Hawaii Revised Statutes Chapter 134 establishes statewide firearms regulations, but unlike many states, Hawaii does not broadly preempt counties from enacting local firearms ordinances on certain matters.
HRS Chapter 134 governs firearms, ammunition, and dangerous weapons throughout Hawaii. The statute requires permits to acquire firearms, registration of all firearms, and contains restrictions on assault pistols and large-capacity magazines. Hawaii is unusual among states because it does not have a sweeping preemption clause forbidding all county firearms regulation. The four counties (Honolulu, Hawaii, Maui, Kauai) administer the permit and registration system through their police departments under HRS 134-2 and 134-3. Counties may adopt rules consistent with state law regarding the application process, locations of permitted use, and local park or facility restrictions. State law still controls the substantive permit standards.
Possessing an unregistered firearm or carrying without a license is a misdemeanor or felony depending on circumstances under HRS 134-17.
Waipahu, HI
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Waipahu, HI
Waipahu retaining walls fall under ROH 21-4.40, capping fill-bearing walls in required yards at 6 feet with terraced heights combined, impacting stream-side ...
Waipahu, HI
Waipahu fences follow the LUO fence definition in ROH 21-4.60, allowing wrought iron, wood, vinyl, plastic, and wire on post foundations, with chain-link com...
Waipahu, HI
Waipahu neighbor fence disputes apply ROH 21-4.30 yard setbacks with 21-4.60 height limits, since Hawaii has no dedicated spite fence statute for Waipahu's t...
Waipahu, HI
Public parks in Waipahu, including Waipahu District Park and Hans L'Orange Park, are closed during posted night hours. Entering closed parks is prohibited, t...
Waipahu, HI
Waipahu follows Hawaii state juvenile curfew under HRS 577-16. Children under 16 cannot be in public places between 10 pm and 4 am without a parent or guardian.
See how Waipahu's local firearms preemption rules stack up against other locations.
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