A law requiring background checks on private gun sales in Nevada won final passage in the Legislature Friday and was promptly signed by the governor, fulfilling the intent of a 2016 voter initiative that proved unenforceable.

Gov. Steve Sisolak speaks as he signs Nevada's law requiring background checks on private gun sales, Friday, Feb. 15, 2019. The law will go into effect in January. (Bill Dentzer/Las Vegas Review-Journal)

Gov. Steve Sisolak, left, and Senate Majority Leader Kelvin Atkinson, D-North Las Vegas, the prime sponsor of Nevada's new law requiring background checks for private gun sales, pose with the bill after the governor signed it into law, Friday, Feb. 15, 2019. (Bill Dentzer/Las Vegas Review-Journal)

CARSON CITY — A law requiring background checks on private gun sales in Nevada won final passage in the Legislature Friday and was promptly signed by the governor, fulfilling the intent of a 2016 voter initiative that proved unenforceable.

Friday’s 28-13 vote in the Assembly after brief debate, and Gov. Steve Sisolak’s immediate signing afterward, capped a week of hearings and votes scheduled to coincide with Thursday’s anniversary of the Parkland, Fla., school shooting last year that killed 17 people.

A focused Democratic legislative majority moved the bill from introduction to the governor’s desk in five days, including a daylong hearing on Tuesday attended by hundreds, amid objections from Republicans and other opponents over a rushed process.

“With this bill, we are taking an important step to address the nationwide public health crisis that is gun violence,” Sisolak said in signing the bill.

With unwavering supportive majorities in both houses, the outcome was never really in question on the measure, which effectively replaces the 2016 initiative voters narrowly approved. The bill repeals the initiative’s provision that sought federal background checks on private sales and instead sets up a state-driven process. It will go into effect in 2020.

The week of discussion and debate served primarily as a proxy opportunity for opposing sides to address larger issues of gun safety, gun violence and gun rights. In forums throughout the week, opponents decried what they called unenforceable, burdensome and ill-defined provisions of the bill.

Supporters cited commonsense bill language, easy compliance and existing experience and practice in other states that require checks on private sales.

They also consistently stressed that the bill only implements what Nevada voters had already approved.

Throughout the week’s debate came references to mass shootings such as Parkland and, closer to home, the the 2017 Route 91 Harvest festival shooting Las Vegas shooting where 58 died in the worst mass shooting in modern U.S. history.

“We are all in support of measures that would mitigate these tragedies,” said Assembly Minority Leader Jim Wheeler, R-Gardnerville, speaking in opposition to the bill on the Assembly floor Friday. “However we all know this bill will not do anything to stop them. Instead, I believe this bill seems like Nevada following a political agenda instead of what Nevada usually does: We lead the way.”

For supporters, it was the culmination of an effort that began in Nevada with legislation in 2013 — finally enacted, as the governor noted, 829 days after voters approved it.

“Sometimes certain things are hard to put into words. Today is one of those,” said Senate Majority Leader Kelvin Atkinson, D-North Las Vegas, the prime sponsor of the bill. “When you think about the emotion, political capital, what our citizens voted for and have been expecting for quite some time, it felt good to finally close the door on this issue and make our state a safer place.”

Contact Bill Dentzer at bdentzer@reviewjournal.com or 775-461-0661. Follow @DentzerNews on Twitter.