A group of D.C. residents, workers and college students have organized a gun rights group to press Congress and the D.C. Council to overturn the city’s continued ban on semiautomatic firearms and to streamline or eliminate the registration process.

Capital Gun Owner President Amy McVey, who was the first person to register a handgun following the Supreme Court’s decision to strike down the District’s 32-year-old handgun ban, said the group will also seek to end the District’s trigger-lock requirement.

Another of the original plaintiffs in District of Columbia v. Heller, Gillian St. Lawrence, also a board member, said the group plans to meet with each of the council members to explain what changes are needed in the District’s gun laws to accommodate the self-defense needs of District citizens.