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  • 2011-03-17 (xsd:date)
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  • State Rep. Eddie Rodriguez says colleges and universities can allow concealed handgun holders to bring their guns onto campus (en)
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  • State Rep. Eddie Rodriguez, D-Austin, recently said he supports the right to carry firearms, but individual schools colleges should decide whether students can pack them rather than legislators approving a blanket law permitting concealed handguns on campuses. Appearing on CNN on Feb. 22, Rodriguez said: Colleges and universities can have guns on campus (now), allow it to happen, and they haven’t done it. He was interviewed alongside state Sen. Jeff Wentworth, R-San Antonio, who has authored legislation allowing concealed handguns on college campuses. Only Utah has such a law. We wondered if colleges can already to permit guns on campus. To back up Rodriguez, Nate Walker, his chief of staff, pointed us to Section 46.03 of the state penal code , which includes language in place since 1974 listing places where weapons, including firearms, cannot be taken. The law says it’s illegal to bring a firearm on the physical premises of a school or educational institution, any grounds or building on which an activity sponsored by a school or educational institution is being conducted, or a passenger transportation vehicle of a school or educational institution, whether the school or educational institution is public or private, unless pursuant to written regulations or written authorization of the institution. According to W. Scott Lewis, Texas legislative director of Students for Concealed Carry on Campus, a college or university could (now) choose to create an administrative policy overruling the statutory prohibition against possessing a firearm at an educational institution, he said, pointing to the same section of the penal code. Brian Malte, state legislative director for the Washington-based Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, which advocates for gun regulations, also interpreted the law to mean universities and colleges can grant concealed-carry permit holders permission to bring handguns onto campus on a case by case basis. Lewis said no Texas college has permitted guns on campus, but in 2007 the Harrold school district, northwest of Fort Worth near Oklahoma, gave employees the OK to carry concealed firearms, a development we confirmed in an August 2008 Associated Press news article . The district’s policy was the first in Texas, the Houston Chronicle reported a month later. The policy , which refers to the law highlighted by Rodriguez’s aide, states the board may, from time to time, authorize specific school employees to possess certain firearms on school property, at school-sponsored or school-sanctioned events, and at board meetings. Only employees with an up-to-date concealed handgun license are eligible, the policy says. David Thweatt, the district’s superintendent, told us the policy has not been challenged in court. Wondering why no college has similarly allowed concealed weapons, we consulted state Land Commissioner Jerry Patterson, who as a state senator authored the 1995 legislation allowing Texans to carry concealed handguns. Patterson pointed to Section 46.035 in the penal code, which he speculated trumps any permission a university may grant to a concealed handgun license holder. The section says it’s illegal for a concealed handgun license holder to carry a handgun on the premises where a high school, collegiate, or professional sporting event or interscholastic event is taking place, unless the license holder is a participant and a handgun is used in the event. At what time does the University of Texas campus have a sporting event not going on? Patterson said. What is a sporting event? Is that a workout? .. I don’t think as a practical matter they could allow anyone to carry a handgun. Austin attorney Allen Halbrook, who has defended licensed firearms dealers, pointed out that premises is defined in the penal code as a building or a portion of building in the penal code. Halbrook said he thought it would generally be illegal to bring a concealed handgun into a classroom. But, Halbrook speculated, maybe not other places on campus: For instance, if I’m a legal, 21-year-old student who’s qualified to own and possess a handgun, if the college permits it, I could have one in my dorm room, he said. Finally, we turned to state authorities for clarification. Most were mum. Spokespeople at Texas A&M University, the University of Texas System, the Higher Education Coordinating Board, the Department of Public Safety and the Texas Legislative Council, which Walker said informed Rodriguez about the law by telephone, each declined to comment. Jerry Strickland, a spokesman for the Texas attorney general’s office, reiterated the prohibition against firearms in school buildings, at sporting events and on any grounds or building on which activity sponsored by a school or educational institution is being conducted. Yet he also noted that firearms aren’t restricted by law from school streets, sidewalks and parking areas. Strickland declined to comment on whether colleges and universities can allow concealed handgun holders to bring their guns into other areas of campus. We have not had occasion to look at that issue thoroughly, he said. Our take: State law allows higher-ed institutions to permit weapons, though concealed handguns are prohibited from sporting and interscholastic events. We rate Rodriguez’s statement Mostly True. (en)
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