Originally published by Kristopher Rodriguez.
Yesterday marked the 50th anniversary of the horrific shooting that took place at the iconic tower at the University of Texas. Charles Whitman was a trained marine sniper who positioned himself atop the 27 story UT tower in 1966 and began shooting at will. This was the first mass shooting on a campus in American history with a total of 17 killed and an additional 30 injured until police were able to stop him. 50 years later, Texas’ campus carry law begins on the same day. The law, which went into effect yesterday August 1, allows those above the age of 21 and who have a concealed handgun license to carry their guns at public universities. Private universities have the option to opt out and refuse to allow guns on campus, which is what a vast majority are doing. Public Universities, on the other hand,are not but are able to designate ‘gun free’ zones.
Senate Bill 11, or campus carry, was pushed by Gov. Greg Abbott and the Republican legislative majority. For months there had been a fair amount of debates, protests and criticism targeting the new bill. Opponents believe that this law will chill free speech on campuses and could potentially lead to more suicides. One faculty member, the former dean of the UT School of Architecture, left UT for a position at the University of Pennsylvania due to his disagreement with allowing guns on campus. The president of UT at Austin takes issues on guns very seriously and aims to create policies that will conform to the new law, and ensure the safety of the entire campus, according to a statement released earlier this year.
Texas A&M University chancellor John Sharp wrote in a letter that “having licensed gun owners in possession of legal weapons on our campuses does not raise safety concerns for me personally, the real question is this: ‘Do I trust my students, faculty and staff to work and live responsibly under the same laws at the university as they do at home?’ Of course I do!” The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley police chief stressed that if ever there is an emergency on campus that students who are allowed to carry should not intervene and try to help, instead, use the gun to protect themselves but do not attempt to stop a serious situation.
Texas is not the only state to allow concealed guns on campus. The map below shows which states allow guns on their campuses and to what extent.
RED = Concealed guns allowed by law
GREY = Concealed guns allowed by law, but schools limit locations/who carries
GREEN = Concealed guns on campus prohibited by law
YELLOW = Schools decide weapons policy
ORANGE = Concealed guns allowed only in locked cars in parking lots
The Facts:
The law does NOT allow open carry on campus
A person must have a license to carry a concealed handgun on campus.
One must be 21 to obtain a license to carry
License holders have been allowed to carry concealed handguns on campus (but not in buildings) for 20 years
S.B. 11 does not affect fraternity or sorority houses or other private residential facilities
The law still makes it a crime for a license holder to carry a concealed handgun while intoxicated.
The post Universities Allow Guns on Campus appeared first on Herrman & Herrman, P.L.LC.
Curated by Texas Bar Today. Follow us on Twitter @texasbartoday.
from Texas Bar Today http://ift.tt/2aKAKvq
via Abogado Aly Website
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