It's legal for both of you. However, the school district can fire a teacher for violating school policy. For example, if a school has a dress code for employees, it's not illegal to violate the dress code but they can be fired.captainkbt wrote:If I can legally have a handgun in my car when I go pick up my kid and park in a school parking lot....why cant the teacher working there have their weapon in their car in the same parking lot? Under TPC 46.035(f)(3) the statute still states that the parking lot is ok. Doesnt SB321 seem to contradict TPC 46.035 in the case of the teacher? It does to me.
Search found 2 matches
- Tue Sep 20, 2011 3:28 pm
- Forum: Instructors' Corner
- Topic: SB321
- Replies: 13
- Views: 2133
Re: SB321
- Tue Sep 20, 2011 2:33 pm
- Forum: Instructors' Corner
- Topic: SB321
- Replies: 13
- Views: 2133
Re: SB321
Maybe she should read the statute. Both 30.05 and 30.06 talk about "property" (not "premises") and 30.05 specifically covers forest land and agricultural land, completely sinking her argument that trespassing laws only apply inside buildings.captainkbt wrote:She said that if a 30.06 sign was posted at the entrance to the parking lot it would be posted in error, again since the statute does not include the parking lot in the definition of "premises".
Maybe she was confused because 46.03 and 46.035 talk about premises.
ETA: sjfcontrol is right about government schools. I'm talking more broadly.