I was just reading the bill mentioned and the current laws as posted on the legislature's web site. I think part of the confusion might be the fact that people are discussing two different sections of the law. The volunteer ES person is allowed to bypass 30.06 and 30.07 signs based on those two sections of the law. Okay, technically he would still be breaking the law but has a defense against being convicted for it. The changes to on-duty first responders are all in making sections 46.02 and 46.03 non-applicable. This does not affect the 30.06 part but means that first responders are not unlawfully carrying to begin with.Tex1961 wrote: ↑Thu Dec 28, 2023 8:57 pmHey, I understand.... And I agree the laws are quite confusing. I've been pouring over the ODFR presentation and honestly it has some contradictions. This is way past my training for sure. I might try and contact the DPS training department next week and get a clarification myself. I've been pouring over most of the government codes 30, health and safety codes and there is a lot of conflicting information. As I tell students multiple times, I am not a lawyer and as such don't give out legal advise. I can only tell students what I know based on what the DPS has told me.
Also some clarification which also may come into play. The on duty certification for first responders really only apply to those who work for counties or municipalities with smaller populations. Municipality with a population of 30,000 or less or a county with a population of 250,000 or less. And only those who are employed by the municipalities or county as full time employees, (NOT VOLUNTEERS). can get the ODFR certificate. Or at least can't utilize it to carry while on duty without permission from their respective departments.
On a side note I will say that considering passing a 30.06 is only a Class C misdemeanor I wouldn't worry to much about it. And you are quite correct about 46.03 locations and federal property.
A part of the law that helps confuse people on this issue is that it makes the first responder AND the volunteer personally responsible for any firearms mishaps by specifically stating that any shooting is outside the job duties so the government is not liable. This makes it look like it means both of them for the entire bill, even though it doesn't really take 30.06/.07 into account at all. And they had to clarify that the volunteer is not covered by the first responder definition so that it again mentions volunteers in the bill.