You should check out Black's Law Dictionary instead. I don't know if Texas employment law, but the federal government also has a definition for employee that's much closer to Black's than to the dictionary.reference.com definition.Keith B wrote:While it might have to be argued, if you are a contractor, consultant, etc and being paid by the business to do work, then by definition you are an employee. Customers would still be prohibited from having a gun in the parking lot.apostate wrote:As I read the bill, it seems a 30.06 sign in a parking lot would not apply to employees, but would be 30.06 notice for contractors, sub-contractors, consultants, customers, etc. I would love to be mistaken about that, but that's how I read Senate Bill 321.JKTex wrote:As Kieth said, and in another way, no sign, even 30.06, will be valid for parking lots (as defined in the bill).
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Return to “HB681/SB321 Parking Lots Bill is on the Floor”
- Fri May 06, 2011 5:20 pm
- Forum: 2011 Texas Legislative Session
- Topic: HB681/SB321 Parking Lots Bill is on the Floor
- Replies: 205
- Views: 67835