30.06 Ruling Letters
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Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters
New ruling letters to Bell County, City of Lake Dallas, Elgin Independent School District, Glenn Heights, Kleberg County, and Woodway Police Dept were posted to the website today: https://texasattorneygeneral.gov/3006/3 ... ng-letters
As I noted earlier, they are going out in small batches. All the recent ones are dated 4/29.
As I noted earlier, they are going out in small batches. All the recent ones are dated 4/29.
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Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters
ELB wrote:New ruling letters to Bell County, City of Lake Dallas, Elgin Independent School District, Glenn Heights, Kleberg County, and Woodway Police Dept were posted to the website today: https://texasattorneygeneral.gov/3006/3 ... ng-letters
As I noted earlier, they are going out in small batches. All the recent ones are dated 4/29.
Looks like some of these folks are getting the message, and removing signs before they are ordered to do so. The County courthouses seem to have the idea that if their commissioners or judges make a decree, then that is the law. I'm glad to see the AG is showing them that the State Legislature, and not local officials, are the ones who actually make the rules. I hope that this trend continues and that the AG continues to act on these complaints. I would still like to see how the ruling will go regarding the Ft. Worth Zoo.
Take away the Second first, and the First is gone in a second
Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters
Previously I noted that the AG listed the following examples in letters to Brazos, Dallas, and McLennan counties:
- County Clerk
- County Attorney
- District Attorney
- County Tax Office
- County Constable
- Commissioners Court (altho I wonder if he has backed off on this one).
In the Kleberg County Letter the AG added the following as an example of an office not essential to the operation of the courts:
- Motor vehicle department
Also, the highest OAG complaint number I saw with the addition of the this last batch is 32.
- County Clerk
- County Attorney
- District Attorney
- County Tax Office
- County Constable
- Commissioners Court (altho I wonder if he has backed off on this one).
In the Kleberg County Letter the AG added the following as an example of an office not essential to the operation of the courts:
- Motor vehicle department
Also, the highest OAG complaint number I saw with the addition of the this last batch is 32.
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Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters
Very disappointed in the Elgin ISD ruling.
That could create the slippery slope for others wanting to claim exclusion based on being an educational institution or school district.
That could create the slippery slope for others wanting to claim exclusion based on being an educational institution or school district.
Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters
Moved
Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters
I find your comment a bit baffling, since I see little doubt that forbidding concealed (and now, open) carry on elementary, junior, and high school districts (without permission of the district) was exactly what the legislature intended. I don't like it, but an independent school district is precisely what the law meant. There is no slope at this point, for the AG to say otherwise would have been in direct contravention of the law. I'm even puzzled that someone went to the trouble to even make a complaint about a ISD administration building.Scott in Houston wrote:Very disappointed in the Elgin ISD ruling.
That could create the slippery slope for others wanting to claim exclusion based on being an educational institution or school district.
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Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters
The score thus far:
There are now 16 Ruling Letters posted on the AG website. Thirteen (13) have been resolved on way or another.
- In nine (9) cases, the violating entity cured its violation (generally by removing improper signs) after citizen complaint but before the AG's office had finished an investigation.
- In two (2) cases the AG issued a notice of violation letter and the violating entity cured the violation, one by removing signs, the other by removing offices.
- in two (2) cases the entity challenged by complaint was found to not be in violation
- In three (3) cases a notice of violation has been issued and no resolution is posted on the website. Two of those cases are still within the 15 day window to cure the violation (or provide evidence the AG is wrong). One has substantially exceeded the 15 day window.
It's also noteworthy that two of the resolved complaints were about illegal postings of signs at a limited duration event. Officially both were resolved when the signs came down at the conclusions of the events. In one case the offending entity promised to not allow it to happen again, in the other the AG warned the entity to remain within the law in the future with such events.
There are now 16 Ruling Letters posted on the AG website. Thirteen (13) have been resolved on way or another.
- In nine (9) cases, the violating entity cured its violation (generally by removing improper signs) after citizen complaint but before the AG's office had finished an investigation.
- In two (2) cases the AG issued a notice of violation letter and the violating entity cured the violation, one by removing signs, the other by removing offices.
- in two (2) cases the entity challenged by complaint was found to not be in violation
- In three (3) cases a notice of violation has been issued and no resolution is posted on the website. Two of those cases are still within the 15 day window to cure the violation (or provide evidence the AG is wrong). One has substantially exceeded the 15 day window.
It's also noteworthy that two of the resolved complaints were about illegal postings of signs at a limited duration event. Officially both were resolved when the signs came down at the conclusions of the events. In one case the offending entity promised to not allow it to happen again, in the other the AG warned the entity to remain within the law in the future with such events.
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Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters
Read his letter. These comments, "(opining that FERPA applies to student records at both the state and local level because "educational agency or institution" includes any public or private agency or institution that receives federal funding under an applicable education program, without regard to whether it enrolls students") "ELB wrote:I find your comment a bit baffling, since I see little doubt that forbidding concealed (and now, open) carry on elementary, junior, and high school districts (without permission of the district) was exactly what the legislature intended. I don't like it, but an independent school district is precisely what the law meant. There is no slope at this point, for the AG to say otherwise would have been in direct contravention of the law. I'm even puzzled that someone went to the trouble to even make a complaint about a ISD administration building.Scott in Houston wrote:Very disappointed in the Elgin ISD ruling.
That could create the slippery slope for others wanting to claim exclusion based on being an educational institution or school district.
So any agency that gets federal funding from an education program can now be considered a school? So what if a zoo gets money? Or libraries, or … ? See the slope I'm talking about?
I believe the intent of the was SCHOOLS… not all buildings supporting them like bus barns or administrative offices completely separate from a school.
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Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters
I don't think the opinion goes that far. When the letter refers to "applicable education program" that could mean "applicable to SCHOOLS". Like Head Start for Pre-K SCHOOLS, not daycares (which wouldn't qualify).Scott in Houston wrote:Read his letter. These comments, "(opining that FERPA applies to student records at both the state and local level because "educational agency or institution" includes any public or private agency or institution that receives federal funding under an applicable education program, without regard to whether it enrolls students") "ELB wrote:I find your comment a bit baffling, since I see little doubt that forbidding concealed (and now, open) carry on elementary, junior, and high school districts (without permission of the district) was exactly what the legislature intended. I don't like it, but an independent school district is precisely what the law meant. There is no slope at this point, for the AG to say otherwise would have been in direct contravention of the law. I'm even puzzled that someone went to the trouble to even make a complaint about a ISD administration building.Scott in Houston wrote:Very disappointed in the Elgin ISD ruling.
That could create the slippery slope for others wanting to claim exclusion based on being an educational institution or school district.
So any agency that gets federal funding from an education program can now be considered a school? So what if a zoo gets money? Or libraries, or … ? See the slope I'm talking about?
I believe the intent of the was SCHOOLS… not all buildings supporting them like bus barns or administrative offices completely separate from a school.
What I read from the opinion is that the ISD administration buildings are part of the SCHOOL system and supporting it, therefore covered. I don't agree with it, but I can see the reasoning. The Fort Worth Zoo might be off limits if it was OWNED by FWISD AND used as part of the curriculum, but just because they "educate" people there and sometimes have school activities, doesn't make them a SCHOOL. I predict they lose.
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Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters
New letter out, to City of Austin about the Austin City Hall, dated 7/5. A snippet:
ETA: https://www.texasattorneygeneral.gov/fi ... y_Hall.pdfIn this instance the citizen complaint alleges that, upon entering the Austin City Hall ("city hall"),
located at 301 West 2nd Street, Austin, Texas 78701, a uniformed security officer with authority
to act for the City of Austin (the "city") provided notice by oral communication that handgun
license holders are prohibited from entering the city hall while in possession of a handgun. The
complainant further provided photographs of the entrance to the city hall where an image warning
that handguns are prohibited within the building is posted. After reviewing the complaint, the
OAG finds the city hall is a multi-story, multipurpose building that houses the city council
chambers and the offices of the council members and other city officials, including the city's
mayor, manager, and auditor. The city hall also contains the offices of the city's finance and
economic development departments, as well as the offices of the city's law department.
In a letter to the OAG dated June 16, 2016, the city provided a response to the citizen complaint,
asserting that the city hall building "meets the statutory definition of a 'government court or offices
utilized by the court' in section 46.03(a)(3) of the Penal Code." The city further states. "[t]he
signage requirements in section 30.06 of the Penal Code do not apply in this case." Based on the
city's representations, the OAG concludes the city intends to exclude the carrying of weapons from
the entire premises of the city hall, purportedly pursuant to section 46.03(a)(3) of the Penal Code.
Upon review, however, the OAG is unable to determine which government court or office utilized
by a government court, if any, is located within the city hall building. Regardless, the city hall
houses numerous non-judicial city administrative offices that are not identified as places where
weapons are prohibited under section 46.03 or 46.035 of the Penal Code. Section 46.03(a)(3) of
the Penal Code does not allow a political subdivision to prohibit licensed handgun holders from
entering into an entire building simply because government courts or the offices of the courts are
located in a portion of that multipurpose building. Consequently, the OAG has determined the
signs at ~e entrance of the city hall, as well as the oral communications utilized by city hall
security officers, are in violation of the Government Code.
The city has fifteen (15) days from the receipt of this written notice to cure the violation.
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Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters
nice!
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Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters
Excellent!
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Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters
I'm going to go along with Scott in Houston on this one, but not because of the money thing. In the AG opinion it is stated that school or educational institution is not defined in 46.03, but is in other contexts. I guess that they are correct in their interpretation, but think that it needs to be better defined. An administration office for an ISD is not a school or an educational institution IMHO and might not be what the legislature had in mind when drafting and approving that part.ScottDLS wrote:I don't think the opinion goes that far. When the letter refers to "applicable education program" that could mean "applicable to SCHOOLS". Like Head Start for Pre-K SCHOOLS, not daycares (which wouldn't qualify).Scott in Houston wrote:Read his letter. These comments, "(opining that FERPA applies to student records at both the state and local level because "educational agency or institution" includes any public or private agency or institution that receives federal funding under an applicable education program, without regard to whether it enrolls students") "ELB wrote:I find your comment a bit baffling, since I see little doubt that forbidding concealed (and now, open) carry on elementary, junior, and high school districts (without permission of the district) was exactly what the legislature intended. I don't like it, but an independent school district is precisely what the law meant. There is no slope at this point, for the AG to say otherwise would have been in direct contravention of the law. I'm even puzzled that someone went to the trouble to even make a complaint about a ISD administration building.Scott in Houston wrote:Very disappointed in the Elgin ISD ruling.
That could create the slippery slope for others wanting to claim exclusion based on being an educational institution or school district.
So any agency that gets federal funding from an education program can now be considered a school? So what if a zoo gets money? Or libraries, or … ? See the slope I'm talking about?
I believe the intent of the was SCHOOLS… not all buildings supporting them like bus barns or administrative offices completely separate from a school.
What I read from the opinion is that the ISD administration buildings are part of the SCHOOL system and supporting it, therefore covered. I don't agree with it, but I can see the reasoning. The Fort Worth Zoo might be off limits if it was OWNED by FWISD AND used as part of the curriculum, but just because they "educate" people there and sometimes have school activities, doesn't make them a SCHOOL. I predict they lose.
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Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters
ELB wrote:Previously I noted that the AG listed the following examples in letters to Brazos, Dallas, and McLennan counties:
- County Clerk
- County Attorney
- District Attorney
- County Tax Office
- County Constable
- Commissioners Court (altho I wonder if he has backed off on this one).
In the Kleberg County Letter the AG added the following as an example of an office not essential to the operation of the courts:
- Motor vehicle department
Also, the highest OAG complaint number I saw with the addition of the this last batch is 32.
The complaints I filed with respect to the courthouse annexes here are No. 99 and 100, according to the letter to the County Judge I was copied on.
Luckily, I have enough willpower to control the driving ambition that rages within me.
Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters
Wowser. I believe the one I just posted answered number 62.JALLEN wrote: ...
The complaints I filed with respect to the courthouse annexes here are No. 99 and 100, according to the letter to the County Judge I was copied on.
I called the AG's office awhile back to try to get an idea of when and where they're going with the government entities that have not complied by the deadlines, got routed around to the Public Affairs person, who basically said they wouldn't comment on any court cases and if I wanted to know more I could file an open records request. hmmm. Been thinking about it, but haven't set aside the time to really do it.
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