Keith B wrote:Bladed wrote:Keith B wrote:ScottDLS wrote:[
I looked into it, and Hospitals are prohibited in 46.035, not 46.03, so why add 30.06 (e) specifically referencing both 46.035 and 46.03 unless it was to allow them to be posted? If you are correct, a city council meeting could not be posted any more than a government owned hospital.
When SB 273 was enrolled, there was an amendment to change 46.035 (c) to specifically allow open meetings of a governmental entity to post a 30.06/30.07 at those meetings. See
https://texasattorneygeneral.gov/opinio ... kp0047.pdf page 4 near the bottom, and
http://www.capitol.state.tx.us/tlodocs/ ... 00273F.htm Section 2.
There was no exception allowed for hospitals like there was for the governmental entity meetings.
Nothing in SB 273 changes the applicability of PC 30.06(e) to PC 46.035. If PC 30.06(e) previously prohibited posting 30.06 at any governmental meeting, it still prohibits posting 30.06 at governmental meetings regulated under the open meeting law. If that's the case, the clarification that the law applies only to open meetings served absolutely no purpose, and there was no reason to include it in SB 273.
The reason PC 46.035(c) was amended by SB 273 was to
LIMIT the meetings that can be posted 30.06 to only those covered by the open meetings law.
Everything the legislature has done, from leaving PC 46.035(c) in place when adding PC 30.06(e) to clarifying PC 46.035(c) to apply only to open meetings, suggests that the intent of the legislature was to allow government-owned hospitals and governmental meetings to be posted 30.06.
Uh, no. A government owned hospital cannot post 30.06/30.07. The exemption was added to make sure that the meetings for governmental entities were still allowed to post the meeting.
Hopefully Charles will jump in here, but I am 99.99% sure I am correct on this.
And with all due respect, I'm pretty sure you're wrong.
Prior to SB 273, PC Sec. 46.035(c) read, "A license holder commits an offense if the license holder intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly carries a handgun under the authority of Subchapter H, Chapter 411, Government Code, regardless of whether the handgun is concealed, at any meeting of a governmental entity."
Now it reads, "A license holder commits an offense if the license holder intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly carries a handgun under the authority of Subchapter H, Chapter 411, Government Code, regardless of whether the handgun is concealed or carried in a shoulder or belt holster, in the room or rooms where a meeting of a governmental entity is held."
All that change does is
limit the types of governmental meetings that can be posted. Prior to that change,
any governmental meeting could be posted.
During the 2007 Texas Legislative Session, the Senate gallery was posted 30.06 whenever the Senate was convened, and during the 2009 session, both the House and Senate galleries were posted 30.06 whenever the respective legislative bodies were convened. Are we supposed to accept that lawmakers voted to revoke the power to post 30.06 at governmental meetings and then flaunted that law by posting 30.06 at governmental meetings?
Texas Penal Code Section 30.06(e) reads, "It is an exception to the application of this section that the property on which the license holder carries a handgun is owned or leased by a governmental entity
and is not a premises or other place on which the license holder is prohibited from carrying the handgun under Section 46.03 or 46.035," (emphasis added).
Under PC Sec. 46.035, a license holder
is prohibited from carrying a handgun in a governmental meeting or licensed hospital that is posted 30.06; therefore, PC Sec. 30.06(e) has never prohibited governmental entities from giving effective notice under PC Sec. 30.06, with regard to governmental meetings and licensed hospitals. That's also why Houston is now trying to claim that its zoo is an amusement park. Because amusement parks are listed under PC Sec. 46.035 as prohibited locations
if posted 30.06, a posting on a government-owned amusement park
would be valid/enforceable.