chlag01 wrote:Update. I decided to leave the unenforceable policy alone, and did not notify. However, they have now stepped up their game. As of today, there are new 30.06 signs posted at the parking lot entrances. I'm guessing they are placed by the property manager of the business complex my employer leases from.
I've started a new thread asking whether they've exploited an SB 321 loophole by having the property manager prohibit storing firearms in the parking lot instead of the employer.
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-- Frustrated
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My response to your opening post would have been, "let sleeping dogs lie." Stirring a hornet's nest never results in a good day for the guy with the stick.
I suspect that, over the next 12-24 months we're going to see more and more businesses resort to what your company appears to have done—which is to band together with other tenants to ask the property managers to post 30.06 signs at the parking lot entrances. When that happens, we can look forward to another kerfuffle in the legislature, where SB321 passed with a specific intent. When businesses begin to defy that intent, it's gonna get ugly for a while, but I predict that in the long run, we will prevail.
Has there been any case-law on the posting of 30.06 signage at parking lot entrances yet? I remember that, early on, 30.06 was intended to include only the "premises," which did not include parking lots, and that a non-employee CHL would have the right to disarm and secure their weapon in the parking lot before entering the premises. More and more, I see references on this board to posted parking lots. What's the deal with that?
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― G. Michael Hopf, "Those Who Remain"
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