I'm not sure what you mean about decriminalization versus preemption of "rules and regulations." Under the Zerwas amendment, colleges would still be allowed to criminalize concealed carry in regent-approved zones, and they'd still be prohibited from regulating concealed carry everywhere else.CJD wrote:I know, and I'm sure that will be abused, and can't be remedied until 2017. I agree, though, that it's better than nothing. To me, decriminalization is more important than preemption on "rules and regulations."casp625 wrote:Yes but they wouldn't be able to opt out the entire campus, only certain areas with "justification"CJD wrote:Don't underestimate boards of regents. I bet we will see large opt outs at ALL Texas public universities.AJSully421 wrote:I agree, the only system that will have enough votes to ban guns in any meaningful way will be the UT system. The rest will have campus carry, with maybe a few restrictions in only a few locations on campus.v7a wrote:The bill author already said he will not oppose the partial-opt-out amendment. I have a feeling that's because a deal has been struck whereby Democrats will not filibuster the bill. Or maybe that's just my imagination running wild... In any case, I think passing SB11 as amended is better than not passing SB11 at all (go read the language of the partial-opt-out amendment, it's not as bad as you may think at first).
Never forget: Concealed means concealed.
Campus Carry -- Where Are We Now?
Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
Re: Campus Carry -- Where Are We Now?
Re: Campus Carry -- Where Are We Now?
You are right. I saw a post where Charles said it was decriminalized, but I must have misunderstood what he meant. So would a violation be an offense under 30.06 or 46.03? Big difference.Bladed wrote:I'm not sure what you mean about decriminalization versus preemption of "rules and regulations." Under the Zerwas amendment, colleges would still be allowed to criminalize concealed carry in regent-approved zones, and they'd still be prohibited from regulating concealed carry everywhere else.CJD wrote:I know, and I'm sure that will be abused, and can't be remedied until 2017. I agree, though, that it's better than nothing. To me, decriminalization is more important than preemption on "rules and regulations."casp625 wrote:Yes but they wouldn't be able to opt out the entire campus, only certain areas with "justification"CJD wrote:Don't underestimate boards of regents. I bet we will see large opt outs at ALL Texas public universities.AJSully421 wrote:I agree, the only system that will have enough votes to ban guns in any meaningful way will be the UT system. The rest will have campus carry, with maybe a few restrictions in only a few locations on campus.v7a wrote:The bill author already said he will not oppose the partial-opt-out amendment. I have a feeling that's because a deal has been struck whereby Democrats will not filibuster the bill. Or maybe that's just my imagination running wild... In any case, I think passing SB11 as amended is better than not passing SB11 at all (go read the language of the partial-opt-out amendment, it's not as bad as you may think at first).
Never forget: Concealed means concealed.
Re: Campus Carry -- Where Are We Now?
Neither--it would be a violation of 46.035(a-3), a Class A misdemeanor.CJD wrote:You are right. I saw a post where Charles said it was decriminalized, but I must have misunderstood what he meant. So would a violation be an offense under 30.06 or 46.03? Big difference.Bladed wrote:I'm not sure what you mean about decriminalization versus preemption of "rules and regulations." Under the Zerwas amendment, colleges would still be allowed to criminalize concealed carry in regent-approved zones, and they'd still be prohibited from regulating concealed carry everywhere else.CJD wrote:I know, and I'm sure that will be abused, and can't be remedied until 2017. I agree, though, that it's better than nothing. To me, decriminalization is more important than preemption on "rules and regulations."casp625 wrote:Yes but they wouldn't be able to opt out the entire campus, only certain areas with "justification"CJD wrote:Don't underestimate boards of regents. I bet we will see large opt outs at ALL Texas public universities.AJSully421 wrote:I agree, the only system that will have enough votes to ban guns in any meaningful way will be the UT system. The rest will have campus carry, with maybe a few restrictions in only a few locations on campus.v7a wrote:The bill author already said he will not oppose the partial-opt-out amendment. I have a feeling that's because a deal has been struck whereby Democrats will not filibuster the bill. Or maybe that's just my imagination running wild... In any case, I think passing SB11 as amended is better than not passing SB11 at all (go read the language of the partial-opt-out amendment, it's not as bad as you may think at first).
Never forget: Concealed means concealed.
Re: Campus Carry -- Where Are We Now?
Ok thanks. Hard to see on a phone!Bladed wrote:Neither--it would be a violation of 46.035(a-3), a Class A misdemeanor.CJD wrote:You are right. I saw a post where Charles said it was decriminalized, but I must have misunderstood what he meant. So would a violation be an offense under 30.06 or 46.03? Big difference.Bladed wrote:I'm not sure what you mean about decriminalization versus preemption of "rules and regulations." Under the Zerwas amendment, colleges would still be allowed to criminalize concealed carry in regent-approved zones, and they'd still be prohibited from regulating concealed carry everywhere else.CJD wrote:I know, and I'm sure that will be abused, and can't be remedied until 2017. I agree, though, that it's better than nothing. To me, decriminalization is more important than preemption on "rules and regulations."casp625 wrote:Yes but they wouldn't be able to opt out the entire campus, only certain areas with "justification"CJD wrote:Don't underestimate boards of regents. I bet we will see large opt outs at ALL Texas public universities.AJSully421 wrote:I agree, the only system that will have enough votes to ban guns in any meaningful way will be the UT system. The rest will have campus carry, with maybe a few restrictions in only a few locations on campus.v7a wrote:The bill author already said he will not oppose the partial-opt-out amendment. I have a feeling that's because a deal has been struck whereby Democrats will not filibuster the bill. Or maybe that's just my imagination running wild... In any case, I think passing SB11 as amended is better than not passing SB11 at all (go read the language of the partial-opt-out amendment, it's not as bad as you may think at first).
Never forget: Concealed means concealed.
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Re: Campus Carry -- Where Are We Now?
Unfortunately, things changed.CJD wrote:You are right. I saw a post where Charles said it was decriminalized, but I must have misunderstood what he meant. So would a violation be an offense under 30.06 or 46.03? Big difference.Bladed wrote:I'm not sure what you mean about decriminalization versus preemption of "rules and regulations." Under the Zerwas amendment, colleges would still be allowed to criminalize concealed carry in regent-approved zones, and they'd still be prohibited from regulating concealed carry everywhere else.CJD wrote:I know, and I'm sure that will be abused, and can't be remedied until 2017. I agree, though, that it's better than nothing. To me, decriminalization is more important than preemption on "rules and regulations."casp625 wrote:Yes but they wouldn't be able to opt out the entire campus, only certain areas with "justification"CJD wrote:Don't underestimate boards of regents. I bet we will see large opt outs at ALL Texas public universities.AJSully421 wrote:I agree, the only system that will have enough votes to ban guns in any meaningful way will be the UT system. The rest will have campus carry, with maybe a few restrictions in only a few locations on campus.v7a wrote:The bill author already said he will not oppose the partial-opt-out amendment. I have a feeling that's because a deal has been struck whereby Democrats will not filibuster the bill. Or maybe that's just my imagination running wild... In any case, I think passing SB11 as amended is better than not passing SB11 at all (go read the language of the partial-opt-out amendment, it's not as bad as you may think at first).
Never forget: Concealed means concealed.
Chas.
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Re: Campus Carry -- Where Are We Now?
Any chance of SB11 still moving forward or does that last post foreshadow bad news?
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Re: Campus Carry -- Where Are We Now?
I suspect CC is the price we had to pay to get OC through without a fight. Sad that we aren't left with enough time or political capital to realistically do anything about CC, but at least we got the OC elephant out of the room. Hopefully this clears the decks next session so the grownups can get back to work.
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Re: Campus Carry -- Where Are We Now?
Scott Farkus wrote:I suspect CC is the price we had to pay to get OC through without a fight. Sad that we aren't left with enough time or political capital to realistically do anything about CC, but at least we got the OC elephant out of the room. Hopefully this clears the decks next session so the grownups can get back to work.
Agreed. Hopefuly we can get a HB308 type bill in 17 that wipes the whole slate, campus, polling places, probably not bars based on what Charles has said in the past, but I could deal with bars being the only places prohibited, maybe reduced to a class B or something.
"The trouble with our liberal friends is not that they're ignorant, it's just that they know so much that isn't so." - Ronald Reagan, 1964
30.06 signs only make criminals and terrorists safer.
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30.06 signs only make criminals and terrorists safer.
NRA, LTC, School Safety, Armed Security, & Body Guard Instructor
Re: Campus Carry -- Where Are We Now?
AJSully421 wrote:Scott Farkus wrote:I suspect CC is the price we had to pay to get OC through without a fight. Sad that we aren't left with enough time or political capital to realistically do anything about CC, but at least we got the OC elephant out of the room. Hopefully this clears the decks next session so the grownups can get back to work.
Agreed. Hopefuly we can get a HB308 type bill in 17 that wipes the whole slate, campus, polling places, probably not bars based on what Charles has said in the past, but I could deal with bars being the only places prohibited, maybe reduced to a class B or something.
I would like the see HB 308 become law but I think you'd have to get campus carry out of the way first.
Re: Campus Carry -- Where Are We Now?
Open carry bill goes to governor after rapid votes by House, Senate
Sen. Brian Birdwell, author of the campus carry bill, said he was fine with a tweak to allow public schools the ability to declare parts of campus off-limits to guns, but not the entire campus. But touting private property rights, he said he opposed getting rid of a total opt-out choice for private schools.
To avoid a Democratic filibuster, campus carry supporters hoped to file paperwork Friday that would allow debate on Saturday. A Birdwell aide said he thought that positive negotiations would allow backers to avoid any procedural hiccups.
Asked what Democrats might do then to stop campus carry, Sen. Royce West, D-Dallas, rephrased a reporter’s question.
“What else can Texans do?” he said. “Pray.”
Re: Campus Carry -- Where Are We Now?
Been saying that all night, too. Especially the latter part. Aside from Class C (A REALLY GOOD THING), the best part is Kory, CJ, et al... won't have a front-and-center bill to use as a soap box. Any permitless carry bills will die a fast, unsupported death in '17 (and '19 and any session where they lurk).Scott Farkus wrote:I suspect CC is the price we had to pay to get OC through without a fight. Sad that we aren't left with enough time or political capital to realistically do anything about CC, but at least we got the OC elephant out of the room. Hopefully this clears the decks next session so the grownups can get back to work.
Re: Campus Carry -- Where Are We Now?
The conference committee has filed their report on SB 11:
http://www.capitol.state.tx.us/BillLook ... &Bill=SB11" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
http://www.capitol.state.tx.us/BillLook ... &Bill=SB11" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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Re: Campus Carry -- Where Are We Now?
That quite literally JUST happened. I was refreshing that page all night. Ohhhh man please come up for debate and vote tomorrow.Bladed wrote:The conference committee has filed their report on SB 11:
http://www.capitol.state.tx.us/BillLook ... &Bill=SB11" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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Re: Campus Carry -- Where Are We Now?
It will be interesting to see if the conference moved up the effective date or left it alone.
Re: Campus Carry -- Where Are We Now?
H Conf. Comm. Report distributed 05/30/2015 12:22 AM