Carry On Campus Measure Back In 2009 Legislative Session

State Rep. Jason Murphey, a Guthrie Republican, has introduced a bill this upcoming legislative session that would allow students and faculty to carry concealed weapons in Oklahoma’s college classrooms.
A similar measure, dubbed “Carry on Campus,” didn’t make it into law last year. Let’s hope the bill fails to pass this year as well. It's unnecessary. It could actually lead to violence rather than prevent it.
Under proposed HB 1083, anyone who holds a concealed handgun permit and completes certification training given by the Council on Law Enforcement and Training (CLEET) would be allowed to carry concealed weapons at public colleges. The new bill appears to exempt faculty from the CLEET training requirement.
Here is the language from the bill’s most critical section:
E. In addition to the provisions of subsection D of this section, any person who possesses a valid concealed handgun license issued pursuant to the provisions of the Oklahoma Self-Defense Act and who:
1. Is certified by the Council on Law Enforcement Education and Training to carry a weapon; or
2. Is a member of faculty who is primarily charged with classroom teaching responsibilities, shall be authorized to carry the concealed handgun into or upon any public college or university property.
Murphey, pictured right, and others have argued such a law would make public colleges safer here in light of the recent shooting tragedies at Northern Illinois University and Virginia Tech. Essentially, students and faculty could stop a shooter with their own weapons, according to those who advocate guns on campus.
Murphey’s bill reflects efforts on the state level throughout the nation to allow students and faculty to carry guns on campus. A student organization, Students for Concealed Carry on Campus, now lobbies in favor of the issue. The National Rifle Association supports carry on campus measures.
The Oklahoma Rifle Association gave Murphey its 2008 Legislator of the Year award for “his continued support of the 2nd Amendment and the right to keep and bear arms.”
Most of the state’s higher education administration officials opposed the bill last year and will probably do so again.
Students and faculty, with some exceptions, are not trained to respond to emergency shooting situations and could overreact or make a deadly situation worse. Bringing guns into classrooms would only increase the potential for violence. What about armed students who are distraught? What about accidental shootings? Some professors might not come to Oklahoma to teach if the law was passed.
These carry-on-campus bills are pushed by the country’s fanatical Second Amendment lobby, which advocates putting more and more weapons on the street. The ultimate goal for this lobby is to pass laws allowing most people to openly carry weapons virtually anywhere they go.
Here is the proposed bill. What do you think? Vote on a poll about the issue. Feel free to leave a comment.
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planning an exodus
again? the brain drain will continue with the faculty leading the way....that's it, when I retire I'm leaving! Time to start saving to move....
omg!
If this passed, I would have to think twice about being a college student or instructor. I'm probably naive to think people are not carrying concealed weapons all the time everywhere, but I'd like to think they're not encouraged to do so in places where I'll be sitting in a small concrete enclosure that has only one exit.