Texas

Texas A&M to allow guns in classrooms, dorms

Terry Holcomb, Executive Director of Texas Carry happily displays his customized holster as he walks to the Capitol for a rally in Austin on Jan 1, 2016, to celebrate Texas becoming an open carry state.
Terry Holcomb, Executive Director of Texas Carry happily displays his customized holster as he walks to the Capitol for a rally in Austin on Jan 1, 2016, to celebrate Texas becoming an open carry state. AP

Texas A&M University's proposed new campus carry rules include few major restrictions for handguns and will allow the weapons in classrooms and dormitories.

The proposed rules have been approved by Chancellor John Sharp and A&M System legal staff. They will be reviewed by the A&M System Board of Regents later this month. State law doesn't require board approval of campus carry rules, but does allow regents to amend the rules if they disagree with them.

The smaller universities in the A&M System will also allow guns in classrooms and dorms, minus three exceptions. Prairie View A&M University, Texas A&M International University and Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi each have dorms that are leased by third-party companies. Those companies will be able to decide on their own whether they want to ban guns in their facilities.

The rules are designed to comply with the state's campus carry law, which was approved last year. The law allows concealed license holders to carry their weapons on campus in most cases. But universities are allowed to declare some limited areas gun-free, as long as those areas don't have the effect of making it impossible to carry a gun on campus.

In Texas, concealed handgun licenses are only available to people over the age of 21, so many undergraduates will still be unable to carry guns.

The law generated strong opposition from some university leaders, especially officials affiliated with the University of Texas System. But administrators at A&M have never expressed much concern. Sharp said in a letter to Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick before the law was approved last year that that he didn't have any problem with the idea.

"Do I trust my students, faculty and staff to work and live responsibly under the same laws at the university as they do at home?" Sharp wrote. "Of course I do!"

SEE WHERE TEXAS’ PRIVATE UNIVERSITIES STAND ON CAMPUS CARRY

That attitude appears to be reflected in the rules. The law has prompted many professors and gun control supporters across the state to call for bans in classrooms, dormitories and professors' offices. Most public universities have opted not to ban guns in classrooms, but a few, including the University of Texas at Austin, have imposed bans in certain dormitories and other places. Most private universities, which have a choice of whether to comply with the law, have chosen to opt out.

A&M appears to be making little effort to ban guns in places where they wouldn't already be banned by the law. A&M will ban them at sporting events, child care facilities and places where student disciplinary hearings are held. Facilities on the campus that are leased by private companies will be allowed to make their own decisions about whether they want to ban guns.

Particular employees will be allowed to ban guns in their own assigned offices if the employee has the president's approval and "has demonstrated that the carrying of a concealed handgun by a license holder in the office presents a significant risk of substantial harm due to a negligent discharge of the handgun," according to the proposed rules.

Disclosure: Texas A&M University and the University of Texas at Austin are corporate sponsors of The Texas Tribune. A complete list of Tribune donors and sponsors can be viewed here.

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This story was originally published April 13, 2016 at 4:19 PM with the headline "Texas A&M to allow guns in classrooms, dorms."

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