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From TTAG | BREAKING: GA Legislature Passes Campus Carry Bill:
BREAKING: GA Legislature Passes Campus Carry Bill
By James England via concealednation.org
Georgia lawmakers have successfully passed legislation through both the House and Senate that would enable concealed carry on the state's campuses. The new bill, passed on Friday 37 to 17, still needs to be signed by Governor Nathan Deal before it becomes law. According to this bill, concealed carriers would not be allowed to carry in athletic facilities, or inside student dormitories (including fraternity and sorority houses). The bill would only apply to public universities and college campuses and would not extend to private universities which would retain the right to set their own policies concerning concealed carry on campus . . .
According to Link Removed, the bill will hit Governor Deal's desk shortly.
Excerpt from HB 859
"(A) Any license holder when he or she is in any building or on real property owned by or leased to any public technical school, vocational school, college, or university, or other public institution of postsecondary education; provided, however,that such exception shall:
(i) Not apply to buildings or property used for athletic sporting events or student housing, including, but not limited to, fraternity and sorority houses;
(ii) Only apply to the carrying of handguns which a licensee is licensed to carry pursuant to subsection (h) of Code Section 16-11-126 and pursuant to Code Section16-11-129; and
(iii) Only apply to the carrying of handguns which are concealed."
The bill is being lauded by proponents as a great step in the right direction.
Previous fights over concealed carry in the Peach State have had mixed results, with a recent open carry debates veering off into "they'll be shooting people in the streets at high noon" territory by those who wish to limit gun rights. As with the open carry debate as well as the concealed carry on campus, there are no studies nor evidence to back such claims. If anything, those attending public universities in Georgia will have just one more legal avenue to pursue their own self-defense while pursuing higher education.