by Kate Galbrait
Representatives from both the Attorney General's office and the
Comptroller's office described their agencies' firearms policies.
Workers for the AG's office can carry firearms — if they have a
concealed handgun license.
At the Comptroller's office, they
cannot. The policy there states: "Employees (other than CPA-commissioned
peace officers) are prohibited from possessing a firearm, ammunition or
other type of weapon or exlosive while in the performance of official
duties. This includes even those employees licensed to carry a concealed
handgun under Chapter 411 of the Texas Government Code."
Original story:
Texas
Railroad Commission employees will now be able to carry concealed
firearms as they go about their work, following a unanimous vote on
Tuesday by the three commissioners.
"[Railroad Commission]
employees often work alone in remote and desolate areas of the state
where they may encounter criminals or dangerous wild animals," Barry Smitherman,
the newest commissioner, said in a statement. "The least we can do is
allow them to exercise their legal right to carry firearms in accordance
with state law.”
The Railroad Commission regulates the oil and
gas industry in Texas. The new policy will allow properly licensed
employees to carry concealed weapons, which they previously had been
prohibited from doing on state property and in state-owned vehicles.
Jerry Patterson,
head of the General Land Office, said he made a similar change to his
agency's policy shortly after arriving in 2003. Both the Railroad
Commission and the GLO, Patterson said, "have a lot of employees who
work out in the sticks, if you will," including along the border.
"It
just makes sense" to be able to carry a concealed weapon, said
Patterson, who also noted, "Frankly, if someone is going to go nuts at
work, they're going to go nuts at work," regardless of the agency's gun
policy.
Smitherman, who consulted with Patterson before pushing through the change, was appointed by Gov. Rick Perry
to the Railroad Commission this summer to replace Michael Williams. He
must win a statewide election a year from now to keep his seat.
Smitherman
said he hoped other agencies would follow the Railroad Commission's
example. The Public Utility Commission, which Smitherman previously
chaired, bans firearms in its offices (the agency does not have field
offices; everyone works in Austin). Its employee handbook says, "It is
strictly prohibited for an employee to possess a firearm, ammunition, or
explosive while on the premises of the PUC."
The Texas Commission
on Environmental Quality's policy states that "carrying firearms,
concealed or unconcealed, or other weapons while performing TCEQ
official business in the field or in the office" is prohibited,
according to Terry Clawson, an agency spokesman.
Calls to offices
of the Comptroller and Attorney General did not yield immediate answers
as to their gun policies, and the Texas Department of Public Safety does
not have a list of agencies' policies.
Smitherman said that all
Railroad Commission workers must abide by the law. “To be clear, this is
not the Wild West," he said in the statement. "Railroad Commission
employees with a [concealed handgun license] will have to abide by all
statutes applicable to CHL holders."
At the General Land Office,
Patterson said that since the change of policy there, "we've had no
problems," and if a security issue arises it gets addressed. For
example, he said, if a "lady has it in her purse, and her purse is out
in the common area, [we] may have a conversation about it."
http://www.texastribune.org/texas-politics/2012-elections/texas-oil-regulators-scrap-concealed-firearms-ban/
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