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Thursday, April 7, 2016

McAuliffe Vetoes Bill Allowing Security Officers to Carry Firearms on Campus

Though it has not been posted on the Legislative Information System as of this posting, the Richmond Times Dispatch (RTD) reported last night that Governor McAuliffe has vetoed HB1234, a bill that would authorize a school security officer (an individual who works for a private security firm) to carry a firearm in the performance of his duties if he is a retired law-enforcement officer.  The bill states that the individual must meet the firearms training standards for active law-enforcement officers and the local school board must grant him or her the authority to carry a firearm in the performance of their duties  and is not otherwise prohibited by state or federal law from possessing a firearm.  According to the RTD, the Governor's veto message states:
“This bill would expose schools and students to unnecessary risk and potential harm by allowing individuals without adequate training to carry firearms on school grounds,”
McAuliffe said the difference between school resource officers (SROs) and someone who is a retired officer working for a private security company is that SROs undergo regular training and private security officers don't.

Bob Owens at BearingArms.com noted that at least on this one, McAuliffe may have a point:
What McAuliffe is objecting to is the arming of school guards who are retired law enforcement officers who lack the current training that the SROs receive.

It’s hardly a public secret that while law enforcement officers are generally good folks, most do not have significant firearms training, and their training varies significant from area to area within states, and from state to state. Unless these law enforcement officers (LEOs) are “gun guys” who seek out additional training on their own time (spending some of the meager salaries to do so), or are detailed to special units, their training is typically rudimentary.

LEOs* generally (notice the qualifier) are limited to training on static targets on a square range with generous time allowances. If they are not trained for the very specialized conditions—long hallways, individual bad guys hiding among a panicked, fleeing mass of “no-shoots”—then simply putting more guns into the equation likely raises the risk of innocent students getting caught in a crossfire. Likewise, the bill McAuliffe vetoed seems expressly designed to address retired officers. Retired officers come in a wide range of conditions and ages, from super-fit, hyper-competent folks I see competing in 3 Gun competitions on the national level in their mid-40s, to doddering 70-somethings that can barely move or see much past their front sight.

For once, I think McAuliffe’s decision may be the correct one.
The bill's sponsor, Delegate Scott Lingamfelter said this was a political veto:
Lingamfelter pointed out that the bill gave school systems the option to allow for armed security officers and would have required them to maintain firearms training to current standards.

"This is the sort of veto that’s done in indelible ink because one day — sadly after a tragedy — people will look back and remember this veto and say ‘We should have put that bill in law,' " he said in a statement.

"This was a bill that had all the right prudent precautions and it died a political death. Let’s hope no more deaths will be tied to this veto, but I fear more will.”
HB1234 did not pass the State Senate with a veto proof majority.

VSSA would be interested on the thoughts of our readers on this one as we have a number of firearm trainers in our membership and reading audience.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

A Purely Political Veto by the Anti-Gun Liberal Left Wing who obviously can't understand what they read and/or can't read !!! . . . SHAME for Future "Preventable" School Incidents will be on them !!!

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The bill states that the individual "must meet the firearms training standards for active law-enforcement officers" and the local school board must grant him or her the authority to carry a firearm in the performance of their duties and is not otherwise prohibited by state or federal law from possessing a firearm.

According to the RTD, the Governor's veto message states:
“This bill would expose schools and students to unnecessary risk and potential harm by allowing individuals without adequate training to carry firearms on school grounds,” McAuliffe said the difference between school resource officers (SROs) and someone who is a retired officer working for a private security company is that SROs undergo regular training and private security officers don't.

SammysDad said...

McAuliffe is a surrogate puppet of the DNC and exposes his liberal indoctrination in everything he does. Unfortunately, even if , in the future, a armed campus security officer could have stopped an incident, the entire liberal establishment from Hollywood, the DNC, and the MSM will cover it up or make excuses for him. The corrupted liberal minds that have been born from the progressive onslaught over the last 40 years has caused despicable politicians to dupe their constituents to believe the most idiotic of ideologies as gospel. Should Virginia elect another democrat in the future, this state will be forever tainted with progressive oppression and increase in immorality and violence.

Anonymous said...

This is obviously a purely Politically Motivated Veto by the Anti-Gun Liberal Left Wing who either can't read & comprehend what they read and/or just quite simply don't CARE !!!

Shame for Any future otherwise "Preventable" School Incidents/Casualties are on THEM !!!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The bill states that the individual "must meet the firearms training standards for active law-enforcement officers" and the local school board must grant him or her the authority to carry a firearm in the performance of their duties and is not otherwise prohibited by state or federal law from possessing a firearm.

According to the RTD, the Governor's veto message states:
“This bill would expose schools and students to unnecessary risk and potential harm by allowing individuals without adequate training to carry firearms on school grounds,” McAuliffe said the difference between school resource officers (SROs) and someone who is a retired officer working for a private security company is that SROs undergo regular training and private security officers don't.