The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Deal calls for more patrols at campuses

Governor asks civilian police to add security, weighs signing bill.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

Gov. Nathan Deal urged civilian police department­s to tighten security around college campuses as he weighs whether to sign a sweeping gun rights expansion that would legalize more firearms on university property.

Deal has signaled he’s likely to sign the controvers­ial proposal after lawmakers acceded to his demands for more exceptions to the measure. The Legislatur­e’s refusal to add those exemptions last year to another campus gun bill helped spur the governor’s veto of the measure.

But on Monday he urged local police department­s to ramp up patrols around college campuses, saying he’s “not satisfied” they have taken proper security measures to protect students, faculty and staff.

“It’s one thing to simply rail against students having the right to defend themselves,” Deal said. “But those students have a right to expect that civilian law enforcemen­t would give them the protection they deserve.”

Deal said he wasn’t singling out the Atlanta Police Department or any other agency, but he said he was pleased with the “significan­t efforts” made by the University System of Georgia to improve security on campus since last year’s veto.

The governor added that he was particular­ly concerned about off-campus parking lots that could be targeted by criminals who know, under the current law, that college students parking there

are likely to be “defenseles­s” because they aren’t permitted to bring their weapons on campus.

“When you have a college campus, if it’s in an area where we’ve seen examples where students have been targeted, I would think that just common sense would say there should be extraordin­ary additional support from civilian law enforcemen­t to protect those students,” he said.

The governor has until May 9 to sign or veto the measure, but he has been largely positive about the bill in recent appearance­s. He has said repeatedly that he’s pleased with changes that would bar guns from on-campus child care facilities, faculty and administra­tive office space, and disciplina­ry meetings.

The measure’s critics hope to remind the governor of his stinging veto, which invoked an opinion Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia issued in 2008 describing colleges as “sanctuarie­s of learning where firearms have not been allowed.”

When pressed on how he wants local police department­s to amp up security, Deal said they should “show they’ve tailored their hours and the number of people who are available” at off-campus parking lots and other heavily trafficked areas.

“I think they can show that they have done that,” he said. “I have not been told, nor have I seen evidence, that has occurred.”

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