Los Angeles Times

Gun ban extended to school employees

Separately, California prohibits hate-crime convicts from owning firearms for 10 years.

- By Patrick McGreevy patrick.mcgreevy @latimes.com

SACRAMENTO — Gov. Jerry Brown signed a law Saturday that will remove the rights of school administra­tors to decide whether employees with concealedw­eapon permits can bring guns on campus.

State law already prohibited civilians who are not school workers from bringing firearms onto campuses, but a change in the law last year gave school district superinten­dents power to decide whether employees could bring concealed weapons onto campuses, according to Assemblyma­n Kevin McCarty (D- Sacramento), who authored the bill.

Five California school districts — including the Kingsburg Joint Union and Kern school districts — have begun to issue authorizat­ions for some school employees to bring guns on campuses, McCarty said. He said it has increased the chance of school shootings.

“A safe learning environmen­t is essential for our children to be successful in the classroom,” McCarty said. “That’s not possible if a school district allows armed civilians to roam California school campuses.”

The measure, AB 424, was opposed by groups advocating for gun owners including the National Rifle Assn. and the Firearms Policy Coalition, which noted that there have been no shootings involving California school employees who brought guns to campuses.

“The constituti­onal right to bear arms is based on the fundamenta­l human right to self-defense,” the coalition wrote to lawmakers. “AB 424 undermines these very important principles based on little more than a whim.”

Under separate legislatio­n signed by Brown on Saturday, California­ns who are convicted of hate crimes will be banned from possessing firearms for 10 years.

Assemblyma­n Reggie Jones-Sawyer Sr. (D-Los Angeles) introduced the legislatio­n, AB 785. He recently cited the August violence in Charlottes­ville, Va., as justificat­ion for expanding the gun ban to those who commit hate crimes.

“The recent incident in Charlottes­ville, where heavily armed neo-Nazis, Klansmen and white supremacis­ts, spewing hatred and inciting violence under the guise of protecting free speech and the right to bear arms, is not what the Founding Fathers of this great nation were protecting when they drafted our Constituti­on,” Jones-Sawyer said.

Misdemeano­r hate crimes that will fall under the firearm ban include using force or the threat of force to interfere with another person’s free exercise of any constituti­onal right because of the other person’s race, religion, gender or sexual orientatio­n.

Gun possession will also be banned for people who deface or damage property in order to interfere with constituti­onal rights. For example, a person prosecuted for painting a swastika on a Jewish house of worship could lose their gun possession rights.

Both measures take effect Jan. 1.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? “A SAFE learning environmen­t is ... not possible if a school district allows armed civilians to roam California school campuses,” Assemblyma­n Kevin McCarty said.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press “A SAFE learning environmen­t is ... not possible if a school district allows armed civilians to roam California school campuses,” Assemblyma­n Kevin McCarty said.

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