Los Angeles Times

How cities can fight back against bad gun laws

- By Ian Ayres and Fredrick Vars and Fredrick Vars are law professors at Yale University and the University of Alabama, respective­ly, and co-authors of the book “Weapon of Choice: Fighting Gun Violence While Respecting Gun Rights.”

Bad gun laws have claimed yet another victim, but not the kind you might be thinking of. This year’s Music Midtown Festival in Atlanta was recently canceled because the organizers believed Georgia law did not allow them to prohibit firearms at the event. The cancellati­on might have saved lives, but it cost the local economy an estimated $50 million. And there may have been a way to hold the festival while still allowing organizers to prohibit firearms at the event.

The cancellati­on of the Music Midtown Festival occurs at the intersecti­on of two legal truths regarding gun law restrictio­ns: Private landowners can exclude people with firearms, but cities and counties in Georgia cannot restrict firearms on public land. The music festival fell somewhere in between. It was going to be held in a public park that festival organizers had rented for two days. According to the lease, the festival could exclude people without tickets, but under recent Georgia case law, the festival could not exclude people carrying guns.

We can derive several important lessons from the cancellati­on of the festival. The first lesson is narrow: Georgia case law is plainly wrong. Any time the government temporaril­y transfers to a private party or entity the right to exclude others from a public space, that right should include the right to exclude people with firearms (no less than wedding crashers). The space is private, not public, for the duration of the lease.

The broader issue extends well beyond Georgia. State laws severely limit the ability of local government­s to regulate firearms. In nearly every state, cities and counties are preempted from regulating guns — only the state can do that. This preemption principle hamstrings cities such as Atlanta that are located in more conservati­ve states from enacting ordinances that restrict gun use.

However, partial privatizat­ion of public land in this circumstan­ce can provide a solution to this problem. Private landowners are not preempted by state law from prohibitin­g firearms on their property. My right to bear arms stops at your property line.

Short-term “privatizat­ion” through a lease could have solved Atlanta’s music festival problem. Although the Atlanta City Council cannot decide to ban guns in its parks because of state law, it is free to enter into a short-term lease — renting the park to a private party.

The council could have made it clear that the rental also transferre­d to the festival organizers the right to decide who could enter the event. Even in Georgia, with its misguided case law, cities have the right to transfer short-term ownership rights in land to private parties. The privatizat­ion approach has already been applied in Missouri.

In 2017, the entertainm­ent district of Westport, a small neighborho­od in Kansas City, was facing a public safety and public relations nightmare. The number of gun-related weapons offenses had risen from 16 in 2016 to 65, and consumers were shying away from the district’s concentrat­ion of restaurant­s and bars. To make matters worse, a new Missouri state law allowing anyone to carry concealed weapons without a permit in nearly every public space had gone into effect earlier in 2017. Westport’s restaurant­s and bars could prohibit patrons from carrying weapons onto their premises, but there was nothing they or the City Council could do to keep armed pedestrian­s from carrying weapons on the public sidewalks and streets.

Westport used the tool of privatizat­ion. The district’s businesses lobbied the City Council to sell them a two-block stretch of sidewalks in the core entertainm­ent district. While state law allows pedestrian­s to carry weapons on public streets and sidewalks, Westport businesses could prohibit weapons on private sidewalks by requiring visitors to pass metal detectors on weekend nights and during festivals. After the “sidewalk privatizat­ion” proposal went into effect in late 2018, gun-related offenses in that area dropped dramatical­ly when the security screenings were in place.

The Westport example shows that privatizat­ion doesn’t have to mean excluding the general public from an area. It just gives a private party a sufficient property interest to make a decision about whether guns are allowed there.

The privatizat­ion approach has added importance after the Supreme Court’s recent 2nd Amendment decision. New York is trying to defend its ban on firearms in Times Square by arguing that it is a “sensitive location” sufficient­ly analogous to the kinds of laws “forbidding the carrying of firearms in sensitive places such as schools and government buildings,” for which the Supreme Court has signaled its approval. But there is uncertaint­y over whether the Supreme Court will uphold as constituti­onal gun bans in entertainm­ent districts.

Partially privatizin­g these public spaces avoids this uncertaint­y, by giving a private party the final say. The 2nd Amendment stops government from unduly infringing the right of the people to keep and bear arms. It doesn’t stop private property owners from choosing to keep their spaces — even if temporaril­y leased — gun free.

Places such as Atlanta are prohibited by state law from regulating guns on streets, but short-term privatizin­g of public spaces can be a work-around.

Ian Ayres

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