Since no one noted my previous post, I went and looked it up for everyone:sugar land dave wrote:I seem to remember reading an Attorney General opinion from several years ago. It stated his thoughts that although a municipality could not regulate chl carry in city parks, counties could perhaps regulate chl carry in the county parks. Sorry, I do not have a link handy.
http://www.txdps.state.tx.us/administra ... .HTM#rapid
Prohibition of hanguns on rapid transportation and in city parks
August 30, 1995
Honorable Ron Wilson
Chair
Licensing and Administrative Procedures
House of Representatives
P.O. Box 2910
Austin, Texas 78768-2910
Opinion No. DM-364
...In answer to your third and last question, we believe that a municipality does not have the power to prohibit licensees from carrying handguns in city parks but that a county does have such power over county parks.
...Neither the concealed handgun law nor any other statute has restricted a county's police power over its parks under section 331.007 of the Local Government Code. We believe that section 331.007 permits the "governing body of a [county] park" to adopt a rule providing for the exclusion or ejection of persons carrying handguns from a county park if such a rule is reasonably necessary and appropriate for the accomplishment of a legitimate object falling within the county's police power under section 331.007. See Falfurrias Creamery Co. v. City of Laredo, 276 S.W.2d at 353.
...A county has the power to adopt a rule providing for the exclusion or ejection of persons carrying handguns from county parks if such a rule is reasonably necessary and appropriate for the accomplishment of a legitimate object falling within the county's police power under section 331.007 of the Local Government Code. The reasonableness and necessity of a measure taken under the county's police power is, in the first instance, a matter within the county's discretion. The courts would not disturb a county's regulation of handguns in county parks unless the regulation were clearly shown to be unreasonable and arbitrary.
Yours very truly,
DAN MORALES
Attorney General of Texas
JORGE VEGA
First Assistant Attorney General
SARAH J. SHIRLEY
Chair, Opinion Committee
Prepared by James B. Pinson
Assistant Attorney General
This is still on the DPS CHL website and has apparently not been superseded .