South Carolina Controllers Scramble To Ban Open Carry
BY Herschel Smith3 years ago
After passage in the House and Senate, and signature by the governor of S.C., the exception was made in the new law that cities could ban open carry in public buildings and parades. With that exception, there has been a massive scramble to do just this. It’s now Columbia, Greenville, Charleston, Spartanburg, and now Conway.
CONWAY, S.C. (WBTW) — Conway’s police chief supports the new rule passed by Conway City Council Monday that bans openly carrying guns in city buildings and during city-sponsored events.
The City of Conway passed the second and final reading of a new gun law following Monday’s city council meeting.
“It’s just an ongoing process of trying to get some things that would help out with some of our city buildings and venues,” Conway Police Chief Dale Long said.
The new ordinance was unanimously passed at Monday’s city council meeting.
“You cannot carry into state house, you can’t carry it into the state senators or legislators office, you can’t carry it in courthouses,” Long said. “And we just decided here in the City of Conway, there’s a need for our city buildings, like coming into the police station or go into city court.”
In November, the City of Florence also passed an ordinance implementing those same restrictions. As Conway joins it, News13 reached out to other cities to see if they had considered the same.
In a statement from North Myrtle Beach public information officer, Pat Dowling, he said: “Weapons are not allowed in city buildings in NMB, including concealed weapons. the city has not addressed open carry at city events.”
For other cities like Darlington and Hartsville, the issue has yet to come to council.
“We are still exploring the best path forward for this in the city of Hartsville to keep all of our employees and residents safe in city facilities and at events,” Lauren Baker, public information officer for the City of Hartsville, said in a statement to News13.
Long said he believes this was a good call on council’s part in keeping the community safe.
“If you’re coming to do city business and at times, there could be things that you’re not happy with the way things would go. And we just wanted to make sure that we try to de-escalate things before they could even become a problem,” he said.
But of course the police chief supports a ban, as they will support gun bans everywhere, all of the time. And that last paragraph makes no sense whatsoever … “there could be things that you’re not happy with the way things would go.”
It doesn’t even make grammatical sense, and it doesn’t because he can’t even elucidate the concern.
But boy do we feel safer. Guys are hiding their weapons rather than carrying them openly.
But hey, as long as they’re hidden from view, they don’t exist …
No comments yet.
RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URL
Leave a comment