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<blockquote data-quote="hrdware" data-source="post: 1764871" data-attributes="member: 24475"><p>When it comes down to it, I think we will end up agreeing to disagree until there is a court ruling on the issue.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Agreed, where these people park is not part of the property where the school is located. However these people are not allowed to carry their gun across the parking lot on the way to dropping the child off for class. By the same token, a person could not park off church with a school property and carry a gun across the parking on the way to class because it is a school.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Correct, but if the church falls under the definition of school according to law, how can you argue that sometimes it is and sometimes it isn't. A public school can't choose when it's a school and when it's a voting location just because there are not kids there.</p><p></p><p> </p><p>In this case I would say that the school building and adjoining parking lot are school property. </p><p></p><p></p><p>No, it doesn't matter who owns the parking lot, the law says you can not leave a firearm in your car on a school property. The location is either an accredited school or it isn't. You can't deem it a school when kids are present and not other times. </p><p></p><p></p><p>As I pointed out earlier, home schools don't count because they don't meet the definition of a school. You have to be accredited in order to be considered a school.</p><p></p><p></p><p>I would agree with this only if the separate demarcated area also had it's own parking lot and not a joint parking area.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="hrdware, post: 1764871, member: 24475"] When it comes down to it, I think we will end up agreeing to disagree until there is a court ruling on the issue. Agreed, where these people park is not part of the property where the school is located. However these people are not allowed to carry their gun across the parking lot on the way to dropping the child off for class. By the same token, a person could not park off church with a school property and carry a gun across the parking on the way to class because it is a school. Correct, but if the church falls under the definition of school according to law, how can you argue that sometimes it is and sometimes it isn't. A public school can't choose when it's a school and when it's a voting location just because there are not kids there. In this case I would say that the school building and adjoining parking lot are school property. No, it doesn't matter who owns the parking lot, the law says you can not leave a firearm in your car on a school property. The location is either an accredited school or it isn't. You can't deem it a school when kids are present and not other times. As I pointed out earlier, home schools don't count because they don't meet the definition of a school. You have to be accredited in order to be considered a school. I would agree with this only if the separate demarcated area also had it's own parking lot and not a joint parking area. [/QUOTE]
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