Should people who lawfully possess firearms be
able to leave them locked in their motor vehicles, on business
property? Common sense would say, "yes." All 50 states allow the
transportation of firearms in motor vehicles for all lawful
purposes and 48 states allow the carrying of firearms in vehicles for
personal protection, in some manner.1 More than one of every four of
America`s 65-80 million gun owners carries a firearm in his or her
vehicle for protection.2
The U.S. Constitution and the constitutions of 46
states protect the right to arms and/or self-defense.3 And
since 1986, federal law has protected the right to transport firearms
in vehicles interstate.4
However, over the last few years disagreements
over the right of people to leave firearms locked in their vehicles
on business property have arisen. As a result, five state
legislatures have passed, and during their current legislative
sessions additional states are considering passing, laws to
protect that right.5
The issue began in 2002 in Oklahoma, when the
Weyerhaeuser corporation fired employees for having guns in personal
vehicles on company property. The Oklahoma Legislature responded,
unanimously in the House and by a vote of 92-4 in the Senate, by
prohibiting "any policy or rule" prohibiting law-abiding people "from
transporting and storing firearms in a locked vehicle."
Arguments raised against the right of people,
particularly employees, to leave firearms in locked vehicles on
business property are unconvincing:
- A business owner`s private property rights are
not affected by a law preventing the micro-management of the
lawful contents of a person`s privately-owned automobile.
Moreover, an employer`s private property interests do not trump a
person`s right to have a firearm available for self-defense, if
needed, during the daily commute to and from work. As with all
civil rights, employers and owners of commercial property may not
act with disregard to the rights of citizens. Reasonable
accommodation is the foundation of the protection of all civil
rights.
- A commercial landowner is subject to numerous
limits, imposed by the federal, state and local governments, on
what may and may not occur on its property.
- Employees have a legitimate private property
interest where their automobiles and their contents are concerned.
In our legal system, property rights extend to property other than
land.
- Most gun-related violent crimes in workplaces
are committed by non-employees. According to the Bureau of
Justice Statistics, 84% of all workplace murders are committed by
strangers; 7% are committed by current or former
employees.6 Naturally, strangers and former employees
are not bound by any company policy pertaining to
employees.
- Anyone determined to commit a violent
crime will not be prevented from doing so by a mere company policy
against having guns in cars. This should go without saying, since
criminals are already willing to break laws against murder, rape,
robbery and assault.
- Laws protecting the right to leave firearms in
locked motor vehicles do not authorize a person to have a firearm
outside his or her vehicle.
- Laws protecting the right to leave firearms in
locked motor vehicles on business property specifically protect
the property owner from liability for any related injuries or
damages. Also, if a business prohibits people from possessing the
means to defend themselves in their vehicles, it is potentially
liable for injuries and damages incurred for failure to provide
adequate security.
- The problem of workplace crimes has been
exaggerated. The nation`s violent crime rate has declined every
year since 1991 and is now at a 30-year low, the murder rate is at
a 39-year low, and workplace violent crime has decreased more than
violent crime generally. The National Institute for Occupational
Safety and Health says, "the circumstances of workplace homicides
differ substantially from those portrayed by the media and from
homicides in the general population."7
Notes:
1. Only Illinois and Wisconsin do not have such
laws.
2. USA Today/CNN/Gallup National Poll, Dec.
17-19, 1993.
3. The constitutions of the United States and all
states except California, Iowa, Maryland, Minnesota, New Jersey, and
New York protect the right to possess firearms for protection,
recreation, sports, hunting, and other lawful purposes. Iowa and New
Jersey`s constitutions protect the right to self-defense in general
terms.
4. 18 U.S.C. sec. 926A.
5. In 1998, Kentucky`s Attorney General determined
that state law prohibits employers from prohibiting people from
having firearms in their vehicles. Minnesota`s Right-to-Carry law
(2003) prohibits employers from prohibiting carry permit holders from
having firearms in their vehicles. Laws protecting the right of any
lawful possessor of a firearm to have a firearm in a personally-owned
vehicle were passed in Oklahoma and Alaska in 2005, and Mississippi in 2006.
6. "Violence in the Workplace, 1993-1999," Dec.
2001 (www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/pdf/vw99.pdf). The study also noted,
the highest percentage of work-related murders occur between 8p.m.-12
a.m., when most businesses are closed.
7. "Violence in the Workplace," July 1996
(www.cdc.gov/niosh/violhomi.html). |