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North Carolina lawmakers agree private schools can let teachers carry guns

Avi Bajpai, The News & Observer on

Published in News & Features

RALEIGH, N.C. — State lawmakers sent a bill to North Carolina Gov. Josh Stein on Thursday that would allow private schools to authorize teachers or school volunteers to carry concealed handguns on campus.

Under House Bill 193, employees or volunteers at private schools would be allowed to carry firearms or stun guns on school grounds if they receive written permission from the school’s board of trustees or administrative director, have a concealed handgun permit, and complete an approved training course.

The bill would also require schools wanting to allow their employees to carry handguns to adopt “written standard operating procedures” for possessing and carrying weapons on school property and distribute those to parents of students.

Republicans and supporters of gun rights have said the bill will make schools safer by giving them the option to have someone on school grounds who is armed and can deal with a school shooter. Democrats and groups that advocate for stricter gun laws slammed the bill, saying the presence of firearms on campuses would make schools unsafe.

The bill initially passed the House in May nearly along party lines, with one Republican, Rep. Mark Pless of Haywood County, voting against it.

It was subsequently amended by the Senate, where lawmakers approved it in a 29-17 vote that was also largely along party lines. Three Democrats joined Republicans in supporting the bill: state Sens. Dan Blue, Paul Lowe, and Gladys Robinson.

On Thursday, the House took a final procedural vote that was required to agree to the Senate’s amended version of the bill, and send it to Stein.

That vote also fell along party lines, with the exception of one Democrat, state Rep. Shelly Willingham of Rocky Mount, joining Republicans in voting to concur with the Senate’s version of the bill and move it forward.

“Common sense tells you, bringing more guns into schools, where there are children, can only give the probability there will be more accidents,” said state Rep. Marcia Morey, a Durham Democrat. “And if there is a problem, if law enforcement does come in, how will they determine who is the good guy, who is the bad guy, if every employee and volunteer in that school has a gun that’s been drawn?”

 

Another Democrat, state Rep. Carla Cunningham of Charlotte, said she visited schools in rural parts of the state along with a group of other lawmakers that were reviewing school safety, and learned that there were remote or harder-to-reach areas where it could take law enforcement up to 45 minutes to respond to 911 calls.

Cunningham ultimately voted against the bill.

Back in May, when the House first passed HB 193, state Rep. Keith Kidwell of Beaufort County, a top gun rights advocate in the House Republican Caucus said, “It’s only common sense that when a bad guy shows up with a gun, you don’t want to bring a knife to a gun fight or a stick. You want to bring a gun to a gun fight.”

It’s the second bill dealing with firearms that GOP lawmakers have sent to the Democratic governor this year.

Last week, Stein vetoed the first bill, a major Republican initiative to remove the permit requirement for carrying concealed handguns that is currently in law.

Republicans have vowed to override the veto, but have yet to hold a vote.

Lawmakers are planning to adjourn Thursday and return for brief one- or two-day voting sessions roughly once a month through the rest of the year, the first of which is expected to take place in late July.

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©2025 The News & Observer. Visit at newsobserver.com. Distributed at Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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