Apparently, those places include the 10 state psychiatric hospitals, which treat patients with serious mental illnesses.
Another law in effect fines state agencies for improperly hanging “no-gun” signs.
This week, Austin State Hospital took down such a sign and replaced it with one asking people to kindly keep firearms out of the premises.
Still, the idea of bringing guns into hospitals for patients with mental issues is raising eye brows among anti-gun activists and Second Amendment supporters alike.
Beth Mitchell of Disability Rights Texas, a federally-funded organization advocating for people suffering mental illness, says it makes “no sense.”
“I don’t know who concocted this idea, who thought this would be a rational policy for the state of Texas,” Mitchell told The Statesman. “It’s only going to going to create fear among the patients themselves.”
Terry Holcomb of Texas Carry says the new law was not intended to welcome guns at psychiatric hospitals.
“Nobody would have asked for that,” Holcomb said. “It’s not something we ever would have considered. Ever.”
Despite the new freedoms, hospital officials are urging visitors to keep firearms out of the facilities.
“While licensed visitors are legally permitted to carry on our hospital campuses, our patients are being actively treated for psychiatric conditions, and generally it’s best not to expose them to weapons of any kind,” said Carrie Williams, spokeswoman for the Department of State Health Services.
Formerly existing law banned concealed guns at state-licensed general and specialty hospitals. However, that rule did not apply to the 10 psychiatric hospitals because they are not licensed by the state.