Fox News is reporting that colleges around the country are "on edge" after three separate incidents in Colorado, Georgia and Kentucky claimed four lives over the course of ten days.
But a report from West Virginia University indicates that school is taking what might be a preemptive course of action to deter deadly crimes on its campus. According to WVU Today, the school's Board of Governors has taken "the next step… to implement the Campus Self-Defense Act which goes into effect July 1."
The law was signed last year by West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice. It allows West Virginians who possess a concealed carry permit to carry a defensive sidearm on the campus of a state college or university beginning July 1.
It's an interesting development in a nation where most colleges and universities prohibit any kind of weapon on their campus grounds. But the recent deaths in the Fox New focus may have some people re-thinking that position. According to Fox:
According to the university, "A web page has been established for those who want to learn more about the law and follow updates about how it will be implemented across the WVU System. FAQs and other pertinent information can be found there, with more to be added in the weeks and months ahead."
April Kaull, executive director of Communications at WVU, told TGM via email the university is required to adhere to the Campus Self-Defense Act. It "allows a person to carry a concealed pistol or revolver on the grounds of an institution of higher education, with some exceptions, if that person has a current and valid license to carry a concealed deadly weapon."
The university has had a police department since 1961, she noted.
Additional information about the University's implementation plan is available here with Frequently Asked Questions here.
In January 2002, a 43-year-old former student named Peter Odighizuwa fatally shot two faculty members and a student at the Appalachian School of Law in Grundy, Virginia Two students, both of whom had personal firearms in their vehicles because they were off-duty police officers, retrieved those guns independently of one another and confronted the killer, who was subdued by several students.
This incident is occasionally used to highlight the importance of being able to carry a firearm on campus, rather than leaving it in a vehicle