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Students for Concealed Carry
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Students for Concealed Carry : ウィキペディア英語版
Students for Concealed Carry
Students for Concealed Carry, formerly Students for Concealed Carry on Campus, is a national grassroots, special-interest organization of U.S. college students, faculty, staff, and others who support allowing citizens with concealed carry permits to carry concealed handguns on college campuses, for self-defense. In addition to using traditional methods to attract students, the organization also makes use of a Facebook page, which has more than 31,000 likes.〔 〕
==History==
Chris Brown, a political science major at the University of North Texas, started Students for Concealed Carry on Campus (SCCC) in the week immediately following the April 16, 2007, Virginia Tech Massacre. Brown ran the organization by himself for about two months (until mid-June 2007), until it became too much of a demand on his time. Brown then ceased taking an active role in the organization.
Without anyone to answer emails or update the website and Facebook pages, the organization languished for a few months, the only real activity being the efforts of three Ohio college students–Stephen Feltoon, Michael Flitcraft, and Bryce Eastlick–to organize the group’s first Empty Holster Protest.
In late August, Scott Lewis, a Texas-based real estate agent and freelance writer who had previously written several essays on the issue of concealed carry on college campuses, responded to a request by the organizers of the Empty Holster Protest for somebody to write a press release about it. After writing the press release, Mr. Lewis contacted Chris Brown and asked him to post the press release on the website and the Facebook page. Mr. Brown responded by relinquishing full control of not only the website and Facebook page but also the entire organization to Lewis, Feltoon, Flitcraft, and Eastlick.
The four new leaders of SCCC then set about establishing a system of governance involving a board of directors (which began with just the four of them), regional directors, and the campus leader system that had already been established by Chris Brown. As the organization grew, the board of directors grew, and the roles evolved. The board of directors came to comprise the regional directors and the national media coordinator (later renamed the director of public relations), and in October 2008, state leaders–a non-board position between the regional directors and campus leaders–were added.
In May 2008, Scott Lewis became the first of the original board members to resign his position (national media coordinator), assuming a less demanding role as a “senior advisor” to the group (he later resigned this position in February 2009; though, he remained involved with the issue in Texas and acted as SCCC’s Texas legislative director during the 2011 Texas Legislative Session).
In July 2008, Mike Guzman, who began his involvement with SCCC as the campus leader for Texas State University and was later appointed to the board of directors as the southwest regional director, was elected as SCCC’s first president. Andrew Dysart, who became the southeast regional director after his own organization George Mason University Students for Concealed Carry was merged with SCCC in late 2007, was elected the first vice president.
In August 2008, SCCC held its first national conference, at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. C-SPAN provided live coverage of the event.
Vice President Andrew Dysart resigned the following September, to take a job with the NRA. Rocky Mountain regional director Al Baker was elected the new vice president. In late-2008 and early-2009, SCCC’s three remaining original board members (Feltoon, Flitcraft, and Eastlick) each chose to move on to the next stages of their lives, leaving their official involvement with SCCC behind. However, each maintained some level of involvement with the movement to legalize licensed concealed carry on college campuses.
Several of SCCC’s second generation of board members, including President Mike Guzman, resigned in the fall of 2009. Upon the departure of Mike Guzman, the roles of president and vice president were temporarily abolished, and Al Baker returned to his previous role as Rocky Mountain regional director.
In the fall of 2010, SCCC’s board of directors named former University of Kentucky campus leader, long-time SCCC media team member, and then-Director of Public Relations David Burnett as the organization’s second president.
In the spring of 2011, SCCC shortened its name to Students for Concealed Carry (SCC) and appointed former Texas Director and then-Southwest Director Daniel Crocker as the organization’s third president.
On August 8, 2011, SCC held its second national conference, at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. As before, C-SPAN televised the event live.
As of September 2014, all public colleges in Utah and Colorado are required by state law to allow licensed concealed carry on campus (there is a concerted effort to get it banned in Colorado, but those efforts have, thus far, fallen short). Idaho state law allows concealed carry by holders of the state's "enhanced" license (public colleges cannot prohibit it), and Mississippi allows it for holders of a Mississippi license with an "enhanced" endorsement (again, public colleges cannot prohibit it). The Kansas Legislature passed a campus carry bill in 2013, but it does not fully go into effect until January 1, 2018. There are other states where campus carry is allowed to varying degrees (e.g., on campuses but not in buildings, as is the case in Texas) and where it is allowed by state law but not school policy (e.g., Oregon), but Colorado, Idaho, Mississippi, and Utah are the only states where concealed carry is currently allowed in most buildings on all public campuses, by both state law and school policy. It should be noted that these four states do have some restrictions. For example, the Idaho law prohibits concealed carry in venues seating more than 1,000 people and in dormitories, and some Mississippi and Colorado campuses have policies against carrying in certain locations such as auditoriums and student housing.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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