What do you call a law that forces employers to accept guns on their property, when doing so makes it impossible to provide a safe workplace under the Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSHA)?
Ridiculous?
What do you call a law that could force guns onto the private property of a homeowner who doesnât want them?
Outrageous?
In Oklahoma, they call it âunenforceable.â
Last Thursday, October 4, Judge Terence Kern of the Federal District Court in Tulsa, Oklahoma, issued a 93-page injunction [pdf document] that rejected the gun lobbyâs fiercest effort yet to force guns into Americaâs workplaces. Notably, the courtâs opinion cited the Brady Center report on this critical subject â Forced Entry: The National Rifle Association’s Campaign To Force Businesses To Accept Guns At Work â no fewer than five times.
Under the âforced entryâ statutes that Judge Kern rejected (Okla. Stat. §§21-1289.7 and 1290.22(B)), someone who kept a gun in their car would have the right to take their weapon almost anywhere there was a parking lot â courthouses, mental health facilities, day care centers, and almost every private business. Even some homeowners in Oklahoma may not have been able to prevent a guest from driving onto their property with a firearm in his or her automobile. (See pp. 61-62 of the opinion [pdf document].)
Does that make sense to you? Should a guest be able to tell you what you can do on the property that you bought and paid for? Somehow it does to the NRA. Yet to most Americans [see table 8.2] with a more traditional understanding of private property, the Oklahoma law was completely irrational. That helps explain why the NRAâs attempts to pass similar laws have failed in Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, Texas and nine other states over the last two years.
As it happens, however, Judge Kern didnât reject the Oklahoma âforced entryâ law because it contradicted a basic understanding of private property. Instead, Judge Kern found it impossible for an Oklahoma employer to simultaneously follow the stateâs bizarre âforced entryâ gun law and fulfill its general duty under OSHA âto protect [ ] employees from recognized hazards that are likely to cause death or serious bodily injury.â The court rightly concluded that an employerâs general duty âextends to the hazard of gun-related workplace violenceâ and that such violence âis a âhazardâ that is likely to cause death or serious bodily injury to employees.â
The evidence is clearly on the courtâs side. And itâs just common sense.
Due to the courtâs decision, working families in Oklahoma can rest easier knowing that now business owners have control over their property again, and that they can punch their time-clocks without worrying about how many of their co-workers have a semi-automatic firearm out in the parking lot because the law said it was OK.
Itâs not OK, and now they have the right to say so.
(Note to readers: This entry, along with past entries, has been co-posted on bradycampaign.org/blog and the Huffington Post.)

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