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San Joaquin
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If it ain't broke, keep fixin' it 'til it is... -
Congrats. I called to change one a month ago and they said to just tell them when I was approvedComment
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Congrats shenecke!
My wife got a call today. The investigator asked her a couple of questions and told her that her permit was being finalized.
I'm hoping my call is coming soon.If it ain't broke, keep fixin' it 'til it is...Comment
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What day did your wife applyComment
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11-04-2014 | 6:18 PM
Arrieta578
Question:
Lately, San Joaquin County has been asking CCW applicants for their employer's firearm policy statement. Obviously, for liability reasons, most employers are not going to authorize or openly state that their employees can carry firearms at work. As a result, recently issued CCWs now have restrictions on them that state something to the effect "Not authorized to carry firearm at work."
Here is my question: My good friend interviewed on Monday and explained that his employer does not have a written firearm policy because no one has ever asked, but now they are considering writing one. The investigator told him "ok, I will just write on your application that you are not authorized to carry your firearm at work. If something changes or you get a written statement from your employer stating you are authorized to carry at work from someone we can call and verify, then we can change it." But here is the catch: my friend is a Mortgage Broker and it is very difficult to define in his case precisely what "at work" means? For example, is "at work" just his office? Or does it included when he goes to the title company for a sign off? Is that "at work?" What about on the weekends, if he attends an open house with a realtor in a dangerous neighborhood? Is he at work? Or a client's home? Or what if he takes clients to a Sunday golf course or out to the duck blind in order to solicit business? Is he at work then? Finally, even more aggravating is that he is the branch manager and when the alarm at the branch goes off in the middle of the night he is required to go the branch, meet the police, and disarm the alarm. Since he lives very close to where he works, he often beats the police to his office and ends up having to wait for them. Any suggestions as to how he should address this situation?
Last edited by Arrieta578; 11-04-2014 at 6:22 PM..
Does anyone have some good suggestions or insight to this question?Comment
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I work from home, they asked about carry at work, explained the conditions, said they would place a condition where I could not carry at work.
Since I am inside my own home, what I do there is none of their business, I can open carry, put it on a shelf talk to an elf....Comment
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At work for him would be at his office/place of employment, not at a golf course open house or title company even though he might be working.11-04-2014 | 6:18 PM
Arrieta578
Question:
Lately, San Joaquin County has been asking CCW applicants for their employer's firearm policy statement. Obviously, for liability reasons, most employers are not going to authorize or openly state that their employees can carry firearms at work. As a result, recently issued CCWs now have restrictions on them that state something to the effect "Not authorized to carry firearm at work."
Here is my question: My good friend interviewed on Monday and explained that his employer does not have a written firearm policy because no one has ever asked, but now they are considering writing one. The investigator told him "ok, I will just write on your application that you are not authorized to carry your firearm at work. If something changes or you get a written statement from your employer stating you are authorized to carry at work from someone we can call and verify, then we can change it." But here is the catch: my friend is a Mortgage Broker and it is very difficult to define in his case precisely what "at work" means? For example, is "at work" just his office? Or does it included when he goes to the title company for a sign off? Is that "at work?" What about on the weekends, if he attends an open house with a realtor in a dangerous neighborhood? Is he at work? Or a client's home? Or what if he takes clients to a Sunday golf course or out to the duck blind in order to solicit business? Is he at work then? Finally, even more aggravating is that he is the branch manager and when the alarm at the branch goes off in the middle of the night he is required to go the branch, meet the police, and disarm the alarm. Since he lives very close to where he works, he often beats the police to his office and ends up having to wait for them. Any suggestions as to how he should address this situation?
Last edited by Arrieta578; 11-04-2014 at 6:22 PM..
Does anyone have some good suggestions or insight to this question?!Comment
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My father went in today to pick up his permit. He also brought in the information for a lcp 380 he just purchased and qualified with. They would not allow this firearm on the permit because it's registered as a 25acp and not a 380. He informed them it was a SSE and it's in 380 form and that's what he qualified with. They still will not allow it.
I know of a few different people that have SSE guns on their permits that came through as 25 acp.
Not sure what to do now.Comment
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