Knoxville leaders have worked out a compromise with a Loudon County
woman who sued the city in October 2015 after officials declined to
allow guns inside Chilhowee Park.
The lawsuit, filed in Knox
County Circuit Court on behalf of Pandora Vreeland, requested that the
court issue a declaratory judgment to allow those with valid carry
permits to "possess their firearms" inside the park.
It was filed after the Tennessee Valley Fair, which operates each fall at the park, concluded.
At
issue is a Tennessee law that says someone with a gun carry permit can
bring a weapon into a state or city park so long as it’s not close to a
school. City leaders and fair operators, however, said the law does not
apply to the fair.
City leaders noted that Chilhowee Park’s name indicated it was a park, but that it was actually an exhibition center.
The agreement between the city and Vreeland was reached Thursday afternoon.
It
essentially says that handgun permit holders are allowed to carry
handguns in all outdoor facilities of Chilhowee Park so long as there is
not an event. Guns are prohibited in the public assembly buildings
like The Muse, the Jacob Building, the Kerr Building, Homer Hamilton
Theater and Golden Gloves Arena.
Guns also are prohibited in
Chilhowee Park’s outdoor facilities during events so long as the event
includes an admission charge, armed security and entrances that are
marked with signs stating that firearms are not allowed into the event.
In
addition, handguns are prohibited in Chilhowee Park when the outdoor
facilities are limited only to those who are invited to the event by a
sponsor, such as a private club using the area. Again, however, for such
events, the entrances must be secured against entry by the general
public and marked with signs stating that firearms are not allowed
inside for the event.
The Tennessee Firearms Association filed a similar lawsuit against the city. That one hasn’t been settled.
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