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A view of Jefferson Street and the Lafayette Science Museum is seen from the second floor of the old bank that was most recently home to the Jefferson Street Pub Tuesday, April 25, 2023, at the building in downtown Lafayette, La.

An effort by UL Lafayette to establish a gun-free zone around its Downtown Lafayette Science Museum has been thwarted — for now.

The museum recently put up signs advising its designation as a “safe school zone,” which would mean carrying guns within 1,000 feet of the building would be prohibited.

The Current reported this week that the concentration of schools in Downtown Lafayette effectively put the district off limits. The same goes for areas around UL.

Precinct Capt. David LeBlanc, whose precinct covers the Downtown area, sent an email Tuesday telling officers not to enforce the rule due to legal concerns.

According to the email, that directive came from the LCG legal department along with interim Chief Paul Trouard. KADN’s Wednesday story placed the responsibility for the decision on Mayor-President Monique Boulet, but Boulet’s role in the decision to halt enforcement is unclear. LCG has not responded to a request for comment by The Acadiana Advocate/The Current.

The museum isn’t the only place where there have been efforts to establish a new “safe school zone” outside of a traditional school campus since a new statewide law allowing the concealed carrying of a gun without a permit went into effect in early July.

In New Orleans, the New Orleans Police Department developed a plan to house a vocational school at its French Quarter station, creating a safe school zone covering much of the Quarter. The department and local officials in support of the effort received pushback from Attorney General Liz Murrill and state Sen. Blake Miguez (R-New Iberia), author of the permitless concealed-carry bill, but after a meeting with the AG, decided to move forward with their plans.

Miguez expressed content with the decision to hold off on enforcing a “safe school zone” in downtown Lafayette on the social media platform X, formerly Twitter. “Lafayette is not New Orleans. Just stop already,” Miguez said in a post Tuesday evening, after the email was sent out to LPD officers.

Both the French Quarter and downtown Lafayette are hubs for local nightlife in their respective cities, prompting a high police presence on weekend nights. As such, both areas are also home to many bars, where carrying a firearm is prohibited.

Still, Sgt. Robin Green with the LPD said enforcing laws on the ownership and carrying of firearms hasn’t been a priority for LPD officers patrolling downtown.

“There's a lot of people between Friday and Saturday nights that do frequent that area, and there are people that do carry firearms,” Green said. “That's not why [officers] are out there.”

The Current's Leslie Turk contributed to this reporting.

Email Alena Maschke at alena.maschke@theadvocate.com

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