Allowing firearms in Campbell County Memorial Hospital in Gillette, or at least parts of it, could help the facility stay ahead of a cantankerous debate over Wyomingâs gun-free zones, which is sure to come up again, said the chairman of the organizationâs board of trustees.
âWhen we can give the governor what he wants, and give the legislators what they want, and possibly give the community what they want too,â Campbell County Health Trustee chairman Alan Stuber told Cowboy State Daily on Tuesday.
CCH is now a gun-free zone, but the topic of possibly allowing firearms in some areas of the hospital came up during the boardâs recent retreat. Stuber, who is a detective with the Gillette Police Department, supports the idea.
A Policy By The Hospital, For The Hospital
During the latest session of the Wyoming Legislature, House Bill 125, which called to repeal the stateâs gun-free zones, passed both chambers by a wide margin, but it was vetoed by Gov. Mark Gordon.
The billâs main sponsor, Rep. Jeremy Haroldson, R-Wheatland, previously told Cowboy State Daily that he intends to introduce a similar bill during the 2025 session.
Gordonâs central argument for his veto was that HB 125 would have amounted to a mandate from the state. That would have taken away the autonomy of local entities, such as hospital boards, to decide gun policies for themselves and their constituents.
Legislators and others who supported HB 125 argued that the right to bear arms under the Second Amendment shouldnât be determined or restricted at the local level.
Stuber said he understands Gordonâs argument, but also understands the opposition to gun-free zones as essentially creating âsoft targetsâ for mass killers. He is suggesting that CCH take the proactive approach of revising its firearms policy now.
Vice Chairman Tom Murphy said he agrees that itâs a discussion worth having.
âI donât think having a sign that says âgun-free zoneâ is any deterrent at all,â to somebody with violent intent toward hospital staff or patients, he said.
But any changes in firearms policy âhas to be specific to this facility. No one facility is exactly like any other,â Murphy said.
Guns Donât Belong In Some Places
Stuber said that based on his experience in law enforcement, he understands why firearms are restricted in some places.
âItâs illegal to carry firearms in the jail. When you arrest somebody, you have to put your gun a lock box before you can take that person into the facility,â he said. âEven our state statues say there are some places where you canât have firearms.â
Likewise, there are some places in CCH where it would best to still ban guns, Stuber said.
For instance, the hospital would likely want to ban firearms in the mental health treatment wing, he said. Firearms should probably also be prohibited around strongly magnetic medical imaging equipment.
And in areas with of the hospital with âa high oxygen content,â discharging a handgun might cause an explosion, so those places should also remain gun-free, Stuber said.
Who Gets To Carry?
Murphy said that if the board decides to move forward with allowing firearms in some sections of CCH, the medial staff and hospital employees must have a say about who gets to be armed and where.
âThere has to be a lot of careful thought put into it, and the people that weâre trying to protect need to have input on that,â he said.
It might come down to requiring that those people who volunteer to be armed undergo extensive training, Murphy said.
Thorough and repeated training is tantamount to being able to respond properly in a high-stress situation, such as possibly having to draw a handgun and fire back at a would-be mass shooter, he said.
âUntil you come across a situation that you are put in, and you have to react to it, you donât know how you will handle that,â he said.
Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.





