Do they have it on the site when you make a reservation online? If not, that is not effective notice.The Holiday Inn in Frisco has a 30.06 sign but not a 30.07. When you check in the desk clerk notifies you of said sign, and says they require all firearms to be openly carried on the premises. When I check in I always reach down and tuck my shirt behind my holster. The desk clerk told me the first time that she was sorry but if they don’t make that notification, they get fired.
Never made a reservation from the website, I use the IHG app, and it pops up on the screen before you finalize the reservation.Do they have it on the site when you make a reservation online? If not, that is not effective notice.
The Holiday Inn in Frisco has a 30.06 sign but not a 30.07. When you check in the desk clerk notifies you of said sign, and says they require all firearms to be openly carried on the premises. When I check in I always reach down and tuck my shirt behind my holster. The desk clerk told me the first time that she was sorry but if they don’t make that notification, they get fired.
That is the only place I've ever seen or heard of that happening. When work is going well, I do a fair amount of traveling to lots of places. I have stayed in hotels in some majorly leftist cities that had lots of gun restrictions that I ignore, but that one is very hard to ignore when the desk clerk gives verbal notice to every person checking in.That's a new one - a business that *wants* you to carry openly, vs concealed if you're carrying a firearm. I'd think their insurance carrier would mandate no-carry, and if there's no insurance mandate, that if they're tolerant of carry on property they'd prefer concealed carry just to minimize complaints.
Well I suppose that would meet the legislated requirement.Never made a reservation from the website, I use the IHG app, and it pops up on the screen before you finalize the reservation.