The college campus provision basically left the exact language we had before where you can't carry on a college campus unless it is locked in a motor vehicle or in the process of being locked in a motor vehicle, and all they did was add on to the end of that section the phrase -or if the college permits it (paraphrased)- So basically they left it up to the colleges to make rules permitting carrying on their campuses. First, I don't think many of them actually will, so the bill might have no effect. And second, I have concerns for the whole idea of R.C. 9.68 and Ohioans for Concealed Carry v. Clyde decision if we start taking the rulemaking authority from the legislature and putting it in other bodies. That's a slope I don't want to slide down.
As for the daycare centers, I also don't think that will have much effect in reality. They removed day care centers from the list of prohibited places, but then created a new crime for carrying in a day care center if there is a posted sign saying no guns. It is a misdemeanor of the first degree rather than an m4 criminal trespass, and a felony on a second offense. That's all fine, but right now day care centers are required to have a no guns sign. I think in reality, very few, if any, will remove their signs, so the practical result of the bill will be no change at all. You still won't be able to carry in a day care center, and if you do in violation of a sign, it will still be an M1 instead of an M4 like all other locations are.
But again, those are relatively minor issues (unless the supreme court invalidates 9.68 based on them, which is unlikely), so I can't stress enough how excited I am for this bill. It recognizes some fundamental aspects of concealed carry that have been neglected by our state that other states seem to understand. And that's that by prohibiting carry in some places means it also prohibits carrying on the way to and from those places. Remedying that is a major victory in my opinion.