Orange County NC Website
2 <br />Statutes. If there is a problem with the General Statutes then we should fix them, but we do not <br />need to pile regulations upon the statutes. Additionally, a lot of people who live in the rural area <br />know that in such areas people are going to hunt, engage in sports shooting, etc. It’s like living <br />near the airport and complaining about the soundof the airplanes. I bought my house knowing it <br />was near a railroad line. I don’t complain. If you live in the rural area then sometimes guns will <br />go off. If they are not shooting at you then don’t worry. And if it keeps going late at night, then <br />there is a General Statute for that. <br />Chad Resnik–Noted that there are no time restrictions in the definition of “unreasonably loud.” <br />Explained that all firearms create noisewithin the range of 164-169 decibels. What is different <br />across situations is the amount of time that the firearm stays at that peak noise. For example, the <br />peak millisecond of sound pressure for a .50 rifle stays at that higher level. Anything moving at <br />rate sufficient to create a supersonic crack will usually create noise in the range of 164-169 <br />decibels. So, the noise is the same except for the length of timeit is sustained.Asked who will <br />decide whether or not the length of time is unreasonable or inappropriate.I bought the 18 acres I <br />live on so that I could shoot. I shoot far away from others. I own a suppressor company. I shoot <br />at night. I want to be sure that if the County is going to impose restrictions that, first, the <br />restrictions can be followed and, second, I can understand them so I’m not that dude everyone <br />hates. Said he wants to follow the rules, but needs a plain English definition of “disturbing” in <br />order to do so, as opposed to what he is reading in the draft ordinance, especially the lastpart, <br />“being a type of sound which could be lessened or otherwise controlled by the maker without <br />unduly restricting his conduct.” Is it the intention that people use suppressors? I can’t tell. My <br />other concernis, given the ease with which people are able to obtain a CCH permit –and this is <br />not going to make me popular --that we have people who cannot shoot. I am a Department of <br />Defense sniper instructor, doing a lot of work with elite Special Forces groups. I am the sniper <br />instructor for the NC Tactical Officers Association. I and another person, a Chapel Hill officer, <br />are the only ones certified to go onto a military range, and so help to make the Association’s <br />SWAT Competition possible. I am a Concealed Carry Handgun instructor. The state requires that <br />I teach you to clean your gun but not how to carry your gun safely. The draft ordinance limits the <br />avenues people have to train on their own property on their own time. We’re not going to change <br />the fact that people are carrying concealed handguns, but we can try not to obstruct their ability <br />to do it safely. The current draft ordinance is much better than the earlier version; this one is less <br />horrible. I understand the concerns completely. I don’t like having people outside of my back <br />window shooting. Idon’t like it now hearing others shoot at the distance I’m hearing it, and I <br />would not like it if they were closer to me. We are moving down the right path. I was under the <br />impression that this is a gun safety committee, not a regulate-how-guns-are-used committee. <br />There is a reason the Second Amendment is second only to the rights to speech, press, petition, <br />assembly, and religion. It is an unalienable right the Creator gave us. We’re not having a <br />discussion about whether or not I can have a gun. Right nowwe are arguing whether or not I can <br />shoot it on my property. I think that there is some middle ground here. We really have to take