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Meeting Notes 102516
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Meeting Notes 102516
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4 <br />feel that you are entitled to investigate. I have put up No Trespassing signs, which people ignore, <br />and I have spoken to them to ensure that it does not happen again. I do what I can to ensure that I <br />and all my people are going to be safe. I handle every one of my shooters. As a CCH instructor I <br />make sure that my students know how to shoot before they leave. I take the extra time to do that. <br />But it’s true, they might not all do that. I know casual shooters, but I am not a casual shooter. I’ll <br />be the first one to jump into somebody’s business and say, “You need to be more careful,” or <br />“You need to make sure you have that.” But I do it in a friendly way. Not in a manner that’s <br />ungoverned. I do it in a common sense way, which we all know is not all that common. I don’t <br />understand when people say gunfire sounds dangerous, because a barking dog sounds dangerous <br />to me, rap music sounds dangerous; we can’t go by what sounds dangerous. A gun can be <br />dangerous in the wrong hands, but that is not what this Committee is here to address. The draft is <br />telling me what I can and cannot do, on land that has been in my family’s hands for generations. <br />That offends me. It offends me that this is your business when I’m not hurting you, not placing <br />you in danger. Even though you perceive it that way. I’m helping countless women.I have brand <br />new shooters. Women who have never picked up a gun. By the time we’re done they are <br />empowered, they are confident in their abilities. And I encourage them: this is where it starts, <br />and this is where it stops. A formal range is expensive, and a lot of these ladies are not going to <br />do it. So they will carry a handgun, licensed by the State of North Carolina, by whatever County <br />they are in, without training if you put severe limitations on them. <br />Andy [last name?]–Thanked Committee for taking the time to listen to meeting observers’ <br />comments. Is concerned that language in section (g) addressing noise is arbitrary and ambiguous, <br />and potentially limits what he can do on his own property. Prefers to shoot at a gun club, because <br />everything already is set up there, but sometimes likes to shoot on his own 10-acres. I can build a <br />berm, I can comply with that part, but has had experiences with neighbors about the noise from <br />his shooting. I have alerted them that I was going to shoot, and it was not received well. They <br />have a problem with the noise. I’m afraid that the ambiguous language in the draft ordinance if it <br />were passed into law could be abused by people who just don’t want others to shoot. <br />Riley Rusky –Thanked the Committee for all the hard work it has done. But you have worked <br />for a solution to a non-existing problem. When all is said and done, this is no different from your <br />very first meeting, when the data presented by the various police departments showed there is no <br />problem to be solved here about firearms safety. There just aren’t the incidents. So you devolved <br />to the issue of noise, and ended up with a very incomprehensible way to determine how shooting <br />is too noisy. I don’t understand it, and Idon’t know if anyone else can understand it. I don’t see <br />how you can enforce it in a fair and consistent manner. I see in the draft that you still want to <br />maintain the compounding of errors so you can maximize the penalties to anybody who does <br />make a mistake and gets caught. I think that is absolutely wrong. You’re splitting it up into little <br />segments so you can fine people on each different item. C’mon folks: treat people decently and
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