Surf City’s gun range might limit public’s use
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Eron Ben-Yehuda
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- A city consultant fired off a report this month
that shot holes through plans for an indoor gun range to replace the
outdoor one closed for safety reasons in 1997.
If the city builds an indoor shooting facility on the 17000 block of
Gothard Avenue, Pulse Marketing estimates annual budget deficits will run
between $200,000 and $400,000, the report shows.
“This is going to be a very tough thing to make financially feasible,”
said Ron Hagan, the city’s community services director.
To reduce the risk of losing revenue, the report suggests limiting, if
not eliminating, the number of recreational shooters who can use the
range.
“I think it’s a terrible loss to the city of Huntington Beach,” said
John Lynch, political activities chairman for the local chapter of the
National Rifle Assn. “You’re never going to get the civilian community to
pay for it if you’re not going to let them use it.”
But City Councilman Tom Harman said there’s very little demand for a
gun range open to the general public.
“It’s crazy,” he said. “How many people do you know [who] are running
around looking for a gun range in town?”
The shooting facility could make money as a regional training center
for local law enforcement agencies, which would pay the city for its use,
Hagan said.
With a city gun range, the Huntington Beach Police Department wouldn’t
have to travel far for training, saving about $42,000 annually, the
report notes. The city could also save about $160,000 per year by
building on city land instead of buying private property, such as the
proposed Randall Lumbar site on Gothard, Hagan said.
The prospects for a city gun range depend a great deal on Fountain
Valley, which plans to replace its own aging shooting facility, Hagan
said. City staff will meet with Fountain Valley officials Tuesday to
discuss either building a joint facility or letting one city take over
because two ranges so close together would never survive financially, he
said.
No time has been set for city staff to make a recommendation to the
City Council, he said.
The old outdoor gun range operated from the late 1960s until January
1997, when the council shut down the facility because of safety concerns.
In February 1996, a stray bullet fired by a police officer in training
whizzed through a sliding glass door at a home on Ford Drive. No one was
hurt.
READER QUESTION
SHOOTING GALLERY
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