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Shooting legal on most of Key Peninsula
By William C. Dietz
KP News
“I have one specific neighbor who
wears guns strapped to him while gardening, playing ball
with his kids, or just walking around the house,” a
reader wrote to the Key Peninsula News not long ago.
“The police have arrested him, but he continues to
shoot. There are eight homes on our road and they all
either have pets or children or both. We as neighbors
are concerned but feel our hands are tied.”
It’s legal to wear a gun while
working in your yard, according to Lt. Larry Bauer,
chief of the Pierce County Sheriff’s Department
Peninsula Detach-ment, but you can’t necessarily fire
it. That depends on where you live.
“We get a lot of people coming into
the (Peninsula Detachment) office for information,”
Bauer says. Of course, it seems safe to assume that
most, if not all, of the folks who come in to peer at
the wall-mounted “Key Peninsula No-Shoot” map are
responsible sports people, checking to see where they
can legally discharge firearms, since reckless shooters
aren’t likely to bother.
According to the map (see left),
the vast majority of Key Peninsula is open to shooting,
which stands in marked contrast to the Gig Harbor area.
A fact likely to please residents who want to preserve
the Key Peninsula’s rural character, and likely to
trouble those who feel the area is too populated for
activities like hunting or target shooting.
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Is
your home in a legal shooting zone?
For a
personalized view of the map go online to:
http://triton.co.pierce.wa.us./council/address/index.cfm.
Once there, enter your house number plus
street, click “Find Address,” select “Map
Link,” and you’ll arrive at a page called
“Info By Address.” You’ll see all sorts of
interesting information there, including a
blue box that allows you to select a “Map
Layer.” Click on “Firearms Restrictions” and
zoom in to see whether you live in a
restricted area. |
Of
course there’s responsible shooting, as practiced by
thousands of hunters and target shooters, and then
there’s the other stuff. Like firing weapons towards
houses and barns. And that’s illegal regardless of
where you do it. Bauer says: “We’ll get a complaint of
someone shooting in an area. If we can see evidence that
someone is shooting from one house toward another house,
we’ll go talk to them. And if we determine that it’s
reckless, we can arrest them.”
Which is to say that Bauer and his
deputies want to help — but it’s difficult, if not
impossible, for them to do anything without some sort of
proof. That can be difficult to collect where shooting
incidents are concerned.
So how bad is the overall problem?
Given the fact that most of the Key Peninsula is open to
shooting, and that only 43 “Shots Fired” complaints were
received during a 13-month period of time (see chart),
that averages out to about three reported incidents per
month. (For a
.pdf file of the chart data, please click here.)
Why
are some areas closed to shooting while others aren’t?
The process to close an area works like this: First,
those favoring such a ban have to get 60 percent of the
property owners in the area they envision as a
no-shooting zone to sign a petition in favor of the
proposal. And, because the property owners must be
registered voters too, that makes the process of
gathering signatures that much more demanding. It also
means that residents who rent their homes can’t
participate in the petition process.
Then, assuming that the necessary
number of qualified signatures is gathered, the petition
would be turned over to the Pierce County Firearms
Advisory Commission. It’s a group which, according to
Sean Gaffney, senior planner for the department of
Planning and Land Services, consists of four members who
represent gun clubs, three members who don’t represent
gun clubs, and two nonvoting members.
Having reviewed the petition, and
the detailed documentation submitted along with it, the
Firearms Advisory Commission makes a recommendation that
is forwarded to the Pierce County Council for a final
decision. Up until this point the council has never gone
against such a recommendation but it theoretically
could.
A proposal that would restrict
shooting in the Palmer Lake area was submitted to the
council in November 2005 but the petitioners are still
awaiting a decision.
For detailed information regarding
the petition process, direct your browser to the Pierce
County Council Website (www.co.pierce.wa.us),
choose “Pierce County Code and Charter” on the right
side of the page, and choose “Title 9 Criminal Code.”
Once you arrive there, page down to 9.32.070, which is
titled “Discharge of Firearms Prohibited or
Restricted.”
Legal shooting areas also have
restrictions — including those listed in a county
ordinance that states, “….it shall be unlawful to
discharge a firearm within 500 feet toward any building
occupied by people or domestic animals or used for
storage of flammable or noncombustible materials. It
shall be unlawful to discharge a firearm within 1,000
feet toward any K-12 school within the county.”
Anyone not familiar with the rules
of gun safety, or in need of a quick refresher, may find
useful to review the National Rifle Association gun
safety rules posted at
www.nrahq.org/education/guide.asp.
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
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