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Federation Position on Town of Williston Firearms Discharge Ordinance and Proposed Changes TheretoAs it exists now, the Town of Williston Firearm Ordinance forbids firearms discharge in public parks. The town has been interpreting all public lands as parks. The Conservation Committee has raised the issue of whether there are areas of public land that could be safely hunted. This was the start of the review of the present firearm discharge ordinance which has led to the proposed amendment. The Williston Selectboard's ordinance, incorporating the proposed amended language is available at: Click here: http://town.williston.vt.us/ordin/firearm%20amend.pdf There are two areas of concern to the Vermont Federation of Sportsmen's Clubs:
The Vermont Federation of Sportsmen's Clubs holds that these two issues are reasonable concerns that can be readily accomdated.
Vermont League of Cities & Towns Synopsis of H.447, Act 173
Shooting Ranges (H.447, Act 173) H.447 establishes that only an owner of a property that abuts a shooting range may bring a nuisance action for civil damages against the range if the range is out of compliance with any noise use condition of any issued municipal or state land use permit. A shooting range now has a rebuttable presumption that it is not a nuisance if it was established prior to the acquisition of the property by the abutting property owner, and the frequency of the shooting or other alleged nuisance activity has not significantly increased since the abutting property owner acquired his or her property. That presumption may only be overcome by a showing that the activity has a noxious and significant interference with the use and enjoyment of the abutting property. H.447 now requires that, prior to nighttime use of a shooting range by law enforcement agencies for training, the range shall notify abutting property owners if they’ve requested notice. A range shall also try to resolve issues through mediation if an abutting property owner requests it. Parties may thereafter submit the dispute to binding arbitration. The shooting range and property owner will share the cost of arbitration and mediation. The bill also severely limits municipal authority by amending Section 8 of the enumerated powers of a municipality. A municipality may regulate the use or discharge of but not possession of firearms within the municipality or portions thereof, “provided that an ordinance adopted under this subdivision shall be consistent with section 2295 of this title and shall not prohibit, reduce or limit discharge at any existing sport shooting range, as that term is defined in section 5227 of Title 10.” The relevant section of Title 10 defines a sport shooting range as “an area designed and operated for the use of archery, rifles, shotguns, pistols, skeet, trap, black powder, or any other similar sport shooting.” H.447 took effect upon passage, May 5, 2006. (Amends 10 V.S.A. § 5227 and 24 V.S.A. § 2291; adds 10 V.S.A. § 5227a.)
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Updated: 28 November 2007