Last week
hunter education instructors across the state began receiving letters
from the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission (NCWRC) informing
them they must begin posting facilities where courses are held against
lawful carry.
This posting will make it illegal for anyone to possess firearms
on the premises, whether or not they are participating in the course.
This creates logistic problems for many ranges that freely offer
facilities for hunter education classes, as facilities are used by
non-participating members for other purposes.
The
mere appearance of such signs has become offensive to those who value
Second Amendment rights and recognize that we are responsible for
self-defense at all times, everywhere we go. NCWRC should have been more sensitive to these issues, and sought input before demanding the display of distasteful signage.
Apparently
what precipitated NCWRC's sudden desire for posting was a hunter safety
participant surprised by being asked to disarm during a course. NCWRC
claims that it is only trying to enforce a 10 year-old policy, and that
NRA has a similar “no loaded firearms” policy during training classes.
While
it may be reasonable to enforce a “no loaded firearm/no ammunition”
policy when conducting training with firearms that are carried
defensively, forcing those with defensive handguns to disarm while
inoperable shotguns and rifles are demonstrated doesn't pass the
commonsense test.
If the goal is safety, forcing people to disarm and handle otherwise safely holstered handguns in parking lots seems to be exactly what should not be promoted, not to mention it unnecessarily creates defenselessness.
GRNC
has valued a positive relationship with NCWRC in the past and we have
worked together to pass pro-hunting legislation through the Assembly.
The hunter safety education program is critically important, and until
now is something that every North Carolinian could be proud of.
We
don't want this essential educational program to be compromised by
ill-advised enforcement of rules for the sake of enforcing rules that
actually decrease safety of participants. Our advice to NCWRC is to ask
instructors to remind attendees that if they are carrying defensive
weapons to not handle them for any reason other than an emergency during
the course. No operable firearms or ammunition will be handled during the course.
If a sign is felt necessary, this language could replace the offensive
and legally-binding “gun buster” sign originally provided.
For
the hundreds of instructors and participants of the course across the
state who understand how important the educational mission is, we cannot
in good conscience advise you to comply with allowing yourselves to be
disarmed, or to post your facilities against lawful carry.
Hopefully
NCWRC will consider the problems associated with their posting policy,
and appropriately revise it. Let's encourage them to do so.
I think the next time I see a NCWRC "rabbit sheriff" on my land I'll ask him to disarm!
ReplyDeleteGood one!
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