Huntington Beach considers opening new gun range
Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- City and police officials want to band together
with the Army Corps of Engineers and other law enforcement agencies to
build a new gun range and training center for use by officers and the
public.
In a subcommittee meeting Dec. 6, city officials decided to apply for
a Joint Task Force Six grant, federal funds aimed at helping city law
enforcement agencies coordinate with federal law programs in the war
against drugs.
Ron Hagan, the city’s director of community services, said the grant
would provide the money to build the gun range, leaving only design and
land costs up to the city.
Approval for the grant application is still needed from the City
Council before it may be submitted to federal officials.
City officials said the new gun range will be state-of-the-art,
featuring a 38,600-square-foot indoor shooting area with noise control
and filters to clear the air of lead dust, as well as a
25,425-square-foot outdoor area for physical exercises and training that
does not involve the firing of any weapons. The facility would cost an
estimated $3 million to $4 million, they added.
“It’s so critical to our training mission,” said Huntington Beach
Police Chief Ron Lowenberg. “With the community continuing to grow,
there’s a lack of space to build these kinds of facilities, and to have
the federal agencies take part ... it’s a win-win for everybody.”
Huntington Beach officers train in Fountain Valley, but officials with
that city’s police force are planning to close their gun range in the
future to make way for a newer facility. Though Fountain Valley police
plan to keep the range open until a new one is operational, some
Huntington Beach officials believe that a local training center offers
more benefits than just training.
It means a larger law enforcement presence in the city, with drug
enforcement, U.S. Customs, border patrol and other agencies interested in
using the center, they added.
Hagan said that a cooperative effort between the city and three school
districts is underway to find a suitable site for the new gun range.
As part of the overall plan, the Huntington Beach Union High School
District and the city’s elementary district, as well as the Fountain
Valley School District, have been trying to consolidate each of their bus
centers into a single transportation hub.
District and city officials are in negotiations to purchase 6.8 acres
from the Randall Lumberyard on Gothard Street for a gun range and and bus
center. The land is too big for either use alone, but could suit both
comfortably, Hagan added.
There are also ongoing efforts to negotiate eight acres, previously
used as a county waste transfer station, on Gothard Street, south of
Talbert Avenue, as another possible location.
The city’s original gun range opened in 1967 to serve city police, the
public and other law enforcement agencies with a firearm training and
qualification arena.
Nestled in an undeveloped portion of Central Park, south of Talbert
Avenue and near the future youth sports facility, the gun range was an
open-air firing center with separate ranges for public, pistol and rifle
training.
Three years ago, the range was shut down by the city, citing safety
and environmental concerns.
City officials said an errant bullet shot in the outdoor gun range
broke a widow in a house just north of Central Park, giving rise to
safety concerns. In addition, the center was built on a former landfill
where methane from decomposing waste caused sinkholes and ground
instability.
Thirty years of use has also resulted in lead contamination of the
area, the cleanup of which is believed by some council members to be the
responsibility of the city’s police officers union, because it managed
the gun range. The city approved cleanup efforts during the Dec. 4 City
Council meeting.
The city has until the end of January to apply for the grant to
qualify for the 2001-02 funds, with the long-term project estimated to be
completed by 2005.
SHOOTING FACILITY
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