116 3rd St SE
Cedar Rapids, Iowa 52401
Home / News / Government & Politics / State Government
Let the shooting continue: Police Department says the 2008 flood has helped it comply with State Ombudsman's questions about shooting range
Jun. 17, 2009 4:23 pm
Neighbors next to the Police Department's regional outdoor shooting range have been trying to get someone to do something to quell some of the range's racket for years.
The Iowa Citizens' Aide/Ombudsman spent the last couple years reviewing the matter before, in April, sending City Hall a letter suggesting that the shooting range, at 2727 Old River Rd., SW, violated state law.
In the letter, Bert Dalmer, assistant ombudsman, noted that the particular section of state law in question falls under a section of state law that prohibits hunting near buildings and feedlots.
Nonetheless, Dalmer said the law prohibits discharging a firearm within 200 yards of a building “inhabited” by people without the consent of the owner or tenant.
City Hall now has answered back. In short, the city says the shooting will continue.
In a letter to the state office signed by Police Chief Greg Graham, Graham says he “doesn't necessarily agree” with the office's analysis.
Graham hones in on the word “inhabited.”
He notes that the 2008 flood drove residents out of two of three homes within 200 yards of the firing range.
A third resident has rebuilt his house, and in this instance, Graham says the Police Department can close down a section of the range so the remainder of the range is not within the 200-yard distance of this residence's house.
A fourth structure is a truck repair shop, not a residence, and Graham argues that the word “inhabited” only applies to residences.
Don Sedrel, a retired firefighter who has most persistently complained about long hours of racket and some stray bullets, lives farther than 200 yards from the shooting range.
In a return letter to the city, the state's Dalmer said his office is reviewing the city's response.
Of note, the city has proposed building a new Public Safety Training Center, perhaps at Kirkwood Community College, that would include a shooting range. In seeking funding for the center, the city has pointed to the state agency's probe of the current shooting range as a reason to build the new center.