For purposes of this chapter the following definitions shall apply:
"Backstop"means a device constructed to stop or redirect bullets fired on a range.
"Baffles"means barriers to contain bullets and to reduce, redirect or suppress sound waves. Baffles are placed either overhead, alongside, or at ground level to restrict or interrupt errant or off-the-target shots.
"Ballistics"means the study of what happens to moving projectiles in the barrel and in flight: their trajectory, force, impact, and penetration. The study is divided into three sections: internal, external and terminal. "Internal" refers to what happens inside the barrel before the bullet or shot leaves the muzzle. "External" is what happens after the bullet or shot leaves the barrel and travels to its final point of impact. "Terminal" is what happens to the bullet or shot at the final point of impact.
"Berm"means an embankment used for restricting bullets to a given area or as a dividing wall between ranges.
"Bullet"means a single projectile fired from a firearm.
"Bullet trap"means a device designed to trap or capture the entire bullet and fragments as opposed to redirecting the projectile into a water or sand pit.
"Director"means the Director of the Department of Building and Planning.
"Expansion"means any change to a public outdoor shooting range existing as of the effective date of the ordinance codified in this chapter or any range developed and operating by virtue of a special use permit, that results in additional firing positions or a lengthened daily period of operations. Expansion shall also include any change increasing the length of the direct fire zone or the area of the shotfall zone in order to accommodate the use of firearms not identified in the then existing special use permit application. Modifications made for the purpose of or resulting solely in maintenance or improvement of a facility, such as the installation of sewer, water or other utilities, pavement of a parking lot, the installation of safety baffles, construction of side or backstop berms, or the construction or remodel of a clubhouse, shall not be considered an expansion.
"Firearm"means a term used to describe any gun, usually small, from which a bullet is propelled by means of hot gasses generated by burning powder (usually smokeless or black powder).
"Firing line"means a line parallel to the targets from where firearms are discharged.
"Firing position (point)"means an area directly behind the firing line having a specified width and depth that is occupied by a shooter, his or her equipment and, if appropriate, an instructor or coach.
Firing Range.1. "Firing range"means a facility designed for the purpose of providing a place on which to discharge firearms, shoot air guns, and/or archery equipment.
"Pistol"means a firearm capable of being held, aimed and fired with one hand. Also known as a handgun.
"Public shooting range"means a firing range where a user fee is charged, or where a person must be a member of a group to be allowed to use the facility and membership requires the payment of dues or fees.
"Range Manual"means The Range Manual – A Guide to Planning and Construction, The National Rifle Association, 1988.
"Ricochet catcher"means a device installed along a backstop, a berm, or on the range floor, designed to capture ricocheting projectiles. Ricochet catchers are more frequently used on backstop areas where the slope or backstop material does not positively contain bullets.
Rifle.1. "Rifle"means a modern firearm designed to be fired from the shoulder. Its main characteristic is a rifled (grooved) barrel that imparts a spin to a single projectile as it travels through the bore.
2. Some rifles designed for military or law enforcement use may have a pistol grip stock instead of a shoulder stock.
3. For purposes of this chapter, "rifles" shall also include black powder and other muzzle loading firearms, some of which may have rifled barrels.
"Safety baffles"means vertical or sloping barriers designed to prevent a projectile from traveling into an undesired area or direction. Most often used to prevent bullets from leaving a firing range.
"Safety fan"applies only to rifle and pistol firing ranges. The safety fan of a firing range consists of three parts: the direct fire zone, the safety zone, and the ricochet zone. The direct fire zone is that area into which all shots are fired during the normal course of shooting. This zone includes all directions and angles of fire used on a firing range while shooting at a specific target, either stationary or moving, from a specific firing point. The length of the direct fire zone extends to the maximum range of the ammunition and firearm used on the firing range, but can be shortened by physical barriers or other devices which reduce the maximum distance of a bullet's trajectory. The safety zone extends 10 degrees to the left and right of the direct fire zone and protects against errant bullets caused by cross fire or accidental discharge of a firearm. The ricochet zone is that area 45 degrees to the left and right of the firing line, and extended a certain distance dependent on the type of firearm and ammunition allowed on the range (i.e., 85 yards for air guns, and up to 1,200 yards for high-powered rifles). The line is then extended parallel to each side of the safety zone downrange to the intersection of a line extended from the terminus of the direct fire zone through the outer corner of the safety zone. See Drawing No. 103 in the Range Manual.
"Shotfall zone"means that area of a shotgun firing range where spent shotgun shot falls to the earth and where development, other than trap or skeet houses or the equivalent facilities for other types of shotgun events, and human occupancy, other than operators of the trap, skeet or equivalent facilities, is prohibited during active shooting.
Shotgun.1. "Shotgun"means a firearm designed to be fired from the shoulder with a smoothbore barrel that fires shot shells possessing a varying number of round pellets;
2. Some barrels are designed to be used with rifled slugs, most generally having smoothbores, but in some cases may be rifled;
3. Law enforcement and military shotguns may have a pistol grip stock instead of a shoulder stock.
"Target line"means a line parallel to the firing line along which targets are placed.
(Ord. 96-076 § 5, 5-6-1996)