Skip to: Content
Skip to: Site Navigation
Skip to: Search

  • Advertisements

Town's curb on BB guns becomes a clash of values

(Page 2 of 2)



  • Print
  • E-mail
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Digg
  • Add This
  • Permissions

Adding to the debate is the emergence of the paintball gun. Not only are the guns, which shoot pellets of paint, being used by teens to conduct mock warfare, but they are also becoming a weapon of choice for carrying out adolescent shenanigans.

A jogger here has been ambushed by paintball gun-wielding teens. In January, residents around Lake Windward complained when youths commandeered a pontoon boat and peppered lakeshore homes with paintballs.

The issue finally came to a head last year when 16 boys bore their paintball guns into suburban woods here. Some residents said they were terrorized by the racket, and wouldn't let their children wander outside. Complaints led City councillor Jim Matoney to propose the ordinance.

"Today, people are afraid to go out in their backyards and enjoy the quiet peaceful enjoyment of their own property because someone is shooting paintballs nearby," says Mr. Matoney. "Terrorism of this type has simply not been covered by many of our existing laws."

The difficulty in these cases has often been identifying the kids who are doing the destructive acts. Consequently the city council voted 4-3 to pass the law with a fine up to $1,000 for kids caught using the guns outside of the presence of adults.

But opponents say that the ordinance unnecessarily clamps down on a playful act of youth. For 14-year-old Rick Whalen, Jr., getting a Daisy Model 840 "Grizzly" BB rifle for Christmas was as exciting as a skateboard. Working his lips over his braces, the teen says he doesn't understand a law that equates cruel misbehavior to his innocent expeditions of plinking ginger-ale bottles.

Similarly, Doug Melton, one of the observers of the controversial incident that brought about the city-council decision, says he feels bemused by the measure. Mr. Melton says he didn't share his neighbor's fear during the fracas. Instead, it reminded him of his own raucous childhood growing up in rural West Virginia. The fact that his brother once shot him with a BB hasn't deterred him from valuing the accident-prone lessons of youth.

"If we're going to have the Second Amendment, then we've got to let children learn about safety, respect, and responsibility, even when they're away from their parents," says Mr. Melton.

By contrast, Councilman Douglas DeRito says he's loathe to let any of his three kids ever get close to a gun. But he says the new ordinance will put to the test his oath to uphold not just local laws but the US constitution. "By trying to legislate every parental right in this city, we are venturing down a very dangerous path," he says.

Still, even some gun-rights advocates say BB guns and paintball guns fall into a category of their own, a nebulous netherworld between toy and firearm.

"Frankly, I don't have a problem with" restricting BB guns, says James Moses, the president of the Alabama State Rifle and Pistol Association in Huntsville. "It's part of the expansion of suburban values as opposed to rural values, and that's an issue that we're going to contend with for the rest of our lives."

Page: Previous Page 1 | 2

  • Print
  • E-mail
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Digg
  • Add This
  • Permissions