New OSHA regs on ammo, powder and primers
Posted: Mon Jul 09, 2007 12:20 pm
I'm sure all of you are by now aware of the terrible mess at OSHA with their proposed new regulations which would effectively end the shooting sports as we know them by severely limiting our ability to obtain ammo and components.
Here is a great letter, copied from another board, you can copy and paste into your message to your Senators and Congressman. Time is very short and we all need to move NOW on this situation:
Dear :
RE: OSHA-2007-0032, PROPOSED RULES
I'm writing you to express my extreme concern regarding the
Occupational Safety and Health Administration's proposed
rule changes regarding explosives, this in 29 CFR Part 1910,
Docket No. OSHA-2007-0032. This proposal would, for the
first time, specify and severely restrict the products used
by millions of American sport shooters, hunters, reloaders,
and antique style firearms enthusiasts, i.e.: all small arms
ammunition and all elements used in the manufacture of such
ammunition; the primers, smokeless powder, and other
elements used by reloaders; and the black powder and
percussion caps used in muzzleloading and replica firearms.
The adoption of this proposal would devastate the shooting
sports industry and, in my opinion, represent a direct and
unconstitutional violation of the right to keep and bear
arms guaranteed to citizens by the Second Amendment.
Examples:
Paragraph (c) (3) (iii) (C) would, in effect, bar all
sporting goods stores, gun shops, or other retailers from
stocking and selling small arms ammunition, reloading
supplies, and black powder. This would literally shut down
an entire retail industry. Gunsmiths would not be allowed,
under this clause, to store the ammunition they require for
test firing, thus destroying the repair industry.
Paragraph (e) (1) (iii) would require individual citizens
who purchase ammunition, reloading supplies, or black
powder--even a single box of small arms ammunition--to
notify local police and fire departments of the purchase and
transport, as well as the location of the designated storage
facility, and to receive permission to do so. This is a
direct violation of a citizen's rights, as well as
ludicrously expensive waste of public resources. It would
also place such economically infeasible requirements on
commercial shippers and carriers that it would ensure that
these business would simply cease to ship these products.
Paragraph (h) (3) (i) (B) places unreasonable limits on the
retail stocking, sale, purchase, and possession of reloading
supplies, and also demonstrates an abysmal ignorance of the
shooting sports upon the part of those who wrote this
proposal. The same is true of Paragraph (h) (4) (i) (C)
regarding primers.
These are only some of the high--or rather, low--points in
this proposal.
In short, even if this proposal emanates from ignorance
rather than malice, its provisions would severely restrict,
if not destroy outright, an entire spectrum of vital
industries that already operate at a high level of safety
under sufficient regulation, and a slate of sports that are
beloved by millions of American citizens. Whether made in
ignorance or malice, it also represents a direct threat of
bureaucratic infringement on a number of civil rights.
The only acceptable outcome for this regulation is that it
be completely rewritten in every particular to specifically
exclude from any new regulation (as was done regarding
civilian and commercial fireworks, which industry actually
has a much less impressive safety record than that of the
small arms ammunition/reloading industry) the wholesale and
retail sales of, the storage of, the shipping of, and all
elements of small arms ammunition, primers and reloading
supplies, and black powder and percussion caps for shooting
sports.
I do realize that you are presently dealing with many vital
and pressing issues, but please do not allow this
bureaucratic mismanagement, whether accomplished in
ignorance or representing an arrogant power grab by an
agency that has no mandate in this area, to proceed.
Sincerely,
Here is a great letter, copied from another board, you can copy and paste into your message to your Senators and Congressman. Time is very short and we all need to move NOW on this situation:
Dear :
RE: OSHA-2007-0032, PROPOSED RULES
I'm writing you to express my extreme concern regarding the
Occupational Safety and Health Administration's proposed
rule changes regarding explosives, this in 29 CFR Part 1910,
Docket No. OSHA-2007-0032. This proposal would, for the
first time, specify and severely restrict the products used
by millions of American sport shooters, hunters, reloaders,
and antique style firearms enthusiasts, i.e.: all small arms
ammunition and all elements used in the manufacture of such
ammunition; the primers, smokeless powder, and other
elements used by reloaders; and the black powder and
percussion caps used in muzzleloading and replica firearms.
The adoption of this proposal would devastate the shooting
sports industry and, in my opinion, represent a direct and
unconstitutional violation of the right to keep and bear
arms guaranteed to citizens by the Second Amendment.
Examples:
Paragraph (c) (3) (iii) (C) would, in effect, bar all
sporting goods stores, gun shops, or other retailers from
stocking and selling small arms ammunition, reloading
supplies, and black powder. This would literally shut down
an entire retail industry. Gunsmiths would not be allowed,
under this clause, to store the ammunition they require for
test firing, thus destroying the repair industry.
Paragraph (e) (1) (iii) would require individual citizens
who purchase ammunition, reloading supplies, or black
powder--even a single box of small arms ammunition--to
notify local police and fire departments of the purchase and
transport, as well as the location of the designated storage
facility, and to receive permission to do so. This is a
direct violation of a citizen's rights, as well as
ludicrously expensive waste of public resources. It would
also place such economically infeasible requirements on
commercial shippers and carriers that it would ensure that
these business would simply cease to ship these products.
Paragraph (h) (3) (i) (B) places unreasonable limits on the
retail stocking, sale, purchase, and possession of reloading
supplies, and also demonstrates an abysmal ignorance of the
shooting sports upon the part of those who wrote this
proposal. The same is true of Paragraph (h) (4) (i) (C)
regarding primers.
These are only some of the high--or rather, low--points in
this proposal.
In short, even if this proposal emanates from ignorance
rather than malice, its provisions would severely restrict,
if not destroy outright, an entire spectrum of vital
industries that already operate at a high level of safety
under sufficient regulation, and a slate of sports that are
beloved by millions of American citizens. Whether made in
ignorance or malice, it also represents a direct threat of
bureaucratic infringement on a number of civil rights.
The only acceptable outcome for this regulation is that it
be completely rewritten in every particular to specifically
exclude from any new regulation (as was done regarding
civilian and commercial fireworks, which industry actually
has a much less impressive safety record than that of the
small arms ammunition/reloading industry) the wholesale and
retail sales of, the storage of, the shipping of, and all
elements of small arms ammunition, primers and reloading
supplies, and black powder and percussion caps for shooting
sports.
I do realize that you are presently dealing with many vital
and pressing issues, but please do not allow this
bureaucratic mismanagement, whether accomplished in
ignorance or representing an arrogant power grab by an
agency that has no mandate in this area, to proceed.
Sincerely,