A Message from the President
We Need All Virginia Gun Owners in the Fight to Protect our Freedom
Welcome
to the VSSA web site. I hope you find the content helpful and informative. As
stated on our Home Page, the goal of VSSA is to promote the shooting sports to
insure our sport and firearms heritage is passed on to the next generation, as
well as protect and defend the 2nd Amendment Rights of all law
abiding Virginians.
I would like to tell you a little about why I got involved with VSSA. It is my hope that if you are not a member, you will agree that you need to be a part of our efforts to protect the Second Amendment and pass on our traditions to the next generation. I was first introduced to firearms by my grandfather when he took me deer hunting for the first time at the age of ten. Accompanying him on these hunts were special times for me and the look of pride on his face when I killed my first deer will always be a fond memory.
As I grew older, I learned that our gun rights had nothing at all to do with hunting but instead, it was about freedom. This realization came as I studied U.S. History and Government as a high school student. I joined the NRA but that was about as far as any of my activism went. It did not hit me until around 1990 that this freedom I had taken for granted for so many years was under constant attack. After the election of Bill Clinton, and passage of then Govenror Doug Wilder's handgun rationing "one gun-a-month" legislation, I decided that I needed to do more than just send in my NRA dues annually-I needed to take action to reach out to other gun owners and urge them to help in this fight for our rights. I became an NRA-ILA-EVC, and I joined the state NRA affiliate association, the Virginia Shooting Sports Association (VSSA).
Over a decade has passed since I
first joined VSSA. Since that time,
I wish I could say all is well in
In 2005, VSSA drafted legislation (HB 2282)
to protect shooting ranges by establishing a state-wide noise standard.
Localities would have been prohibited from shutting down a shooting range, or
denying the application for new shooting ranges as long as the noise level did
not exceed the state-wide standard. The legislation was based on a successful
effort by the state of
In 2006, Delegate Chris Saxman sponsored a bill (HB1537) that would stated no property that is within a sport shooting range shall be condemned except in accordance with general law. Further, owners of sport shooting ranges would have been allowed to relocate any condemned portion of their shooting range within the jurisdiction of the condemning authority and any sport shooting range that relocated, or any owner would have had the same rights, powers, and privileges, with respect to the range, that existed prior to the condemnation. What passed was substantially different. The final version of the bill stated that any shooting range operating or approved for construction in the Commonwealth, that relocated to another site in the same locality, due to condemnation action, would not be subjected to any noise control standard more stringent than those in effect when the sport shooting range was originally approved for construction or began operating, whichever was earlier. The bill also prohibited a locality from subjecting a shooting range to noise control standards that are more stringent than the standards existing at the time the range was originally approved for construction or began operating, whichever was earlier. The original bill would have allowed a range to locate in locality and not face more stringent noise standards but again, VACO lobbied hard and the State Senate amended the bill. Believing something that moves us to a positive position was better than nothing, we again settled for less than we originally wanted.
Finally, in the 2007 Session of the General Assembly, VSSA member Delegate Bill Janis went to bat for the shooting sports community by sponsoring HB3109. This bill would have made the discharge of a firearm towards a subdivision within the range of the firearm, or to discharge a firearm towards any person or structure, when no barrier exists that would prevent the projectile from striking a person or structure, a Class 1 misdemeanor. The important part of the bill however was that with these changes, a locality would no longer be able to prohibit hunting generally within a half-mile radius of a subdivision, but would still be able to prohibit hunting within a subdivision. Again, the bill moved through the House of Delegates with relative ease. It finally made it out of the Senate Courts of Justice Committee on the last day committee action could be taken, only to be defeated by a parliamentary procedure on the floor by former firearm community friend, Senator Russ Potts, in one last thumb of his nose after announcing he was not running for re-election.
What all of these bills have in common is that VACO
made a full court press attempt to defeat the bills once they moved to the
State Senate. VACO has virtually unlimited resources compared to VSSA. Very
little of our member dues go to lobbying and the fundraising that we do comes
no where near the amount of resources that are available to VACO through the
dues paid by the member localities. VSSA needs your help. First, we need the
support of every Virginia Gun Owner as well as every VSSA member to contribute
to the VSSA War Chest. This is the fund we use for legislative action. Second,
we need every
The threat to our gun rights is real. It is coming
from us at the local level. We need your help to insure we can win the battles
when they happen. With the help of every
Thank you for visiting the VSSA web site and for your support.