Minnesota's growing legions of gun owners are increasingly packing gun ranges and triggering an intense demand for new ones.
The heated debate over stricter gun regulations nationally fueled a dramatic spike in gun permits and firearm sales locally. They're competing for time at crowded metro ranges with a new generation of shooters who've helped make school target teams the fastest-growing sport in the state.
That's leaving people like Gary Morrison of Otsego and his teenage daughter, who is on a target shooting team, fed up with years of long drives and waits. So this month, he and his business partner, Steve Benoit, are starting construction on a new indoor gun range in Rogers.
"This is really a recreation service the public is demanding," Benoit said. "There are a lot of people who want to do this sport, but they just don't have a place to go."
It's one of several ranges opening in the state. Police gun ranges like Maple Grove's are also opening to the public for the first time thanks in part to a new law. And at the Department of Natural Resources, firearm safety instructors struggling to find space in the metro are using state parks for practice or offering virtual training for adults starting this month. But opening up a new gun range isn't so easy, clashing at times with communities.
In Osseo, nearly 100 gun owners and supporters packed city meetings last month to rally for a new $3.3 million gun club after school district leaders and some residents voiced concern about the indoor range's location in the center of town and two blocks from a school. But city leaders approved it, hoping the gun club will attract visitors to their small northwestern suburb.
Range shortage
Last December's Newtown, Conn., school shooting ignited a push for more gun restrictions, and although proposals haven't gone anywhere in Congress, they led to a gun-buying frenzy. Locally, applications to purchase and carry handguns have surged statewide, on pace to surpass last year's numbers.
The number of gun ranges isn't formally tracked, but the DNR's Chuck Niska keeps an informal online list and said he hears about new gun ranges or proposed ones almost weekly. Statewide, there are more than 400 gun ranges, archery ranges and game preserves.