Q-and-A: New rule allows loaded guns in nation's parks

A new federal rule took effect Friday, allowing people to carry loaded, concealed firearms in national parks in certain cases.
The rule has drawn two lawsuits. It's backed by many gun-rights groups, as well as the Bush administration, but is opposed by several groups representing current and former National Park Service employees.
Here are some answers to what the change means:
Q: What's the new rule?
A: You can carry loaded, concealed guns in a park controlled by the National Park Service or a wildlife refuge controlled by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service if the state laws where the parks and refuges are located allow concealed firearms and you have the proper concealed weapons permit. The rule change, however, does not allow the guns to be taken into federal buildings in the national parks and refuges. A ban remains on hunting and target shooting in national parks.
The new rule doesn't affect national monuments that are run by the Bureau of Land Management. BLM does not restrict firearms possession.
Since 1983, the federal government had allowed in national parks guns that weren't loaded, or that were in a trunk or otherwise inaccessible while driving. Before, no firearms were allowed in national parks.
Q. Why the change?
A: Interior Department spokesman Chris Paolino cited two letters signed by 51 U.S. senators saying the ban impinges on the rights of law-abiding gun owners. Since the BLM and the Forest Service allow firearms, "these inconsistencies . . . are confusing, burdensome and unnecessary," said one letter.
Q: What does the change mean for the average person?
A: "I think it is impossible to predict" how many people will enter Saguaro National Park with loaded guns, said Sarah Craighead, the Arizona park's superintendent.
Some Saguaro staffers feel that some visitors may put themselves in hazardous situations knowing they are armed, said Bob Love, the park's chief ranger.
"There's always the concern about saguaros being used for target practice," Craighead said.
Authorities find five to 10 plants vandalized yearly inside the park, Love said.
They're concerned that people with guns might shoot rattlesnakes and other wildlife, particularly since park staffers have heard a few visitors say things like "'the only good snake is a dead snake,'" Love said.
In a letter to Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne, U.S. Rep. Raul Grijalva of Tucson, who is against the new rule, warned that the change could result in deadly confrontations or more gun accidents. Park Service law-enforcement agents will also be put at greater risk, he said.
Q: Why bring a gun to a national park?
A: "I view carrying a gun as kind of an ultimate insurance policy, just in case," said Green Valley, Ariz. resident Fred Lawrence. Added Kevin Bacon of Green Valley: If you're out in the back-country, "you don't know what animals are running around out there. You get a rabid coyote. . . . It's been documented that there are mountain lions and bears around (Saguaro National Park). I wouldn't go in there to hunt them, but there is no sense in walking in unprotected."
Concealed weapons permit-holders are "statistically the most well-behaved people in society," said Charles Eller, secretary of the Arizona Citizens Defense League, since only 971 of 117,684 such permits issued in Arizona since 1994 have been revoked.
No records exist of lions or bears attacking people in Saguaro National Park. Two rabid foxes have attacked people in the past five years, Love said.
Q: Are national parks dangerous?
A: Nationally, their crime rates are lower than many similarly sized communities, said Jerry Case, until recently the Park Service's chief of regulations. In Saguaro National Park, four assaults -- but no rapes or murders -- occurred from 2003 through 2007. Forty-nine serious crimes occurred then, including burglaries, larcenies, motor-vehicle thefts and robberies.
"If you are saying in five years only 49 people have been victimized, I would suggest to you that's a good reason to get rid of the regulation," Eller said, adding, "I'm not trying to tell you national parks are the most dangerous places you could go, but they're also the farthest from help."
Q: What about the National Rifle Association?
A: The NRA believes that "law-abiding citizens and those who have gone through legal channels should not be prohibited from protecting themselves and their families while enjoying national parks," said NRA spokeswoman Rachel Parsons.
Q: What's next?
A: Lawsuits have been filed against the rule by the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, a gun-control advocacy group; and by the National Parks Conservation Association and the Coalition of National Park Service Retirees. They say the Interior Department violated federal law by not doing an environmental review.
Interior Secretary-designate and U.S. Sen. Ken Salazar of Colorado didn't sign the letter advocating the new gun rule but told the Grand Junction Daily Sentinel in Colorado last month that he thought it was "sensible."
E-mail Tony Davis at tdavis(at)azstarnet.com.

(Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service, www.scrippsnews.com.)
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Brady Campaign - wrong as usual

An environmental review was not required because this rule change has no effect on the environment.

Not Sensible at All

Concealed weapons in national parks?? Why?? What is sensible about this??

National parks serve as refuges for wildlife and for people. Concealed weapons should not be allowed in national parks.

You should check your data,

You should check your data, sir!
Concealed Carry is legal & lawful in most states of America (43now?)
- in your supermarkets, malls and bookstores. It not new by any means.
You just dont know it or see it.

Firearms locked in a box & unloaded have always been allowed to be
in your possession in National Parks. So basically they have always
been there just hidden away... err concealed.

What this new regulation does is allow those who have permits & carry
in malls and your corner grocery store to carry in National Parks.

And I dare say you will still not know it or see it, there too!

too bad

i am glad I have my right to protect myself in my home as well as in a National Park. For those who don't like it.....don't carry a gun. I personally love it!

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