Yeah that's only a problem if you are an irresponsible retard, you are just making shit up now.Zoning is a layered approach, Residential is most restrictive. The concern I see with this law is allowing explosive materials in residential neighborhoods. There are minimum distances between between house and lot lines. In developments these can be very close. Hence the issue with explosive materials.
You guys are supposed to be pro life. You tell me you advocate for having explosives where children live and play?
You know how gun poder works right? It just doesn’t explode. Any way none of the 100ish pounds I have hasn’t yet.Zoning is a layered approach, Residential is most restrictive. The concern I see with this law is allowing explosive materials in residential neighborhoods. There are minimum distances between between house and lot lines. In developments these can be very close. Hence the issue with explosive materials.
You guys are supposed to be pro life. You tell me you advocate for having explosives where children live and play?
Zoning is a layered approach, Residential is most restrictive. The concern I see with this law is allowing explosive materials in residential neighborhoods. There are minimum distances between between house and lot lines. In developments these can be very close. Hence the issue with explosive materials.
You guys are supposed to be pro life. You tell me you advocate for having explosives where children live and play?
Everything is perfectly safe and accidents never happen. Now I understand the world.
Be sure to ask your fire department members how they would feel rolling up to a kitchen fire not knowing there is gunpowder in the house.
am I storing said gun powder in the kitchen? while I am at it should I ask them about the gas that is in the vehicles in the attached garage, propane tank on the gas grill, or the multitude of flammable items in the house and garage?Everything is perfectly safe and accidents never happen. Now I understand the world.
Be sure to ask your fire department members how they would feel rolling up to a kitchen fire not knowing there is gunpowder in the house.
You sound like Brandon did you almost lose your corvette and wife in a kitchen fire?You do realize these ordinances are written for the lowest common denominator? Just because some site members are infallible does not mean the entire population is. This is why ordinances are written the way they are.
Obi the items you mentioned are items normally associated with residences and fire departments respond accordingly. Gun powder in bulk is not.
I did not say the gun powder was stored in the kitchen. But a fire anywhere in a home will spread, doubling size every minute provided oxygen and combustible materials. What is the response time in your area?
Orcus keeps digging that hole of fantasy that he and the ones who are suing the state to make it illegal to sell firearms in your home. This is how laws go in order of authority U.S Constitution • Laws (statutes) enacted by Congress • Rules promulgated by federal agencies • State constitution • Laws enacted by the state legislature • Rules promulgated by state agencies • City/county charters (the “constitution” for the city or county) • Local laws and ordinances • Rules promulgated by local , just like the states want to disenfranchise voters by circumventing the constitution of the USA to take trumps name of the ballot its unconstitutional.You sound like Brandon did you almost lose your corvette and wife in a kitchen fire?
EXACTLY!! Children should have more access to nitroglycerin and C4. HOW were you able to such adroitly cut though the dog whistles and expose the truth?! Anyways, no camouflaging it now: More access to children!! It's a quicker way to destroy books.Zoning is a layered approach, Residential is most restrictive. The concern I see with this law is allowing explosive materials in residential neighborhoods. There are minimum distances between between house and lot lines. In developments these can be very close. Hence the issue with explosive materials.
You guys are supposed to be pro life. You tell me you advocate for having explosives where children live and play?
Do you understand what gun powder does when lit on fire while it is in the plastic jug it comes in? It seems you think it blows up like on the cartoons.You do realize these ordinances are written for the lowest common denominator? Just because some site members are infallible does not mean the entire population is. This is why ordinances are written the way they are.
Obi the items you mentioned are items normally associated with residences and fire departments respond accordingly. Gun powder in bulk is not.
I did not say the gun powder was stored in the kitchen. But a fire anywhere in a home will spread, doubling size every minute provided oxygen and combustible materials. What is the response time in your area?
I did and you won’t answer my question. What happens when gun powder in the plastic jugs start on fire. Do they explode?As is customary, start name calling first and avoid answering questions/responding to statements.
I did some research and this is the correct information.
Depending on amount and circumstances small arms smokeless powder can be classified as either
a flammable solid or as an explosive.
https://www.hazmattool.com/info.php?a=Powder,+smokeless&b=UN0509&c=1.4C
https://www.hazmattool.com/info.php?a=Smokeless+powder+for+small+arms+(100+pounds+or+less)&b=NA3178&c=4.1
Ammunition and components fall under this:
https://www.phmsa.dot.gov/sites/phmsa.dot.gov/files/2022-01/The Facts on Small Arms Related Hazmat brochure.pdf
Lunk take note.
Storage fall under these requirements
https://regulations.atf.gov/555-219/2019-24570#555-219-p1
Less than 1000 lbs 75 feet from inhabited building.
So the argument over whether a city can enact zoning ordinances concerning gun/ammunition sale in residential areas seems mute.
No one responded about concerns about firefighter response regarding bulk storage.
I also wonder what the insurance industry has to say about this.