Chattanooga Times Free Press

Georgia quietly becomes a top gun-making state

Remington Arms latest in relocation of gun-makers from North to South

- BY CHRISTOPHE­R QUINN

When Remington Arms announced in November its decision to move its global headquarte­rs to west Georgia, bringing 850 jobs, it became the latest in a string of gun-makers relocating to the Peach State.

Georgia has quietly become one of the country’s top 10 states for gun manufactur­ing, according to data from the National Shooting Sports Foundation.

The state is now home to 74 companies that make hunting rifles, shotguns, pistols, semi-automatic military style rifles, parts, accessorie­s and ammunition, according to the Georgia Department of Economic Developmen­t.

It didn’t happen by accident.

The state’s business recruiters began aggressive­ly courting gun-makers six years ago after noticing a trend: Firearms manufactur­ers were fleeing the Northeast, where some states have passed more stringent gun laws, and relocating to politicall­y friendlier Southern climes.

“It has been good politics for red state governors to recruit these companies,” because it adds to their conservati­ve bona fides, said Ryan Busse, a senior adviser at Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence, which advocates for gun control.

In September, when Smith & Wesson announced it was moving its headquarte­rs to Tennessee, executives said the company was relocating due to tough new gun manufactur­ing laws proposed in Massachuse­tts, where it had been since 1852. Democrats there introduced a bill to ban the manufactur­ing of certain firearms unless they are intended for sale to the military or law enforcemen­t.

The gun-maker also cited Tennessee’s “unwavering support for the Second Amendment.”

The expansion into the South is also a sign of the times, Busse said. Companies are expanding. Since last year, gun sales in the U.S. have been at all time highs. Smith & Wesson reported last summer that sales had doubled to more than $1 billion compared to the previous 12 months.

In addition to the gun-friendly environmen­t, gun manufactur­ers that make their home in the South often avoid unionized labor.

Remington plans to build its $100 million facility factory in LaGrange, near Columbus, and will move its headquarte­rs from upstate New York.

At the same time, internatio­nal gun companies have been expressing interest in Georgia.

Rick McCaskill, the head of the Developmen­t Authority of Bainbridge and Decatur County, helped to lure Brazilian gunmaker Taurus to the state. The manufactur­er arrived in 2019 and brought an initial 300 jobs.

Landing the company sparked new life in Bainbridge, a city of 14,500 in southwest Georgia, he said. In a decade in which census counts show 67 of Georgia’s 159 counties lost population, Decatur County gained 5.5%.

“Taurus has made over a million guns in Bainbridge,” said McCaskill.

Each pistol that rolls off the line has the city name stamped into the metal.

Georgia’s gun industry employed 4,630 in 2020, according to data from the National Shooting Sports Foundation.

Its suppliers provide jobs for thousands more, the foundation said. McCaskill believes some of those could be coming to his area. A few already have been looking around, he said, though he declined to name them.

The country’s iconic firearms brands — such as Winchester, Colt, Smith & Wesson, Remington — were founded in the United States’ original heavy industrial corridor of Connecticu­t, New York and other northeaste­rn states.

The companies largely remained in that region until the late 20th century.

Then some northeaste­rn states started imposing more gun restrictio­ns, said McCaskill.

Connecticu­t — where 20 children, ages 6 and 7, and six adults were gunned down at Sandy Hook Elementary in Newtown in one of the nation’s most notorious school shootings — banned certain military style semi-automatic rifles and large ammunition magazines.

Massachuse­tts now requires that gun buyers get purchase permits from the local police and that first-time buyers pass a training course.

The South, meanwhile, has one of the gunfriendl­iest population­s, said Mark Oliva, a spokesman for the National Shooting Sports Foundation.

A 2020 report from the left-leaning Center for American Progress notes that Georgia is among the states that have passed laws that shield gunmakers from lawsuits.

Remington and other Georgia-based firearms companies did not respond to requests for interviews. But Ken D’Arcy, Remington CEO, issued a statement in November saying, “We are very excited to come to Georgia, a state that not only welcomes business but enthusiast­ically supports and welcomes companies in the firearms industry.”

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