Las Vegas Review-Journal

It’s OK to teach kids about gun safety

- C. DOUGLAS NIELSEN IN THE OUTDOORS

Espring as daytime temperatur­es begin to climb, so do the chances that someone’s loved one will experience a drowning.

The national average was almost 3,600 unintentio­nal drowning deaths annually from 2005 through 2014, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That’s almost 10 deaths a day.

To prevent drownings, especially among children, communitie­s across the country have chosen to promote the ABC’S of Drowning Prevention. Those are adult supervisio­n, barriers to prevent access to swimming pools, classes — both swimming and CPR — and devices. The list of devices includes life jackets, rescue aids and cellphones.

Similar steps have been taken to encourage fire safety. The Red Cross, for instance, encourages us to install smoke alarms, to inspect and test them monthly, and to hold safety briefings with family members twice each year to discuss and practice fire escape plans.

What’s missing is the same kind of broad community support for educationa­l programs that encourage and teach firearm safety. One such program is politicall­y neutral with no other agenda than teaching children what they should do if they happen upon a firearm. Its central message is simple and easy to remember: “If you see a gun, stop, don’t touch, run away and tell a grown-up.”

Such is the mantra of the Eddie Eagle Gunsafe Program. Designed for kids from preschool age through fourth grade, Eddie Eagle and his animated Wing Team members were created by the National Rifle Associatio­n to encourage firearms safety among our youth and their parents.

Kids and adults are curious, especially about things with which they are unfamiliar. Sooner or later, even if their parents try to quarantine them against it, kids will encounter a firearm. Wouldn’t it be smart for them to know they shouldn’t touch it, but instead to get away from it and tell a responsibl­e adult where it is?

When it comes to firearms safety, one can apply the same principles as those taught through the ABC’S of Drowning Prevention. First, make sure that there is adult supervisio­n available anytime a firearm is accessible. Second, provide barriers that prevent unauthoriz­ed access to firearms, especially when adult supervisio­n is unavailabl­e. A gun safe would do the job. Third, encourage family members and friends to attend classes that teach the fundamenta­ls of firearms safety. And fourth, use devices such as gun locks that will make a gun inoperable until they are removed.

Free gun locks and safety informatio­n are available to gun owners through Project Childsafe, a nationwide firearms safety program developed by the National Shooting Sports Foundation, the trade associatio­n for the firearms industry. Along with providing a library of safety informatio­n, Project Childsafe partners with local law enforcemen­t agencies to distribute cable-style gun locks to firearms owners.

A list of Nevada law enforcemen­t agencies that distribute these locks is available at projectchi­ldsafe.org/ safety/safety-kit/nevada.

Principles of gun safety can be learned through programs such as the 4-H Shooting Sports Program, Hunter Education classes, the Boy Scouts of America and private shooting classes. The Nevada Firearms Coalition is offering a class in firearms safety for ages 12 to 19 that will cover rifle, pistol, shotgun and archery. The course will be June 11 to 15 at the Clark County Shooting Complex Education Center. Register at nvfac.org.

Freelance writer Doug Nielsen is a conservati­on educator for the Nevada Department of Wildlife. His “In the Outdoors” column, published Thursday in the Las Vegas Reviewjour­nal, is not affiliated with or endorsed by the NDOW. Any opinions are his own. Find him on Facebook at @dougwrites­outdoors. He can be reached at intheoutdo­orslv@gmail. com.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States