A staunch Second Amendment advocate and certified NRA pistol instructor who runs a private shooting range on Pushaw Road is spurring Bangor officials to consider where firing ranges should be allowed within city limits.

The Business and Economic Development Committee, comprised of most city councilors, began a discussion Monday night that will likely lead in the coming weeks to the creation of a new ordinance regulating such ranges. Bangor allows weapons to be discharged in more rural parts of the city, but commercial firing ranges — where money is exchanged for use or services — are not permitted.

Kevin Schmersal, 65, has operated Castle Gate Arms for the last five or so years behind his home, where he lives with his wife, Patti. Schmersal said his range serves mostly as a classroom, where he invites trained firearm experts to teach paying participants how to use weapons safely. He recently hosted a course with an outside instructor who taught participants how to respond in an active-shooter situation.

“I’m trying to make firearm safety courses available to people. My feeling is that nobody can be overly prepared for any given situation,” Schmersal said. “This is what this range has always been about — doing important work.”

But his neighbors — whose complaints about noise from the shooting range helped bring the issue to the attention of city officials — don’t necessarily agree.

Some of those neighbors implored members of the committee at the Monday meeting to reconsider the new ordinance, because of the loud gunfire that echoes from Schmersal’s range, and the potential for intrusive noise from more ranges in the future.

“The objection I have is to call a shooting range a constitutionally protected event,” next-door-neighbor Jane Varney said.

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