NSSF Bullet Points – Weekly Firearms Industry Newsletter

NSSF Bullet Points - Weekly Firearms Industry Newsletter - 05082017Featured NSSF Story: Our Continuing Efforts to Help Prevent Suicide by FirearmI was in Phoenix last Saturday at the invitation of Dr. Keita Franklin, director of the Department of Defense Suicide Prevention Office, to participate in a panel discussion at the American Association of Suicidology Conference. The National Shooting Sports Foundation welcomes such opportunities to let those working in the field of suicide prevention know about the firearms industry’s efforts to engage collectively on this issue and also to alert them to our new initiative with the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention.

Since suicides account for nearly two-thirds of all fatalities involving firearms, far more than homicides or accidents, the issue also deserves our attention. In recent years, a number of groups dedicated to suicide prevention recognized they could be more successful educating the firearms-owning community about suicide risk factors and warning signs, as well as options to safely store their firearms when not in use, if they partnered with NSSF. As the trade association for the firearms industry, NSSF enjoys credibility with gun owners and is known for its longtime safety efforts such as Project ChildSafe, which has distributed more than 37 million firearm safety kits that include a gun lock in more than 15,000 communities across the country, and has seen firearms accidents plummet to less than 1 percent of all accidental deaths.

We are fully engaged on this issue. In recent years, NSSF’s collaborations on suicide prevention include the State of Utah, the U.S. Veterans Administration, U.S. Department of Defense, Connecticut Mental Health Department, the National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention, and mental health groups across the country. We will work with any group that will set aside the politics surrounding firearms and will forego anti-gun messaging, which unfortunately hinders potentially promising firearms safety collaborations and turns off gun owners, and focus on delivering genuine firearms safety messages to the right audience.

We are hopeful of helping to save many lives through our groundbreaking partnership with the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, the largest suicide prevention organization in the country. We’re currently piloting a suicide prevention education program in four states involving firearms retailers, shooting ranges and AFSP state chapters. Among the materials being provided to retailers and ranges for distribution to gun owners is the new “AFSP-NSSF Firearms and Suicide Prevention” brochure , which NSSF also provided to suicide prevention leaders attending the Phoenix conference.

The key message is that suicide is preventable. By understanding risk factors, such as depression and substance abuse, and warning signs such as withdrawal or person talking about doing harm to themselves, coupled with keeping firearms securely stored when not in use, you can help save lives and reduce the number of suicides involving firearms.

As AFSP Chief Medical Officer Christine Moutier observes, “By increasing public education of firearms and suicide prevention, and by encouraging the use of safe storage options, we give suicidal individuals something they desperately need: time. Time for the intense suicidal risk to diminish and time for someone to intervene with mental health support and resources.”

The response to my presentation at the conference was extremely positive, and I was pleased to hear from so many how appreciative they are that NSSF is engaged on this important issue

— More NSSF News —

  • SUNDAY HUNTING BECOMES LAW IN WEST VIRGINIA … Gov. Jim Justice has signed SB 345 into law, expanding Sunday hunting on private land with written permission. NSSF made passage of this legislation a priority after Sunday hunting initiatives passed in all 11 counties where it was on the ballot in the 2016 election. Sunday hunting is a victory both for sportsmen and for the state economy.
  • The Indiana Supreme Court, ruling in KS&E Sports and Edward J. Ellis vs. Runnels, has upheld state law that bars claims for damages brought by a police officer injured by a convicted felon who used a straw-purchased handgun.
  • Twenty-nine U.S. senators have signed a letter to urge the Secretaries of State and Commerce to complete unfinished Obama administration export control reforms to assist the global competitiveness of the firearms and ammunition industry.
  • The April 2017 NSSF-adjusted National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) figure of 1,111,596 is an increase of 0.04 percent compared to the April 2016 figure of 1,111,205. NSSF members can log in to view more data.
  • Research has shown there are 24 million non-gun owning Americans interested in gun ownership. NSSF will be hosting a webinar open to anyone in the industry on May 9, from 1 – 2 p.m., that examines the eight segments of current gun owners.
  • The most valuable asset a business has is one that isn’t even listed on the balance sheet: their individual customer. So what’s a customer actually worth?
  • NSSF has verified with ATF that Minnesota handgun carry permit holders will be able to use those permits in place of background checks to buy firearms.
  • ATF Q&A: More great questions came in on our 24/7 NSSF member compliance hotline last week. One question asks whether an employee who becomes prohibited from possessing firearms can continue to be employed by an FFL.

 

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