Section 8: Safety Considerations
8.1 Range Officer Authority
- The Range Officer / Chief Range Officer has absolute authority over all safety matters on the range
- All athletes, coaches, and spectators must obey Range Officer commands immediately and without question
- The Range Officer may halt firing at any time for any safety concern; no shots fired during a halt count
- Range Officer uses standardized commands: “Load,” “Start,” “Stop,” “Unload,” “Show Clear”
8.2 Firearm Handling
- Muzzle direction: Firearms must be pointed downrange at all times. Pointing a firearm in any other direction — loaded or unloaded — is grounds for immediate DSQ.
- Actions open: When not on the firing line or when not actively firing, all firearm actions must be open (bolt open, cylinder open, breech broken). A chamber flag (bright-colored indicator inserted in the chamber) is recommended.
- Loading: Firearms may only be loaded on the firing line after the Range Officer’s “Load” command
- Unloading: Firearms must be unloaded and shown clear to the Range Officer before leaving the firing line
- Dry firing: Permitted only when pointed downrange and only during the designated preparation/sighting period or during competition
8.3 Personal Protective Equipment
- Hearing protection: Mandatory for all persons on the range (athletes, officials, spectators). Earplugs, earmuffs, or electronic hearing protection.
- Eye protection: Mandatory for all shotgun events; recommended for rifle and pistol events. Shooting glasses with impact-resistant lenses.
- Range officials and media personnel in the range area must also wear hearing and eye protection
8.4 Range Safety Procedures
- No live ammunition permitted outside the designated firing areas (no ammunition in equipment rooms, warm-up areas, or spectator areas)
- Range closed and secured during scoring, target changes, and maintenance periods — no personnel downrange when firing is possible
- Backstops and bullet traps inspected and maintained to prevent ricochets or bullet escape
- Emergency ceasefire procedure: any person may call “Cease Fire” if an unsafe condition is observed; all firing stops immediately
- Medical personnel and first-aid equipment present at all sanctioned competitions
- Shotgun ranges: fall-out zone must be clear of personnel and structures; maximum pellet travel distance considered in range design
8.5 Environmental and Lead Safety
- Indoor ranges require ventilation systems that direct air from the firing line toward the backstop to prevent lead exposure from airborne particles
- Lead contamination mitigation: regular soil testing at outdoor ranges; bullet traps designed to capture and contain lead fragments
- Athletes handling ammunition should wash hands before eating or drinking
- Some jurisdictions require non-toxic (steel or bismuth) shot for shotgun events held near waterways or wetlands