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Sports-Shooters-Mag-Issue-59-Single-Pages-FA

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Just one of the many dangers in a natural disaster is around the security and whereabouts of firearms. 12 It is an unfortunate reality that the NSW community is becoming more accustomed to preparing for natural emergency events – bushre, ood, cyclone, storm – with many households having their evacuation and disaster plans mapped out and ready to operationalise at a minute's notice. These plans are key in identifying who to contact, who to mobilise, what to take, and when to leave. Sometimes these decisions must be made when minutes or seconds can be the difference between being safe or being stranded. Just one of the many dangers in a natural disaster is around the security and whereabouts of rearms. With the wide scale destruction of property, rearms may be lost, damaged or displaced. Unfortunately, and reprehensibly, following a natural disaster, criminals take advantage of the confusion that ensues. In January 2020, the Firearms Registry worked with local police and the Rural Fire Service to identify, contact and assist customers who had been affected by the bushres across NSW. Where possible and necessary, we encouraged licence holders to make alternate safe storage arrangements at police stations, rearms dealers, or with another appropriate licence holder, and to make the necessary notications to the Firearms Registry. The Firearms Registry also made direct contact with peak associations and the rearms dealer network to ask for a unied approach to assist with licence holders, clubs and range facilities that had been affected by the bushre disaster.

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