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Plans to extend the Ashford and District Rifle Range have been deferred

Plans for an open-air rifle range in Ashford have been put on hold over fears someone could be “maimed”.

A proposal to build a 50m Olympic size outdoor firing area at the Ashford and District Rifle Range, off Chart Road was discussed at last week’s planning committee.

The club, which has more than 100 members, sits within a triangle of land bounded by Chart Road, the A28 and the Great Chart Recreation Ground.

The Ashford and District Rifle Range want to open a new open air firing area
The Ashford and District Rifle Range want to open a new open air firing area

Both the new firing position and the target area would be under cover and the range would be enclosed by the existing single-storey building and by two-metre high chain link fencing.

The proposal also includes further noise mitigation measures including some backstop and noise barrier landscaping within the site.

However, the plans were met with objections from some councillors, who worried about the safety of the public and noise pollution to neighbours.

“You only need one accident for someone to get maimed or hurt." - Cllr Barrett

Cllr Bill Barrett, ward member for Singleton South, said he couldn’t possibly support a rifle range 50m from a road.

He said: “What concerns me is that a bullet could hit a member of the public.

“You only need one accident for someone to get maimed or hurt. Are we confident this range is fully sheltered, so that if a bullet does ricochet it could hit a wall?”

Cllr Paul Clokie, member for Tenterden North, said he knew members of the club and understood that the rules are stringent. However he questioned what guns would be used and said “bullets travel quite far and fast”.

He added: “What if someone shoots a bit high and it goes above the bund?”

He noted that 61 people had objected to the application and said he would like to see extra protection above the targets.

Cllr Bill Barrett
Cllr Bill Barrett

Fears from neighbours included the noise nuisance to homeowners, cyclists and pets, safety concerns that “accidents will happen”, its proximity to the road and the impact on house prices.

Speaking at the meeting, Gerald McHugh, from Great Chart, said: “The residents of Great Chart and Singleton do not support this.”

He spoke of the impact the noise would have on neighbours and said the “committee would be negligent to approve it”.

Another objecting speaker, Angus Wilson, said it was the intermittent and unexpected nature of the shots that would create problems for neighbours and those using the playing fields, blasting it an “unacceptable intrusion”.

Ward member for Downs North, Cllr Stephen Dehnel, who has a military background, addressed the fears and said a rogue shot fired accidentally in the wrong direction was “very rare.”

Cllr Stephen Dehnel
Cllr Stephen Dehnel

He said: “This would be an attractive facility in Ashford. It would serve the people in the area.

“However, we should address residents’ concerns with safety and noise.

“Anything we can do to mitigate their worries on safety, we should do. We are duty bound.”

Leader of Ashford council, Cllr Gerry Clarkson agreed, and suggested that a screening wall replace the chain fence, as this would “take the sting out of a bullet” and act as a sound barrier.

Members discussed the scheme for just over an hour, and despite officer’s recommending it for approval it was finally agreed to defer the application.

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