Some interesting reading from the EPA on shooting ranges and lead, best practices, and such.
And before a bunch of you go off on the EPA...
Acknowledgements
The USEPA would like to acknowledge
the support of:
• The National Rifle Association of America
• The National Shooting Sports Foundation
• The Wildlife Management Institute
• Mark Begley of the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection
• Mr. Dick Peddicord of Dick Peddicord and Company, Inc.
These participants provided valuable information and assistance as peer reviewers in the develop- ment of the manual and their efforts are truly appreciated. EPA also wishes to give special thanks to Dr. Charles W. Sever of Okie Environmental Consulting, L.L.C., Inc., Mr. Mike Warminsky of Brice Environmental Services Corp., and Mr. Victor Ordija of Sporting Goods Properties.The EPA also wishes to acknowledge and thank the many others who provided important comments and insight, and especially those individuals who took the time to meet with us in person or on the phone.
I have a narrow 200 yard shooting alley on our property. I built a soft sand berm in a U shape behind the paper target area and shoot a few hundred rounds per year. I don't use metal targets because I think they cause ricochet out of the sand area. But that's just me.
When I was a kid, I used to shoot competitively indoors at two ranges. One was the YMCA, the other a city-owned parks department facility. There were two levels of steel backstops at 45 degree angles. The lower for prone position and the upper for standing. There were sand traps below each of them. These were 50' ranges.
I can tell you from personal experience, that even with the 45 degree angle steel plates, bullet fragments would come back and hit us occasionally. If you looked up at the acoustic tile ceiling over and behind the shooting stations, they were all torn up in the opposite direction. It was obviously from ricochet. And I'm not talking a few. There were thousands of tiny scratch marks in those ceilings at both ranges.
Eventually, the shooting sports waned in popularity at the Y and the city facility, probably due to the local gun stores with shooting ranges, and the lack of interest from youth.
I'm not sure what became of the area inside the Y. It's still there. The city facility was attached to a gymnasium and was open for decades. My kids took karate classes there for years. The shooting area was converted to a garage for parks department storage.
Only years later did they discover that not only the shooting range area, but the gymnasium and all side rooms were contaminated with lead dust. It was cleaned up, and the building sold.
Anyhow, I'd be pretty comfortable with a small shooting range with sand traps and adequate backstops and not worry too much about lead contamination as long as it's contained and not in a wet area.