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Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Shell-shocked resident wants bylaw review Ex-cop wants Central Saanich to revisit rules allowing live ammo for pest control Devon MacKenzie News staff
A Central Saanich resident is calling for a bylaw review after an incident at his home on Aug. 5 left him and his family feeling unsafe in their own backyard. Gord Gummer, who lives on a property Jewett Place that backs onto farmland, was shocked to find a pellet from a shotgun shell had made its way inside his home. “I am always aware now. I think about my family, the pets, my granddaughter … and what might have happened if they’d been hit by the pellet,” he said. The night of the incident was an average Sunday night for Gummer, but as he sat watching TV something strange happened. “It was about (9 p.m.) and my wife and I were sitting in our family room when she noticed something fly into the living room and then into the kitchen through the open french door,” he said. “I called the Central Saanich Police that night and reported the incident and then a couple of days later I noticed a small dent in one of the kitchen cabinets where the pellet hit,” he said. Gummer said police visited his home that night and a few more times over the following weeks. Investigators eventually determined that the buckshot, which Gummer believes came from a farm behind his home, had ricocheted off a rock in his garden and then into the house. “My wife and I spend a lot of time in our family room and kitchen as well as on the decks in the backyard where the buckshot travelled,” said the retired longtime Victoria police inspector. “My nine-month-old granddaughter also spends a lot of time here including the night before the incident happened, when we were having a birthday party in our backyard.”
Devon MacKenzie/News Review staff
Central Saanich resident Gord Gummer stands in the doorway on his back patio, where an errant pellet from a shotgun shell flew through last month. Gummer is calling for a review of the municipality’s bylaws on wildlife control on farms. Central Saanich police continue to investigate the incident, but declined to comment in any detail. “All I can confirm, because the investigation is ongoing, is that the case is still under active investigation,” said Cpl. Janis Jean. Gummer’s property backs on to fields leased by Silver Rill Corn, which holds legal permits to control deer and other wildlife on its property. That includes using blanks or live rounds in shotguns. Permits for farmers to discharge firearms for such purposes are issued by both the police and the Fish and Wildlife bureau of the Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natu-
ral Resource Operations. They stipulate a minimum 100-metre distance must be kept between the point of firing and a possible residence. Clayton Fox of Silver Rill says the operation has been practicing safe crop protection for close to 50 years and that they use ammunition specifically designed to only travel a certain distance. “We are only allowed to use specific shells and we always have, and (they can’t) travel far distances (because) they lose velocity very quickly,” Fox said in an email to the News Review. “The only explanation we have come up
with is a manufacturers error in one of the shells we use which allowed a BB to travel three times the distance it is supposed to … followed by a fluke ricochet. I can assure anyone that we are obeying every law and safety concern, and staying in the boundaries of where we are permitted to discharge shotguns. (We) will continue to practice the use of these permits safely.” Gummer is concerned the situation of farmers using live ammunition could become more problematic. PLEASE SEE: Crop protection, page A4
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