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The Watchman
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20070817/D8R2UKLG0.html
Ammunition Shortage Squeezes Police
Troops training for and fighting the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan are firing more than 1 billion bullets a year,
contributing to ammunition shortages hitting police departments
nationwide and preventing some officers from training with the
weapons they carry on patrol.
An Associated Press review of dozens of police and sheriff's
departments found that many are struggling with delays of as
long as a year for both handgun and rifle ammunition. And the
shortages are resulting in prices as much as double what
departments were paying just a year ago.
"There were warehouses full of it. Now, that isn't the case,"
said Al Aden, police chief in Pierre, S.D.
Departments in all parts of the country reported delays or
reductions in training and, in at least one case, a proposal to
use paint-ball guns in firing drills as a way to conserve real
ammo.
Forgoing proper, repetitive weapons training comes with a price
on the streets, police say, in diminished accuracy, quickness on
the draw and basic decision-making skills.
"You are not going to be as sharp or as good, especially if an
emergency situation comes up," said Sgt. James MacGillis, range
master for the Milwaukee police. "The better-trained officer is
the one that is less likely to use force."
The pinch is blamed on a skyrocketing demand for ammunition that
followed the start of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, driven
by the training needs of a military at war, and, ironically,
police departments raising their own practice regiments
following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. The increasingly
voracious demand for copper and lead overseas, especially in
China, has also been a factor.
The military is in no danger of running out because it gets the
overwhelming majority of its ammunition from a dedicated plant
outside Kansas City. But police are at the mercy of commercial
manufacturers.
None of the departments surveyed by the AP said they had pulled
guns off the street, and many departments reported no problems
buying ammunition. But others told the AP they face higher
prices and months-long delays.
In Oklahoma City, for example, officers cannot qualify with
AR-15 rifles because the department does not have enough
.223-caliber ammunition - a round similar to that fired by the
military's M-16 and M4 rifles. Last fall, an ammunition shortage
forced the department to cancel qualification courses for
several different guns.
"We've got to teach the officers how to use the weapon, and
they've got to be able to go to the range and qualify with the
weapon and show proficiency," said department spokesman Capt.
Steve McCool. "And you can't do that unless you have the
rounds."
In Milwaukee, supplies of .40-caliber handgun bullets and
.223-caliber rifle rounds have gotten so low the department has
repeatedly dipped into its ammunition reserves. Some weapons
training has already been cut by 30 percent, and lessons on
rifles have been altered to conserve bullets.
Unlike troops in an active war zone, patrol officers rarely fire
their weapons in the line of duty. Even then, an officer in a
firefight isn't likely to shoot more than a dozen rounds, said
Asheville, N.C., police training officer Lt. Gary Gudac. That,
he said, makes training with live ammunition for real-life
situations - such as a vehicle stop - so essential.
"We spend a lot of money and time making sure the officers are
able to shoot a moving target or shoot back into a vehicle,"
Gudac said. "Any time we have a deadly force encounter, one of
the first things we pull is the officer's qualification
records."
In Trenton, N.J., a lack of available ammunition led the city to
give up plans to convert its force to .45-caliber handguns. Last
year, the sheriff's department in Bergen County, N.J., had to
borrow 26,000 rounds of .40-caliber ammunition to complete
twice-a-year training for officers.
"Now we're planning at least a year and a half, even two years
in advance," said Bergen County Detective David Macey, a
firearms examiner.
In Phoenix, an order for .38-caliber rounds placed a year ago
has yet to arrive, meaning no officer can currently qualify with
a .38 Special revolver.
"We got creative in how we do in training," said Sgt. Bret
Draughn, who supervises the department's ammunition purchases.
"We had to cut out extra practice sessions. We cut back in
certain areas so we don't have to cut out mandatory training."
In Wyoming, the state leaned on its ammunition suppler earlier
this year so every state trooper could qualify on the
standard-issue AR-15 rifle, said Capt. Bill Morse. Rifle rounds
scheduled to arrive in January did not show up until May,
leading to a rush of troopers trying to qualify by the deadline.
"We didn't (initially) have enough ammunition to qualify
everybody in the state," Morse said.
In Indianapolis, police spokesman Lt. Jeff Duhamell said the
department has enough ammunition for now, but is considering
using paint balls during a two-week training course, during
which recruits fire normally fire about 1,000 rounds each.
"It's all based on the demands in Iraq," Duhamell said. "A lot
of the companies are trying to keep up with the demands of the
war and the demands of training police departments. The price
increased too - went up 15 to 20 percent - and they were
advising us ... to order as much as you can."
Higher prices are common. In Madison, Wis., police Sgt. Lauri
Schwartz said the city spent $40,000 on ammunition in 2004, a
figure that rose to $53,000 this year. The department is
budgeting for prices 22 percent higher in 2008. In Arkansas,
Fort Smith police now pay twice as much as they did last year
for 500-round cases of .40-caliber ammunition.
"We really don't have a lot of choices," Cpl. Mikeal Bates said.
"In our profession, we have to have it."
The Lake City Army Ammunition Plant in Independence, Mo.,
directly supplies the military with more than 80 percent of its
small-arms ammunition. Production at the factory has more than
tripled since 2002, rising from roughly 425 million rounds that
year to 1.4 billion rounds in 2006, according to the Joint
Munitions Command at the Rock Island Arsenal in Illinois.
Most of the rest of the military's small-arms ammunition comes
from Falls Church, Va.-based General Dynamics Corp. (GD), which
relies partly on subcontractors - some of whom also supply
police departments. Right now, their priority is filling the
military's orders, said Darren Newsom, general manager of The
Hunting Shack in Stevensville, Mont., which ships 250,000 rounds
a day as it supplies ammunition to 3,000 police departments
nationwide.
"There's just a major shortage on ammo in the U.S. right now,"
he said, pointing to his current backorder for 2.5 million
rounds of .223-caliber ammunition. "It's just terrible."
Police say the .223-caliber rifle round is generally the hardest
to find. Even though rounds used by the military are not exactly
the same as those sold to police, they are made from the same
metals and often using the same equipment.
Alliant Techsystems Inc. (ATK), which runs the Lake City plant
for the Army, also produced more than 5 billion rounds for
hunting and police use last year, making the Edina, Minn.-based
company the country's largest ammunition manufacturer. Spokesman
Bryce Hallowell questioned whether the Iraq war had a direct
effect on the ammunition available to police, but said there was
no doubt that surging demand was affecting supply.
"We had looked at this and didn't know if it was an anomaly or a
long-term trend," Hallowell said. "We started running plants
24/7. Now we think it is long-term, so we're going to build more
production capability."
That unrelenting demand for ammunition will continue to put a
premium on planning ahead, said Maricopa County, Ariz., Sheriff
Joe Arpaio, who so far has kept his department from experiencing
any shortage-related problems.
"If we have a problem, I'll go make an issue of it - if I have
to go to Washington or the military," Arpaio said. "That is a
serious thing ... if you don't have the firepower to protect the
public and yourself."
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