Gun permit applicants increasingly are women

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http://www.tennessean.com/local/archives/03/11/43325480.shtml

Gun permit applicants increasingly are women


By JAY HAMBURG
Staff Writer


Even after working several years as a prison guard, Twanda McCurry never felt the need to carry a gun for protection outside of work, and especially not after she went into a new business as an office manager at a bottling plant.

Until about three weeks ago.

That's when she decided to join the fast-growing number of Tennessee women who have permits to carry handguns.

Since 2000, the percentage of gun-carry permits issued in the state to women has risen steadily from about 10% to almost 20% of those issued so far this year.

No one is exactly sure why. The reasons given vary from a growing interest in sports shooting among women to the belief that men — who are the majority of gun owners — rushed in to get gun-carry permits when they became more easily available in 1996, while women gradually gained interest.

To McCurry the reason was simply personal.

It was late in the afternoon about three weeks ago when McCurry and her sister pulled up to their townhouse apartment in Antioch. Three men rushed up, brandishing an assortment of weapons, including a handgun, a crowbar and a baseball bat.

Startled, the two women felt ambushed but managed to make it into their apartment unharmed. McCurry thinks it was only because the men realized they had made a mistake and backed off to find their intended targets.

Nonetheless, it left her feeling very vulnerable to violence.

''I never imagined I would have to purchase a gun to feel secure,'' said McCurry, 33. ''But life is too short to be afraid to leave my house or my car.''

After undergoing a background check, paying a $115 fee and taking a required training course, she got her gun-carry permit, making her one of more than 5,500 Tennessee women who have done so this year.

Permits are issued by the Department of Safety, which took over the process from county sheriffs in 1996. This created a more uniform set of standards for approving handgun permits and fostered a large increase in applications.

To get a permit to carry a handgun in Tennessee, you must be 21 and pass a criminal background check done by the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation. Permits are good for four years.

While the number of women getting permits may be slowly leveling off after rising for a couple of years, several women contacted said they had recommended getting handguns to their female friends.

Instructors and sellers urge potential handgun owners to get thorough training in the handling of a firearm and in how to make sure no children accidentally get their hands on weapons.

McCurry purchased handguns as early Christmas gifts for her two sisters and urged them to get the training needed to get a gun-carry permit.

The permit allows a person to carry a gun openly or in a concealed manner. There are restrictions on bringing guns into certain settings, including school property and places where alcohol is served.

Linda Compton got her permit about four years ago after there was an armed robbery at her family's grocery story, Compton's Foodland, on Smith Springs Road. ''I feel much more comfortable with it,'' said Compton, 60. '' I take it almost everywhere. Things have just gotten meaner out there.''

Compton said she even recommended the idea to her 82-year-old mother, who eventually decided against it.

Middle Tennessee gun sellers and gun safety instructors say they have noticed more women becoming interested in acquiring guns during the past two to three years. No one seems to know exactly why because violent crime generally is down in Nashville.

''It's hard to know what it's connected to,'' said Buford Tune, a former Metro police officer who runs the Academy of Personal Protection and Security. ''We're getting a lot of women who realized that they can't depend on anybody to protect them.''

The increase in his female trainees in the past couple of years includes those who may have to work late at night, those whose husbands or boyfriends may often be out of town, and those interested in becoming security officers, said Tune, who has run a weapons and personal safety school for 10 years.

''We used to see about two out of 20 in a class were women. Now we're starting to see about one-half of the class being women.''

Gun sellers see a rise in women buying guns, as well. Female customers have increased by 25% to 30% in the past five years, said John Arnold, owner of Specialty Arms II in La Vergne.

A similar rise has been noted at Law Enforcement Equipment in Nashville. ''Something has happened in their life that they perceive as a threat, and they feel safer with this,'' said owner Tommy St. Charles. ''It gives them peace of mind.''

Those who study the demographics of gun ownership think that the number of gun-carry permits is not likely to increase dramatically in the near future. Most states that offer similar permits have found that the number of approved permits eventually settles at a level equal to 2% to 5% of the population, said John Harris, head of the Tennessee Firearms Association, which promotes safe use of guns and lobbies legislators.

''After 9/11, there was a spike and you'll continue to see spikes'' with reports of local violent crimes, said Harris, who is legal adviser to the National Rifle Association in Tennessee.

There are 137,608 valid handgun permits in Tennessee, which is about 2.5% of the population.

Lisa Binkley, who lives in Good- lettsville, is glad she is among that 2.5%.

Binkley, 39, works as a security guard, but when she applied for a permit, she wanted to carry a gun for her own protection. ''If I'm out with my family or if I'm by myself, I want to be safe.''

To carry a handgun

The Tennessee Department of Safety issues permits to carry handguns. Qualified applicants must be 21, have a clean criminal record and attend a short course in handling their firearms given by a state-certified school.

Consumers are urged to ask detailed questions about the background and experience of their instructors before choosing a class.

These Web sites offer more information on handguns, laws and safety issues:

Tennessee Department of Safety: www.tennessee.gov/safety/index.html

Tennessee Firearms Association: www.tennesseefirearms.com

KidsHealth for Parents: www.kidshealth.org
 
Women who do not resist an attack are 2.5 times more likely to be seriously injured than those who resist with a gun.

My wife gets her CCW as soon as the blighted state of SC will let her.
 
I just wish more ladies .. nationwide would ''see the light'' .... where carry is permitted of course.;)

No disrespect to the fairer sex at all but ... they are relatively more vulnerable ... and deserve every bit as much a means of defending themselves as us guys.

I applaud any woman who ''goes for it'' .... it is their right and also the way to go.
 
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