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FFS!!! If they're scared of them and don't know how to use them, it'd have to be criminally irresponsible to let them have them wouldn't it??????
The long beam of the law
Taking aim … police have called for tenders for a virtual reality shooting
range. The picture above was supplied by Meggitt Training Systems, which will
bid for the project.
Taking aim … police have called for tenders for a virtual reality shooting
range. The picture above was supplied by Meggitt Training Systems, which will
bid for the project.

Edmund Tadros
January 4, 2009
THE NSW Police Force will spend about $2 million on a virtual reality shooting
range as senior officers blame a lack of training for recruits being frightened
of firearms.
The police academy at Goulburn has "only six lanes" available for live fire,
according to a tender request for the new training simulator.
In the past, recruits have used public shooting ranges to supplement their
training.
"The capacity of this [Goulburn] facility has been exceeded due to an increasing
number of recruits," the tender document states.
Senior police say the lack of access to shooting ranges has resulted in some
younger officers receiving so little practice that they are scared of using
their guns.
Officers also claim their annual day-long firearms requalification training is
inadequate, leaving them unprepared to use their weapons in dangerous
situations.
The criticisms come after the shooting of 48-year-old Susan Bandera in Sydney
last month by a 35-year-old female constable who has been in the force for two
years.
Virtual ranges involve replica guns, complete with recoil, being "shot" at
scenarios on a video screen, via wireless technology.
The force will pay $1 million for a building plus $850,000 for the computer
system, which may be operational by September.
"We have a lot of young cops who are scared of guns," a senior officer told The
Sun-Herald.
"They are deployed most of the time and do not get enough access to training and
other courses - it's a major problem."
Another officer said the once-a-year requalification program was not enough:
"It's amazing an innocent bystander hasn't been shot. We all know it's a
pathetic level of training - command say it comes down to money and a lack of
resources."
Opposition police spokesman Michael Gallacher said officers should have more
firearms training.
"These simulators are very advanced but quite simply nothing will replace live
fire training needed to allow officers to learn how to use their weapons at a
moment's notice," he said. "The idea of the training is to get a feel for the
pressure of the situation of actually using the firearm that you're going to be
issued. I'd be concerned we're now reducing live fire training and replacing it
with the Nintendo Wii."
Police Association spokesman Greg Black said the union supported virtual
training as long as it did not replace live training.
Assistant Commissioner Michael Corboy defended the force's training regimen,
saying there would be no reduction in live training.
"The use of a weapons simulator [will allow] NSW Police to train students more
frequently in a more efficient and technologically advanced manner," he said.
Mr Corboy said he had received no complaints about the yearly training program
or officers being concerned about using their guns.