Fort Discovery Corp. v. Jefferson County ( 2020 )


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  •                                                                                              Filed
    Washington State
    Court of Appeals
    Division Two
    September 9, 2020
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION II
    FORT DISCOVERY CORP., a Washington                                No. 53245-0-II
    Corporation; STEPHEN     ANDERSON,
    STEVEN GILSTROM, and JAY TOWNE,
    Appellants,
    v.
    JEFFERSON       COUNTY,         a   Washington              UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    municipality,
    Respondent.
    CRUSER, J. — In November of 2017, we decided Kitsap County v. Kitsap Rifle and
    Revolver Club, 
    1 Wash. App. 2d
    393, 
    405 P.3d 1026
    (2017), upholding a Kitsap County ordinance
    that imposed uniform permitting requirements on commercial shooting facilities. Shortly
    thereafter, Jefferson County undertook the creation of its own ordinance, modeled after the one we
    upheld in Kitsap County. However, unlike the Kitsap County ordinance, Jefferson County’s
    ordinance included a restriction on shooting at commercial facilities after dark. Appellants,
    including commercial shooting range owners and their patrons, filed suit seeking to invalidate
    Jefferson County’s ordinance.
    Appellants Fort Discovery Corp., Stephen Anderson, Steven Gilstrom, and Jay Towne,
    (together, “Appellants”) appeal from the trial court’s order granting summary judgment in favor
    No. 53245-0-II
    of Jefferson County and denying Appellants’ cross motion for summary judgment. Appellants
    argue that the trial court erred because (1) RCW 9.41.290 preempts Jefferson County’s ordinance,
    (2) the preemption exception in RCW 9.41.300(2) does not apply, (3) the ordinance is
    unconstitutional under article I, section 24 of the Washington Constitution, and (4) the ordinance
    is unconstitutional under the Second Amendment of the United States Constitution.
    We hold that (1) RCW 9.41.290 does not preempt the entire ordinance, but the provision
    restricting shooting after dark regulates the discharge of firearms within the scope of RCW
    9.41.290; (2) the entire ordinance, including the restriction on shooting after dark, is valid because
    this restriction falls within the exception to preemption under RCW 9.41.300(2)(a); (3) the
    ordinance does not violate article I, section 24 of the Washington Constitution; and (4) the
    ordinance does not violate the Second Amendment of the United States Constitution.
    Accordingly, we affirm.
    FACTS
    I. COMMERCIAL SHOOTING FACILITIES IN JEFFERSON COUNTY
    Fort Discovery Corporation (“Fort Discovery”) operated a commercial shooting range in
    Jefferson County from 1990 to 2017. The Jefferson County Sportsmen’s Association
    (“Sportsmen’s Association”) is the only other commercial shooting range currently operating in
    Jefferson County. The Sportsmen’s Association has been operating for over 56 years, with a
    “perfect” safety record, and has not had “incidents of any kind,” during that time period. Clerk’s
    Papers (CP) at 305. Fort Discovery similarly did not have any incidents requiring “‘medical
    attention’” during its 27 years of operation.
    Id. at 174. 2
    No. 53245-0-II
    In the summer of 2017, Joseph D’Amico, president of Fort Discovery, decided to move the
    gun range to a new location. D’Amico informed the Jefferson County planning department of his
    intent to close the former range and build a new range in a remote location near Lake Tarboo,
    where the nearest inhabited home was approximately 1.5 miles from the property. However,
    D’Amico’s plans to move the gun range came to a halt on December 18, 2017, when Jefferson
    County issued an emergency moratorium on any new shooting ranges in unincorporated Jefferson
    County.
    II. EMERGENCY MORATORIUM
    The emergency moratorium was passed to allow the Jefferson County Board of County
    Commissioners (“BoCC’) to develop an ordinance that would provide uniform permitting
    requirements for shooting ranges. The moratorium called for the creation of a review committee
    to advise the BoCC in drafting the ordinance, consisting of multiple interested parties including
    representatives from both commercial shooting facilities, 1 the Jefferson County sheriff, and “at
    large” property owners appointed by the BoCC, among others.
    Id. at 243.
    The review committee’s
    task was to “study the safety, environmental and land use impacts of commercial shooting facilities
    and reasonable measures to address those impacts,” and to “provide input to the County as the
    County generates and recommends a draft ordinance.”
    Id. The moratorium ordinance
    included among the legislative findings that,
    WHEREAS, bullets striking a residence on November 22, 2017 near the
    shooting range located at 112 Gun Club Rd., Port Townsend, WA 98368 on land
    owned by Jefferson County but operated by Jefferson County Sportsmen’s
    Association called to question the safety of commercial shooting facilities, even
    1
    The review committee included D’Amico, representing Fort Discovery and Security Services
    Northwest, Inc., a private security company, as well as John Minor, representing the Sportsmen’s
    Association.
    3
    No. 53245-0-II
    though it was ultimately determined the damage was likely not caused by the
    shooting facility operated by Jefferson County Sportsmen’s Association.
    Id. at 240.
    This finding refers to an incident during which a realtor was showing a property to a
    prospective buyer when they heard bullets going past the trees overhead and saw what they
    believed were bullet holes in a trailer on the property. Sheriff Art Frank determined that the
    complaint was “unfounded.”
    Id. at 275.
    He opined that the dents visible on the trailer did not appear
    to be caused by the direct fire of bullets coming from the range and the design of the range
    “appear[ed] to be constructed sufficiently to prevent a direct shot from striking the structure.”
    Id. at 272.
    The sheriff also did not believe, based on his “experience and understanding of bullet
    behavior,” that the bullets heard traveling overhead at that property originated from the
    Sportsmen’s Association.
    Id. During the sheriff’s
    investigation, Captain Stamper researched whether there were any
    prior reports of bullets leaving the Sportsmen’s Association facility and Stamper discovered 11
    complaints from a variety of addresses in the area dating back to 2008, not including the incident
    involving the realtor. Two complaints that involved bullets striking property were explicitly
    determined to be unfounded at the time they were investigated. For the remaining nine complaints,
    Stamper’s memorandum could be read to suggest that the shooting position on the range was too
    far to allow stray bullets to pass overhead or to reach any of the nearby properties, but it did not
    make any specific conclusions to that effect.
    4
    No. 53245-0-II
    III. REVIEW COMMITTEE AND DRAFT ORDINANCE
    The review committee produced a comprehensive report, as well as a draft ordinance that
    was consistent with the report, to the BoCC in August 2018. The report noted that, after “many
    weeks” of “active participation” at public review committee meetings, the draft ordinance was
    “borne of balancing interests,” to which some parties will object because “it goes too far and some
    probably will say it does not go far enough.”
    Id. at 412.
    Nevertheless, the review committee
    believed the draft ordinance would withstand legal challenge because the drafting process was
    open and inclusive, it did not directly regulate “any particular facility, person or project, despite
    the claims of some and the hopes of others,” and committee members “worked hard to rely on the
    BoCC’s substantial health and safety powers as the basis for the draft ordinance, as Kitsap
    County[2] did in its successful defense of its own shooting range ordinance.”
    Id. The review committee
    also relied heavily on the NRA Range Source Book, which provides guidance to assist
    in designing safe shooting facilities. The draft ordinance repeated in its entirety the legislative
    finding regarding the report of a bullet striking a residence that was also included among the
    legislative findings in the moratorium.
    There was an extended public comment period for the draft ordinance, as well as public
    hearings. Fort Discovery submitted written comments on the draft ordinance, and a representative
    from the Sportsmen’s Association gave “detailed testimony.”
    Id. at 662.
    2
    
     The review committee was expressly referring to this court’s opinion in Kitsap County v. Kitsap
    Rifle and Revolver Club, 
    1 Wash. App. 2d
    393, 
    405 P.3d 1026
    (2017).
    5
    No. 53245-0-II
    IV. JEFFERSON COUNTY ORDINANCE 12-1102-18
    The BoCC passed the final ordinance (“ordinance”) on November 2, 2018, which was
    codified in ch. 8.50 of the Jefferson County Code (JCC). The ordinance was similar to the draft
    version, but it also included “numerous revisions” adopted in consideration of the public
    testimony, including “many changes requested by [the Sportsmen’s Association].”
    Id. at 662.
    The purpose of the ordinance was to “provide uniform requirements for the establishment
    and operation of all commercial shooting facilities in unincorporated parts of the county.”
    Id. at 201.
    In keeping with this purpose, the ordinance imposed, for the first time, permitting
    requirements for commercial shooting facilities. For example, to obtain an operating permit,
    commercial shooting facilities must undergo a professional safety evaluation by a qualified
    shooting range evaluator. The safety evaluation ensures consistency with the NRA Range Source
    Book “for facility designs and institutional controls.”
    Id. at 216.
    In addition, the ordinance outlined
    minimum standards for security, containment, and public health and environmental impacts.
    The ordinance did not include the legislative finding regarding the bullet striking the
    residence. However, the ordinance did include other legislative findings that more broadly
    addressed matters of public safety.
    For example, the findings in the ordinance state that the County has experienced increases
    in population density in areas proximate to commercial shooting ranges, and the County “has an
    interest in ensuring the compatibility of commercial shooting facilities with their surroundings and
    in minimizing potential safety hazards.”
    Id. at 184.
    In addition, “public complaints about lack of
    safety and land use compatibility issues arising from the operation of commercial shooting
    facilities . . . have called on the scarce resources of Jefferson County’s emergency management
    6
    No. 53245-0-II
    system and the Sheriff’s office.”
    Id. The BoCC specifically
    noted that the rural areas where it may
    be appropriate to have a commercial shooting facility also tend to have scarce emergency services.
    The ordinance also contained a provision, as part of the safety plan, which required that:
    no shooting take place after dark, except for law enforcement officers or members
    of the armed forces[,] provided such shooting after dark for law enforcement
    officers or members of the armed forces does not occur after 10 p.m., shooting does
    not exceed four hours, and the maximum days shooting after dark is allowed does
    not exceed one day per week.
    Id. at 213-14.3
    The Sportsmen’s Association’s range did not offer evening shooting to its patrons,
    but the old Fort Discovery range did. Fort Discovery did not learn about the restriction on evening
    shooting until the day the ordinance was passed. The topic was not addressed during review
    committee deliberations. However, night shooting had been raised during public hearings before
    the BoCC and was discussed at the last public hearing the day before the ordinance was passed.
    Fort Discovery believed that the provision was, in its view, “a political compromise. Opponents to
    the gun range didn’t want any shooting after 5:00 p.m.” Verbatim Report of Proceedings (VRP) at
    19. Then, “all of a sudden at the last minute, evening shooting restrictions appeared.”
    Id. 3
      Jefferson County Board of County Commissioners amended the ordinance and replaced it with
    Ordinance 04-0224-20, App. B, § 8.50.240(2)(p) (Feb. 24, 2020). With respect to this provision,
    the current version limits the restriction on shooting after dark to outdoor facilities; indoor facilities
    may allow patrons to shoot after dark. Compare Ordinance 12-1102-18, App. B, § 8.50.240(2)(p)
    (Nov. 2, 2018) with Ordinance 04-0224-20, App. B, § 8.50.240(2)(p) (Feb. 24, 2020).
    7
    No. 53245-0-II
    V. DECLARATORY RELIEF ACTION
    Fort Discovery, together with Stephen Anderson, an individual who shot at the old Fort
    Discovery range, Steven Gilstrom, who also shot at the old Fort Discovery range, and Jay Towne,
    president of the Sportsmen’s Association, filed suit seeking declaratory relief. They sought to
    invalidate the entire ordinance, alleging it was preempted under RCW 9.41.290 and that RCW
    9.41.300(2)(a), which provides an exclusion to preemption under RCW 9.41.290, did not apply.
    Appellants further argued that the ordinance was unconstitutional under article I, section 24 of the
    Washington Constitution and the Second Amendment of the United States Constitution.
    Appellants also claimed that the provision banning evening shooting was invalid for the same
    reasons, even if the entire ordinance was not.
    The County filed its motion for summary judgment on December 18, 2018, arguing that
    following this court’s decision in Kitsap County, it was entitled to judgment as a matter of law
    because the ordinance is constitutional under both the state and federal constitutions and is not
    preempted under RCW 9.41.290. Appellants filed a cross motion for summary judgment on
    December 21, 2018, conceding that there were no genuine issues of material fact but arguing that
    they were entitled to judgment as a matter of law because the ordinance was preempted by RCW
    9.41.290, that RCW 9.41.300(2)(a) did not apply, and that the ordinance was unconstitutional
    under both the state and federal constitution.
    Following oral argument on both motions, the trial court granted the County’s motion for
    summary judgment and denied the Appellants’ cross motion for summary judgment. It ruled that
    RCW 9.41.290 does not apply to the Jefferson County ordinance, citing Kitsap County, and that
    even if the ordinance regulated the discharge of firearms, and thus fell within the purview of RCW
    8
    No. 53245-0-II
    9.41.290, it was a permissible regulation under RCW 9.41.300(2)(a). Further, the trial court ruled
    that the ordinance neither violated article I, section 24 of the Washington Constitution nor the
    Second Amendment of the United States Constitution. The trial court also wrote a memorandum
    opinion consistent with its ruling.
    Appellants appeal the order granting Jefferson County’s motion for summary judgment
    and denying Appellants’ motion for summary judgment.
    DISCUSSION
    I. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    This court reviews a summary judgment order de novo, and it engages in the same analysis
    as the trial court, viewing all facts and reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the
    nonmoving party. Associated Press v. Wash. State Leg., 
    194 Wash. 2d 915
    , 920, 
    454 P.3d 93
    (2019)
    (plurality opinion). Summary judgment is appropriate where there are no genuine issues of
    material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. CR 56(c).
    The interpretation and application of a statute is a matter of law that is subject to de novo
    review. Kitsap County, 
    1 Wash. App. 2d
    at 402. Constitutional issues are also reviewed de novo.
    State v. Sieyes, 
    168 Wash. 2d 276
    , 281, 
    225 P.3d 995
    (2010).
    II. APPLICATION OF RCW 9.41.290
    Appellants argue that the ordinance is invalid because it is preempted by RCW 9.41.290.
    Appellants contend that even though this court determined the largely similar Kitsap County
    ordinance was not preempted under RCW 9.41.290, the facts of this case compel a different result.
    Specifically, Appellants claim this case is distinguishable from Kitsap County because here, (1)
    the ordinance regulates the “discharge” of firearms when it prohibits shooting after dark, and (2)
    9
    No. 53245-0-II
    the ordinance is more “onerous” than the Kitsap County ordinance because it is 27 pages longer.
    Br. of Appellants at 22-23.
    The County argues that the ordinance is not preempted under RCW 9.41.290 because the
    ordinance regulates shooting facilities, and nothing in RCW 9.41.290 prevents local governments
    from regulating shooting facilities. In addition, the County contends that like the ordinance in
    Kitsap County, this ordinance does not directly regulate the discharge of firearms because it
    imposes requirements only on the owners and operators of commercial shooting facilities but not
    on its patrons.
    We agree with the Appellants that the restriction on shooting after dark regulates the
    “discharge” of firearms and falls within the scope of RCW 9.41.290. However, the remaining
    permitting provisions do not implicate the discharge of firearms and, therefore, the ordinance is
    not preempted under RCW 9.41.290.
    A. LEGAL PRINCIPLES
    A local government is vested with authority under article XI, section 11 of the Washington
    Constitution to “make and enforce within its limits all such local police, sanitary and other
    regulations as are not in conflict with general laws.” RCW 36.32.120(7) grants this same power
    specifically to counties. “Local governments have ‘considerable latitude in exercising police
    powers’ and a regulation is reasonable ‘if it promotes public safety, health or welfare and bears a
    reasonable and substantial relation to accomplishing the purpose pursued.’” Kitsap County, 1 Wn.
    App. 2d at 404 (quoting City of Seattle v. Montana, 
    129 Wash. 2d 583
    , 591-92, 
    919 P.2d 1218
    (1996)
    (abrogated on other grounds by Yim v. City of Seattle, 
    194 Wash. 2d 682
    , 702, 
    451 P.3d 694
    (2019)).
    10
    No. 53245-0-II
    An ordinance that conflicts with a state statute is invalid under article XI, section 11.
    Cannabis Action Coal. v. City of Kent, 
    183 Wash. 2d 219
    , 225-26, 
    351 P.3d 151
    (2015). But we
    presume that an ordinance is constitutional under article XI, section 11, and the party challenging
    an ordinance faces a “‘heavy burden’” of proving otherwise.
    Id. (quoting HJS Dev.
    , Inc. v. Pierce
    County, 
    148 Wash. 2d 451
    , 477, 
    61 P.3d 1141
    (2003)). Where the legislature intends to preempt the
    entire field on a given subject, “leaving no room for concurrent jurisdiction,” and a local ordinance
    addresses the same subject, the local ordinance conflicts with the state statute. Lawson v. City of
    Pasco, 
    168 Wash. 2d 675
    , 679, 
    230 P.3d 1038
    (2010). Such field preemption may occur where
    legislative intent is express or where it is necessarily implied. Watson v. City of Seattle, 
    189 Wash. 2d 149
    , 171, 
    401 P.3d 1
    (2017).
    The statute at issue here, RCW 9.41.290, is an example of “clear preemption language.”
    Id. at 171.
    RCW 9.41.290 provides,
    The state of Washington hereby fully occupies and preempts the entire field
    of firearms regulation within the boundaries of the state, including the registration,
    licensing, possession, purchase, sale, acquisition, transfer, discharge, and
    transportation of firearms . . . Cities, towns, and counties or other municipalities
    may enact only those laws and ordinances relating to firearms that are specifically
    authorized by state law.
    (emphasis added). “We must interpret an express preemption clause narrowly but fairly.” Kitsap
    County, 
    1 Wash. App. 2d
    at 404.
    B. ANALYSIS
    In Kitsap County, this court held that RCW 9.41.290 did not preempt the Kitsap County
    ordinance because Article 2, the challenged article of the ordinance, was not a “firearms
    regulation” within the scope of RCW 9.41.290.
    Id. at 408.
    In that case, Kitsap County adopted an
    11
    No. 53245-0-II
    ordinance that required all shooting facilities, including existing facilities, to obtain an operating
    permit, and failure to obtain such a permit would result in closure of the shooting range.
    Id. at 400.
    The Club argued that RCW 9.41.290 preempted Kitsap County’s ordinance because the permitting
    requirements effectively regulated the discharge of firearms.
    Id. at 406
    .
    
    This court disagreed and held that Article 2 did not regulate the discharge of firearms.
    Id. Instead, Article 2
    only regulated shooting facilities, and there is nothing in ch. 9.41 RCW that
    pertains to shooting facilities, nor is there any “indication that the legislature intended to preempt
    local ordinances requiring shooting facilities to obtain operating permits.” Id.4
    Here, Appellants argue that RCW 9.41.290 preempts the entire ordinance because it
    regulates the discharge of firearms and “shooting guns at a gun range is the ‘discharge’ of guns. It
    just is.” Reply Br. of Appellant at 5-6. But this court flatly rejected an identical argument raised
    by the Club in Kitsap County because the ordinance did not actually impose any restrictions on the
    individuals who “discharge firearms” at those facilities. 
    1 Wash. App. 2d
    at 407.
    Appellants correctly identify the shooting after dark provision as distinguishing this case
    from Kitsap County. There were two articles in the Kitsap County ordinance, and this court held
    that Article 2, “unlike Article 1 . . . [did] not prohibit or expressly regulate the discharge of
    4
    Moreover, the Kitsap County ordinance was not in conflict with RCW 9.41.290 because the
    statute permits counties to enact laws relating to firearms “‘that are specifically authorized by state
    law.’” Kitsap County, 
    1 Wash. App. 2d
    at 405 (quoting RCW 9.41.290). Imposing permitting
    requirements on shooting facilities falls within a county’s police power authorized by RCW
    36.32.120(7).
    Id. at 407.
    In addition, this court reasoned that recent Supreme Court cases have
    limited the preemptive scope of RCW 9.41.290 and upheld local government regulations.
    Id. at 407-08.
    Applying the RCW 9.41.290 preemption to permitting requirements on shooting facilities
    would broaden the statute’s preemptive scope in a manner inconsistent with recent Supreme Court
    decisions.
    Id. 12
    No. 53245-0-II
    firearms.”
    Id. at 406
    . 
    Article 1, on the other hand, “clearly regulates the discharge of firearms,”
    because it “expressly prohibits the discharge of firearms in certain areas.”
    Id. at 406
    n.3. But the
    Club limited its challenge to Article 2.
    Id. Here, the ordinance
    contains a provision which provides that shooting after dark is not
    permitted, except by law enforcement officers or members of the armed forces. Shooting after dark
    is permitted one day per week and may not exceed four hours. Unlike Article 2 in the Kitsap
    County ordinance, which exclusively imposed permitting requirements on facility owners and the
    facilities themselves, this provision regulates who can shoot at commercial facilities, when, and
    for how long. See
    id. at 406.
    This provision, therefore, reaches shooting facility patrons, directly
    impacting their ability to discharge a firearm at the facility at certain hours of the day where other
    individuals are not so restricted. Consequently, this provision regulates the discharge of firearms
    and the RCW 9.41.290 preemption applies.
    III. EXCEPTION TO PREEMPTION UNDER RCW 9.41.300(2)(A)
    Appellants argue that the exception to the RCW 9.41.290 preemption under RCW
    9.41.300(2)(a) does not apply because there was no legitimate safety rationale supporting the
    imposition of the permitting restrictions. They assert that the language “reasonable likelihood”
    under RCW 9.41.300(2)(a) is not satisfied by mere speculation and that instead, there must be
    “specific factual legislative findings” justifying the County’s reliance on the exception. Br. of
    Appellants at 23-24.
    We disagree with the Appellants and hold that there is no requirement that the ordinance
    must be supported by specific legislative findings. Because it is “conceivable” that shooting after
    13
    No. 53245-0-II
    dark may jeopardize humans and property, this regulation on discharging weapons falls within the
    exception to preemption in RCW 9.41.300(2).
    A. LEGAL PRINCIPLES
    RCW 9.41.290 states that local governments are not preempted from enacting ordinances
    that fall within the purview of that statute if the regulations are authorized under RCW 9.41.300.
    Relevant here, RCW 9.41.300(2)(a) provides that counties are authorized to enact ordinances
    “[r]estricting the discharge of firearms . . . where there is a reasonable likelihood that humans,
    domestic animals, or property will be jeopardized.” The limiting principal in this statute states that
    such ordinances cannot abridge rights guaranteed under article I, section 24 of the state
    constitution. RCW 9.41.300(2)(a). The constitutionality of restrictions on shooting after dark will
    be addressed separately in section III, below.
    To the extent that a provision regulates the discharge of firearms under RCW 9.41.290,
    then RCW 9.41.300(2)(a) may provide an exception for that regulation. Kitsap County, 
    1 Wash. App. 2d
    at 412. “However, to the extent that regulations regarding the operation of shooting ranges do
    not affect the discharge of firearms, preemption under RCW 9.41.290 does not apply at all to those
    regulations and no exception is needed to avoid preemption.”
    Id. Therefore, a provision
    that
    pertains to the discharge of firearms can be severed for analytical purposes from the remaining
    provisions in the ordinance.
    B. ANALYSIS
    In Kitsap County, this court held that even if the Kitsap County ordinance were a regulation
    related to the discharge of firearms under RCW 9.41.290, the exception to preemption in RCW
    9.41.300(2)(a) applied because “shooting ranges create a risk of danger to people and property.”
    14
    No. 53245-0-II
    Id. at 409
    . 
    This court analyzed general statements from the preamble as well as statements
    regarding the ordinance’s purpose.
    Id. at 409
    -10
    .
    For example, the preamble to Kitsap County’s ordinance stated, “‘[T]he County has an
    interest . . . in minimizing potential safety hazards created by the operation of shooting ranges.’”
    Id. at 409
    (alteration in original) (quoting CP at 15). The preamble also contained an express
    acknowledgement of RCW 9.41.300(2)(a).
    Id. In addition, the
    purpose statement to the ordinance
    provided,
    The purpose of this article is to provide for and promote the safety of the general
    public by establishing a permitting procedure . . . The shooting range standards
    adopted herein are intended to protect and safeguard participants, spectators,
    neighboring properties and the public.
    Id. at 409
    -10 
    (emphasis omitted) (quoting Kitsap County Code 10.25.060). This court held that
    these legislative statements were sufficient to establish that the preemption exception in RCW
    9.41.300(2)(a) applied.
    Id. Here, the ordinance
    contains nearly identical and perhaps even more extensive legislative
    statements demonstrating that the ordinance and the shooting after dark provision were enacted to
    address a reasonable likelihood that shooting ranges may jeopardize humans and property. For
    example, in the preamble, the ordinance states that the County has an interest in “minimizing
    potential safety hazards created by the operation of commercial shooting facilities.” CP at 184.
    The preamble goes on to state that commercial shooting facilities may be appropriate in rural areas,
    but in those areas, “emergency services are scarce and adopting a commercial shooting ordinance
    would promote public safety and preserve precious emergency services.”
    Id. at 185.
    Similar to the
    Kitsap County ordinance, here the County also expressly mentioned RCW 9.41.300(2)(a) in the
    15
    No. 53245-0-II
    preamble. And in describing the purpose of the ordinance, the County explained that it was created
    to “[e]stablish a permitting procedure and rules for the siting, design and operation of commercial
    shooting facilities that protect participants, spectators, neighboring properties and the public,”
    Id. at 201.
    Like the legislative statements in Kitsap County, these statements are sufficient to satisfy
    the requirements of RCW 9.41.300(2)(a).
    Appellants complain that there is no specific legislative finding demonstrating that the prior
    operations were unsafe, but such specific findings are not necessary to justify imposing restrictions
    related to discharging firearms under RCW 9.41.300(2)(a). They cite to the fact that both
    commercial shooting facilities in the county had a combined “83-year safety track record,” and the
    fact that the legislative finding regarding “the Errant Bullet Pretext,” was removed from the final
    ordinance to demonstrate the infirmity of the County’s safety justification. Br. of Appellants at 24.
    However, like the Club in Kitsap County, Appellants cite no authority supporting their
    assertion that in order to apply the exception to preemption under RCW 9.41.300(2)(a), the County
    was required to enter specific findings that show shooting after dark is dangerous or that the
    existing commercial shooting facilities were not operating safely. 
    1 Wash. App. 2d
    at 410. Although
    in the prior litigation involving the Kitsap Rifle and Revolver Club, there were substantial
    unchallenged findings demonstrating that the Club had been operating unsafely, in applying the
    preemption exception, this court held that specific findings were unnecessary.
    Id. at 410
    -11.
    
    Instead, this court recognized that an ordinance need not be predicated on specific findings
    because the constitution does not require county commissioners to “conduct a special investigation
    or make formal findings before they exercise their police power.”
    Id. at 410
    (quoting Petstel, Inc.
    v. County of King, 
    77 Wash. 2d 144
    , 151, 
    459 P.2d 937
    (1969)). Rather, “‘if a state of facts justifying
    16
    No. 53245-0-II
    the ordinance can reasonably be conceived to exist, such facts must be presumed to exist, and the
    ordinance passed in conformity therewith.’”
    Id. (internal quotation marks
    omitted) (quoting State
    v. McCuistion, 
    174 Wash. 2d 369
    , 392, 
    275 P.3d 1092
    (2012)).
    It is a matter of common understanding that firearm use can encompass certain dangers
    and that shooting in lower light may increase these dangers. Consequently, it is conceivable that
    shooting ranges in general, and shooting after dark in particular, may jeopardize humans and
    property. See
    id. at 411.
    “Therefore, we must presume that such facts existed,” and that the
    ordinance was enacted “in conformity with those facts.”
    Id. at 411.
    Whether shooting facilities had
    operated safely up to that point is irrelevant, as is the fact that a particular claim regarding an errant
    bullet was determined to be unfounded. Accordingly, the shooting after dark provision falls within
    the exception to preemption under RCW 9.41.300(2)(a) because it was enacted under the
    ordinance’s broader purpose of “protect[ing] participants, spectators, neighboring properties and
    the public.” CP at 201.
    17
    No. 53245-0-II
    III. ARTICLE I, SECTION 245
    Appellants argue that the ordinance violates article I, section 24 of the Washington
    Constitution because it unduly burdens a “range training right”6 inherent to the state constitutional
    right to bear arms in self-defense. Br. of Appellant 40. Appellants first urge this court to “clarify”
    that the proper test for determining whether a local ordinance violates article I, section 24 is either
    strict or intermediate scrutiny, as opposed to the traditionally applied test of constitutional
    reasonableness, because the latter test is a weaker protection than either the strict or intermediate
    scrutiny standards required under the Second Amendment. Appellants further argue that this court
    should afford the range training right even greater protection than the “[m]inimum of
    [i]ntermediate [s]crutiny” because (1) the range training right is “closely intertwined” with the
    5
    Where it is feasible to do so, we will resolve constitutional issues under our own state constitution
    before turning to federal law. State v. Jorgenson, 
    179 Wash. 2d 145
    , 152, 
    312 P.3d 960
    (2013).
    Appellants argue that this case presents an example of an occasion on which this court should
    depart from the traditional order and address the United States Constitution first. Appellants claim
    that because the Second Amendment provides a “federal floor” of minimum protections for the
    right to bear arms, our state constitution cannot provide weaker protections of this same right. Br.
    of Appellants at 35-36. However, in Jorgenson, our Supreme Court held that the right to bear arms
    under the state and federal constitution must be interpreted 
    separately. 179 Wash. 2d at 152
    .
    Therefore, we should address article I, section 24 first.
    6
    Appellants derive the “range training right” from the 7th Circuit opinion in Ezell v. City of
    Chicago, 
    651 F.3d 684
    , 704-06 (7th Cir. 2011). There, the court recognized that the right to train
    and practice in the use of firearms at shooting ranges is protected under the Second Amendment.
    
    Ezell, 651 F.3d at 704
    -06. No Washington court has recognized an analogous right under article I,
    section 24. See Kitsap County, 
    1 Wash. App. 2d
    at 414-18. Although in Kitsap County this court
    acknowledged the range training right in its Second Amendment discussion, it did not recognize
    an analogous right within the scope of article I, section 24.
    Id. at 415, 418.
    Instead, this court held
    that permitting restrictions on shooting facilities did not burden the right to bear arms in self-
    defense under article I, section 24. Kitsap County, 
    1 Wash. App. 2d
    at 418.
    18
    No. 53245-0-II
    right to bear arms, and (2) a Gunwall7 analysis reveals that the state constitution provides greater
    protection of this right than the federal constitution.
    Id. at 39-47.
    Appellants assert that because
    article I, section 24 provides greater protection than its federal counterpart, this court should
    analyze the range training right by applying either the strict or immediate scrutiny standard.
    We decline to compare the constitutional reasonableness approach to the federal tiers of
    scrutiny, and we apply the independent analysis described by the court in 
    Jorgenson. 179 Wash. 2d at 155
    . A restriction on shooting after dark at a commercial facility and the imposition of permitting
    requirements on commercial shooting facilities do not violate article I, section 24 because they are
    reasonable regulations enacted pursuant to the State’s police power. In addition, a Gunwall
    analysis is unnecessary because the Supreme Court established that article I, section 24 is analyzed
    separately from the Second Amendment.
    Id. at 155.
    A. LEGAL PRINCIPLES
    Article I, section 24 of the Washington Constitution reads,
    [t]he right of the individual citizen to bear arms in defense of himself, or the state,
    shall not be impaired, but nothing in this section shall be construed as authorizing
    individuals or corporations to organize, maintain or employ an armed body of men.
    The scope of this right is individual and it “exists only in the context of an individual’s ‘defense
    of himself, or the state.’” 
    Sieyes, 168 Wash. 2d at 293
    (quoting Const. art I, § 24). The right to bear
    7
    State v. Gunwall, 
    106 Wash. 2d 54
    , 
    720 P.2d 808
    (1986). In Gunwall, the Supreme Court provided
    a mechanism by which courts analyze the scope of a Washington constitutional provision as
    compared to its federal counterpart, involving six factors: (1) the text of the state constitution, (2)
    differences in the text of parallel state and federal constitutional provisions, (3) the history of the
    state constitution, (4) preexisting state law, (5) structural differences between the state and federal
    constitutions, and (6) matters of particular state interest or local concern. Id.at 61-62.
    19
    No. 53245-0-II
    arms under this provision is “not absolute.” 
    Montana, 129 Wash. 2d at 593
    . Nor is this right secured
    “because arms are valued per se.”
    Id. at 594.
    The right exists primarily to ensure an individual’s
    ability to act in self-defense or defense of the state.
    Id. When reviewing a
    constitutional challenge, this court presumes that a statute is
    constitutional, and the challenger has the burden of showing that it is unconstitutional. City of
    Seattle v. Evans, 
    184 Wash. 2d 856
    , 861-62, 
    366 P.3d 906
    (2015).
    B. CONSTITUTIONAL REASONABLENESS
    Appellants argue that this court should depart from the constitutional reasonableness
    standard upheld by the Supreme Court in Jorgenson because Jorgenson was decided in 2013, and
    current Second Amendment cases demonstrate that a higher level of scrutiny is needed to protect
    the range training right. Appellants claim that the Washington Constitution cannot provide weaker
    protections than those afforded under the Second Amendment. We disagree and hold that this court
    cannot depart from the analysis required by controlling authority and we continue to apply the
    constitutional reasonableness standard. We hold that under this standard, the ordinance and the
    shooting after dark provision are constitutionally reasonable.
    This court is bound by a decision of the Washington Supreme Court and is required to
    follow Supreme Court precedent. 1000 Virginia Ltd. P’ship v. Vertecs Corp., 
    158 Wash. 2d 566
    , 578,
    
    146 P.3d 423
    (2006). Failure to follow legal authority that directly controls analysis of an issue is
    error.
    Id. at 578.
    Appellants do not attempt to distinguish between this case and Jorgenson. Rather,
    they mean for this court to directly reject the approach to article I, section 24 analysis articulated
    by the Supreme Court. See Br. of Appellant at 38 n.31 (“This is why Appellants respectfully
    suggest this Court and ultimately the state Supreme Court need to ‘hit the refresh button’ on their
    20
    No. 53245-0-II
    holdings from before the blossoming of the federal jurisprudence on the range training right and
    Second Amendment rights in general.”). To the extent that Appellants suggest this court should
    abandon the “constitutional reasonableness” standard articulated in Jorgenson because they claim
    Jorgenson improperly imposed an insufficient standard, we dismiss this suggestion as meritless.8
    Appellants assert that Jorgenson is outdated because it cites Washington cases decided
    before the “current wave of new Second Amendment jurisprudence,” namely referring to the
    United States Supreme Court Decision in District of Columbia v. Heller, 
    554 U.S. 570
    , 
    128 S. Ct. 2783
    , 
    171 L. Ed. 2d 637
    (2008). Br. of Appellant at 38. Appellants suggest that Heller and its
    progeny have rendered Washington cases analyzing article I, section 24 obsolete. But Jorgenson
    was decided after Heller, and our Supreme Court did not simply overlook that case. Rather, the
    court in Jorgenson held that Heller does not govern the independent analysis of Washington’s
    constitutional 
    provisions. 179 Wash. 2d at 156
    . For this same reason, Appellants’ argument that
    Jorgenson was wrongly decided because it articulates a lesser standard than the federal floor of
    intermediate scrutiny fails. Jorgenson does not impose a lesser standard; it imposes a different
    standard.
    Id. In Jorgenson, the
    Supreme Court conducted a Gunwall analysis and held that “the state
    and federal rights to bear arms have different contours and mandate separate interpretation.”
    Id. at 152.
    The right to bear arms under article I, section 24 is “subject to reasonable regulation pursuant
    to the State’s police power.”
    Id. at 155.
    A firearm regulation is constitutionally reasonable when it
    is “‘reasonably necessary to protect public safety or welfare, and substantially related to legitimate
    8
    For the same reason, we reject the Appellants’ separate claim that because the right to bear arms
    in self-defense is a fundamental right, this court should apply a strict scrutiny analysis.
    21
    No. 53245-0-II
    ends sought.’”
    Id. at 156
    (quoting 
    Montana, 129 Wash. 2d at 594
    ). This analysis involves a balancing
    of “‘the public benefit from the regulation against the degree to which it frustrates the purpose of
    the constitutional provision.’”
    Id. (quoting Montana, 129
    Wn.2d at 594).
    The entire ordinance, as well as the shooting at night provision, are constitutionally
    reasonable regulations that do not violate article I, section 24. Public safety and welfare are
    necessarily implicated in any circumstance involving firearms because it is widely understood that
    guns pose an inherent danger to people and property. Therefore, the public benefit of the ordinance
    is its creation of uniform permitting requirements designed to “protect participants, spectators,
    neighboring properties and the public.” CP at 201. The ordinance expressly recognizes the value
    of providing a place for individuals to learn firearm safety “in a safe, controlled setting.”
    Id. at 185.
    The ordinance, including the shooting after dark provision, do not frustrate the purpose of
    article I, section 24, because they do not burden any individual’s rights to bear arms in self-defense.
    The ordinance primarily regulates the facility and its operations rather than the rights of the patrons
    who wish to shoot at the facility. In addition, the ordinance is limited to commercial shooting
    facilities, and does not apply to “a privately owned property used for lawful shooting practice
    solely by its owner or the owner’s guests without payment of any compensation to the owner of
    the privately owned property.”
    Id. at 202.
    To the extent that the shooting after dark provision
    impacts the rights of any patrons not in law enforcement or the armed forces who wish to shoot
    after dark, this burden is minimal because individuals may still practice shooting in low light
    conditions in places other than commercial shooting facilities. Taken together, this balancing
    reveals that the public benefit of the ordinance and the shooting after dark provision outweigh any
    22
    No. 53245-0-II
    burden this enactment imposes on article I, section 24. Consequently, the ordinance is a reasonable
    regulation pursuant to the County’s police power and does not violate the state constitution. 9
    IV. SECOND AMENDMENT
    A. LEGAL PRINCIPLES
    The Second Amendment states, “[a] well regulated [m]ilitia, being necessary to the security
    of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear [a]rms, shall not be infringed.” The Second
    Amendment applies to Washington through the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
    McDonald v. City of Chicago, 
    561 U.S. 742
    , 791, 
    130 S. Ct. 3020
    , 
    177 L. Ed. 2d 894
    (2010);
    
    Sieyes, 168 Wash. 2d at 296
    .
    9
    Appellants argue that a Gunwall analysis is required because no court has previously considered
    the contours of article I, section 24 compared to the Second Amendment with respect to the
    corollary range training right at issue in this case. However, there is no need to conduct a Gunwall
    analysis in this case because the court in Jorgenson has already determined that the rights protected
    under article I, section 24 and the Second Amendment are not identical and must be separately
    analyzed. 
    Jorgenson, 179 Wash. 2d at 155-56
    . The purpose of conducting a Gunwall analysis is to
    determine when it is appropriate to decide a case that implicates similar federal and state
    constitutional provisions on independent state grounds. 
    Gunwall, 106 Wash. 2d at 62
    . This issue, as
    applied in the context of article I, section 24 and the Second Amendment, has been finally resolved
    in 
    Jorgenson. 179 Wash. 2d at 155
    . Moreover, to the extent that Appellants argue that because article
    I, section 24 provides greater protection to the range training right, this court must analyze the
    ordinance by applying the less deferential strict scrutiny standard, we disagree. The constitutional
    reasonableness standard used to evaluate article I, section 24 is a distinct standard that has not been
    assigned a place among the tiers of scrutiny used to evaluate laws that implicate federal
    constitutional rights. Appellants assume, without providing any support, that constitutional
    reasonableness is a lesser standard than strict scrutiny, or it is equal to or lesser than intermediate
    scrutiny. “[W]here no authorities are cited in support of a proposition, the court is not required to
    search out authorities, but may assume that counsel, after diligent search, has found none.” In re
    Disciplinary Proceeding Against Cottingham, 
    191 Wash. 2d 450
    , 465 n.1, 
    423 P.3d 818
    (2018)
    (alteration in original) (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting State v. Young, 
    89 Wash. 2d 613
    ,
    625, 
    574 P.2d 1171
    (1978)). We decline to determine where the independent constitutional
    reasonableness standard fits among the tiers of scrutiny used to evaluate the Second Amendment.
    23
    No. 53245-0-II
    In Heller, the Court held that Second Amendment protects an individual’s right to keep
    and bear arms, including firearms, in the home and in an “operable” condition, tied primarily to
    the core purpose of “immediate 
    self-defense.” 554 U.S. at 635
    . Drawing an analogy to the right to
    free speech, the Court recognized that this right is “not unlimited.”
    Id. at 595.
    Following Heller, most federal circuit courts, including the Ninth Circuit, adopted a two-
    step inquiry to determine whether a challenged restriction violates the Second Amendment.
    Silvester v. Harris, 
    843 F.3d 816
    , 820-21 (9th Cir. 2016). The first step is the historical step,
    wherein the court considers whether a challenged law burdens conduct protected under the Second
    Amendment based on how the right was historically understood.
    Id. at 821.
    If a challenged law
    imposes restrictions that can be traced to the founding era, and such restrictions were not
    considered then to infringe on the Second Amendment, the law does not violate the Second
    Amendment and may be upheld without further analysis.
    Id. In the second
    step, the court determines the appropriate level of scrutiny by which to
    analyze a challenged law.
    Id. The appropriate level
    of scrutiny is determined on a “sliding scale,”
    by considering “(1) how close the challenged law comes to the core of the Second Amendment
    right, and (2) the severity of the law’s burden on that right.”
    Id. Rational basis review
    is never
    appropriate for analyzing enumerated rights. 
    Heller, 554 U.S. at 628
    n. 27. Thus, the scale slides
    between intermediate and strict scrutiny, depending on the degree to which the core right of using
    arms in self-defense under the Second Amendment is burdened. 
    Silvester, 843 F.3d at 821
    . For
    example, a law that regulates only the manner in which a firearm may be used is less burdensome
    on this core right than a law that wholly prohibits possession. Jackson v. City & County of San
    Francisco, 
    746 F.3d 953
    , 961 (9th Cir. 2014). In the same vein, “regulations which leave open
    24
    No. 53245-0-II
    alternative channels for self-defense are less likely to place a severe burden on the Second
    Amendment right than those which do not.”
    Id. A challenged law
    will withstand intermediate scrutiny analysis if: (1) the government’s
    objective in creating the law was “significant, substantial, or important,” and (2) there is a
    “reasonable fit” between the law and its objective. 
    Silvester, 843 F.3d at 821
    -22.
    B. ANALYSIS
    Appellants claim that because the Second Amendment protects the right to train in shooting
    at a gun range as an ancillary right to the right to bear arms in self-defense, an ordinance that
    restricts shooting after dark and imposes other regulations on shooting ranges violates the Second
    Amendment. Appellants assert that the ordinance burdens conduct protected by the Second
    Amendment. Appellants further claim that the ordinance fails an intermediate scrutiny analysis
    because the restrictions are not substantially related to any valid safety justifications but instead
    are a “‘solution’ in search of a problem” premised on speculation with no factual support. Br. of
    Appellants at 32-33.
    Restrictions on the right to shoot after dark at a commercial shooting facility, or on the
    right to shoot at commercial shooting facilities that are not subject to permitting requirements, do
    not burden conduct protected by the Second Amendment. Even assuming, arguendo, that the
    ordinance burdens conduct protected by the Second Amendment, these restrictions present only a
    modest burden on the ancillary right to train at commercial facilities. And the necessity of these
    measures is justified by the collaborative process under which the ordinance was created, the
    reports of bullets reaching properties near the Sportsmen’s Association range, the NRA Source
    Book, and common sense.
    25
    No. 53245-0-II
    1. The Historical Step
    In Kitsap County, the county did not present any argument on the historical step and
    addressed only the second step, which relates to scrutiny. 
    1 Wash. App. 2d
    at 415. This court
    “assume[d] without deciding” that the ordinance implicated the Second Amendment.
    Id. Here, this issue
    was briefed extensively and may be fully addressed.
    In Ezell, the court held that the right to train in the use of firearms was a corresponding
    right to the Second 
    Amendment. 651 F.3d at 704
    . The court explained,
    The right to possess firearms for protection implies a corresponding right to acquire
    and maintain proficiency in their use; the core right wouldn’t mean much without
    the training and practice that make it effective.
    Id. In rejecting the
    City’s claim that range training is categorically beyond the scope of the
    Second Amendment, the court described many founding era statutes and ordinances that imposed
    restrictions on discharging firearms in certain conditions or that imposed permitting or licensing
    requirements to engage in firearms practice.
    Id. at 705
    -06 n.13. A particularly relevant example
    includes a “1790 Ohio statute that prohibited the discharge of a firearm before sunrise, after sunset,
    or within one-quarter of a mile from the nearest building.”
    Id. at 705
    . 
    Another relevant example is
    a 1746 Boston statute which provided that residents could shoot targets “‘for the Exercise of their
    Skill and Judgement . . . at the lower End of the Common’ if they obtained permission from the
    ‘Field Officers of the Regiment in Boston.’”
    Id. (alteration in original)
    (quoting Act of May 28,
    1746, ch. X, 1746 Mass. Acts 208). The court identified similar restrictions that required permitting
    for target practice through 1869.
    Id. at 705
    n.13.
    26
    No. 53245-0-II
    The court distinguished the City’s “absolute prohibition” on shooting ranges within the
    city limits from these laws because these laws were “merely regulatory measures.”
    Id. (emphasis in original).
    The court held that evidence that target practice was regulated does not support the
    City’s assertion that a right to train in the use of arms through target practice was categorically
    unprotected under the Second Amendment.
    Id. at 705
    -06.
    
    This case is therefore distinguishable; the ordinance does not provide for a complete ban
    on range training, but only creates “merely regulatory measures” in requiring commercial facilities
    to obtain operating permits and in prohibiting target practice at commercial facilities after dark for
    some patrons.
    Id. at 705
    (emphasis in original). Because these types of restrictions can be traced
    to the founding era, they were not then considered to infringe on the rights enumerated in the
    Second Amendment. 
    Silvester, 843 F.3d at 821
    . Therefore, permitting requirements on commercial
    shooting facilities and time, place, and manner restrictions on range training at commercial
    facilities are beyond the Second Amendment as it was historically understood. Id.10
    10
    Appellants contend that this court cannot look to statutes from the east coast states to determine
    whether the restrictions in the ordinance are outside the scope of the Second Amendment.
    Appellants assert that because there were no restrictions on target practice or range training during
    the founding era in Washington, the right to range training “without restrictions such as those in
    the [o]rdinance,” is protected by the Second Amendment and the analysis cannot conclude at the
    historical step. Br. of Appellant at 31. However, Appellants provide no support for their claim that
    the historical step consideration is limited to the geographical portion of the United States from
    which the challenged law originates. In addition, this unsupported assertion implies that the Second
    Amendment provides greater protection of the individual right to self-defense for individuals in
    western states than in east coast states. This claim is without merit. This is similar to Appellants’
    argument that citizens in Washington enjoy greater protection of the range training right under
    article I, section 24 than under the Second Amendment. See n. 
    9, supra
    .
    27
    No. 53245-0-II
    2. Intermediate Scrutiny Application Step
    Even if the ordinance burdens a right protected by the Second Amendment, the ordinance
    passes constitutional muster. We must first determine which level of scrutiny applies to the specific
    restriction in this case.
    Id. at 821.
    Both Appellants and the County agree that intermediate scrutiny
    is appropriate here. They are correct; the restrictions at issue in this case place only a minimal
    burden on the core right to self-defense under the Second Amendment and the ordinance must
    therefore be analyzed under intermediate scrutiny.
    Id. Appellants agree that
    ensuring safety at gun ranges is an important government purpose
    and this issue is not in dispute. See Kitsap County, 
    1 Wash. App. 2d
    at 417 (holding that “[t]he
    County has an important government interest in public safety—ensuring that shooting facilities do
    not endanger people or property.”). But Appellants argue, relying heavily on Ezell, that the County
    lacked sufficient “‘empirical evidence’” to establish that the restrictions imposed here were
    substantially related to the important purpose of ensuring safety at commercial shooting facilities.
    Br. of Appellant at 33 
    (quoting 651 F.3d at 709
    ).
    We disagree with the Appellants and hold that the ordinance and the shooting after dark
    restriction are substantially related to the important government purpose of ensuring safety at
    commercial shooting facilities and withstand intermediate scrutiny.
    Ezell is distinguishable and employed a less deferential form of intermediate scrutiny
    because the restriction at issue posed a heavier burden on the core Second Amendment right than
    the Jefferson County 
    ordinance. 651 F.3d at 708-09
    . McDonald, apart from being the seminal case
    that incorporated the Second Amendment against the states, also invalidated the city of Chicago’s
    near-universal prohibition on handgun 
    possession. 561 U.S. at 791
    . The ordinance addressed by
    28
    No. 53245-0-II
    the 7th Circuit in Ezell followed McDonald, and it imposed a permit requirement for handgun
    possession that compelled individuals to undergo one hour of training at a gun 
    range. 651 F.3d at 689-90
    . At the same time, the City categorically banned all gun ranges from operating within the
    city.
    Id. Therefore, in that
    case, the range training right was inextricably linked to the right to bear
    arms, and the contested regulation imposed a severe burden on the core right to bear arms in self-
    defense. The court thus required the City to establish a “close fit between the range ban and the
    actual public interests it serves” in order to justify this regulation.
    Id. at 708-09.
    But here, the right to possess a firearm is not conditioned on training at a commercial
    shooting facility. Nothing in ch. 9.41 RCW requires a purchaser of a firearm to complete training
    at a commercial shooting facility. Moreover, unlike the Chicago ordinance, here the ordinance and
    the restriction on shooting after dark do not constitute a complete ban on commercial shooting
    ranges. To the contrary, here the ordinance was designed with the express aim to “[p]romote the
    continued availability in the county of shooting facilities for firearm education, training, and
    practice in the safe use of firearms, and firearm sports, without prohibiting or expressly regulating
    the discharge of firearms.” CP at 201. The individual ancillary right to train on a shooting range
    remains largely intact under this ordinance, which functions primarily to regulate the facility and
    its owners but not its patrons.
    Consequently, to the extent that the permitting requirement for commercial shooting
    facilities and the restriction on shooting after dark burden the core right of self-defense via the
    ancillary range training right at all, the burden is minimal. 
    Ezell, 651 F.3d at 704
    . If a law only
    minimally burdens the core Second Amendment right, it may be more easily justified.
    Id. at 708.
    As the court in Ezell described,
    29
    No. 53245-0-II
    a severe burden on the core Second Amendment right of armed self-defense will
    require an extremely strong public-interest justification and a close fit between the
    government’s means and its end. Second, laws restricting activity lying closer to
    the margins of the Second Amendment right, laws that merely regulate rather than
    restrict, and modest burdens on the right may be more easily justified. How much
    more easily depends on the relative severity of the burden and its proximity to the
    core of the right.
    Id. “‘Empirical data’” is
    not required, and an ordinance may be justified “‘based solely on history,
    consensus, and ‘simple common sense.’” Lorillard Tobacco Co. v. Reilly, 
    533 U.S. 525
    , 555, 
    121 S. Ct. 2404
    , 
    150 L. Ed. 2d 532
    (2001) (internal quotation mark omitted) (quoting Florida Bar v.
    Went For It, Inc., 
    515 U.S. 618
    , 628, 
    115 S. Ct. 2371
    , 132 L. Ed. 2d 541(1995)) (upholding
    commercial speech restrictions).
    Here, the ordinance and the restrictions on shooting after dark withstand intermediate
    scrutiny. The ordinance was created following a thorough deliberative process that included input
    from representatives of commercial shooting facilities operating in the county. The draft version
    of the ordinance was amended in response to oral testimony provided by a representative of the
    Sportsmen’s Association at a public hearing before the BoCC. The provisions of the ordinance
    were largely made with specific reference to the NRA Range Source Book, which the Ezell court
    cited with approval when describing examples of narrower precautionary regulations that the City
    could have employed if it was concerned about safety at shooting 
    ranges. 651 F.3d at 709-10
    . In
    addition, there were multiple complaints from different properties near the Sportsmen’s
    Association of bullets being heard flying overhead since 2008. Finally, we again note the common
    understanding that guns are inherently dangerous and that shooting in lower light conditions might
    increase that danger. Given the minimal degree to which the permitting requirements and the
    30
    No. 53245-0-II
    shooting after dark restriction burden the core individual right to self-defense, these justifications
    satisfy intermediate scrutiny in this case.
    V. APPELLANTS’ MOTION TO DISMISS FOR MOOTNESS
    On May 26, Appellants filed a motion to dismiss under RAP 18.9(c)(2), arguing that the
    appeal has been rendered moot by a subsequent amendment to the ordinance at issue in this case
    and by a pending federal lawsuit that similarly challenged the constitutionality of the ordinance.
    We deny this motion because this court could still provide effective relief on each claim raised by
    Appellants.11 See Wash. Off Highway Vehicle All. v. State, 
    176 Wash. 2d 225
    , 232, 
    290 P.3d 954
    (2012) (holding that a court will generally dismiss a case as moot where the court can no longer
    provide effective relief.)
    CONCLUSION
    We hold that the ordinance is a constitutionally valid exercise of the County’s police power
    because the only provision of the ordinance that may conflict with RCW 9.41.290 is the shooting
    after dark restriction, but this restriction is exempt from preemption under RCW 9.41.300(2)(a).
    11
    Fort Discovery’s appeal is not rendered moot by either the amendment to the ordinance or by
    the pending federal lawsuit. First, because the new version of the ordinance still imposes uniform
    permitting requirements and contains a restriction on shooting after dark at outdoor facilities, JCC
    8.50.240(2)(p), effective relief was theoretically available on each ground asserted by Appellants
    had this court agreed with the arguments they raised. Second, the pending federal lawsuit does not
    render this appeal moot because Fort Discovery has not identified any final judgment from the
    federal court that precludes this court from providing it effective relief. See Columbia Asset
    Recovery Group, LLC v. Kelly, 
    177 Wash. App. 475
    , 481-82, 
    312 P.3d 687
    (2013) (holding that
    because the parties still had an existing interest in the outcome of the case, notwithstanding the
    pending federal court action, effective relief remained available.)
    31
    No. 53245-0-II
    We further hold that the ordinance does not violate either article I, section 24 of the Washington
    Constitution or the Second Amendment of the United States Constitution.
    Accordingly, we affirm.
    A majority of the panel having determined that this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but will be filed for public record in accordance with RCW 2.06.040,
    it is so ordered.
    CRUSER, J.
    We concur:
    SUTTON, A.C.J.
    GLASGOW, J.
    32