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Re-opening of SF's only gun store stirs debate - Video report linked

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  • sfsunset
    Junior Member
    • Sep 2010
    • 3

    Re-opening of SF's only gun store stirs debate - Video report linked

    Re-opening of SF's only gun store stirs debate - Video report linked
    You may send your letters to:
    ATT: Permit Code/Enforcement Sergeant Coggan< William.Coggan@sfgov.orgWilliam.M.McCarthy@sfgov.orgLouis.Cassanego@sfgov.org




    Vic Lee
    More: Bio, E-mail, News Team
    SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) -- A battle over a gun shop is really heating up in San Francisco. But it is not the average standoff over gun rights and the Second Amendment -- even the owner is reluctant to open the store.


    Andy Takahashi is perplexed. The city says he cannot set up an office for his wholesale gun business unless he re-opens the High Bridge Arms gun shop. The Planning Commission says his building is zoned only for retail.

    "Very strange to me; it's my building, you know," Takahashi said.

    Takahashi closed San Francisco's only gun shop late last year after more than 50 years in the same location in the Mission District.

    "I do export-import," he said. "If I don't open retail shop, I'm going to lose export-import license."

    So reluctantly, he has applied for a permit to open it again so he can legally set up his wholesale office in the back room.

    Now, Takahashi faces a fight he really does not want to take on.

    "It's running about five to one that the community wants to deny the permit," SFPD Ingleside Station Capt. Louis Cassanego said.

    The Northwest Bernal Alliance opposes the permit, but not for Second Amendment reasons.

    "We would like to see something in the storefront that supports the neighborhood, like dry cleaners, a coffee shop, those kinds of things," alliance member Jamie Ross said.

    Others object because they say a gun store brings in the wrong elements, a concept not everyone understands.

    David Pinch runs a coffee shop across the street.

    "It brings police to the neighborhood; that's their main shoppers," he said. "It's the police, how is that causing more crime?"

    Cassanego says he supports the gun shop's permit, but only if it has good security systems.

    Store manager Steve Alcairo says that is not a problem.

    "We're going to do everything in our power to make sure that we do not get ammunition or firearms into the wrong hands," he said.

    The showdown will continue Wednesday at the Planning Commission meeting.
  • #2
  • #3
    Mstrty
    Senior Member
    • Nov 2008
    • 2443

    As a small business owner myself the I cant stand the government telling me what I can and cant buy/sell. At the same time I am sympathetic to surrounding businesses not wanting a wholesale only shop in a retail area. So Im with the NBA on the zoning issues, while I lament with the store owner on the government bureaucracy. I am all for a retail gun store being in the location. It has got to be frustrating attempting to restructure your business in a direction of your choice and have the government go not in my backyard. I wish him well.
    ~ ~

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    • #4
      chiefcrash
      Internet Dictator
      CGN Contributor - Lifetime
      • Jul 2006
      • 3408

      dupe de dupe dupe...
      Originally posted by Kestryll
      we can not nor should not dismiss or discount my theory that in the dark of night you molest sea anemones by candlelight.
      Originally posted by TKM
      Show me on this 1st Amendment bobble-head doll where the mods touched you.
      Originally posted by Click Boom
      It is clear from this thread that citadel grad was the gunman, and Oswald his patsy.

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