A youth softball program in Oregon has decided to move forward with plans to raffle off an AR-15-style assault weapon as part of a fundraiser, despite divided opinions in the community.
The Lady Dragons fast-pitch program has been criticized for the decision to keep the firearm as part of the raffle after the same type of weapon was used to massacre 17 people at a high school in Parkland, Florida on February 14.
The youth softball organization provided a statement to the Statesman Journal on Monday saying they sympathized with current events, but that the fundraiser ‘is a legal, well-regulated raffle, with tickets being sold to willing and able purchasers’.
Community members have voiced their upset with the decision, with former Dallas High School teacher Rebecca Penna saying ‘the impression it gives is distasteful’.
The Lady Dragons fast-pitch youth softball program in Dallas, Oregon will move forward with a raffle that has been underway since January 30 and includes an AR-15 rifle, despite division
Michelle Johnstone, superintendent of the Dallas School District, stressed that the program was not affiliated with the school district in any way.
Despite the division in the community, the Lady Dragons stand by their decision to continue to sell tickets for the raffle of the firearm, which was provided by a private donor.
‘Raffling a high-ticket item, yes, even a firearm, has been done by similar sports organizations with great success,’ the program’s statement read.
Dallas City Council President Micky Garus, who sits on the board of the Lady Dragons youth program, said many tickets had been purchased for the raffle.
Jim Moore, director of the Tom McCall Center for Policy Innovation at Pacific University in Forest, said continuing with the raffle could reflect negatively on the program.
He made mention that the board members making these decisions weren’t the ones on the field, wearing the uniforms.
‘They are in the political sphere right now by doing this,’ Moore said.
‘The post-Florida landscape … changes the political calculus.’
Additionally, there was also some push-back against the rifle raffle within the community, prior to Nikolas Cruz, 19, admitting to shooting and killing 17 people and injuring 15 others with an AR-15 at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Valentine’s Day, according to Garus.
The division follows the highly publicized high school shooting in Florida on February 14, where an AR-15 was used to kill 17 people and injure 15 others
Garus said, in a Facebook post on February 3, that he had been kicked off of the social media website for 24 hours after posting details about the raffle.
‘It’s really sad,’ he wrote in the post.
‘We are trying to do something good for our community by providing funding opportunities for youth sports, and it resulted in a few people dictating to the majority what they deemed inappropriate.’
Jody Lewis, who currently lives in Eugene but grew up in Dallas, said, ‘It’s been incredibly polarizing.’
The organization reiterated on Monday that all legally required precautions would be taken to ensure the rifle went to a permissible gun owner.
‘The winner of the raffle will have to pass all necessary background checks, the same as would be required of them to purchase the rifle,’ the statement to the Statesman read.
The Facebook page for the program, where details could be found about the raffle which began selling tickets on January 30, appears to have been disabled.
The Lady Dragons fast-pitch softball program of Dallas, Oregon, is hosting the fundraiser for equipment, field improvements and to help ensure registration fees remain low for families.
The program has teams for girls ages 10-and-under through 16-and-under.
The raffle is scheduled to take place on April 4.
Nikolas Cruz, 19, faced court briefly on February 15 as he was officially charged with 17 counts of premeditated murder over the high school shooting massacre in Parkland, Florida