
[A] program to reduce firearm-related suicides in Vermont has brought together gun groups, suicide prevention advocates and mental health experts.
Members of the Vermont Federation of Sportsmenโs Clubs and employees of the Department of Mental Health joined suicide prevention advocates Thursday to celebrate the rollout of the Gun Shop Project at a suicide prevention conference in Montpelier.
The project, an initiative backed by the Legislature in a bill that passed in 2015, aims to reach out via gun sellers to people who may be experiencing suicidal feelings. It is based on a New Hampshire program that was spearheaded by the owner of a firearms store.
Meetings about implementing the Gun Shop Project began a year ago, according to Alex Potter of the Vermont Suicide Prevention Center, which is part of the Brattleboro-based Center for Health and Learning. Groups including the sportsmenโs federation and Gun Owners of Vermont began distributing posters to firearms retailers around Vermont about the project six months ago.
Potter cited statistics from 2014, when 48 percent of the 126 recorded suicides in Vermont involved a firearm.
Jaskanwar Batra, medical director of the Department of Mental Health, lauded the collaboration behind the Gun Shop Project.
โIf you listen to the discussion on the national debate one might be tempted to think that we could not find common ground between advocates for suicide prevention and gun shop owners and the organizations that represent them,โ Batra said. โIโm proud to say this could not be further from the truth in Vermont.โ
As part of the project, posters with help-line phone numbers were sent to gun shops and firing ranges. Organizers are also supplying tip sheets for how to speak with a potential customer whom a gun shop operator might be concerned about.
โWeโre not asking the individual to be a therapist. Weโre not asking them to try to work with that person there and then. Weโre asking that owner to say, โHere is a resource I would recommend that you call,โโ Potter said. โThatโs something that an individual can do without feeling that they need a masterโs to be able to have that conversation.โ
Two workshops on the issue are planned this month: one in Rutland on Sept. 18, the other in St. Johnsbury on Sept. 25.
Chris Bradley, president of the Vermont Federation of Sportsmenโs Clubs, first heard about New Hampshireโs program several years ago.
โBy taking the fundamental approach of raising awareness of these tragedies to Vermont sportsmen and sportswomen, sportsmen and sportswomen could then become more educated in what to look for and further become aware of what resources were available,โ Bradley said.
He said there could be openings for people to reach out to others.
โWe especially like the idea of sportsmen helping other sportsmen,โ Bradley said. โThese are people that share a common interest.โ
The speakers resisted discussing a proposal to implement universal background checks for gun sales, which several high-profile Democrats have said they plan to bring to the Legislature in the next session.
โThis is really something that we leave at the door,โ Bradley said. โThe fact of this matter is that weโre looking at sportsmen helping sportsmen.โ
Potter also declined to comment on universal background checks. He said members of the Vermont Suicide Prevention Coalition are entitled to their own opinions on that issue.
โI choose not to give a political statement today concerning my own concerns,โ Potter said. โThey may be different from those here. They may be the same as those here. But thatโs not the role Iโm here in today.โ


