The Environmental Protection Department, which is responsible for protecting the environment, only "provides technical advice" for the gun club inspection phone database of mud. The Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department, which manages country parks, has never The tests involved soil quality within the park. The government relied on the gun association to conduct its own mud testing, but the gun association still stated at the end of last year that it would “consider the “feasibility” of conducting soil testing in stages, reflecting that the department condoned “hea to do it”.
The gun club was rented by the government at a nominal land price of $1,000 under the Private Playground Deed, but only about 400 members could enjoy the service, and the membership fee was even higher at $150,000. The terms of the land grant also stated that "the wastes from the land should be cleaned up at one's own expense" and "no pollution should be caused to the catchment areas within and outside the lot". Obviously it is an official land, and the government says it can deal with the breach of lease. However, the Lands Department delayed for more than a year until September last year to enter into the lease agreement
with the Gun Club, and the agreement itself only affects the decision to renew the lease. In other words, the gun club can continue to operate until the contract expires in 2027, and even rely on the gun club to "actively suspend" the target shooting activities, making the contract a "symbolic punishment". Gun clubs enjoy preferential land prices, and the consequences of "selfish play" by a small group of people have to be shared by the public. The Lands Administration once pointed out that once a breach of the lease is found, it will consider taking land as a punishment.