WASHINGTON (March 7) - Hobbyists who build and launch high-powered model 
rockets soon could be subjected to federal background checks, fingerprinting 
and storage area inspections.

Under new provisions set to go into effect May 24 under the Homeland Security 
Act, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives would place 
further restrictions on the fuel that powers the rockets.

''You can't even estimate the devastating effect this is going to have on the 
hobby,'' said Bruce Kelly, the publisher of High Power Rocketry, a hobbyist's 
magazine.

Hobbyists have won the support of Sen. Mike Enzi, R-Wyo., who is drafting 
legislation to free rocketeers from the rules. His spokesman dismissed 
government claims that the regulations would better track explosives while 
not being ''overly burdensome'' to buyers.

Sport rocketry attracts thousands of hobbyists across the country. The 
rockets can stand taller than an adult, soar miles into the sky and are 
designed to land intact nearby.

The new rules will require buyers of the rocket fuel, APCP, to submit their 
fingerprints and photographs to ATF. The bureau will check applicants' 
backgrounds to see if they are among those banned from possessing explosives 
- felons, for example.

ATF also will inspect the areas where permit holders store explosives at 
least once every three years. It will not examine records those people keep, 
ATF specialist Chad Yoder said.

Currently, permits are required only if a person is receiving the fuel from 
across state lines.

Enzi says the rules will discourage people from taking up the hobby. The 
senator and some hobbyists maintain that the regulations also will threaten 
some educational programs.

The ATF says the most commonly used model-rocket motors, which are smaller 
and typically use a weaker fuel, do not require permits and will not be 
affected.

''The Safe Explosives Act has not, does not and will not affect that 
exemption,'' said Gail Davis, chief of the ATF's public safety branch.

Hobbyists also fear restrictions on how explosive material can be shipped 
will hamper businesses that make and sell rocket motors.

Curtailed shipping could lead to a de facto ban on motor sales, said Gregory 
Lyzenga, a model-rocket enthusiast and geophysics researcher at NASA's Jet 
Propulsion Laboratory.

''It's not as though there's been a law passed saying 'model rocketry is 
illegal,' but it's just that the materials are unavailable,'' Lyzenga said.

Rocketeers are suing ATF in federal court in Washington to force it to change 
its classification of APCP as an explosive. They say APCP burns and does not 
blow up. A decision is pending.

''The gasoline in the tank of your car would make a better bomb,'' Lyzenga 
said. ''If I was looking for what I thought was a serious danger to public 
safety, I certainly would not start here.''

 AP-NY-03-07-03 0353EST

Copyright 2003 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news 
report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed 
without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.  All active 
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