Penn Tactical Solutions
Range Safety Toolkit
Built for ranges. Not adapted from somewhere else.
Gunshot wounds produce life-threatening hemorrhage within 3 to 5 minutes. EMS response to most ranges exceeds that window. The range officer on duty is the only trained person present before EMS arrives -- and in many incidents, they have equipment staged somewhere and no written protocol for what to do with it.
A tourniquet on the wall is not a program. This toolkit gives your range the written framework, response protocols, inspection standards, and lead hygiene program that close the gap between having equipment and being ready to use it.
Five documents. Immediate PDF delivery. Built by a National Registry Paramedic and Certified Tactical Paramedic with 27 years of emergency response experience.

Is Your Range Safety Program Legally Defensible?
Answer yes or no for each item. Your program maturity rating and per-pillar breakdown appear at the end.
Five Documents. Every Component of a Defensible Range Safety Program.
From kit configuration to lead hygiene to staff response protocols -- built to be printed, laminated, posted, and used.
Range Trauma Kit Standard
Minimum equipment list with approved models, kit placement standards (60-second access rule), AED program requirements, Naloxone protocol, monthly inspection checklist, and training requirements table for all range staff roles.
Range Emergency Action Plan
Fillable REAP template covering range information, emergency contacts, facility layout, staff role assignments, step-by-step response protocols for GSW, cardiac arrest, and overdose, EMS coordination checklist, and incident documentation form.
RSO Medical Quick Card
Laminate-ready card for every Range Safety Officer. Step-by-step response for CEASE FIRE, 911 scripting, limb wounds, torso wounds, chest wounds, and EMS handoff. Pre-fill spaces for range address and AED location. One card per RSO.
Customer Bay Emergency Card
Laminate-ready bay posting for customers, guests, and members. Covers 911 call, range safe, CPR, AED, and RSO notification in numbered steps. Includes quick-reference injury type table: GSW, cardiac arrest, lead exposure, unconscious patient.
Lead Mitigation and Decontamination Guide
Comprehensive lead hygiene program: OSHA action level reference, exposure pathways, Shooter's Soap decon protocol, take-home bottle program, staff end-of-shift standard, monthly compliance checklist, BLL monitoring table, workers' comp liability reference, 30-day rollout plan, and employee acknowledgment form.
RECOMMENDED EQUIPMENT FOR RANGE SAFETY PROGRAMS
Based on the standards outlined in this toolkit.
Built for the people who run patrol medical programs.
Whether you're building from scratch or auditing an existing program, this toolkit has something for you.
Range Safety Officers
Firearms Instructors
Club Safety Coordinators
Commerical Range Managers
Risk and Liability Adminstrators
Military Range Personnel
Range Administrators
Range Customers
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about the toolkit.
Do the trauma kit standards apply to outdoor ranges?
Yes. Document 1 includes separate staging guidance for outdoor ranges - weatherproof IP-rated kit boxes for downrange berm areas, and guidance on AED cabinet ratings for exposed outdoor environments. The 60-second access rule and kit contents requirements apply equally to indoor and outdoor facilities.
Is this really free?
Yes. All five documents are available as a free download with immediate PDF delivery. The equipment referenced in the toolkit -tourniquets, kits, Shooter's Soap, and station gear- is available for purchase separately. Pennsylvania agencies can procure through COSTARS Contract 012-E25-397 with no competitive bid requirement.
What format is it delivered in?
Immediate PDF delivery after checkout. All documents are formatted for standard letter-size printing. The RSO Quick Card and Customer Bay Emergency Card are formatted for lamination. Document 5 includes fillable fields for the acknowledgment form and compliance logs. No proprietary software required.
Does the lead hygiene program cover OSHA compliance?
Document 5 covers the OSHA lead standard (29 CFR 1910.1025) including the action level, PEL, medical surveillance requirements, blood lead monitoring obligations, HazCom documentation, and workers' compensation liability reference. It is not a substitute for legal advice and the document is explicit about that. It gives range operators a structured, practical, and defensible program and tells them exactly where to engage an attorney, occupational health physician, or industrial hygienist.
We already have a program. Is this still useful?
Consistently yes. The self-assessment and monthly checklists surface gaps in documentation, inspection cycles, and lead hygiene that have drifted over time. The most common finding in established ranges is an incomplete lead safety program -- exit wash station present, but no take-home program, no staff acknowledgment forms, and no air monitoring data on file.