In urban centers across the country, guns are often fired as the ball drops at midnight – sometimes with deadly consequences. (Photo via Flickr)

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To put a peaceful point on Wednesday's New Year's Eve celebration, a Southfield gun shop and training center owner says he's not going to contribute to a dangerous holiday tradition in metro Detroit – the indiscriminate firing of guns into the air at midnight.

Action Impact owner Bill Kucyk told WXYZ-TV that he thinks the tradition is dangerous, reckless and puts people and property at risk. "What I hope to accomplish, is to raise awareness and discourage the random shooting of firearms," Kucyk said. "I am trying to take away any excuse you have to shoot your gun."

Ministers, police and politicians on Monday urged a gunplay-free New Year's Eve celebration during announcement of the 17th annual "Ring in the New Year with a Bell, Not a Bullet" campaign, the Detroit Free Press reports. You Might Also Like:

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Similar New Year's Eve tragedies have played out in urban centers across the country.

The Firearms Talk blog said that in Miami, officers are ordered to officially take cover from falling bullets as part of standard safety protocol. In Jacksonville, FL, police received about 260 calls about random gunfire in 2012. In one instance, a stray bullet hit a private plane at 1,200 feet and injured the pilot. Los Angeles police field about 500 calls about random gunfire every New Year's Eve, including one in 2012 causing injury when a bullet grazed a boy's skull.