After retiring from the military I moved the family to Kansas so that my wife could be close to her family. After a few moves and a couple of years I told the wife that I just couldn't live there anymore, I missed the mountains and the open country of the west where I grew up. While we lived in Wichita I tried to join a rifle club but it was a joke. 50 yards for rifle but they were real proud of their long range target - it was one shooting position with a target frame at 100 yards. Hunting sucked since I could only really hunt if I joined a hunting club or knew a farmer and even then they usually hunted in drives across open fields for deer - boring.
I grew up in Arizona and never knew how difficult it is east of the Mississippi for rifle shooters. I can't believe that anybody would even imagine that 50 yards is a reasonable distance for shooting rifles, hell, I shoot my pistols that far, even the .22LR is used at 100 yards. Now that I've settled in Montana I have my own mini-range out to 200 yards, there's a 400 yard range only 20 minutes drive from my house and if I want to shoot farther than that I just need to drive out to public land and pick a spot without too many trees or mountains.
Good luck guys but then I'll be honest, if it were really important to you you'd either change the laws or leave the state, but then I'm pretty happy when you choose to stay where you are. Way too often we get somebody from out of state that claims to love everything Montana but the first thing they want to do is change everything, so I figure that the less we get to move here the better. Hell, even I'm considered an outsider and I've been in my remote cabin for almost 6 years now. It's only been the last year that some of the people that live closest to me have started talking with me - and I like that way.