Free: Contests & Raffles.
Hunter ED FeeThere are already a million reasons that young hunters are not getting recruited. I see this as another reason that fewer hunters will be recruited. Hunter Education should remain free for anyone. Raise the price of my license but keep hunter ed free for anyone. Everytime you add another rule or cost to involving new hunters in hunting you are going to reduce recruitment.
Quote from: bearpaw on January 24, 2013, 09:36:07 AMHunter ED FeeThere are already a million reasons that young hunters are not getting recruited. I see this as another reason that fewer hunters will be recruited. Hunter Education should remain free for anyone. Raise the price of my license but keep hunter ed free for anyone. Everytime you add another rule or cost to involving new hunters in hunting you are going to reduce recruitment. The issue is not so much recruitment of students to hunter education, as it is to retention.Right now most of the hunter education classes in the state are full. Many fill up within days of registration opening. There is a shortage of classes, not students. As you've probably noticed, some of the recent changes to the program have resulted in a loss of instructors, making the situation worse.What is more troubling than recruitment is that a significant percentage (close to 50%) of students that pass hunter education do not purchase a hunting license the year they pass. Worse yet, within three years a majority of graduates have dropped out of hunting permanently.If there is no fee, there will be an even larger number of individuals who sign up for classes, but don't show. We already have a problem with that; making the class free will make it worse.
To elaborate on my comments about making HE instructor training more available.Myself and another local friend went to a day long class to become NRA certified rangemasters. The class was offered only 30 minutes from my town. There were about a half dozen of us that did it. I mistakenly assumed it would allow me to help with HE.There is even a shortage of HE instructors in my area, yet there were 6 of us there to get Rangemaster training for a full day. I bet the state would have similar success at recruiting HE instuctors if they were more customer friendly like the NRA.
Quote from: Bob33 on January 24, 2013, 10:24:59 AMQuote from: bearpaw on January 24, 2013, 09:36:07 AMHunter ED FeeThere are already a million reasons that young hunters are not getting recruited. I see this as another reason that fewer hunters will be recruited. Hunter Education should remain free for anyone. Raise the price of my license but keep hunter ed free for anyone. Everytime you add another rule or cost to involving new hunters in hunting you are going to reduce recruitment. The issue is not so much recruitment of students to hunter education, as it is to retention.Right now most of the hunter education classes in the state are full. Many fill up within days of registration opening. There is a shortage of classes, not students. As you've probably noticed, some of the recent changes to the program have resulted in a loss of instructors, making the situation worse.What is more troubling than recruitment is that a significant percentage (close to 50%) of students that pass hunter education do not purchase a hunting license the year they pass. Worse yet, within three years a majority of graduates have dropped out of hunting permanently.If there is no fee, there will be an even larger number of individuals who sign up for classes, but don't show. We already have a problem with that; making the class free will make it worse. I believe you are thinking in reverse. The goal should be to put as many kids through gun safety as possible. The reason classes are overfull is due to a lack of classes, a lack of instructors, a lack of WDFW to recruit instructors and make it easy to become one. Make hunting more accessible and easy for people to participate and you will also have more hunters.I think HE should actually be taught in the schools as part of the curriculum.
Quote from: bearpaw on January 24, 2013, 10:45:58 AMQuote from: Bob33 on January 24, 2013, 10:24:59 AMQuote from: bearpaw on January 24, 2013, 09:36:07 AMHunter ED FeeThere are already a million reasons that young hunters are not getting recruited. I see this as another reason that fewer hunters will be recruited. Hunter Education should remain free for anyone. Raise the price of my license but keep hunter ed free for anyone. Everytime you add another rule or cost to involving new hunters in hunting you are going to reduce recruitment. The issue is not so much recruitment of students to hunter education, as it is to retention.Right now most of the hunter education classes in the state are full. Many fill up within days of registration opening. There is a shortage of classes, not students. As you've probably noticed, some of the recent changes to the program have resulted in a loss of instructors, making the situation worse.What is more troubling than recruitment is that a significant percentage (close to 50%) of students that pass hunter education do not purchase a hunting license the year they pass. Worse yet, within three years a majority of graduates have dropped out of hunting permanently.If there is no fee, there will be an even larger number of individuals who sign up for classes, but don't show. We already have a problem with that; making the class free will make it worse. I believe you are thinking in reverse. The goal should be to put as many kids through gun safety as possible. The reason classes are overfull is due to a lack of classes, a lack of instructors, a lack of WDFW to recruit instructors and make it easy to become one. Make hunting more accessible and easy for people to participate and you will also have more hunters.I think HE should actually be taught in the schools as part of the curriculum."The reason classes are overfull is due to a lack of classes, a lack of instructors, a lack of WDFW to recruit instructors and make it easy to become one".I completely agree. As you pointed out, right now there are not enough instructors and classes. Making the classes free now, without first addressing the lack of instructors/classes doesn't make sense to me. If there comes a time when there are empty spots in classes then I would be more inclined to support making them free.
There is even a shortage of HE instructors in my area, yet there were 6 of us there to get Rangemaster training for a full day. I bet the state would have similar success at recruiting instructorsors if they were more customer friendly like the NRA.
"Maybe I am misunderstanding, are you saying there is currently a charge for HE? It was free for me and for all my kids when they went, as far as I know they are still free."It is not currently free in any class that I'm aware of. The maximum a class can charge is $5. Most classes charge a bit more ($20, for example) and then refund the $15 to the student at the end of class. This works to minimize the no shows. We give our students the option to donate the $15 back to the program or keep it. I would estimate that 90%+ donate the $15 back to the program.