Free: Contests & Raffles.
There are not very many kids under the age of 8 passing hunter ed these days. But every year kids over 8 are shut out of classes because parents enroll a 5 or 6 year old in class. Why because big sister or brother is taking the class.Half way through the 5-6 year old drops out. You cannot bring in another student in the middle of a class. Class size is limited for a bunch of reasons. For me it is space. 25 students is plenty to teach good handling skills too. I want quality not volume. So if Your 12 year old wants to go through a class but cannot find a seat because 5-7 year olds ( who we know will not pass most the time) you look at it a little different.The bottom line is the best thing for pumping out more hunters is to restrict the class age. So the folks who are ready can find a seat.
As far as the 594 provision goes. WDFW has basically said its their legal interpretation that a instructor-student transfer is legal, nowhere in the law does it say that's legal. I don't know about you but I'd rather go by something written in law, not just someone's interpretation.Realistically a police chief (who reports to a mayor) could send his officers to go arrest the hunter ed instructor for unlawful transfer. The chief/mayor may not agree with WDFW's interpretation of 594. The case would then be prosecuted by the city attorney, who also happens to report to the mayor. Whereas if you put it in law that an instructor-student transfer is lawful, then obviously they can't do anything. Obviously the chances of this happening are slim to none, but when you go off of someone's interpretation of the law and not an actual wording itself, it leaves the door open for a big mess.But I do think it should be expanded to include student-student transfers.
Quote from: bigtex on January 14, 2015, 11:42:42 AMAs far as the 594 provision goes. WDFW has basically said its their legal interpretation that a instructor-student transfer is legal, nowhere in the law does it say that's legal. I don't know about you but I'd rather go by something written in law, not just someone's interpretation.Realistically a police chief (who reports to a mayor) could send his officers to go arrest the hunter ed instructor for unlawful transfer. The chief/mayor may not agree with WDFW's interpretation of 594. The case would then be prosecuted by the city attorney, who also happens to report to the mayor. Whereas if you put it in law that an instructor-student transfer is lawful, then obviously they can't do anything. Obviously the chances of this happening are slim to none, but when you go off of someone's interpretation of the law and not an actual wording itself, it leaves the door open for a big mess.But I do think it should be expanded to include student-student transfers.If this bill fails do you expect instructors to stop transferring firearms to students because of that extremely rare possibility?It would be far better to address all transfers.
Quote from: ghosthunter on January 14, 2015, 11:35:14 AMThere are not very many kids under the age of 8 passing hunter ed these days. But every year kids over 8 are shut out of classes because parents enroll a 5 or 6 year old in class. Why because big sister or brother is taking the class.Half way through the 5-6 year old drops out. You cannot bring in another student in the middle of a class. Class size is limited for a bunch of reasons. For me it is space. 25 students is plenty to teach good handling skills too. I want quality not volume. So if Your 12 year old wants to go through a class but cannot find a seat because 5-7 year olds ( who we know will not pass most the time) you look at it a little different.The bottom line is the best thing for pumping out more hunters is to restrict the class age. So the folks who are ready can find a seat. That's a pretty well thought out opinion and something I hadn't thought about. My daughter passed with flying colors at 8 and she is very mature and bright for her age. I think she maybe could have handled it at 7, but not before. At 8, she did have some challenges with working the rifle during the live fire exercise.Essentially, I put her through early to start collecting points. This year (11) was the first time she actually hunted. I second the notion that I would prefer the state not tell me when she is ready to hunt, but I can see either a higher fee (partially refunded upon completion) or an age limit on the class if space is a concern. I would also support a $1 fee on each license to fund more classes.
I am just saying right now instructors are basically in limbo. WDFW says it's their interpretation that an instructor-student transfer is legal. That interpretation can be the complete opposite of a mayor who can basically use their PD as their own little agenda squad and can force the chief to go get the instructor. If something is in law then that changes everything.
per http://www.ncsl.org/research/environment-and-natural-resources/minimum-hunting-age-statutes.aspxMontana- Minimum age to hunt is 12Wyoming- Minimum age to hunt is 12Utah- Those under 14 must hunt with a licensed adult who is at least 21Oregon- Nobody under 11 can hunt big gameNorth Dakota- Minimum age of 14 to hunt big gameNevada- Minimum age of 12 to hunt big game. Those under 18 must be accompanied by someone over 18 who is licensedMissouri- Those 6 to 15 can only hunt does and turkey when accompanied by an adultMinnesota- Minimum age of 12 for big gameLouisiana- Under 16 required to be accompaniedIdaho- Minimum age of 10, must be accompanied for most activities until 17Colorado- Under 16 must be accompaniedArizona- Minimum age of 10 for big game. Those under 14 must by supervised by someone over 18. Someone over 18 cannot supervise more than 2 minorsI chose those states for a reason. Mostly conservative, pro gun, pro hunting states.
Quote from: bigtex on January 14, 2015, 11:42:42 AMAs far as the 594 provision goes. WDFW has basically said its their legal interpretation that a instructor-student transfer is legal, nowhere in the law does it say that's legal. I don't know about you but I'd rather go by something written in law, not just someone's interpretation.Realistically a police chief (who reports to a mayor) could send his officers to go arrest the hunter ed instructor for unlawful transfer. The chief/mayor may not agree with WDFW's interpretation of 594. The case would then be prosecuted by the city attorney, who also happens to report to the mayor. Whereas if you put it in law that an instructor-student transfer is lawful, then obviously they can't do anything. Obviously the chances of this happening are slim to none, but when you go off of someone's interpretation of the law and not an actual wording itself, it leaves the door open for a big mess.But I do think it should be expanded to include student-student transfers.I agree with you that there's ambiguity regarding 594. My opinion is that 594 should be changed to fix that ambiguity. Because, if a new law is passed which conflicts with 594, the new law will be struck down by the courts, at least the parts which conflict. My understanding is that because it's a referendum, a bill doesn't have the power to supersede it's components. I may be wrong. I know I was once.