Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Hunter safety instructor­s fight to retain process

- Paul A. Smith Milwaukee Journal Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK – WISCONSIN PAUL A. SMITH

Hunter education leaders in Wisconsin are fighting to retain what they call the most critical aspect of the state’s successful safety program: in-person testing for youth.

The Wisconsin Hunter Education Coalition last week began circulatin­g a memo titled “Demand there be No Shortcuts to Safe Hunting in Wisconsin.”

“The long-standing key to improving our hunting safety record has been having new hunters being taught and tested by qualified instructor­s,” said John Plenke, chairman of the coalition. “We can’t stand by as legislatio­n is proposed to change that.”

Wisconsin law requires hunters under the age of 18 to pass a “field day” of instructio­n and testing conducted by certified instructor­s in order to obtain a hunting safety certificate.

That would become optional under a pair of bills introduced this fall as part of the “Sporting Freedom Package” supported by Hunter Nation, the Kansasbase­d advocacy group.

Senate Bill 611 and Assembly Bill 670 would allow an individual to satisfy the field testing requiremen­t simply by participat­ing in a mentored hunt with a licensed adult.

The measures are intended to make it easier for prospectiv­e hunters to get certified in the state. Data have shown a long-term decline in hunting in Wisconsin and nationally and some recent efforts to recruit people to the activity have focused on simplifyin­g the process.

Luke Hilgemann, a Marshfield resident and president of Hunter Nation, said at an Oct. 19 Senate committee hearing on SB 611 that experience with the state’s mentored hunting law has shown the change could safely be made.

Since 2009, 150,000 young hunters have participat­ed in Wisconsin’s mentored hunting program and not a single firearm injury has resulted, Hilgemann said.

Plenke agreed with that statistic but said three hunting accidents have occurred this year involving others who had only taken the online course.

Many long-time hunter education instructor­s feel it’s unacceptab­le to add any risk to the equation.

“I believe it is misguided to purport that a mentored hunt can prove the same quality of hands-on training as a hunter education program,” said Rick Heisler, who has served as a Wisconsin hunter safety instructor for 43 years. “I am in total opposition to SB 611.”

Heisler said the proposed legislatio­n has no safeguards or checks on the level of training or expertise of the mentor.

The bills come on the heels of a suspension of the in-person testing requiremen­t due to COVID-19. After hunting education courses were canceled during the pandemic in 2020, the Department of Natural Resources allowed young hunters to get a certificate through an online-only process.

That has reverted back to normal and the hunter education coalition is working to keep it in place.

The coalition includes Plenke as chair, as well as Heisler, Ray Anderson, Mark LaBarbera, Kevyn Quamme and Tom Thoresen.

Senate Bill 611 has already been passed by the Senate.

Assembly Bill 670 was assigned Oct. 29 to the Assembly Committee on Sporting Heritage but has yet to have a hearing.

The coalition is asking for a “call to action” from the state’s citizens to contact their representa­tives in the Assembly.

“You can no longer stand by and be the ‘silent majority’,” the coalition said in its memo. “These bills would make it legal for a person having received no hunter education to be certified during a mentored hunt by a person having no training or has only taken the online hunter safety class possibly without any firearm experience.”

 ?? ?? Students go through a field day of instructio­n and testing in order to earn their Wisconsin hunter safety certificate.
Students go through a field day of instructio­n and testing in order to earn their Wisconsin hunter safety certificate.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States