Author Topic: Firearms Training in School?  (Read 931 times)

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Offline deltecs

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Firearms Training in School?
« on: February 01, 2008, 11:28:50 AM »
This new article illuminates West Virginia's proposed school curriculum to include possible hunting classes and firearms training.  Maybe we should all take an example from them on this subject.  It probably would further decrease minors injuries caused by firearms accidents even though these figures are declining.  Who else thinks firearms training should be taught in the classroom?

Newsmax



W.Va. Considers Gun Training in Schools 

Thursday, January 31, 2008 8:30 AM

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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- A significant drop in the number of hunters in West Virginia has left a hole in the state's budget, and one lawmaker thinks he has a solution: allow children to receive hunter training in school.

Seventh- through ninth-graders could opt for instruction in topics ranging from survival skills to gun safety, but the weapons would have dummy ammunition or be disabled. Sen. Billy Wayne Bailey, who introduced the bill this month, doesn't envision students firing real guns during class time.

"It's a way to take this kind of education in the classroom and make it more convenient for young people," said Bailey, a Wyoming County Democrat.

West Virginia, where roughly 320,000 people participated in the recent two-week gun season for bucks, may be the only state contemplating such a bill, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

Although it still ranks in the top six nationally for sales of hunting permits to nonresidents, West Virginia sold 154,763 permits to residents in 2006, a 17 percent decrease from 1997, according to the state Division of Natural Resources.

The decline is being felt at the state Capitol. This month, Gov. Joe Manchin proposed spending $1.8 million on DNR's law enforcement efforts to make up for revenue lost because of the decline of hunting and fishing permits.

"West Virginia is probably in better shape than other states, but this is really rather disconcerting from our perspective," said Paul Johansen, DNR assistant chief of wildlife management.

Nationally, the number of hunters 16 and older was about 12.5 million in 1996, a 10 percent decline from 2006, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Part of West Virginia's problem is it doesn't require senior citizens to buy a hunting license. The state has one of the oldest populations per capita in the nation, and the ranks of hunters aren't being replenished by young people.

To secure a license, residents have to complete at least 10 hours of training and be at least 10 years old when they take the test, which includes demonstrating proper gun safety. Would-be hunters have to show they can load and unload a gun, carry it across obstacles, and keep the muzzle pointed in the right direction.
 
Greg lost his battle with cancer last week on April 2nd 2009. RIP Greg. We miss you.

Greg
deltecs
Detente: An armed citizenry versus a liberal society
Opinion(s) are expressly mine alone and do not necessarily agree with those of GB or GBO mgmt.

Offline jgalar

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Re: Firearms Training in School?
« Reply #1 on: February 02, 2008, 03:09:02 AM »
Way to go West Virginia!

Schools and businesses make their students and employees take sensitivity training for race, gender, sexual orientation etc - why not a sensitivity training class to be understanding ofr hunters and shooters.

They won't be bringing real guns into the classroom - I don't see why everyone is getting their panties in a wad.

Offline Kurt L

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Re: Firearms Training in School?
« Reply #2 on: February 02, 2008, 06:36:30 AM »
i may be wrong but i think a lot of kids think a gun is like one on a video game,and after you shoot someone they will just
get back up and be ok. how can we go wrong be teaching what good and bad damage a gun can do. hunter safety could be
more detailed etc in my opinion also.
we had an uncalled for shooting here just before thanksgiving .
a young hunter shoot a deer and was looking for it in the woods and his dad was also looking for it .

the father had no orange on.
the son heard the brush move and started shooting.
now his father is dead.

yes the father should have had orange on.
and the boy should have been tough not to just blast at the brush.
it's sad to here such things as a little common sense would have saved this family.

KURT LGo TO RIFLE RED RYDER SUPER MAG CARBINE

Offline dukkillr

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Re: Firearms Training in School?
« Reply #3 on: February 02, 2008, 10:19:18 AM »
When I lived in southern missouri a bunch of the rural schools taught hunters safety.  I like the idea, you just never know when even a non-hunter might encounter a loaded gun at a friends house.  Much like abstinence only people, I'm suspect of anyone who wants to hide knowledge. 

Offline Leatherstocking

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Re: Firearms Training in School?
« Reply #4 on: February 18, 2008, 02:15:29 AM »
There should definitely be such training in school. I am hopeful that with the attention on all of the recent school/college shooting, that maybe some support will grow for it. When teens were getting pregnant too often, and it became a major problem, sex ed was instituted.... in school. The same should be done for guns.
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Offline Brett

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Re: Firearms Training in School?
« Reply #5 on: February 24, 2008, 03:26:10 AM »
Some of the older folks here probably remember that marksmanship training was pretty common in public schools many years ago.  Some even had live fire shooting ranges in their basements. 
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Offline Leatherstocking

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Re: Firearms Training in School?
« Reply #6 on: February 24, 2008, 05:10:45 AM »
Yeah, they had a range in the basement of my uncle's school (in rural upstate NY). My uncle always talks about how he would hop on the bus with his books in one hand and the .22 in the other - those were the days, huh?!!
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"A thing is right when it tends to preserve the integrity, stability and beauty of the biotic community. It is wrong when it tends otherwise" - Aldo Leopold (1949)