ACA took over the release program. They changed the system to no longer put out scheduled release dates because release staff were in danger of being shot and some were hit by pellets by people shooting birds as they were released from the truck! I can't even imagine standing there gun in hand waiting for someone to open crate doors and shoot birds exiting the crates. I've never gone to shoot pheasants at a release site as like you to me it's shooting not hunting and cramming that many hunters into a 1/4 to 1/2 section of land all trying to get the limited number of birds available that week is far from safe imo. If they set it up that the sites are only allowed to be hunted every second week and released birds on the weeks between and the sites are limited to number of hunters it might at least disperse the birds a bit and give more of a hunting experience. Better yet is find a source like South Dakota and make a deal to import wild pheasants and start a reintroduction program with closed seasons and let the birds establish themselves the way Ontario did by trading the state of Michigan moose for wild turkeys. That program was extremely successful for Ontario hunters.
The site that I go to is not 1/4 or 1/2 section , it is 1-1/2 sections, with a great deal of bush, which the birds are driven into within the first hour or two. So a dozen hunters or more can be spread over that 1-1/2 sections, and not be in each other's way. After the initial release, the birds are dispersed over a considerable area, and after a few hours, it takes a good dog to find any. Yes there are idiots that flock to the release truck, most have no dogs, and will even ground swat birds if they can, but the rest of us try to avoid being anywhere near the truck. I spent over 20 days at the site this year, and I actually saw the truck twice, once it arrived when I was headed back to my vehicle with a limit of birds, and the other time, when it was leaving the site, and I went to the far limits of the site to avoid the area, where the birds are actually released. This morning was an example of how tough it can be to find birds only a day after a release, I did find two birds in over two hours, but I only heard four other shots, during that time period. So six shots from over a dozen people in over two hours, that doesn't sound like the easy shoot that many people imagine it is. As for releasing one week, and hunting the next week, the predation due to coyotes , hawks and owls would likely claim over half of the birds, and some more would leave the site, so that idea is not at all practical. No it isn't quite like hunting wild birds, which I also do ,but once those birds are in the brush, they aren't nearly as easy to find as many people think. Basically, the release sites provide an opportunity for many people to hunt birds, without having to travel hours to get to where the wild birds live, and they do reduce hunting pressure on the wild birds.