I have seen some of those wonderful ranges,a box on a stick.
Our club has had some of there ranges closed do to berm height infractions.(will be repaired in the spring)
All you people who think the Ontario regulations will not effect you,you might want to pull your heads out of you asses.
The days of starting a gun club in a field are over.
The guys that say shoot some were else,when all the some were else s have been closed,will be trying to get into a range were they have upgraded to keep up to requirements.
There will be no room for you because you wont spend 1/2 a day to familiarize your self with the range.
Calling a member of a legitimate shooting range a knob because of safety rules is very short sighted.
Correct me if I am wrong if you shoot any matches,pistol long range rifle,skeet or trap all have safety rules to protect the shooters and volunteers.
There were more hunting accidents when the boys came back from overs seas,all were experienced shooters,then there are today do to training courses.
Hmmm. All of our ranges get inspected the same as everyone else's ranges. Same rules - funny that - must be the Federal Government or something. We also had a berm height issue that needed fixing. Sorry - no box on a stick - we hillbillies actually have to conform to the same Fed standards.
Yes, every range has safety rules. I'm sorry, but it doesn't take a formal course to impart the knowledge lips to ears in the sitting position facing a screen full of PowerPoint. Ours are written down and passed out as part of the membership package (and are also available on the web site...yes, we do have electricity and modern appliances out here, too!)
I originally thought this was a local range thing, which is why I believed it was a "knob" issue. Now that I have found out that it is an Ontario CFO thing, I no longer believe you or any of the range operators are "knobs". I DO, however, find it interesting that you are a willing and active proponent for this course that no other province in the Great Dominion deems necessary. As I said, I am all for safety, but you can't legislate (or teach courses) on common sense, no matter how hard you try!
The club safety rules need to be published. New members need to be shown around and have the safety elements of the range briefed, shown and, where applicable, demonstrated. In daily shooting, each member is responsible for observing and enforcing the safety standards. Simple as that. People who don't meet the safety standards are asked to leave.
Same safety standard as the 9 other provinces, no 1/2 day course.
Anyway, too bad for Ontario shooters. Hope things change!