Perhaps we might petition the government to eliminate the law that firearms owners be tested and licensed since this basic level of safety competence is common sense. (I'm being sarcastic here.)
The firearms community is bigger than those of us that shoot competitively. In many places there are many range members that are opposed to the style of shooting that we do. If we can acknowledge their discomfort by at least reassuring them that we are trying to protect their continued access to to their own pursuits without having their ranges shut down because of accidental, negligent, unintentional, non-purposeful, un-aimed, un-focused, "oops I didn't mean to do that", discharges of firearms, I am inclined to support that.
I am doing what I can to support competitive shooting in my community and at my home range. One of the things that I want the novice competitive shooter to know is that we are an inclusive and welcoming group. But because safety is part of this passion, there should be an introductory level of standardized competency based training and testing that we should consider.
This testing doesn't need to be BB but something should be considered.
I have a question. If I wanted to shoot a match with my duty sidearm, in my duty holster, am I going to have a bunch of weiners making a fuss for not having the almighty black badge?
Yup we are trying to re introduce it instead of the BB requirement. We have a program, but it was dropped for BB requirement because it didnt require any staff for the "3gun clinic".
Trying to overturn that decision by proving that Canada runs 3guns without BB while still being safe. On the other end, CQB at the same club doesnt require anything...
Considering the repercussions a club and match director should be asking if they have done their due diligence. Anyone who discounts or doesn't support some level of training or competency review I would bet:
1) I don't want to shoot with.
2) has never been on a club executive (or volunteered).
3) has never put on a match.
I must be one of those guys then, even though I:
1) Volunteer my ass off at our club;
2) Have MD'd and SO'd at mine and other clubs for the last 10 years and been club 3 Gun Coordinator since the position was created.
well thank you for being outside of my stereotypical viewpoint, at least to a certain degree...
Having taken a course or reviewing competency doesn't mean the shooter can't or won't make a mistake.
Accidents are accidents but knowledge mitigates most hazards...
We make it very clear to new shooters what is expected of them. Our SOs are there to help new shooters complete the stages safely, not "monitor and DQ".
So your doing training on the fly which is much like I stated we did at our club matches. I have no issue with this at a small closed event but at a larger competitive match are you for real or just a timer holder?
Don't confuse differing view points on "mandatory" or "specific" training or instruction with carelessness or incompetence. We all want our events to run safely. There's more than one way to get there.
Yes many ways to get there but success favours the prepared and a curriculum, even a cursory one is the successful path.
Your in Northern Alberta, right?
Nice area, I don't shoot there.




























