Hogwash. Your hunting license will prove you are a hunter...Has nothing to do with a PAL.
Prior to January 1st 2019 the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry (OMNRF) was issuing two distinct Ontario Outdoors Cards: a Hunting Card and a Fishing Card. The hunting cards had 4 different codes on them:
H1 (all firearms*), Ontario resident 15 years+: Required the completion of the Canadian Firearms Safety Course, Ontario Hunter Education Course and successfully challenging the Ontario Hunter Education Course Exam
H2 (all firearms*, except guns), Ontario resident 15 years+: Required only the completion of Ontario Hunter Education Course and successfully challenging the Ontario Hunter Education Course Exam.
A1 (all firearms*), Ontario resident 12 years+: Required the completion of the Canadian Firearms Safety Course, Ontario Hunter Education Course and successfully challenging the Ontario Hunter Education Course Exam.
A2 (all firearms*, except guns), Ontario resident 12 years+: Required only the completion of Ontario Hunter Education Course and successfully challenging the Ontario Hunter Education Course Exam.
H stood for hunter and A for apprentice.
Note: the definition of firearm according to the Ontario Fish and Wildlife Conservation Act, 1997 includes an air gun, pellet gun, bow or crossbow.
Therefore an H1 or A1 Hunting Outdoors Card allowed you to hunt with a “gun” and an H2 or A2 Outdoors Card allowed you to hunt with a bow or crossbow only. A Conservation Officer could see by asking for your Outdoors Card whether you were allowed to hunt with a gun or only with a bow.
Starting January 1st 2019 adopted a single format of Outdoors Card and it no longer indicates which hunter certification you have successfully completed (the former H1, A1 and H2, A2 codes explained above). This information is now on file with the Fish and Wildlife Licensing Service. The hunting licenses you purchase does not say which certification you have either. The only way a Conservation Officer can validate if you are a certified “gun” hunter while completing a hunter inspection is by asking for your PAL. This is why this requirement is now spelled out in the Ontario Hunting Regulations.