Well kombayotch,
This is exactly what I offered to do last year with the APRA. I made a proposal for a 4 match schedule (so as not to "take up too much of their range time") that I would completely run myself. I am quite familiar with DCRA Service Conditions rules, having shot over the past 15 years including numerous BCRA Championships and the NSCC. I offered to do everything including stats that I would report to them.
I was one of the "innocent" parties that does not even live in Calgary. I simple paid my dues each year, happily shot and assisted with matches (I also promoted the APRA everywhere I went). I felt that I was the perfect person to take it over as I did not have any connection to the membership issues or politics.
(This situation reminds me of problems that have been experience in junior sport like" Little League Baseball; a person in-charge of memberships screws up, money is missing. The only difference is that instead of dealing with that person or person, all the players get blamed and the entire organization of junior players is suspended from playing.)
My proposal was outright rejected. I was advised that the Full Bore Club had voted to allow service rifle shooting once again and it would consist of competitors shooting their service rifles prone only, right beside full bore shooters, shooting the same targets, ranges and course of fire that they were shooting. I advised that this was not a true service rifle competition and wished to run regular DCRA matches but was told that this was how it was going to be.
I've learned the hard way that many of those in the APRA and Full Bore Club have not interest in ever having Service Rifle shooting back on the Homestead Range. As said before it "encroaches on their range time". There are many people interested in Service Rifle shooting in Alberta, including some enthusiastic good shooters in Edmonton. We are all putting our efforts elsewhere as there are some new long-range ranges that are due to open up in the Province in the next year or two. There are many members on the boards and executive of the APRA and AFRA that are less than honest and driving an agenda against Service Rifle Shooting. I now work very hard against the APRA as they have lost legitimacy within our Province.
When the APRA advised that the Service Rifle club's membership numbers were incomplete, the Service Rifle club advised that they would agree to any number of members that the APRA could come up with and pay whatever they wanted......but the APRA would never give a number....and never resolve the matter.... Example: Service Rifle thinks that they have 60 members, if the APRA disagreed and said you have 160 members, the Service Rifle club was going to accept that number and pay for that number, no questions asked.
It's exhausting and frustrating but we will have Service Rifle Shooting Again, just waiting for a range to be finished.
Rich