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heritagesft01 Regular Member
| Joined: | Fri Jan 30th, 2009 |
| Location: | Kansas USA |
| Posts: | 6 |
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Posted: Fri Jan 30th, 2009 04:13 pm |
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Kansas legislators have introduced a new bill requiring schools to add Hunter Safety Orientation to their curriculum.
Session of 2009
HOUSE BILL No. 2049
By Committee on Agriculture and Natural Resources
1-21
AN ACT concerning the hunter safety orientation programs in schools.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Kansas:
Section 1. (a) The Legislature finds that:
(1) Firearms and hunting are important elements of the history, culture
and economy of the state of Kansas;
(2) the use of firearms while hunting or at any other time can be
dangerous when the firearms are not handled in a careful and safe manner;
and
(3) the opportunity of participating in a hunter safety orientation program
should be offered to students in certain grades.
(b) The state board of education, in consultation with the secretary
of the department of wildlife and parks, shall develop a hunter safety
orientation program for use in accredited schools of this state. The components
of a hunter safety orientation program shall include, but not be
limited to, instruction relating to:
(1) The protection of lives and property against loss or damage as a
result of the improper use of firearms;
(2) the proper use of firearms in hunting and sport competition; and
(3) the care and safety of firearms in the home.
(c) The state board of education shall develop a curriculum, materials
and guidelines that local boards of education and governing authorities
of accredited nonpublic schools may use in implementing the program of
instruction on hunter safety. School districts also may use materials prepared
by any national nonprofit membership organization which has as
one of its purposes the training of people in marksmanship and the safe
handling and use of firearms.
(d) Hunter safety orientation programs shall be conducted by an instructor
certified by the secretary of the department of wildlife and parks
or who has other training necessary to conduct the program as determined
by the state board.
(e) Hunter safety orientation programs may be offered to students in
any of the grades six through twelve over a two-week period during the
school year as part of physical education classes, or as part of the general
curriculum offered to students in such grades or at the end of the school
day, as determined by the board of education of the school district or the
governing authority of the accredited nonpublic school.
(f) Participation in hunter safety orientation programs is voluntary to
students and any student may choose not to participate in the program.
If a student chooses not to participate in the program, the student shall
participate in another educational activity if the program is offered during
regular school hours.
(g) Nothing in this section shall be construed to require a school
district to provide a hunter safety orientation program if there is not
sufficient student interest in the program, as determined by the school
district or if a certified instructor is not available to provide instruction.
(h) The school district shall issue a certificate to any student who
successfully completes the hunter safety orientation program.
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its
publication in the statute book.
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WVCDL State Researcher

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Posted: Fri Jan 30th, 2009 08:45 pm |
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| Please edit your message to contain a link to the bill. It is unnecessary to reprint the full text here.
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heritagesft01 Regular Member
| Joined: | Fri Jan 30th, 2009 |
| Location: | Kansas USA |
| Posts: | 6 |
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Posted: Fri Jan 30th, 2009 11:26 pm |
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Sorry, new to the board, and the text was handy.
Whats funny is that the only comment you make is on the format of the post and not the contents.
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Walleye Regular Member
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Posted: Sat Jan 31st, 2009 01:16 am |
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Not happening. Too many gun-control freaks in the power seat, both at the state level and fed level.
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Mike Super Moderator
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Posted: Sat Jan 31st, 2009 05:42 pm |
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heritagesft01 wrote: Sorry, new to the board, and the text was handy.
Whats funny is that the only comment you make is on the format of the post and not the contents.
The format of the post and the title do not quickly convey your point. Bottom line up front style of writing is the only kind that will get folks to read your posts.
And what is the point of this post?
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heritagesft01 Regular Member
| Joined: | Fri Jan 30th, 2009 |
| Location: | Kansas USA |
| Posts: | 6 |
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Posted: Mon Feb 2nd, 2009 12:35 am |
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Please, excuse me. But, apparently walleye understood that the post was just info that was being passed on.
I am so sorry that people are more critical of someones non perfection than just taking a look at what is in the contents.
But seeing how walleye is from Kansas and made a remark about the post and not the way it was presented, and that the only other 2 that made comments only commented on the way it was done tells me a lot about the Virginia's.
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heritagesft01 Regular Member
| Joined: | Fri Jan 30th, 2009 |
| Location: | Kansas USA |
| Posts: | 6 |
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Posted: Mon Feb 2nd, 2009 09:54 pm |
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| Actually , I feel this bill has a fair chance of passing. Sebilius will probably veto, but she did the same with the cch bills also and they were overode.
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Walleye Regular Member
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Posted: Tue Feb 3rd, 2009 07:11 am |
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I don't see it as likely because of the way schools are ran nowadays. Concealed carry is one thing, teaching anything about guns in public school is something else.
If it does pass, I doubt many schools would implement such a class or have the resources to do so.
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KBCraig Regular Member
| Joined: | Tue Aug 7th, 2007 |
| Location: | Northeast Texas |
| Posts: | 1497 |
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Posted: Sun Feb 8th, 2009 02:44 am |
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In my rural school in Arkansas, we all took hunter safety in 7th grade, taught by a state game warden. (I graduated in 1981 and haven't lived there since, so I don't know if this is still the practice.)
We even went out to private land and everyone shot 10 rounds from single-shot .22 rifles.
The game warden who taught my course impressed on me a very important lesson: the gun isn't clear until you visually inspect the chamber!
He held up a 1911 and asked, "Is this gun safe?" The whole class yelled "Noooo!" He asked what he had to do to make it safe, and got lots of spontaneous feedback: "Take out the magazine!" "Pull the slide back!" "Put the safety on!" "Lock the action open!"
After he had removed the magazine and cycled the action several times, we all agreed the gun was safe. So, he pointed at the ceiling and pulled the trigger.
You have no idea how loud a .45 ACP blank is inside a classroom with cinderblock walls.
That was the day I learned that extractors can break, and leave an unfired round in the chamber. I've never forgotten that lesson.
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