March 16, 2013
'An especially dedicated bunch'
Volunteer hunter safety instructors go above and beyond to share love of outdoors
John McCoy
Showing students how to safely handle pump shotguns and other types of firearms is just one of the many things volunteers such as Glenn Jones (left) and Don Lockard (right) teach during state-required hunter safety education classes. A volunteer force of 250 instructors provides the service for about 7,600 first-time hunting-license buyers each year.
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- So just who are the people who teach West Virginians how to hunt safely, and why would they drive around the world to do it?

"They're volunteers, and they come from all walks of life," said Lt. Tim Coleman, hunter safety education coordinator for the state Division of Natural Resources. "They're hunters who want to be involved in their sport, and to preserve that sport for future generations."

And they appear to want it pretty badly. Last year, West Virginia's cadre of 250 unpaid teachers dedicated a total of 7,418 hours and drove 28,978 miles - the equivalent of 11/6 times around the Earth - to certify 7,600 new hunters for first-time license purchases.

Since 1989, first-time hunting-license buyers born after Jan. 1, 1975 have been required to take and pass a state-certified hunter safety education course. The 10-hour course covers basic information about firearms and how to load, unload and carry them safely; how to identify wildlife and where to shoot them to get the quickest, most humane kills; field-dressing of game; tree-stand safety; basic survival; ethics; conservation; and wildlife management.

"That's a lot of information to pack into 10 hours," said Glenn Jones, president of the West Virginia Hunter Education Association. "Our volunteers do it to make the woods a safer place to be, and also to make sure people are informed about what they should be doing."

Before hunter education was mandatory, Natural Resources Police officers taught the courses, usually to middle- and high-school students.

Demand for classes skyrocketed once they became compulsory. To meet the demand, DNR officials recruited civilian volunteers and trained them to teach the material. Coleman called West Virginia's instructors "an especially dedicated bunch."

"When we started the program in 1969, I took a course in volunteer management, and the teacher said the average hunter-ed instructor doesn't last more than five years," he added. "Well, I have 15 to 20 of those original instructors who are coming up on 25 years of service, and they're still going strong.

"They do this because of their love for hunting, and they get nothing out of it but satisfaction. I'm very proud of them, and I'm comfortable with them out there doing the teaching because I know they're doing it right."

To become certified, volunteers must take and pass the basic 10-hour course, pass a background check and attend a special "instructor workshop."

"Our instructors have to have clean backgrounds - no felonies, no firearm-related violations, and no misdemeanors in the last two years," Coleman said. "Then, in the instructor workshops, we teach them teaching methods, DNR policies, and how to do all the paperwork associated with the classes."

Some of the instructors teach solo, while others take a tag-team approach.

"My team has five members," Jones said. "Any of us could teach the course by himself, but we prefer to come as a group and play off each other. My job as leader is to make sure we don't forget anything."

Jones said the class curriculum evolves to address safety issues as they arise.

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