For those Utah hunters with kids approaching hunting age.
AGCHAWK
2/16/07 4:53pm
Utah Proposes Lower Minimum Age for Big Game Hunting
What is proposed?
Reduce the minimum age requirements for hunting big game from 14 to 12.
Utah's requirements for hunter education and adult supervision will remain in effect.
Utah has the most restrictive youth big game hunting regulations in the western United States.
Why make the change?
According to the national Youth Hunting Report compiled by the National Shooting Sports Foundation and the National Wild Turkey Federation:
Youth hunters (ages 6 to 10) are safe. In 2002, with 1.7 million young hunters spending over 15.3 million days in the field, there were 77 hunting-related shooting accidents reported.
Hunting in general is safe. Statistically, the number of people injured or killed in hunting-related shooting accidents is similar to the number of people injured or killed by lightening strikes.
Youth hunting rates are declining and now is the time to facilitate participation and aggressively recruit new hunters.
Youth recruitment is less successful in states with higher youth hunting restrictions.
The minimum age for hunting small game in Utah was eliminated in 2006. More than 2,500 hunters age 12 and under hunted small game in Utah during 2006 with no reported accidents.
Reductions in hunter numbers will harm the hunting economy and adversely affect conservation.
On November 22, 2005, the Utah Wildlife Board endorsed reducing the minimum age for big game hunting from 14 to 12. Public sentiment at Regional Advisory Council meetings generally supported this change to the minimum big game hunting age.
What is proposed?
Reduce the minimum age requirements for hunting big game from 14 to 12.
Utah's requirements for hunter education and adult supervision will remain in effect.
Utah has the most restrictive youth big game hunting regulations in the western United States.
Why make the change?
According to the national Youth Hunting Report compiled by the National Shooting Sports Foundation and the National Wild Turkey Federation:
Youth hunters (ages 6 to 10) are safe. In 2002, with 1.7 million young hunters spending over 15.3 million days in the field, there were 77 hunting-related shooting accidents reported.
Hunting in general is safe. Statistically, the number of people injured or killed in hunting-related shooting accidents is similar to the number of people injured or killed by lightening strikes.
Youth hunting rates are declining and now is the time to facilitate participation and aggressively recruit new hunters.
Youth recruitment is less successful in states with higher youth hunting restrictions.
The minimum age for hunting small game in Utah was eliminated in 2006. More than 2,500 hunters age 12 and under hunted small game in Utah during 2006 with no reported accidents.
Reductions in hunter numbers will harm the hunting economy and adversely affect conservation.
On November 22, 2005, the Utah Wildlife Board endorsed reducing the minimum age for big game hunting from 14 to 12. Public sentiment at Regional Advisory Council meetings generally supported this change to the minimum big game hunting age.
6,781
Youngsters are safe when they have great parents and training. Not until in my book. The truth of the matter is youngsters aren't to safe although most think they are. Some are just plain dangerous.
With good training, parenting, teaching, and course then yes of course they can be safe.
The majority of hunting accidents happen in the age groups of 18-25! More than likely that is most of our age group. The parameters for these youth hunting is that the youth needs to be within a range of the supervising adult that they can communicate without using radios or anything, just by speaking to each other.
True. Not every parent out there is responsible either, but for the most part a lot of them are.
IMO it is a great opportunity to get fathers and sons back in the outdoors together, if a kid goes through hunter safety and his dad hasn't hunted for a while, I'll bet he will get back out there with his kid!
We also need to remember that the youth are the next generation if we aren't doing things to keep them involved with hunting we may lose them and if we do we lose the ones that will be fighting with us to save the sport in years to come.
In the last few years the number of youth buying small game and hunting licenses had dropped significantly, they are doing things along with some of the sportsman’s groups to keep the alive in hunting. For our sake and the sports let’s hope that it works.
When this passes it will only be for the general season hunts they will not be able to put in for the limited entries until they reach 14.
I was at a particular hunting banquet two nights ago and they did a lot of things to involve the youth even at the banquet-it was great. They even raffled off a youth turkey hunt; those are opportunities that I never had.
This is just another one of those threads that is just my opinion, but in 15 years I want to be hunting and having as good of opportunity then as do now with my kids. I definitely believe that we need to be involved in some way to help our sport and passions stay alive..........and improve!
If you have anything like that in Utah, lowering the age to 12 won't help there either.