Commission Agenda Item No. 14
Presenter: Steve Hall

Briefing
Hunter Education
May 22, 2019

I.      Executive Summary: The Texas Hunter Education Program (Program) has been in existence for 47 years and hunter education has been mandatory for the past 31 years for hunters born on or after September 2, 1971. A rite of passage for hunters in North America, the Program is a hallmark accomplishment of the Pittman-Robertson Wildlife Restoration Program. New hunter education strategies are being developed to improve the Program’s convenience and diversity and students’ access to mentors and hunting opportunities in accordance with the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department’s (TPWD) Recruitment, Retention, and Reactivation (R3) Strategic Plan.

II.     Discussion: The Texas Hunter Education Program began in 1972. In 1987, the Texas Parks and Wildlife Commission (Commission) passed rules requiring Texas hunters born on or after September 2, 1971 to successfully complete the hunter education course prior to hunting. To date, over 1.6 million students have been certified. Nearly 30,000 Texans, most of whom were/are volunteers and professional educators in the schools, have been trained as hunter education instructors.

The hunter education course covers the following topics:

  1. Safe handling and use of firearms and other sporting arms (e.g. archery, crossbows);
  2. Wildlife conservation and management (i.e. the hunter’s role);
  3. Hunting laws and applicable rules and regulations; and
  4. Hunting safety and ethics, including landowners’ rights.

In 2013, the Commission amended 31 Texas Administrative Code chapter 51, subchapter D and chapter 53, subchapter A, division 3) to:

  1. Allow online instruction providers to charge more than individual instructors;
  2. Provide an online-only training option for persons 17 years of age and older;
  3. Streamline classroom requirements – standardizing and going from 10 to 6 hours; and
  4. Exempt veterans/active duty members of the U.S. Armed Forces from live-fire requirements in field courses (statutory rule adoption). A subsequent statute exempts active/retired military and certain law enforcement personnel from the requirement.

There are currently three hunter education course options available to the public.

  1. Instructor Led, Classroom – six hours in length; primary method used by school teachers and volunteers
  2. Instructor Led, Internet and Field – two hours credit for online study and four hours of skills/live fire training
  3. Internet Only – for those 17 years of age or older

The minimum age for certification is 9 years. Hunters under 9 years of age, those under 17 years of age without proof of hunter education, and those 17 years of age and older who purchase a one-time “deferral” must be accompanied by a licensed adult hunter that can show proof of certification or be otherwise exempt (born prior to September 2, 1971). The Hunter Education statute provides persons charged with an offense (failure to present proof of hunter education certification while hunting) the opportunity to complete the hunter education course within 90 days to dismiss the charge.

Texas has seen a significant reduction in hunting incidents since the implementation of the program. Significant accomplishments also include an increased compliance rate to Texas hunting regulations, less wounding of animals, and an enhanced image for both hunters and hunting.

Major partnerships with other agencies and non-profit/conservation organizations have led to hunter education instruction in schools, primarily within the agriculture science curricula (1988), within county extension and 4-H networks (1994), as part of youth hunts provided by the Texas Youth Hunting Program (1996), and in outdoor education/physical education classes (2014). In 2018, almost 10,000 students were trained in the schools as a result of such partnerships.

In 2015, TPWD contracted with Element Learning Systems to develop a new online registration system that was launched in February 2017. Students desiring the training can go online at https://tpwd.texas.gov/education/hunter-education to search and register for courses and print their own certification cards upon successful completion. Students may pay instructors on site or those taking the online-only option may pay vendors online. Those completing Internet and field courses take a free online course at TPWD’s web site. Field courses are more limited than classroom courses, as most are held at safe range locations. The benefits of field courses include hands-on, live-fire, and hunter-skills training.

Over the next 10 years, program enhancements must be made to be relevant to both hunters and the non-hunting public, who will demand that hunters continue to act safely and responsibly. Strategies will be linked to the R3 strategies currently being developed. Such strategies include:

  1. Improving instructor-led course convenience (increasing the number of locations and times where and when people want courses has always has been an issue in a large state);
  2. Increasing efforts to be more diverse and inclusive – both students and instructors;
  3. Enhancing online courses (e.g. increasing the “fun factor,” interactive exercises, social media links, video productions, blogs/vlogs, and components that spark critical thinking and open discussion); and
  4. Increasing “Hunting & Shooting Sports 101” offerings (advanced hunter education), access to mentors, and youth/adult hunting opportunities, especially on private lands.

Attachments – 2

  1. Exhibit A – Summary of Texas Hunting Incidents 1972 - 1987
  2. Exhibit B – Summary of Texas Hunting Incidents 1988 - Present

Commission Agenda Item No. 14
Exhibit A

Summary of Texas Hunting Incidents Voluntary Hunter Education Program 1972-1987
Calendar Year Fatal Non-Fatal Accidents Hunting Licenses Sold Accidents/ 100,000 Licenses Fatalities/ 100,000 Licenses Students Certified
1966 28 53 81 644,653 12.6 4.3 -
1967 23 70 93 797,846 11.7 2.9 -
1968 37 68 105 854,693 12.3 4.3 -
1969 24 68 92 895,593 10.3 2.7 -
1970 19 53 72 935,793 7.7 2.0 -
1971 24 68 92 978,285 9.4 2.5 -
1972 30 55 85 966,332 8.8 3.1 2,119
1973 22 58 80 1,011,963 7.9 2.2 4,314
1974 16 52 68 1,037,925 6.6 1.5 6,094
1975 11 66 77 1,051,834 7.3 1.0 8,531
1976 11 52 63 1,050,349 6 1.0 10,043
1977 17 64 81 1,080,530 7.5 1.6 11,298
1978 20 63 83 1,091,794 7.6 1.8 10,890
1979 10 43 53 1,093,716 4.8 0.9 10,775
1980 13 56 69 1,160,375 5.9 1.1 12,166
1981 19 53 72 1,174,023 6.1 1.6 13,187
1982 23 74 97 1,216,032 8 1.9 13,323
1983 17 63 80 1,325,474 6 1.3 14,131
1984 21 39 60 1,140,174 5.3 1.8 13,052
1985 15 57 72 1,100,991 6.5 1.4 11,284
1986 13 55 68 1,162,785 5.8 1.1 11,195
1987 12 69 81 1,189,566 6.8 1.0 8,611
Voluntary 425 1299 1724 22,960,726 7.5 1.85 161,013

HUNTING INCIDENT RATE (AVERAGE) DURING VOLUNTARY PROGRAM – 7.5 per 100,000 hunting licenses issued.

HUNTING FATALITY RATE (AVERAGE) DURING VOLUNTARY PROGRAM – 1.85 per 100,000 hunting licenses issued.


Commission Agenda Item No. 14
Exhibit B

Summary of Texas Hunting Incidents Mandatory Hunter Education Program 1988 - Present
Calendar Year Fatal Non-Fatal Accidents Hunting Licenses Sold Accidents/ 100,000 Licenses Fatalities/ 100,000 Licenses Students Certified Deferrals Sold
1988 12 58 70 1,189,000 5.9 1.0 18,043  
1989 12 66 78 1,193,000 6.5 1.0 36,708  
1990 8 45 53 1,132,917 4.7 0.7 24,590  
1991 13 68 81 1,103,903 7.3 1.2 28,682  
1992 6 56 62 1,053,063 5.9 0.6 25,453  
1993 6 52 58 1,077,055 5.4 0.6 26,942  
1994 5 46 51 1,083,227 4.7 0.5 34,972  
1995 4 36 40 1,060,000 3.8 0.4 31,215  
1996 2 29 31 990,000 3.1 0.2 24,998  
1997 8 43 51 960,000 5.3 0.8 30,625  
1998 3 37 40 1,011,500 3.9 0.3 31,052  
1999 6 38 44 1,010,455 4.3 0.6 37,775  
2000 8 44 52 1,145,000 4.5 0.7 39,049  
2001 3 40 43 1,076,159 4 0.3 28,062  
2002 3 32 35 1,024,495 3.4 0.3 37,847  
2003 2 42 44 1,082,225 4.1 0.2 33,769  
2004 4 25 29 1,091,178 2.7 0.4 31,171  
2005 2 29 31 1,082,593 2.9 0.2 31,442  
2006 4 28 32 1,115,772 2.9 0.4 29,532  
2007 4 26 30 1,112,099 2.7 0.4 30,960  
2008 6 20 26 993,533 2.6 0.6 32,308  
2009 3 26 29 1,011,936 2.9 0.3 43,880 12,545
2010 4 21 25 1,141,924 2.2 0.4 41,785 13,997
2011 2 21 23 1,165,248 2 0.2 43,645 15,101
2012 5 20 25 1,155,542 2.2 0.4 45,719 15,438
2013 3 30 33 1,227,025 2.7 0.2 59,597 17,257
2014 2 24 26 1,284,933 2.0 0.2 72,026 11,898
2015 2 18 20 1,259,259 1.6 0.2 66,961 14,025
2016 5 19 24 1,271,368 1.9 0.4 60,115 14,371
2017 2 19 21 1,248,450 1.7 0.2 55,507 12,113
2018 3 14 17 1,235,590 1.4 0.2 57,440 11,004
Mandatory 151 1,073 1,224 34,588,449 3.5 0.44 1,193,405 137,749
TOTAL 576 2,372 2,948 57,549,175 5.1 1.00 1,354,418 137,749

HUNTING INCIDENT RATE (AVERAGE) DURING MANDATORY PROGRAM – 3.5 per 100,000 hunting licenses issued. 

HUNTING FATALITY RATE (AVERAGE) DURING MANDATORY PROGRAM – 0.44 per 100,000 hunting licenses issued.