Youth-hunting bill advances to House
The Daily Inter Lake | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 10 years, 1 month AGO
A state bill that would create a special youth hunting license for children between 10 and 18 who have not completed Hunter Education passed the Senate on a final vote Tuesday.
Senate Bill 395, sponsored by Sen. Mark Blasdel, R-Kalispell, would require that young hunters be accompanied by a designated mentor and compel them to complete a hunter education course within two years to continue hunting.
The proposed law drew a deluge of personal testimony from senators during Monday’s floor session where it passed 25-24.
Proponents touted the measure as a means to increase interest in hunting among Montana’s youth, while opponents argued that 10-year-olds were too young to forgo the state’s safety-focused Hunter Education program.
On Tuesday’s final vote, the bill’s margin of support widened to 28-22, with two senators switching to “yes” votes and another voting in favor after an excused absense.
The bill now goes to the House.
MORE IMPORTED STORIES
ARTICLES BY THE DAILY INTER LAKE
No headline
MISSOULA — Glacier Wolfpack softball had a productive day against Missoula teams, first routing Big Sky 25-0 and then edging Sentinel 4-3 on Thursday in Western AA play.
Wolfpack falls to Capital by 20 in loser out
BUTTE — The Glacier Wolfpack (15-10) fell to Helena Capital 56-36 on Saturday, eliminating them from the Class AA state girls basketball tournament at the Butte Civic Center.
No headline
Buffalo Hill Golf Club in Kalispell is now accepting registration forms for the upcoming men’s league season.