The New Zealand Deerstalkers’ Association is calling for police to cancel their contract with the NZ Mountain Safety
Council.
This comes just after the MSC unexpectedly abolished two positions administering key areas such as training and
licensing, and disbanded an advisory committee on firearm safety. The programme instructors, many of whom are also NZDA
members, say the changes were made without consulting major firearm organisations or even the police, according to NZDA
National President Bill O’Leary.
“Suddenly there’s a great vacuum looming in teaching safety to our growing numbers of sporting shooters and hunters,” he
said. “It will compromise the training needed by every person going into the outdoors with a firearm, including the more
than 10,000 New Zealanders who currently obtaining their first licence each year.”
The two programme managers employed by MSC were also tasked with developing the programme and keeping in contact with
instructors for training and reporting on firearm incidents, Mr O’Leary said. “They do many other things to make the
legitimate sporting and hunting use of firearms as safe as possible – for both shooters and the general public.”
The Technical Committee had nominees from national hunting and shooting organisations, firearm instructors, Ministry of
Defence and the police. That committee provided advice to the programme managers and contributed to their development.
That structure has now been dissolved despite assurances by CEO Mike Daisley over the past year that the programme would
not be affected during the disestablishment of the other outdoor disciplines and the regional committees, Mr O’Leary
said.
“MSC had assured the police been assured that the programme would continue unchanged but NZDA has no confidence in that
assurance.”
He said that instructors had a strong loyalty to the programme and the managers and had communicated their extreme
concern to the NZDA as the leading hunting organisation in NZ. “We share their view that MSC lets down all New
Zealanders by making changes that are pointless at best and almost certainly harmful.”
Meanwhile the police have moved to ask police District Arms Officers to reassure instructors that police value the
volunteers’ services and will ensure that the provision of resources and resolution of any issues will be a priority.
ENDS