2016 may have come to an end, but the AHLA is just getting started!
Crouched in the snow, deep in a southeastern Kentucky holler last week, I sat glassing the opposite hillside for anything that resembled an elk. Conditions were ideal to say the least. Single digit temps and fresh snow are the key ingredients to have them up and moving. Or so we thought. It had been three days of the same routine.
Drive, hike, glass. Repeat.
Fortunate to tag along with a friend who had caught lightning in a bottle and drawn a Kentucky cow elk tag, I was excited to hunt them so close to home. It was the absolute perfect way to wrap up a long, but rewarding hunting season. It was sometime in the late afternoon of day three and zero elk sighted, that my thoughts began to turn to work and the plans we have for the American Hunting Lease Association for the upcoming year and even beyond. The AHLA has all the potential, drive and inspiration to have a tremendous impact on the entire hunting landscape in the U.S. now and moving forward.
But, first I had to get back home to Indianapolis for a few important meetings at the Archery Trade Association show.
What We Do
I have to be honest, when I am asked what the AHLA actually does, I have a pretty standard response that includes protecting and promoting the hunting lease concept whenever and wherever possible. It usually gets a bit of a blank stare back and half-hearted nod. What I really wish is that I could take everyone that has asked me that question to the meetings I had planned in Indy.
My first meeting was with the Tree Stand Safety Awareness Foundation and the State of Indiana DNR. Frustrated by the number of preventable tree stand accidents a couple of years ago, the AHLA reached out to Hunter Safety Systems to see what could be done. The result of that contact and some discussion HSS was already engaged in was the creation of an industry wide movement. With representatives from the AHLA, Realtree, Summit, Kalchemy, Hunter Safety Systems, the International Hunter Education Association and private individuals with extensive backgrounds in safety, the TSSA is setting a course of action that will dramatically reduce tree stand accidents nationwide. The AHLA is proud to have a seat on the Board of Directors of the TSSA and will take an active role on behalf of all AHLA members to make sure the message of “staying connected” reaches every hunter that hunts from an elevated platform. Getting the individual states to buy in to our message is the first step and the reason for our meeting with the Indiana DNR. I am pleased to report that the IDNR is on board is excited to work with the TSSA.
“The AHLA is proud to have a seat on the Board of Directors of the TSSA and will take an active role on behalf of all AHLA members to make sure the message of “staying connected” reaches every hunter that hunts from an elevated platform.”
Our next meeting was every bit as important and truth be told, one that I was really looking forward to. A few years ago, the AHLA (again, on your behalf) wanted to support an organization that was actively fighting for the rights of all hunters. Frankly, we are very careful about what groups we support, after plenty of research there was one organization that stood above the rest. The Sportsmen’s Alliance has a long track record of standing up for the hunters and fishermen of this country. Coupled with their history of winning the battles they engage in, we felt our members would be proud to support the Alliance and feel good to know that portions of the revenue generated from hunting lease insurance sales goes right back into the fight to keep our hunting heritage alive. So, we made the contact and the first of 3 annual contributions.
It didn’t take long for our support to pay dividends. When the State of Illinois redefined the term “outfitter” in 2015 it inadvertently affected more commerce than intended. The result for landowners and hunters leasing land in Illinois would have been significant to say the least. Caught in the web were hunting related websites, hunting booking agents, hunting lease companies and even a non-profit working for the hunters of Illinois. The AHLA immediately reached out to the Sportsmen’s Alliance for guidance and they never hesitated. They quickly arranged a meeting with the officials from the IDNR and the American Hunting Lease Association and even mediated the meeting. The opportunity to sit down with a government agency doesn’t come easily, but this meeting was amicable and productive from the beginning. The issue is set to be addressed in the next legislative session.
Today’s meeting at the ATA was simply to reaffirm our support and to present Sportsmen’s Alliance President Evan Heusinkveld and Vice President Sean Curran with a check on behalf of the AHLA and its members for $10,000. Both Heusinkveld and Curran are hunters at heart and committed to defending hunters rights wherever needed.
“Today’s meeting at the ATA was simply to reaffirm our support and to present Sportsmen’s Alliance President Evan Heusinkveld and Vice President Sean Curran with a check on behalf of the AHLA and its members for $10,000.”
My third and last meeting was back with the Board of Directors of the TSSA. The sense of urgency felt by the board was heightened a couple of weeks prior when we received the news of a 12 year old boy in Mississippi dying from a tree stand accident. An unthinkable tragedy that was 100% preventable. Just as I walked into the meeting I received a text, informing me an Ohio man had fallen from his stand and was airlifted to a hospital just 24 hours earlier. I did not know his condition.
Clearly there is an epidemic in our sport that must be stopped. Our meeting set a course that the entire hunting industry can follow. As your representative on the TSSA board, the AHLA will be aggressive and pro-active in making sure no hunter… young or old…doesn’t hear the message. If you don’t already follow us on Facebook, Instagram or Twitter, please do so. We will post and share frequently and with your help these tragic stories will stop.
So, do we sell hunting lease insurance? Of course we do. We do it better, easier and more affordable than anyone else. But, is that who we are and all that we do?
Absolutely not.
We are proud to work on your behalf every day. Whether a hunter in Alabama or Pennsylvania needs hunting lease insurance or a landowner just wants to ask questions before they decide to lease their farm. It is what we do and who we are and we thank you (our members) for the opportunity to serve in that role.
If the AHLA can help you or your hunt club in any fashion, we are here to guide or advise you however needed. You can call (866-782-6330), email (info@ahuntinglease.org) or even chat with a staff member on our home page (ahuntinglease.org)
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