I don't know everything about our club programs, but I don't believe 100% NRA clubs get any special benefits. Range/club grants are limited to a maximum of $5,000, not the tens of thousands of dollars stated in the article. At least three years ago, the NRA dropped NRA membership as a requirement to participate in NRA matches, so the implication the club's juniors can now compete only because the club became a 100% NRA club is false.Andrew wrote:The article implies that the NRA uses incentives to gun clubs to coerce their members into joining the NRA. Let me restate my question, "Is NRA membership an issue for anyone?" It's not an issue for me(long time member) and I wasn't aware that requiring NRA membership was an issue for others.Charles L. Cotton wrote:What "tactic" and by whom?Andrew wrote:http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/02/ ... 8320130203
Have you been denied membership in a club due to your refusal to join the NRA? I've been a member since '74, wasn't aware that this was a membership "tactic".
PSC Shooting Club, Inc. is a 100% NRA club meaning all Members must be NRA Members. We even make sure their NRA Membership runs through the entire PSC Membership year (July 1st through June 30th). We had less than 10 people refuse to join or renew because of the Club's policy and we haven't missed them a bit.
This is our Club's policy, not something the NRA could or did mandate.
Chas.
Again, I'm on the NRA Board, but I'm not on the Clubs & Associations Committee so I'm hardly a good resource on benefits available, beyond what what I'm mentioned. I can say that my club, PSC Shooting Club, Inc. has never received one single direct benefit for being a 100% NRA club. The benefit we see is supporting the NRA so we can continue to own and use firearms.
Chas.