HARRISBURG — Paid hunter education instructors might be coming to Pennsylvania, starting in Allegheny County.
 The Pennsylvania Game Commission is looking into  hiring instructors on a contractual basis to help meet the need for offering  more classes in key areas. 
 Keith Snyder, chief of the agency's hunter  education and outreach division, told board members at their work group meeting  Monday that the classes — required of all first-time hunters and trappers —  have, at times, been a barrier to getting people into the sport. Students  weren't able to find classes to get the training needed, he said. 
  The commission has tried to address that using  “strategic scheduling,” offering more classes at those times when, according to  visitors to the commission's website, people are seeking them, he said. That's  borne some fruit. The commission certified about 41,000 students last year, its  most in years, he said.  
 But more needs to be done, he added. 
  Last year, for example, Pittsburgh ranked first  among all cities in terms of where people were located when getting online to  seek out a hunter safety course. Based on those visits, the commission should  have offered 131 hunter education classes in Allegheny County last year, Snyder  said. It offered only 45. That's the most it could handle with its 91 volunteer  instructors, he said.  
 Likewise, in Philadelphia, the commission should  have offered 70 classes. It offered 12, using 15 instructors. 
“Those two areas have a significant gap where the  volunteer instructor system is just not getting it done,” Snyder said. 
 To correct that, the commission will look into  paying two-man instructor teams to teach more classes. They will earn $150 each  per class, but be required to teach at times of the commission's choosing,  likely during periods of peak demand between September and November, in venues  that can hold at least 100 students at a time, Snyder said. 
 The commission isn't relying on paid instructors  entirely, though. Snyder said it's looking to recruit more volunteer instructors  and make it easier for them to get trained. 
 That might pay dividends, commissioner Brian  Hoover of Delaware County said. 
“If we can make it more convenient for them, I  think that will be an improvement,” Hoover said.  
 Another change might be coming, too. Increasing  the number of classes offered will likely necessitate the end of requirements  that a wildlife conservation officer be present at every one, commissioner Tim  Layton of Windber said. How long might it be after that until all hunter  education training is offered online, he wondered? 
 Not long, Snyder said. Pennsylvania offers online  training now, though students must still take their test in person. 
 Six states last year went to the kind of online  training that can be done start to finish. That's a trend that will only grow,  Snyder predicted. 
“We're starting those discussions already,” he  said. “It could be another tool in our toolbox to reduce barriers.” 
Details
 Top spots 
  Pittsburgh is the No. 1 city from which people  most often search for hunter education classes. Rounding out the top 10 are:  Philadelphia, State College, Altoona, New York, Lancaster, Harrisburg, Erie,  Scranton and Wilkes-Barre. 
 The presence of New York on the list seemed odd  until the Pa. Game Commission did some more research, said Keith Snyder, chief  of the agency's hunter education and outreach division. Most of those New York  hunting class-seekers are Pennsylvania residents who work across the border.
Bob Frye is a staff writer for Trib Total Media.  Reach him at bfrye@tribweb.com or via  Twitter @bobfryeoutdoors.

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