My hunting partner, @Tom Ryan, of many years is an active-duty soldier stationed in GA. This fall he entered the draw for the Alabama Sandhill season and was selected. In order to hunt the season you must pass an ID test and purchase a tag. This is done after the draw is complete and you are selected/notified. Drawing entry deadline was Sept. 25 and if selected you had until Oct 2 to complete the ID test and purchase the permit. Tom was part of a Hurricane Helene emergency team (he's a flight EMT) and was on duty when the email with pertinent dates was sent to him. He got a second email from the state but was buried with emergency duties including oversight by a 4-star general. With the national emergency situation in full swing, it was not until Oct 3rd he read the email and immediately contacted the state which did not respond until today. Tom got a call back from Seth Maddox telling him he missed the deadline and therefore forfeited his sandhill permit.
So let me ask you folks. Does a soldier working in a national emergency deserve a few hours of leeway? Or should the state strictly adhere to their rules in all situations? I'm interested in what folks outside of this situation think.
So let me ask you folks. Does a soldier working in a national emergency deserve a few hours of leeway? Or should the state strictly adhere to their rules in all situations? I'm interested in what folks outside of this situation think.
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