TrackingPoint Renews SCI Partnership

   10.17.14

TrackingPoint Renews SCI Partnership

Safari Club International is pleased to announce the renewal of TrackingPoint as a corporate sponsor. Recognizing SCI’s international standing and stellar reputation, TrackingPoint has aligned with SCI to support its mission at home and abroad.

“Our corporate partners are an integral part of SCI’s success,” said Phil DeLone, CEO of Safari Club International. “That’s why we are so pleased that TrackingPoint has renewed their corporate sponsorship with us. Their innovative business model and dedication to protecting our right to hunt, coincides with the SCI mission to preserve that heritage and fight for conservation world wide.”

“TrackingPoint is proud to share the same ideals and commitment to the preservation of our hunting heritage around the world,” said TrackingPoint representative Anson Gordon. “It is more important than ever to ensure our rights now, and for future generations.”

TrackingPoint specializes in producing precision-guided firearms. Their applied technologies are changing the face of the firearms industry.

Contact

pressinfo@safariclub.org

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Protecting hunters’ rights and promoting wildlife conservation, SCI’s two areas of focus, historically has been the interest of hundreds of individuals long before SCI was established. But how did SCI as an organization begin?

Forty years ago, there were many safari clubs across the country made up of local, unaffiliated groups of hunters. One such was Safari Club of Los Angeles, which was formed in April 1971 by forty-seven individuals. In early 1972, an out-of-towner from a similar club in Chicago attended one of the monthly Wednesday night meetings, and it was decided that the L.A. club should attempt to combine with the one in Chicago to make it an affiliated chapter. The founder of Safari Club of Los Angeles, C.J. McElroy, went to the Windy City and instituted the new chapter.

Eleven months after the formation of Safari Club of Los Angeles, on March 9, 1972, the name was changed officially to Safari Club International. SCI continued to reach out to other independent safari clubs throughout the United States in an effort to combine them into a single overall organization.

Today, interest in SCI’s two primary missions has grown a worldwide network. Subsequent involvement and promotion of these missions is rooted in each of our 55,000 members, supported through each of our 190 membership chapters found across the globe, and put into action by government representatives and personnel both nationally and internationally.

In this way, we can encourage an appreciation for nature and wildlife so that conservation efforts remain strong, while also fighting to protect our rich hunting heritage. Big changes can be achieved through the endeavors of many who are united in a mission – the mission of Safari Club International.

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