Training should be an option; it should not be a requirement. Most trainers tell how they are doing this to assist the gun owners and protect their rights when in the reality it is all about the money. The thing that turns a lot of people off is the cost of training. Get 20 people in for a day at a couple hundred apiece; it's a good day for the trainer, regardless whether anyone actually learns anything or not. Instructors need to be compensated for their time, but if it is truly to protect our rights, they should be reasonable with the charges. I was brought up with guns, did a lot of training in the Army too. That does not mean I know anything and would not like some more training, but I refuse to and can not afford to pay the prices for it. But still, the last thing anyone wants to do is to try and deny me my rights.
You have the option to carry a concealed handgun in Nebraska without going through the training, and getting a CHP. It is under NE Revised Statute 28-1202 section 1b.
http://www.nebraskalegislature.gov/laws/statutes.php?statute=28-1202As to the cost of the training, I will weigh in on that since I am a trainer.... When I first started teaching these classes I charged $100 per person. I got into because I have a great passion for handguns and concealed carry. I didn't get into this business to feed my family. My initial estimates of expenses showed that I would make a decent amount for my time after paying all of the expenses as long as I had a decent sized group of folks. I do it because I love this issue and am passionate about it, and yes I make money doing it.
After a couple of months of actually doing the training, and realizing how much work and all of the expenses I was incurring, I had to raise my rate to $125...... At $100 it was not worth what I was having to go through to spend all the time required on these classes. (Keep in mind, it isn't just an 9 hour class... I spend many hours a week, answering emails, phone calls, and all the related paperwork that comes along with this).
After a daylong CHP class, I feel like I have been bulldozed. It is ALOT of work, not only the classroom portion, but spending a couple hours out on the range in the afternoon. I have to deal with people of varying experience levels. Some are experienced and this class is cake walk, some need lots of extra attention. I have dealt with people that are plain and simple unsafe with their firearms...... And it is my job in these classes to teach them how to change their poor handling habits. I have had dropped guns, loaded guns pointed at me, been swept, you name it.
I charge $125 for a quality training class. $150 to add Utah training certification on (which is extra classroom work, extra handouts and paperwork, and requires me to go to Utah every couple years and re-certify). My students have the option of doing just the NE, or completing the UT and NE in the same day.
Some Instructors charge $125 to $175 and they teach an old stale, boring, dry NRA Basic pistol class, and hand out a copy of NE laws at the end of class. I would be ****ed if I paid that much for a class and got the NRA outdated, dry, stale materials. I have a custom developed curriculum, book and multimedia presentations that are a compilation of years of my own training and research.
There was one Instructor who started out as "Mr Do-Good" with good intentions of helping gun owners. He charged about $35 to take the class... This paid for the NRA basic pistol book, certificates, handouts, etc, etc... He did not have to pay rent on a range or classroom (those were given to him for free). I don't know if he had insurance or not....... He started teaching classes and quickly realized that it was much more work than he imagined. Then he had the state patrol come in and audit him a couple of times because of complaints on the poor quality of his class....... All this time he ran around bad mouthing me and my partner for "gouging" people. Guess what? Mr Do-Good no longer teaches, because he realized he couldn't teach a quality class and charge nothing for it.
A lot of the money I make from teaching classes gets invested right back in to my program so I can provide an even better class. I put this money towards getting more training myself so I can improve my classes even more, I spend a lot on different holsters, props, guns, etc.... so I have actual examples to see in my class.
If you want quality training, do your research.... Figure out who is teaching you, what they are teaching you, what their experience or qualifications are.... And then decide if it is worth it for you.
And if you don't feel you need training..... Then don't pursue it. Carry under the statute I quoted above and take your chances. Either way stay safe out there.