I'm needing RSOs for the Lincoln IDPA League that is starting up.
I will look into the correspondence option. Thank you for the help.
Um, just so you know, when they say "SO" in IDPA, they aren't talking about NRA RSOs---they are talking about IDPA Safety Officers, which is something completely different.
(This is similar to "ROs" in USPSA---they don't mean standard Range Officers, they are talking about USPSA-certified Range Officers.)
IDPA Rules, page 53-54 goes into it. (And page 57, point number 2 for club affiliation.)
While the NRA RSO training (and certification) is a useful thing, it really won't help anyone run a competition shooter. Among other things, competitions ROs and SOs enforce the safety (and procedural) rules
of their particular sport, and the NRA RSO course doesn't teach any of that.
The NRA RSO course is more about being the general safety officer for an open range, with general shooters on a firing line. (More focused on rifle shooting, too.) Just not very similar.
You may already know this, but in case you don't----at IDPA and USPSA matches, having a NRA RSO certification doesn't mean anything with respect to SO and RO certification.