Thanks, Gyro!
The year before I took over the rocketry range, I was just an observer with my fourth grade son. Although I was already a shooting instructor and on my way to formal NRA RSO. But I was an observer, so _tried_ to hold my tongue and let my child learn from another volunteer... That is _UNTIL_ the guy left the launchers' removable keys on the table by the launchers--and the Scouts--as he went out to the pads and started rewiring?!?!? I _HAD_ to shout out to my boys: "Sit down at the back of the tent. We are not blowing this guy's fingers off. He is literally wrapping his fingers around gun powder to setup your rockets. There will be no excited little fingers fidgeting with either the controllers or the safety keys."
After that session, I excused myself to go talk with a Shooting Sports Committee friend. We agreed that although rocketry was not under Shooting Sports in the national guide, NAR and common sense says rocketry should run with the same discipline as any other range! They backed my play, and the volunteer was reassigned to a station better suited to their temperament. That night, SIX of us (Camp Director, Program Director, Quartermaster, Shooting, an Electrician who ran rockets in years prior, & myself) and a Scout all met to re-enact and re-imagine how the station should/could run. We looked at field (other stations or campsites adjacent), facilities (tents, roping, red flags, etc.), equipment (controllers, keys, rods, covers, etc.), range countdown & commands, educational speaking prompts....ALL of it. We then played RSO & Scout participants, and acted it all out start to finish until ALL were satisfied.
I have been running the station in the years since. Still enjoying what everyone had to contribute, still "paying it forward" to the next generation--and still insisting upon God's own discipline on my range! "I've never had to meet a Mom with their child at the ER--and I'm not going to start today!"