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Old October 22nd 06, 02:48 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.policy,rec.radio.amateur.misc
U-Know-Who U-Know-Who is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 570
Default ARS License Numbers


"Slow Code" wrote in message
news
wrote in
ups.com:

These are the numbers of current, unexpired
amateur radio licenses held by individuals
on the stated dates, and the percentage of
the total number of active licenses that
class contains:

As of May 14, 2000:

Novice - 49,329 (7.3%)
Technician - 205,394 (30.4%)
Technician Plus - 128,860 (19.1%)
General - 112,677 (16.7%)
Advanced - 99,782 (14.8%)
Extra - 78,750 (11.7%)

Total Tech/TechPlus - 334,254 (49.5%)

Total General/Advanced/Extra - 291,209 (43.2%)

Total all classes - 674,792

As of October 17, 2006:

Novice - 24,187 (3.7%) [decrease of 25,142]
Technician - 286,314 (43.6%) [increase of 80,920]
Technician Plus - 35,056 (5.3%) [decrease of 93,804]
General - 131,866 (20.1%) [increase of 19,189]
Advanced - 70,623 (10.8%) [decrease of 29,159]
Extra - 108,647 (16.5%) [increase of 29,897]

(percentages may not add up to exactly 100.0% due to rounding)

Total Tech/TechPlus - 321,370 (49.0%) [decrease of 12,884]

Total General/Advanced/Extra - 311,136 (47.4%) [increase of 19,927]

Total all classes - 656,513 (decrease of 18,279)

Note that these totals do not include licenses
that have expired but are in the grace period.

They also do not include club, military
or other station-only licenses.

Note also that effective April 15, 2000, new
Novice, Technician Plus and Advanced licenses
are no longer issued.

Since April 15, 2000, FCC has renewed all existing
Technician Plus licenses as Technician. By May of
2010, the number of Technician Plus licenses will drop
to zero, because all of them will have been renewed as
Technician or allowed to expire. It is therefore
informative to consider the totals of the two classes,
since the Technician class includes a significant
number of Technician Plus licenses renewed as
Technician.

73 de Jim, N2EY




Thanks Jim,

Maybe now people will see dumbing down ham radio was a bad idea.

SC


Well, hopefully it really won't matter too much. I personally hope they take
your coveted HF bands for worldwide data communications, and outlaw HF ham
radio altogether. You can then hook your key up to a buzzer and code
yourself into the grave.

HTH