July 23, 2007 ARS License Numbers
			 
			 
			
		
		
		
			
			On Jul 26, 7:50?pm, "Dee Flint"  wrote: 
 
 While I expected a lot of upgrading to happen, this is more than I would 
 have expected in so short a time. 
 
Consider a few factors, Dee: 
 
1) There was a lot of notice that the changes were coming. 
2) The changes reduced the number and types of test needed to upgrade 
to General or Extra. Like a price reduction on an item. 
3) While the raw numbers may look like a lot, compare them to the 
percentages. Generals went from being 19.9% of US hams to 21.7%, while 
Extras went from 16.5 to 17.0 %. 
 
 And yet in another way, I'm surprised 
 that there are not even more people upgrading.  I wonder if there are a lot 
 of inactive hams that just aren't getting the word? 
 
All sorts of factors: 
 
- Some hams haven't gotten the word 
- Some hams are inactive but still in the database 
- Some hams are perfectly satisfied with the license they have 
- Some hams are studying for their upgrade, waiting for a nearby VE 
session, etc. 
- Some hams are holding onto their old license classes for a variety 
of reasons. For example, I have had more than one Advanced tell me 
that s/he won't upgrade to Extra because the Advanced "proves" the 
person passed a code test, while the Extra doesn't. Others have told 
me that they're sure FCC will eventually give Advanceds a free upgrade 
to Extra, so they're just waiting it out. At least one I know feels 
insulted that it takes the same testing to go from General to Extra as 
it does to go from Advanced to Extra. 
 
All sorts of other reasons. 
 
Perhaps there is someone out there who is determined to be the last 
Extra or the last Novice on the books. 
 
With 10 year licensing, it's possible that a considerable percentage 
of the US amateur population has dropped out but still shows up in the 
database. For example, if 2% of the US amateur population dies per 
year,  and the total is relatively stable, there will be approximately 
10% of the total who are dead but whose licenses are still valid. (I 
got this number by assuming that it's equally likely for a ham to die 
in any year of the 10 year license term, which means that the median 
would be 5 years. 5 years times 2% is 10%). 
 
2% may be a low number, too - it assumes that the *average* amateur is 
licensed for 50 years. 
 
In any event, at least the steady decline in the ARS license numbers 
since 2003 or so seems to have stopped. 
 
73 de Jim, N2EY 
 
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
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