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![]() "Michael Black" wrote in message ... "Dr.Ace" ) writes: The Quarter Century Wireless Association, Inc. has filed a petition with the Federal Communications Commission requesting rulemaking action to amend Section 97.505(a) of the Commission's Rules for the Amateur Radio Service. This is amusing, given that incentive licensing came into effect in the US 37 years ago, meaning that a significant number of QCWA members could have been licensed after the rules went into effect. Someone licensed in 1968 is only 13 years away from fifty years of being licensed, doubling the 25 year requirement of being a ham to join the QCWA (if the old rule applied that you had to be licensed for 25 years). So what ? I guess you are easily amused. I suspect there are only a handful of US hams still active who were around at the time of the introduction of incentive licensing and who've not upgraded at some point. I suspect they still got screwed just the same. "There remains today, at most, a few thousand amateur operators so affected who have not chosen to upgrade." People wait for over a quarter century for privileges they could get sooner by simply taking a test? "To regain the privileges withdrawn, a licensee had to upgrade to Amateur Extra Class by traveling to an FCC office and passing difficult high-speed telegraphy and written examinations." Take note that the press release has a date of October 30, 2000, five years ago. Surely by now there's been some sort of response to the petition, be it yes or no Michael VE2BVW FCC denied the petition. But we can still credit the QCWA with trying to right a wrong doing. Ace - WH2T |
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