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Michael Coslo posted on Wed, 5 Dec 2007 10:28:14 EST
Interesting numbers, Len We have a continuation of the dropoff of (almost certainly) inactive Hams. Not too surprising there, if a person subscribes to the idea that a lot of folks who once used 2 meters as a sort of "pre cell phone cell phone" had migrated over to cell phones to get their communication needs taken care of. I think that that will continue until around 2009-10. Mike, I wasn't presupposing any reasons for individuals to let their licenses expire. Expirations are expirations. There's no proof or anything else that all or some majority expirations come from Technician class (the ones that supposedly used 2m as a cell phone substitute). I used www.hamdata.com primarily because that website does sort out new licensees and expirations from the huge singular daily amateur radio license database available from the FCC. QRZ and some other amateur-oriented websites do different sorting. The ARRL website listing only has sorting by 'active' license status, class, and state or province, does not indicate 'new' nor expiration nor class changes nor 'other administrative changes.' ALL of these amateur-oriented statistical data services come from the SAME public database information. That database contains enough sub-data fields to derive all kinds of sorting. Some of that sorting would require temporary storage of past database information to show changes. The ARRL sorting is perhaps the simplest kind since it requires no storage of previous database information, taking only the 'active' individuals licensees out and sorting them by license class and geographical locations. The number that I think is most important is the new license numbers. People are still getting licenses, and at a healthy rate. Well, at a 0.1% growth rate over 9 months, 'healthy' would be a rather subjective descriptor, wouldn't it? :-) At least they are INCREASING what was a LOSS rate, not a growth. In the year prior to 3 March 2007 the number of expirations was 29,096 versus newcomer total of 22,605. That's a negative delta of 6,487. The positive delta over 9 months since 3 March 2007 was only 1,162 (20,901 newcomers v. 19,739 expirations). Not having the exact statistical breakdown of any licensee numbers insofar as 9 months prior to 3 March 2007, I simply used the One Year prior available numbers and did simple arithmetic (multiply by 3/4) to find a comparative change of newcomer v. expirations. That turned out to be 21,822 expirations v. 16,957 newcomers, still a negative delta and a 4,865 average drop to total licensees in the same 9 months. In probability and speculation, without the elimination of the code test as ordered on 19 December 2006 (R&O FCC 06-178), the total licensee numbers would still be decreasing. What would be more indicative of 'health' might be a more detailed sorting of public database information as to newcomers achieving what class license as their first. As a part of that, it would be nice to see how many and from which class does a license class change within some time period. That seems to me to be more indicative of newcomers interest and the probable future of amateur radio in the USA once normal human attrition has taken care of the rest of us. If that probable future turns out to be different than what the devotees of the 60s and 70s newcomers did, then it is just different. Such difference in perference would not be a 'moral flaw' of newcomers despite what some boomer-generation-newcomer licensees express now. The future of USA amateur radio belongs to the newcomers of now. I think that the relatively minor number of existing licensees who ARE doing things for newcomers, such as Steve Bonine described in another thread here, are an EXCELLENT example of what should be done...positive steps, proactive steps to help, not hinder newcomers. 73, Len AF6AY |
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