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In article , "Dee D. Flint"
writes: "Leo" wrote in message .. . Points well taken, Hans. I suggest, however, that the question (what the amateur radio service would be comprised of if it were created today) must be explored in order to validate what 'historical aspects' of the hobby still apply in 2003 - a 'sanity check', if you will. As I understand it, the ARS was created in early 20th century to fulfil a need (to provide a pool of trained operators, I believe, with experimentation and development mentioned as other objectives). This mandate has evolved over the years, and maybe it is time to review and bring it in-line with the requirements and technology of today. Not really. That was the excuse that was used for the government to save face. They really wanted to disallow amateur activity altogether when the various radio services and regulations were initiated (see "200 Meters and Down"). It took quite a bit of organized lobbying on the part of the amateurs to maintain a place in the radio spectrum. After World War I, it took a similar lobbying effort to get the government to allow the resumption of amateur activity. They had shut it down for the war and it looked as if they intended to keep it shut down. Exactly, Dee. And it didn't stop there - amateurs had to fight for recognition internationally as well, all through the 1920s. Amateur radio was only recognized as a separate radio service by international regulations in 1927. The whole concept of "radio for its own sake" evolved over time, and as K0HB so rightly says, is still evolving. What it evolves into is mostly in the hands of those who choose to become radio amateurs. Note that the regulations did not contain any sort of "Basis and Purpose" statements until 1951, when FCC insisted on writing such into the regs for each service. The ARS is certainly not a service born of regulations - but it exists today because the regulators allow it to do so - if we don't have a clear idea of specifically why it should continue to exist, or what it should be composed of, how can we justify it if and when the time comes? We cannot convince regulators to maintain CW testing, as an example, if the best arguement that we can come up with is "history"! I am convinced that all the regulators really care about wrt amateur radio is: - Noninterference with other services - Orderly on-air behavior by amateurs - Reasonable level of use of allocated spectrum Everything else is pretty much up to us. It was put there by regulation for a reason - and it needs a reason to survive. Regulators don't deal in nostalgia....and if a push comes to approve a potentially multi-billion dollar rollout of a service like BPL, they are going to be hard-pressed to stave it off on our behalf without a solid justification of why the ARS is still important! Yes once again it is time to fight. If all we can offer is our ability to TALK on the radio, there isn't much justification for the continuation of Amateur Radio with all the frequency privileges we have today. Exactly. And it's not just amateur radio that is threatened by BPL. I raised this question because, frankly, the vast majority of arguements that I have read in this newsgroup have been driven by emotion, nostalgia or historical references. If someone proposes that CW should continue to have exclusive band assignments because it is a great mode to use during emergencies due to its inherent readibility through noise, and that CW testing should continue to ensure that a pool of CW-competent operators is maintained for emergency comms, then OK, good point - maybe it should. But CW *doesn't* have any *exclusive* band assignments on HF/MF! Not one Hz! There are lots of reasons to keep CW/Morse testing - and lots of reasons to let it go. All reasons basically come down to someone's opinion, one way or the other. Although this is a good and valid point, those who don't know code and don't want to learn it have successfully outshouted the proponents of code testing so that the regulators, who know nothing of the merits of the code themselves, look like they are going to go along with it. Maybe. OTOH, if someone proposes that CW testing should continue because thats the way its been since the beginning of time, then - who cares? What relevance does that statement have to do with today? So what? "If it ain't broke, don't fix it" Successful businesses have learned to do this type of review on their internal processes in order to survive, in the interest of efficiency (and, for fun, watch what happens when some idiot tells the departmental VP that something is being done because it has always been done that way - wow! - never happens twice!). If something is being done, and no one can properly justify it, then out it goes. Replaced by a new and (hopefully) better process, or abandoned altogether if no longer needed. We could learn something from this too. Sure! But sometimes they learn after the fact that although they couldn't come up with a justification to keep something, it turns out to be necessary to function efficiently and they have to reinstate it.. Although touted for decades as the wave of the future, "the paperless office" still has not become a reality. We always need paper documents for something. Excellent example. Offices today use more paper, not less! Note that most of the concepts of the computerized office (mouse, graphical user interface, computer at every desk, networking) came from Xerox's Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) in the very early 1970s. The folks at Xerox thought their core business of copiers would wither away as computers took over..... Often when something is done a certain way, it's not just because "we've always done it like that" but because of very good reasons that are not immediately apparent to outsiders - or even insiders. Someone has suggested that if amateur radio were invented today, without the benefit of all of the history and tradition, it would be a version of FRS or maybe CB - if that is true, we have a serious problem when industry comes knocking for more of our frequency spectrum. How do we convince the regulators that it remains an important service, if we believe that? Simple show them that we are a resource with unique skills and resources and numbers that cannot be found in any other radio service. Which is why any radio service continues to exist, really. Of course we should keep the history of the service in mind as we decide what should define it today. That's an advantage that we have over those who created it initially - we can see what worked well, what failed, and what still works - and pick and choose accordingly. But to argue from a position of emotion, or vanity, or 'what has always been' - type historical perspectives - that's a fool's game plan. Eliminating skill and/or knowledge requirements should always be approached with caution and some degree of trepidation. We sometimes don't know what we need until we no longer have the ability to use that skill and/or knowledge. Even when projecting based on past experience, foresight is far from 20/20. It's also important to monitor the actual results of changes. For example, back in April of 2000, code testing was reduced to a single 5 wpm test *and* the written tests were reduced. Did we get lots more new hams? Nope - in 3-1/2 years, the ARS in the USA has grown by less than 10,000. What we did get was lots of upgrades by already-licensed hams in the year or so following the rules changes, then a slowdown to nearly the rates before the changes. 73 de Jim, N2EY |