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KØHB wrote:
"Mike Coslo" wrote And I respectfully thought that NCI was solely against the Element 1 test. But now NCI is coming out in favor of giving most hams priveleges that they haven't been tested for. We can quit fussing about the NCI "support" of the "Great ARRL Giveaway". I've read the NCI comments on RM-10867, and they contain no persuasive arguments whatsoever. Basically NCI just ticks off the points of the ARRL/NCVEC petitions, and "supports" them with remarks like "81% agree with this", "92% agree with this", etc. Yeah, you're right. Those numbers don't mean a whole lot since it is those that chose to respond to the poll, etc, etc... Reading the FCC ECFS comments uncovered one very heartening bit of information. W3BE, who is generally a very staunch supporter of ARRL, and who notably is a member of NCVEC (with their clone giveaway proposal) rips into them (ARRL and by extension NCVEC) on several points. John is also a long time FCC'er and his views will have influence with the Commission. In stark contrast to the say-nothing NCI comments, here are some excerpts from his submittal. "This commenter also takes issue with the petition.s plan for the Commission to upgrade our 282,500 Technician and our 67,532 Tech Plus operators, without examination, to General Class.19 In effect, our present 146,164 General Class operators -- all of whom have qualified by examination for the privileges of that operator license class -- would suddenly find their stations sharing their privileges with some 350,032 operators, none of whom have similarly qualified. Today, for a Technician or Tech Plus Class operator to upgrade to our General Class, the person has to answer correctly 26 out of a unique set of 35 questions concerning the privileges of our General Class operators.20 Each examination utilizes questions taken from our Element 3 question pool. Our pool is also maintained through a cooperative effort among our VECs and is in the public domain. An Amateur Extra or Advanced Class VE has prepared each question in this pool. It is, therefore, the definitive statement by our knowledgeable operators as to what a successful examinee for our General Class operator license needs to know. Our VEs stand ready to administer this examination to any and all of our Technician and Tech Plus Class operators. There are training manuals and courses available to those who need assistance. Freakin' Elegant! "Moreover, for the Commission to order an exemption to our Element 3 General Class examination for our 350,032 Technician and Tech Plus operators would sully our reputation for excellence. After all, the Commission would have excused from our examination over 70% of our General Class licensees. More than two operators out of three, therefore, would be unqualified for their privileges. Such an indefensible situation would be detrimental to the future well being of our amateur service and for maintaining harmony and goodwill within our amateur service community. This commenter, therefore, asks respectfully for the Commission to also dismiss this aspect of the proposal. Wordy but spot-on! "This commenter takes issue with the petition's plan that would have the Commission upgrade our 84,563 Advanced Class operators to Amateur Extra Class without proving to our amateur service community that they are qualified to hold this -- our most prestigious class of operator license. To adopt this proposal would be highly unfair to our most dedicated and most highly qualified 107,313 Amateur Extra Class operators who have expended the time and effort to master the necessary qualifications. By climbing to the top, step-by-step, they have demonstrated their unqualified support for the objectives of our amateur service in our United States. Our Advanced Class operators -- for whatever reasons. have stopped short of the top rung of our ladder. To implement any such plan would diminish the reputation for excellence associated with our expert class. It would incur the disapproval of the very amateur operators who have so faithfully passed all of our examinations. It would, therefore, be detrimental to the future well being of our amateur service and for maintaining harmony and goodwill within our amateur service community. This commenter, therefore, asks respectfully for the Commission to dismiss this aspect of the proposal." I want to shake this dude's hand! It's almost like something MEANS something! Like our licenses. That is one of the saddest things about the Giveaway...oops, the one time adjustment. In the end, all it does is dilute the service. More General glass ops? sure. But if most of them are Technicians, that will dilute the average amateur to the Technician level. If some people here think that's BS, let 'em. Life's a b***h, and then ya have to listen to my opinion. ---Then he takes aim on the disincentive licensing practice of slicing the bands up into it's current host of ghettos-by-license-class. "Finally, this commenter takes issue with the petition.s request to once again tinker with our frequency sub-bands. Our frequency sub-bands are the classic example of well intentioned, but ineffective, rules taking on a life of their own. Process before progress. All operator frequency authorizations should be as complete bands. Only in this manner would the notion of spectrum rewards as an upgrading motivator have a chance of working effectively. Too many hams seem to have the attitude, 'I like my call sign. There's no need to upgrade just for a few more kHz.. That should tell us something. It is the Commission's class-distinctive sequential call sign system that is the upgrading motivational tool that works. Slicing up a frequency band by license classes seems to provide little, if any, significant motivation for upgrading to those who need motivation beyond the personal satisfaction of having attained our expert level of excellence. A segregated frequency sub-band scheme clearly increases the monitoring and enforcement workloads and isolates those whose self-training progress would benefit most from over-the-air communication with those having the expertise of the higher operator classes. It would, therefore, be detrimental to the future well being of our amateur service and for maintaining harmony and goodwill within our amateur service community. This commenter, therefore, asks respectfully for the Commission to also dismiss this aspect of the proposal." Finally, it was humorous to note one commenter who has submitted a total of 89 pages of comments, almost totally unresponsive to the ARRL petition, but merely tangential meanderings uncomplimentary to amateur radio in general. Unfortunately he gave no call sign, so I was unable to identify his license class. could it be??????? - Mike KB3EIA - |
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