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Mike Coslo wrote in message ...
Brian Kelly wrote: Well, the Techs are vetted on safety issues, 'Nother piece of nonsense. Any number of EEs who worked with HV for a living have killed themselves on the job and in ham shacks over the years professional experience and ham radio test questions aside. Nonsense? There is no doubt that an engineer can fry themselves. But that really isn't the point. There is no level of education that can insure complete safety. Agreed. What the idea - and the point is - is to provide the exposure to some relevent material, and hope it sinks in. It is an excercise for the student to use or not to use. Where in the charter of the FCC does it state that one of it's missions is to provide any form of education as part of it's radio operators licensing processes?? The FCC is a federal regulatory agency, not an academic institution at any level. In the context of ham radio it's *sole* missison is to take a reasonable poke at maintaining law and order within the portions of the RF spectrum allocated for ham radio operations. It does this via testing the technical and operating competence levels of ham radio license applicants. Period. I've long held the view that peripheral issues like HV and tower climbing safety questions creeping into the tests are for the most part out of place because they have no implications with respect to the public interest in the RF spectrum. I disagree with the concept of the FCC trying to "teach" personal safety as part of the licensing process. RF safety questions on the other hand are germain to the testing process because the public does have a stake in radiation exposure issues. My bottom line in all this is that the FCC is testing for subjects which have nothing to do with it's role as a regulator and is failing to include topics which should be included in the tests like emergency communications procedures and others I could dredge up. I never had to answer any questions on tower climbing or RF exposure topics to get my Extra. I've dangled by my whatchmacallit up towers at 150+ feet more times than I can recall and I'm no more RF brain-fried than any of the rest of you RRAP lurkers. Times change, Brian. Safety is considered important these days. You're lecturing the choir . . . I've spent over a half century in the manufacturing sector much of it out on the production floors in various roles in the bowels of smokestack America. I've seen the blood and gore up close and personal, nobody around here supports safety education any more strongly than I do. The question is where that education should come from. Twisting your comment a bit "Personal safety education in ham radio should be left as an exercise for the individual". - Mike KB3EIA - w3rv |