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Old December 31st 05, 04:01 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.policy
Bill Sohl
 
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Default How many licenses should there be, why and what privileges?


wrote in message
oups.com...

Bill Sohl wrote:
wrote in message
oups.com...
Bill Sohl wrote:


(SNIP)

FCC also
left 13wpm and 20wpm as requirements for many years
with the lack of change/elimination of said 13/20 wpm
elements supposedly waiting for a "consensus" in the
amateur ranks.

Perhaps. Yet anyone who could come up with a doctor's
note could get a medical waiver. Such notes were never
hard to get.


But in the overall perspective waivers were used only by
a relatively small percentage of new hams.


I've heard figures as high as 10%.


Perhaps, but that can't be verified easily.

In the few VE
sessions I assisted in I don't recall ever seeing one being
used. Was the waiver process abused by some?
Probably, but it wasn't a wide practice at all.


Who can say what constitutes "abuse" if the person got
a doctor's note?


Exactly. In the end, it was the doctor's, if anyone, that
would have to be assessed as signing off on a waiver
that shouldn't have been issued.

In spite of the lack of any consensus on
code the FCC did, in fact, end 13/20wpm test elements
in April 2000 based on arguments and the FCC's own
conclusions at that time.

Yep. FCC also reduced the written tests at the same time
and closed off three license classes to new issues.


I presume you mean the FCC reduced the number
of written tests as opposed to the overall
difficulty of the test material since the syllabus for
the now three remaining test elements did not change.


What FCC did was to reduce both the number of tests and
the total number of questions for each class of license.


Neither of which makes testing easier as long as
the total syllabus of questions remains the same.
If a student is given a list of 100 spelling words
to learn, it is neither easier or harder for the student
to pass if the spelling test has 20 words or 10 words.
In the end, the student still has to learn all the
words on the list.

(SNIP)

End result is less admin work for FCC. No more medical
waivers, only three written elements instead of five, and
eventual elimination of some rules.


That eventual elimination, unless
changes are made by the FCC, could
well be upwards of 50+ years assuming there are
some Advanced hams who are in their 20s.


Only true if those hams continue to renew and never
ever upgrade.


Do you see any mass effort to upgrade by currently
licensed Novice or Advanced license holders? In fact,
there seems to be more than a handful of Advanced
that say they'll never upgrade so they can be ID'd
as having passed 13wpm morse.

Bottom line, every statement or opinion offered by the FCC
in any NPRM and/or R&O is not cast in stone and can
end up being revisited and changed at a later review.

Agreed - but at the same time, getting them to do so
is an uphill battle. Particularly when such an change will
result in more work for FCC.


On the issue of a learners license I see no additional
work for FCC if there are only one or two other
licenses as some (e.g. Hans) have proposed.


The big admin issue with new license classes is that the
database has to be re-done.


In today's environment that shouldn't be a big deal at all.
The entire database could probably be imported into an
Excel file and given to some college computer science
majors and modified in a day or so. This stuff just isn't rocket
science anymore.

(SNIP)

Cheers,
Bill K2UNK


 
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