I think we're being unfair here. We don't know how the Georgia SM
got hold of the e-mail and there is no evidence that the candidate is
campaigning in Georgia. I knew Mickey Cox, K5MC, when he became
Louisiana SM (roughly the same time I became East Bay SM) as we were in
SM Training together. Trust me, he's nobody's fool. His stuff
is also posted on QRZ.
That aside, in my opinion, we shouldn't be discussing elections at all in
this reflector.
-- Andy Oppel, N6AJO
Pacific Division Vice Director
At 07:01 PM 2/20/2008, K8JE wrote:
Joel,
I thought competency tests were against the law for voting or running for
office in the US. ;-)
Jim Weaver, K8JE, Director
ARRL Great Lakes Division
5065 Bethany Rd.
Mason, OH 45040
E-mail:
k8je@arrl.org;
Tel.:
513-459-0142
ARRL - The Reason Amateur Radio
Is!
Members - The Reason ARRL Is!
From: Joel Harrison
[mailto:w5zn@arrl.org
]
Sent: Wednesday, February 20, 2008 8:55 PM
To: arrl-odv
Subject: RE: [arrl-odv:16518] silly season starts early
First thing he needs to do is look at an ARRL Division map. If he sent
that to the Georgia SM he?s campaigning in the Southeast Division where
votes don?t count for Delta Division Director!
From: w4ru@bellsouth.net
[
mailto:w4ru@bellsouth.net]
Sent: Wednesday, February 20, 2008 5:06 PM
To: arrl-odv
Subject: [arrl-odv:16518] silly season starts early
This was forwarded to me by the Georgia SM 73 Sandy, W4RU
---------------------------------------------------------------------
I believe the ARRL needs new leadership if we truly want it to be
the
"National Association of Amateur Radio" in the future. In
recent years the
ARRL Board of Directors has shown poor judgment in a number of ways.
Perhaps the most obvious example is the "regulation by
bandwidth" proposal
(RM-11306) submitted by the League to the FCC. A large majority of
the
comments submitted by hams to the FCC on RM-11306 were negative; the
League
then tried to salvage part of RM-11306 by submitting an ex-parte
revision
which included an "erratum" that supposedly conveyed the ARRL's
true
desires. Finally, in the face of massive opposition, the ARRL asked
the FCC
to withdraw RM-11306 from further consideration.
I have decided to run for Delta Division Director this year. Fred
AA7BQ has
given me permission to post my campaign platform on QRZ.COM.
Although the
election ballots will not be mailed to the ARRL members in the Del
ta
Division (Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Tennessee) until
late
September, I would like to hear now from both Delta Division members and
any
other amateur radio operators who have constructive ideas on how we
can
improve the ARRL. Depending upon the suggestions I receive here and
by
other means (emails, discussions at hamfests, etc.), I will "fine
tune" my
platform in the coming months.
Among the changes I plan to pursue if I'm elected the new Delta
Division
Director are the following:
1. ARRL members should have the choice of receiving QST, QEX, or
NCJ.
A number of League members have complained in recent years about the lack
of
technical content, contest reporting, etc., in QST. If the content
in QST
cannot be improved, then the members should have the choice of
receiving
QST, QEX, or NCJ. Other organizations (e.g., the National
Rifle
Association) offer similar options to their members and the A RRL should
do
likewise.
2. The ARRL Board meetings should be open to a limited number of
members,
including those who write for non-League publications such as CQ
Magazine
and WorldRadio, as long as personnel issues are not under
discussion.
The ARRL Board needs to be more "open" in making League policy;
one way to
do that is to permit a limited number of League members to attend
Board
meetings (at their own expense) unless personnel matters are under
discussion. These "guests" would be observers only.
It is particularly
important that members who write news articles for non-ARRL
publications
(e.g., CQ Magazine, WorldRadio) be permitted to attend Board meetings.
3. An independent committee of technically qualified hams should
carefully
determine the advantages and disadvantages of "regulation by
bandwidth"
through spectrum efficiency studies, etc., to determine if a new
proposal
should be subm itted to the FCC.
The recent ARRL petition included essentially no documentation
(engineering
studies, band plans, or other data) that justified changing from the
current
scheme of regulation by mode to regulation by bandwidth. Before we
ask the
FCC to make such a dramatic change in the Part 97 rules, the ham
community
needs to be reasonably sure that such a change is warranted and that
the
Amateur Radio Service will be improved.
4. The ARRL Board should achieve a reasonable degree of consensus
within
the ham community before submitting any future proposals to the FCC.
The ARRL Board should post drafts of its proposals on the ARRL Web site
for
comments by hams, both members and non-members. All of the posted
comments
should be available for everyone to review. Some proposals may have
to be
revised several times over many months before a consensus is
achieved. If a
reasonable consensus cannot be achieved, th en that proposal should not
be
submitted to the FCC. This policy will prevent future fiascoes
similar to
RM-11306.
5. All petitions released by the FCC for comment that concern the
Amateur
Radio Service should be made known to the ham community in a timely
manner
by the ARRL.
In late 2007 the FCC invited comments on RM-11392, a proposal asking the
FCC
to limit the maximum bandwidth of data transmissions to 1.5 kHz on all
HF
bands except 10 meters. In addition to not filing any comments
itself, the
ARRL apparently never even mentioned the existence of this
particular
petition on the ARRL Web site. There is no excuse for the ARRL not
to
inform the ham community of the existence of such petitions. In addition,
if
the ARRL chooses not to comment officially to the FCC, the League should
at
least discuss within the ham community the various advantages and
disadvantages of any submitted petitions. The ARRL once again
showed a
serious lack of leadership in its failure to do anything regarding
RM-11392.
6. The ARRL should increase its support of the National Traffic
System and
should quickly move on the recommendations of the National Emergency
Response Planning Committee.
The current national leadership undervalues the training opportunities
in
emergency communications offered by the League's own National Traffic
System
(including NTSD, the digital "arm" of NTS) in such fundamental
skills as
formal message handling and operating in directed nets. The ARRL
Board
should support the use of all appropriate modes and networks in
providing
backup communications to the public during emergencies. In
addition, since
Hurricane Katrina there has been little apparent progress by the
ARRL
regarding the recommendations of its own National Emergency Response
Planning Committee (NERPC). For example, little or no action
appears to
have be en taken by the ARRL Board so far on such issues as
credentialing,
establishing a national emcomm database of responders, or identifying
Major
Disaster Emergency Coordinators (MDECs).
I want the ARRL to once again be a membership organization that we all
can
be proud of, newcomers and old timers alike. If elected, I will
work
diligently to have the Board adopt the changes described above.
Thank you
for your support.
73,
Mickey Cox K5MC
k5mc@arrl.net
Andy Oppel
andy@andyoppel.com
andy_oppel@alamedanet.net