Walt,

Are there really ~500k 'active' operators, and more than 200k on HF? Or 
is that just licenses that haven't expired?  I personally know 2 
licensed 'hams' in my area that don't even know what their call signs 
are, let alone have any intention of ever owning or operating a radio, 
and they tell me that there are lots more like them... organizations 
such as the local ski patrol have pushed to have all their members 
licensed, they drilled on the tech pool questions and became hams, 5 
years after testing, less than 2% of them are active (could put a basic 
2m fm station on the air with less than 48 hours notice).  I used to be 
the local ARES resource coordinator, and wrestled with the problem of 
trying to recruit some of the nearly 130 licensed hams in my area 
(population < 6k) into participating in local emergency communications, 
fewer than 30 of the over 130 licensed hams were active.  The inactive 
licensees actually seemed to have less interest in amateur radio in 
general than the general public.  It was much easier to recruit new 
members, and get them licensed than it was to get a response out of the 
existing amateur population.  Of the ~130 I doubt more than a dozen or 
so would care less about bandwidth based band plan proposals, and I 
doubt more than 3 or 4 even know about it.

Don't know what it would really take to get the board to 'listen', but 
as the vast majority of the respondents seem to be opposed to the 
proposed changes; and the fact that they have an unsolicited response 
rate as high as it already is, to a proposal with virtually no mass 
publicity, not a politician in the world would consider themselves to 
have a mandate.  I doubt they'll ask us, because if they did, they 
wouldn't like the answer or the numbers at all.  Remember, 'smart' 
lawyers never ask questions they don't already know the answer to, and 
'smart' politicians never ask questions when they know the answer 
they'll get doesn't support their position.

Erik
N7HMS

Walt DuBose wrote:
> But is 1471 such a large number given that there are about 500,000 active 
> amateur radio operators in the U.S. and more than 200,000 on HF?
> 
> If there were 10 times the number of responses, then the Board might listen.
> 
> 73,
> 
> Walt/K5YFW

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