I'm not sure what the US equivalent of BIPM would be.

NIST/Metric is part of the Department of Commerce and is thus, unlike BIPM,
not an international body. It has also undergone a substantial reduction in
funding. Jim McCracken may be able to comment further.

The national standards body is, of course, ANSI, which has many many other
things on its plate than just SI. They do their bit by conforming to SI
within their own standards documents (which, of course, form the basis of
the U.S. input to ISO).

Doing things legislatively appears to be sensible on its face. However, to
accomplish anything, you have to get the attention of the legislators, whose
primary motivation (with some notable exceptions) is to get re-elected. Any
bill, in the House or the Senate, has to have a substantial number of
sponsors in order to stand a chance of even being considered, let alone
passed.

Metrication is not an election-time issue and, very likely, never will be.
We would need some kind of popular groundswell to make it an issue that
would resonate with a significant proportion of the population.

If only Jimmy Carter had not sabotaged metrication (inadvertently), and if
only Ronald Reagan had not subdued it almost completely (deliberately), we
might not be having this discussion.

(If you remember, Carter, in trying very na�vely to be fair, appointed both
supporters and opponents of metrication to the commission that was supposed
to implement it. Reagan, in his turn, defunded the commission.)

We'll just have to keep chipping away, spreading the word and setting the
example.

Bill Potts, CMS
Roseville, CA
http://metric1.org [SI Navigator]


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On
Behalf Of Ma Be
Sent: Tuesday, April 09, 2002 16:22
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:19360] Hey, a new idea!


Hello, folks,

Please allow me to submit a new idea before you.  This whole debate I and
Jim have been having on SI frameworking got me thinking.

How about we focus our efforts on getting countries around the world to
yield authority on the issue of system of units to the "local" standards
bodies, which, evidently, in turn, would be subject to the highest
*international* authority on the issue, BIPM, for example (given that this
is a science issue and science has NO frontiers, issues of sovereignty
should not be a concern).  In other words, when it comes to the use of units
of measurements, ALL stakeholders in the society should use what such
authoritative bodies would stipulate as "legal".

This is actually similar to how it is, for instance, in my birthcountry,
Brazil.  This could be a "backdoor" entrance to metrication in the US.

That's how it would work.  We would first get the equivalent BIPM arm in the
US to recognize ONLY SI units as having any legal status.  Secondly we would
do legislativewise what is necessary to give such body full authority on
this.  The argument for this implementation would be obvious.  Since units
of measurements ARE the *unquestionable* domain of science, it would only
make sense to yield power and authority on this to those professionals in
this area.

It's not like this would be a first or unheard of.  We already do this for
things like safety, environment, etc.  Therefore, why not extend this to
units of measurement?

Comments anyone, please?  Thanks for your feedback.

Marcus


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