We're not dimwits! That's just Daves biased view of us. He must have had a bad experience and it tarring all civil servants with the same brush.


And for the record, whilst Ofcom are the licensing authority, the licenses are actually issued by the Radio Licensing Centre which is part of the Post Office group (so they are NOT civil servants)!!!

Andrew GI0NWG


Jerry K3BZ wrote:
Hey, Dave... How is it that your British civil servants are "dimwits", while
ours over here are so handsome, debonair, talented, sophisticated,
intelligent and... of course... witty?

Just ...  wondering..... 8^)       73,  Jerry K3BZ


----- Original Message ----- From: "mausoptik ltd" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "'Charles Harpole'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[email protected]> Sent: Wednesday, May 11, 2005 10:46 AM Subject: RE: [DX-NEWS] U.K. licensing changes?



Hi


As far as I know it was just a proposal along with others such as extending licensing for life and extending the licensing period to 10 years. Currently we have to renew every year.....and this means that civil servants have to do a little work once a year for their money.

I can't see deregulation happening myself, though this is not because I
have any faith whatsoever in Ofcom (the licensing authority) or any
other of the dimwit civil servants - but more because of the
international regulatory implications.  Surely this would have to go
through a WARC, wouldn't it?.

My feeling is that they'll extend the license period.  There's more on
the RSGB site www.rsgb.org.uk

Regards

Dave G0OIL

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Charles Harpole
Sent: 11 May 2005 01:58
To: [email protected]
Subject: [DX-NEWS] U.K. licensing changes?

QST:
The May meeting of the Radio Amateur Society of Thailand was circulating
a
document that appeared to say that all ham radio in the United Kingdom
would
be completely deregulated... that no new licenses would be issued,
existing
ones not renewed, and that the ham bands would be open season for anyone
to
operate there from U.K.  Now, I may have not understood what I was
reading
there, but maybe someone has direct information.

Exact info or not, this brings up the most important issue for DXers and
for
all ham radio.  It is one thing for a national government to empower a
ham
club to do licensing... it is entirely a different and much more
distressing
thing to think that a government will simply stop having anything to do
with
ham radio.  Other than opening the airwaves to (more) chaos, if hams
anywhere are operating without a real license, then we who remain
licensed
anywhere else can not, by international treaty and local law, have any
contact with them, I think.

Gasp!

Charles Harpole
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


---------------------------------------------------------- Archives http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected] THE DXR is sponsored by the North Jersey DX Association. Please visit our website: http://www.njdxa.org/index.php scroll to bottom for subscribe/unsubscribe options ----------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------
Archives  http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]
THE DXR is sponsored by the North Jersey DX Association.
Please visit our website:
http://www.njdxa.org/index.php
scroll to bottom for subscribe/unsubscribe options
----------------------------------------------------------

Reply via email to