Read careful please; the context should have been clear. BUT since you need some help on it.... The ARRL is an enterprise. As such it represents its MEMBERS as being stateside based, not STATE based. Not the population of the country. Sheesh! Merry Xmas.
Where is Warren G. Harding (1865-1923), 29th POTUS, when we need him..... America's [ Radio Relay League--added by W2AI] present need is not heroics but healing; not nostrums but normalcy; not revolution but restoration.
"One of Several National Associations for Amateur Radio" ? I wasn't aware of more than one? Do any of the others have status such that they are in a position to represent Amateur Radio in Washington DC?
Yes, and all of them. As do you. As I mentioned, everyone can lobby and every site with an Internet address is a "National Organization." Here's one: https://www.ardc.net And another: https://recnet.com/node/2863 Another: https://emcomm-training.org NYU Wireless: https://wireless.engineering.nyu.edu/tedrappaport-about/ And another, etc., etc., etc. https://marcus-spectrum.com
None of these are a 'national organization of amateur radio'. They represent specific interests and missions that are not 'of amateur radio' as a whole. ardc is a grant giving foundation and does not have open membership to individuals. At least that is the inference from your link.
Their national nexus isn't dependent on, or limited to semantic interpretations regarding specific interests and missions, or open membership. The question concerned 'One of Several National Associations for Amateur Radio' and an ability to lobby on behalf of amateurs. They're all national and they can all lobby. Is ARRL the best, or the most effective? It's a matter of opinion. And, as always YMMV.
I think N1FM was meaning organizations such as RSGB, DARC, JARL, RAC, FMRE, WIA, NZART, etc. They are also National Associations for Amateur Radio within their national jurisdictions and IARU members.
I agree. It's actually a really good magazine. It's actually pretty impressive they put out as many magazines as they do each month. Putting together a magazine every month is not a small task.
It's not exactly cheap living in the Empire State either. The cost of living and taxes are the highest in the nation. Housing is scarce and expensive. The populace residing here are overtaxed and over regulated. No small wonder 550,000 residents left New York to other states over the past 12 months.
I give ARRL credit for being a publishing house with a wealth of information contained in their publications. More so; The so-called pillars [and subsequent Rhetoric] of public service, advocacy, education, technology, along with the power play rivalries and in-house politics at ARRL HQ: I can do without. Furthermore, The downfall of ARRL membership commenced, in 1963, when the League promoted the concept of incentive licensing--which, at the time, General Class licensees had FULL operating privileges.
Thanks, Kevin ... another great interview. And good job on asking the tough questions without being rude. I am a member of ARRL, I support what they do, frequently contribute to various special funds, and I'm not going to have a hissy fit and quit over the dues increase and QST decision. But Inderbitzen's comments to the effect of "we don't have a contract" were almost enough to push me the other way. Good grief. The issue isn't, "Let's do this to the members and ask our lawyers if the members can do anything about it .... Ha ha ha! No contract ... we got 'em!" Is that actually the way ARRL processed the decision? How about instead noting that the benefit of a printed copy of QST was a material inducement to paid membership for many people, and that the decent, honest, and ethical decision would be to recognize that and continue their subscriptions through the expiration of their membership terms? Even worse, was ARRL soliciting memberships that included printed copies of QST even while they had internally concluded that they had no intention of providing that benefit? And they feel OK with that because the lawyers told them the decision was not actionable? Anyway, thanks again for another very informative (even if distressing) interview, 73 Skip K4EAK