Thanks for that post Brian. I like that you want to have these issues discussed by the entire club, and it might be good for you to send a short email message to the club letting them know about this topic. I can send you an updated emailing list if you don't have the latest one. Thanks!
With regard to the "Bob Kuczewski" stuff, I'd like to give you a little background. I left San Diego toward the end of 2010 to spend some time on the east coast with my Mom who needed some help. So Joe Spinney was president of the Hawks from September 9th, 2010 until September 11th, 2011 when you were elected for your first term.
When Joe first became President of the Hawks, he also assumed that the resistance on the Council was due to an animosity toward me. So here's what he wrote to the Soaring Council Chairman (Angelo Orona) and the Soaring Council members on September 20th, 2010:
Quote:
Hello Angelo and members of the Soaring Council,
My name is Joe Spinney and I'm a regular hang glider pilot at Torrey Pines. If you don't know me by name, you likely know me as the sole hang glider pilot zooming around among the sea of paragliders, usually in a bright orange wing.
I've been a member of the Torrey Hawks and recently became President with the hope that a different approach in leadership will yield different results. With that in mind, I'm requesting you add to tonight's agenda the topic of adding the Torrey Hawks to the Soaring Council. If the Hawks were added, then as President I would either attend myself or select a current member to represent the club. I can promise you that person will not be Bob Kuczewski.
I look forward to tonight's meeting.
Sincerely,
Joe Spinney
Now that was a good-faith effort on Joe's part to assure the Council that he would not appoint me to represent the Hawks. Of course, I wasn't happy about the Hawks making any promises about who they would (or would not) appoint, and I did tell Joe privately that I didn't think the Hawks should be restricting our ability to choose our representatives in that way. But I didn't raise a public fuss, and I sat back to watch what happened.
It turned out that Joe's nice letter (and my year-long absence) had
ZERO effect on the Council (just as I predicted). They had been claiming that "it was all about Bob", but I was gone from December of 2010 through December of 2011 (with just a few visits) and the Council still did not vote to accept the Hawks. So it's important to understand that they use "Bob" as an excuse, but the underlying reality is that none of the clubs want to dilute their own voting power on the Council by adding another club. If "Bob" is thrown under the bus, I suspect they'll just find another excuse to deny the Hawks membership on the Council.
By the way, that reminds me of even more proof of that position. When I first began to work to get the Soaring Council together, I was on good terms with all of the RC clubs and sailplane clubs. Gary Fogel and I corresponded regularly, and I was even suggested as a representative for the Torrey Pines Gulls RC club. The resistance by the other clubs didn't happen until AFTER September of 2007 when I first applied to have the Torrey Hawks added to the Council. I have plenty of email to show this if you want the proof.
So it's important to understand that anyone who says they don't want to add the Hawks to the Council "because of Bob" is blowing smoke up your keel tube. There may be some animosity toward me because i've been so persistant, but the real problem is that they just don't want to add another club to dilute their power.
So here's the real "lay of the land" as I have come to understand it...
The original Soaring Council (under the City of San Diego, and before paragliding) was made up of 6 clubs: 2 Sailplane, 2 RC, and 2 HG. When Gary Fogel resurrected the Soaring Council in 2007 (through my urging), the Bylaws that he produced had a 3rd RC club (TPSSS) to give the current configuration of the Council. Unfortunately, I didn't really question the imbalance at that time (and I never asked him who had voted to add the TPSSS), so here's what ended up becoming the current makeup of the Council (Note: SP=Sailplane, RC=Remote Control, HP=Hang Gliding/Paragliding since they are considered to be the "same" sport by Gary Fogel):
SP - National: Soaring Society of America (SSA)
HP - National: United States Hang Gliding and Paragliding Association (USHPA)
RC - National: Academy of Model Aeronautics (AMA)
SP - Local: Associated Glider Clubs of Southern California (AGCSC)
HP - Local: San Diego Hang Gliding and Paragliding Association (SDHGPA)
RC - Local: Torrey Pines Gulls (Gulls)
RC - Local: Torrey Pines Scale Soaring Society (TPSSS)
You can see from this, that because hang gliding and paragliding are lumped into one "sport" we don't have separate representatives for either (that's why I've listed them as "HP" rather than HG or PG). So we only have 2 representatives covering both sports (essentially 1 representative per sport), while the RC clubs have managed to get 3 representatives for their one sport.
Here are the positions that I think each of the groups are taking:
The RC's feel that the hang gliders were a blight on Torrey when they arrived in the 70's. I believe there's still some memory of that in their club. They also remember being kicked out of Torrey for a year by Jebb (PG pilot who also claimed to be an HG pilot when it suited him). So they feel it's very important for them to have strong control of the Council to protect them from the HG (and now PG) "blight" that's befallen Torrey. I think that's why they invented the "Torrey Pines Scale Soaring Society" so they could get a third RC seat on the Council. This doesn't have anything to do with Bob. It has everything to do with them wanting 3 out of 7 votes on the Soaring Council. But I'm still on good terms with some of the RC folks, and I believe that there are some good rational people in that group who would support adding the Hawks because they can see that it's fair ... even if it isn't in their own special interests.
The sailplanes are in a different situation. I don't think they have anything against hang gliding or the Hawks. In fact, the AGCSC actually voted to follow USHPA's lead on whether or not to add the Hawks. They said that if USHPA will vote to add the Hawks, then they would do so as well. They are more concerned about whether they'll be able to fly at all given the precarious nature of their runway on UCSD property. In general, I've had good relations with many of their members, and I think they're mostly honest enough to recognize the imbalance on the Council and to support adding the Hawks if they feel that it would actually happen. They do, however, want to stay on good terms with Robin because they like to place their winch inside the Gliderport lease area. But I think they are the most likely non-HG/PG organization to support adding the Hawks.
Then there's the two HG/PG organizations on the Council (SDHGPA and USHPA).
The SDHGPA has essentially become a paragliding organization. This is a result of the continuous production of new PG pilots at Torrey. All of the SDHGPA presidents, vice presidents, and most of the officers (and members) have been PG pilots for as long as I've been attending their meetings (I think I first attended in early 2007). They are mostly pawns of the concession, and that was evident when Dave Metzgar appointed Gabe Jebb to the Soaring Council (even though he knew it was against the Soaring Council's rules). So of all the clubs, I think the SDHGPA is the last one that would ever vote to add the Hawks to the Council. In fact, they really resent the fact that the Hawks even exist (picture the middle east with the Hawks playing the role of Isreal). The SDHGPA has wanted to maintain absolute control over both sports, and they really hate me for starting an alternate club in San Diego. I do think there are some reasonable people inside the SDHGPA, but they are far outnumbered by the Torrey Pawns. So the SDHGPA leadership would rather have the current under-representation of our sports on the Soaring Council than allow the Torrey Hawks to have a vote or a voice.
Last, but not least, is USHPA. USHPA SHOULD be working to support the Torrey Hawks. That's what it says in the USHPA Standard Operating Procedures. SOP 06-01.02 states:
USHPA Chapters can take advantage of many benefits provided by USHPA.
These include:
:
F. Additional leverage in lobbying efforts.So we are supposed to be able to get help from USHPA in our lobbying efforts. That should include our efforts to increase our representation on a local boards like the Soaring Council where other sports are also represented. In fact, USHPA did vote to increase our representation on the Soaring Council in their March 2010 resolution:
USHPA Resolution passed in March of 2010 wrote:
Bob Kuczewski's Motion to Amend the Chapter Support Report: To ask USHPA's representative on the TPSC to work to increase our sports' representation on the Torrey Pines Soaring Council to bring our total HG/PG representation from 2 to 3 so we will have the same number of HG/PG representatives as the RC clubs have.
The motion to amend passes 12 in favor, 10 against
But USHPA hasn't followed through on that resolution because Ken Baier (and several others lurking behind the scenes) don't want to do it. You heard Ken Baier say it in his own words after the September 17th Soaring Council meeting:
"I don't like this club."
"I don't want to vote for this club."
"I don't want to speak for this club."
- Ken Baier, September 17th, 2012
That's where the problem lies. USHPA should be lobbying the other organizations for their support in balancing the Soaring Council. That's what USHPA's resolution told Ken to do ("work to increase our sports' representation on the Torrey Pines Soaring Council"). Ken should be approaching the sailplane clubs asking for their support. He should be going to the RC clubs asking for their support. He should even be pressuring the SDHGPA to play nicely and allow the Hawks to have a voice on the Council. I believe that could really make a difference. But Ken Baier (and USHPA) have not followed through on the USHPA Board's resolution, and that's the first biggest problem.
When I was Director, I thought that Ken Baier really cared about fairness at Torrey. After all, he had been defeated as Regional Director by David Jebb who used some underhanded tricks (according to Ken). Unfortunately, I misread Ken's opposition to Jebb as being a desire for true fairness at Torrey and that's why I worked (very hard) to get him appointed to both the Soaring Council and the Advisory Board. In retrospect, I think both were mistakes.
Don't get me wrong here. I don't think that Ken is a bad guy. But Ken has three problems that make him unsuited to the task. The first problem is that Ken doesn't believe in having different clubs for the different sports of hang gliding and paragliding. I believe he supported the merger between USHGA and the failing USPA? (US Paragliding Assocation?). Ken's second problem is that he is, after all, running a paragliding business (Airjunkies Paragliding). He hasn't flown a hang glider at Torrey in years, and I don't think he appreciates the pressures that hang gliding has experienced due to the growth of paragliding. Third, Ken is one of those guys who wants to be liked. This can be a debilitating factor when you need to be forceful to get things done. I understand that a "bull in a china shop" isn't always the best way either, but sometimes you have to take a firm stand for something and not allow peer pressure to erode your conviction. Ken hasn't been able to do that in the nearly 8 years that I've known him.
So when I evaluate all the players, I think it all has to start with USHPA's support. If we can really get that, then we can have USHPA (which is a voting member of the Council) begin to approach the other clubs asking them to help balance the Council. That's where I think we should start. I also think that's far more important than making any changes to our club's bylaws to satisfy Ken. We have to realize that Ken is not going to support us even if you promise not to appoint me to the Council or change our bylaws or do anything. He might
say he's going to support us (just like the USHPA resolution
says he's supposed to do), but if he really doesn't want to do it, then he's just not going to do it.
With regard to changing our bylaws, I go back and forth. Sometimes, I think that maybe we should change them to remove the excuse that Ken is raising. But other times I don't think that we should be allowing USHPA (or Ken) to dictate how we run our club. I like the idea that our club is free. That's how hang gliding started ... with freedom in aviation. I also like that our memberships are good for as long as people want. I might agree with creating different levels of memberships, but I want everyone to feel that they belong to the Hawks whether they're paying or not. This club should be about binding hang glider pilots together, and I'm inclined to resist anything (including money) that divides us. So if we can do these things in a way that doesn't change the spirit of freedom in our club, then I'll vote to go along with them. But I don't think it will make any difference because I think Ken's mind is made up to resist us regardless of what we do. BUT, if we do decide to make any changes to our bylaws to satisfy Ken, then I think we should get (in writing) exactly what Ken will do to support the Hawks in return.
Finally (sorry this is so long), I have been thinking about the issue of paid memberships, and I'd like to propose this idea. I'd like to keep money out of the Hawks until we have a real need for it (like insurance). After all, we don't even have a treasurer!! But if we need to have a "paid member" level or list, then here's my proposal. I would suggest that we ask members who want to be "paid members" to donate their "membership fee" of say $10 to their own favorite club (Crestline, Sylmar, Funston, even USHPA or SDHGPA). Anyone who donates that fee to any hang gliding or paragliding club will be considered a paid member of the Torrey Hawks for the purposes of satisfying Ken Baier or anyone else who complains about us being a free club. How does that sound Brian?