Not initially.
GREAT!!! We can get this ball rolling and then, after we're firmly and comfortably established, we can figure out some way to deal with all the crud that's clotting the organization - when all the crud has been elected to the Board of Directors and appointed as Committee Chairs. I can't wait to see how THAT works out.
I think if we want to get insurance easily (or possibly at all), our best hope is to say that we are meeting or exceeding USHPA standards.
How 'bout we focus on EXCEEDING for a little bit? 'Cause if we're trying to MEET USHPA standards US Hawks is just a pathetic and astronomical waste of time.
OK, that's easy to say, but how would a prospective insurance company know that our standards are as good as USHPA's standards (whether you approve of USHPA's standards or not)?
They could put a finger on one of our wrists and check for pulse.
The answer is that we don't judge the meeting of standards for ourselves, and instead we accept USHPA's judgement of standards.
Great! We look to a total sewer of an organization in which no one - save for dead pilots - is held accountable for anything and which maintains its sterling safety record by shredding accident reports. Then we build from there with less accountability and better shredding techniques.
If they say you're an Advanced Instructor, then we say you're an Advanced Instructor.
Well just to be fair and consistent then, shouldn't we honor their rating suspensions and revocations with the same level of scrutiny? And we should probably also assume that if a USHGA aerotow pilot is persona non grata at one or more USHGA aerotow operations we should probably also play it on the safe side and continue that policy as well.
I suspect you won't like that answer Tad...
Do ya think?
...(and others might not either)...
I bloody well hope so.
...but you must understand that there will have to be a transitional period where we rely on the judgement of an organization that the insurance industry already trusts - USHPA.
Do we really wanna get insurance from people that stupid? (Yeah, probably.)
I think that's the only way we can get affordable insurance to get us started.
What if we got started by siphoning off USHGA pilots and giving them online training to turn them into REAL pilots. Like Zack, for example. And then we could give them little US Hawks cards which might come to count for something.
Can anyone see any other way to get our members insured?
We build and bill ourselves as a BETTER organization than USHGA.
We get rid of spot landing requirements - which INCREASE the pilot's chances of killing himself before, during, and after qualification and get BRUTAL on hook-in checks so we don't hafta keep recruiting replacement members to maintain our numbers and lessen the chances of unaccompanied gliders shorting out everyone in the valley.
We set instructional standards that we we're serious about and when we see a YouTube video that shows they're not being adhered to we pull instructor certification so that the word gets out that the standards actually mean something.
That's the organization I'd send my nephew into. No way in hell I would EVER send him - or anyone else I didn't hate - into USHGA or anything that could possibly evolve out of what you're proposing.
USHGA's killing about one participant per thousand per year. If we can't add a zero to the back of the latter number drunk and blindfolded then we should probably find something else to do.