I will be submitting an application for membership tonight at the TPSC meeting, which I believe will be added on the agenda as new business for the July meeting. I fully expect the application will be voted down at the meeting in July, however I'm hoping that we can rally some support in that time from Torrey Hawks members, mainly to show the TPSC that the Torrey Hawks are more than Bob's HG club. If the membership application is voted down, our only recourse is to begin getting in touch with San Diego City Parks and Recreation and perhaps city council members to get involved with the oversight of the Torrey Pines Gliderport. My belief is that they would be wise to simply accept us for who we are and work with us rather than force us to attempt to work around them, which is not what I want to do. Unfortunately, the majority of the TPSC members appear to be so loathsome of Bob that they have little or no interest in trying to work with the Torrey Hawks.
Some of the outstanding issues I would like to see raised with the site lessee via the TPSC:
1) Fees for all pilot activities publicly posted to include day use and tandem flights.
2) Revision of the site rules to explicitly state all activities prohibited by the flight director (to avoid the situation where the police were called on Bob)
3) Raise the issue of long landings. I had one last month and it required extreme manuvering to avoid practicing paragliders and spectators.
The text of the application is below:
Quote:
Brian McMahon
President, Torrey Hawks Hang Gliding Club
May 20, 2012
RE: Torrey Pines Soaring Council Membership Application
Byron Lowry, Chairperson
Members
Torrey Pines Soaring Council
Dear Sirs:
As the president of the Torrey Hawks Hang Gliding Club (Torrey Hawks), I am formally requesting voting membership for our club on the Torrey Pines Soaring Council (TPSC) per Article 6, Section 2 of the Torrey Pines Gliderport Historical Society bylaws.
The request for voting membership on the TPSC by the Torrey Hawks was previously made in 2007 by Bob Kuczewski, then president of the Torrey Hawks, but the application was apparently never voted on by the TPSC.
At the TPSC meeting held on March 19th, 2012, an agenda item should have existed regarding our request for membership consideration, which was made at the TPSC meeting held on January 23, 2012. In addition, I had sent emails to several members of the TPSC regarding my position on why the Torrey Hawks should be included as a member on the TPSC. I will restate them here:
• The TPSC exists to consult with and advise the Torrey Pines site lessee/operator, the City of San Diego, and the Regents of the University of California in formulating flight safety regulations and policies. For this reason alone, any club with an interest in the Torrey Pines Glider Port and a reasonable membership population should be represented on the TPSC by a member of the club as designated by its executive leadership.
• The TPSC wields no powers that would or should preclude membership of the Torrey Hawks; in fact, it is more of a forum where all interested parties can discuss matters related to the Torrey Pines site.
• The Torrey Hawks as an interested club in the Torrey Pines Glider Port has no other means for raising issues regarding the site other than attempting to rely on existing TPSC members. That has proven to be futile; the mere consideration of the Torrey Hawks application for membership has been virtually ignored by current and former TPSC members for the past five years.
It has been stated that the Torrey Hawks were already represented by the USHPA member of the council and that we should work through that member. This argument has merit; however the current membership of the TPSC is not represented in this manner, and there is no statement in the bylaws that each parent organization be represented by only one local chapter. The Academy of Model Aeronautics (AMA) has membership to the TPSC as well as two separate chapters of the AMA (the Torrey Pines Gulls Radio Controlled Soaring Society and the Torrey Pines Scaled Soaring Society). In the same vein, the Torrey Hawks and the San Diego Hang Gliding and Paragliding Association could rightly have membership as chapters of the United States Hang Gliding and Paragliding Association (USHPA), which also has membership on the TPSC. If the TPSC insists that each discipline have one national organization representative and one local chapter representative as TPSC members representing all members of a given discipline, then the bylaws should be amended to reflect such ideology. In addition it would be necessary to eject either the Torrey Pines Gulls chapter of the AMA or the Torrey Pines Scaled Soaring Society chapter of the AMA from membership to the TPSC.
It is not the goal of the Torrey Hawks to induce the TPSC to eject current members. We are merely asking for fairness by being added to the TPSC as a voting member representing over 250 hang glider pilots with an interest in preserving the sport of hang gliding at the Torrey Pines Glider Port.
Sincerely,
Brian McMahon
President, Torrey Hawks Hang Gliding Club