RickMasters wrote:
bobk wrote:
I think it would be a wonderful endeavor to resurrect the XCPA.
The effort would be better spent building the US Hawks. Let the XCPA be a lesson.
I think they're one in the same. The US Hawks
IS its members. The US Hawks
IS its chapters.
RickMasters wrote:
-- I built the XCPA in a vacuum. All the members came from somewhere else. When they finally showed up, they were there to fly. There was no one I could delegate duties to. When I left, the XCPA fell apart. But in a city, you should be able to find people who will participate. Just make sure they are worthy of the challenge.
It's a shame that the Internet didn't exist then or XCPA.org might be a hang gliding site rather than an accounting match making site.
RickMasters wrote:
-- I built the XCPA quickly without much planning. The USFS said they were going to close Horseshoe because of sanitation and congestion issues. They came to me because I had been a USFS engineer and was a HG pilot. They put me on the spot and I answered.
It's much the same history with the US Hawks. I originally tried to start a new organization named the HGAA (I'm not sure if you followed that fiasco). I trusted someone to run the forum, and he ended up hijacking it and killing it. That's why I've been a lot more careful this time around.
RickMasters wrote:
The chapters are a great strategy.
It's even better than a great strategy. It's the way to really run things. Local people make local decisions. The people running each Chapter make all the decisions on their forums. They tell me what to do, and I work for them when it comes to their forums. And yet we're still all integrated so our resources and ideas are easily shared. It's the one thing that neither USHPA nor hanggliding.org nor the Oz Report will provide ... because they're all scared to give up control to someone who might be critical of them. I think that's the biggest breakthrough for the US Hawks. Whether it's in the Blog forums or in the Chapter forrums, we have come up with a delegation model where individuals and clubs can be responsible for their own subsections of the larger organization.
RickMasters wrote:
-- I built the XCPA with a sensible fee structure. I calculated the needed expenses and divided by the projected membership to arrive at dues. Our costs were headquarters, utilities, office, and insurance. No one was paid. It was a club. Everyone pitched in at morning or poor flying days. Look at the XCPA headquarters. They did that! Townspeople, too.
That's exactly how it should be. That's exactly how we want to model the US Hawks!!!
RickMasters wrote:
-- I was a true believer. So are you. That's what it takes to start up. The real work begins with the formation of the BOD. Identify your key issues and keep it simple. Make sure your BOD members are on the same page.
You're right on all counts Rick. I've been wanting to move toward a BOD for years, but after seeing what happened to the HGAA, I want to make sure that we have a BOD that's on the same page just as you've said. With new chapters and members coming on "board", I think we might be gaining enough critical mass to start discussing a BOD to diffuse the "it's just Bob's club" protests.
RickMasters wrote:
-- Perks are important but make sure they are provided by the members and not by you. Soaring camps with shared retrieval are a no-brainer.
Right now, the perks are each other. The friendship and support that we build among ourselves is pretty much what we have to offer. But as we grow, we can start to approach the big "I" word.
RickMasters wrote:
-- Don't go ahead with the BOD until your members can fly without U$hPA certification. Have a site or two for your activities where public liability insurance is not required. Even if they're far away, each chapter needs one. In time, governments will recognize US Hawks certification. They are not supposed to play favorites.
This is going to be tricky. For a long time I am expecting that our members will be getting their insurance from U$HPA. So most of our members will be dual members and most of our chapters will be dual chapters. That's where the fact that we're absolutely free of charge helps us. Most members and clubs wouldn't want to pay to belong to both. Since USHPA gives them something they need (insurance) and we don't, then the choice would be clear. But by being absolutely free, it gives both members and clubs the ability to belong to both at no additional cost. Eventually I'm hoping we can gain enough members to make insurance affordable, and then we can have a discussion about making that purchase. I'm thinking that US Hawks membership will remain free, but being an insured member will cost. So insurance will be an option not part of the package. Your membership ... and your ratings ... will be good for life for free, but if you need something that costs us (like insurance) then that's something that will have to be paid for.
RickMasters wrote:
-- Be hang glider pilots.
You saved the toughest one for last.
We are a hang gliding organization, but some of our members and some of our chapters will be either biwingual or paraglider only pilots. We can't tell the RGSA that we won't allow their club because they have paragliding pilots. We can't tell the AFFA that we won't allow their club because they have paragliding pilots. Paragliding pilots have joined the Torrey Hawks Hang Gliding Club because they support reforms of the management at that site. We can't tell them we don't want them either. The fact is that we do want them. We want anyone who supports hang gliding whether they fly paragliders or 747s. Remember, I'm a biwingual pilot myself. I'm also a private pilot and a sea-plane pilot. None of the other things I fly prohibits me from supporting hang gliding. As an organization, that has to be our position. Individual members and individual clubs may take a different viewpoint, but the US Hawks must remain just as neutral with respect to paragliding as we are to bowling or baseball or hopscotch or any other sport. We give our members a platform to speak their minds on any topics, but as an organization, we must remain neutral.
I sure hope that doesn't lose you Rick.