as a former 8 year resident and property owner in DC and an active contester
I fully agree with Eric..one more mult in all contests is a positive
thing....73
Mike Reagan
NI7T
Price, Utah
http://www.ni7t.com
----- Original Message -----
From: "Eric Rosenberg" <wd3q@starpower.net>
To: <cq-contest@contesting.com>
Sent: Monday, May 21, 2007 12:11 AM
Subject: [CQ-Contest] Counting DC as a Multiplier and Not as Part
ofMaryland.
> Dear Fellow Contesters,
>
> As I'm sure you well know, the North American QSO Party considers the
> District of Columbia as part of Maryland, not as an independent entity,
> and therefore not as a unique multiplier. This despite the fact that
> the District, while not a State, is self governed, its residents pay
> federal and local taxes, vote in federal (presidential) elections, and
> send a Delegate to the House of Representatives.
>
> In past years, we residents of the District of Columbia have argued that
> DC should qualify as a separate multiplier, equivalent to a state. The
> NCJ contest managers have consistently rebuffed that argument.
>
> A closer reading of the NAQP rule describing multipliers (item #11)
> leads us to believe that our justification for a separate multiplier
> based on statehood may have been misguided. So what if we're not a
> state! We do appear to qualify under the clause "and other North
> American countries," as per the rule:
>
> "Multipliers: Are U.S. states (including KH6 and KL7), 13 Canadian
> provinces/territories (British Columbia, Alberta,
> Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia,
> PEI, Newfoundland/Labrador, Yukon, NWT and Nunavut) and
> other North American countries. District of Columbia counts as
> Maryland. Non-North American countries, maritime mobiles and
> aeronautical mobiles do not count as multipliers, but may be worked
> for QSO credit."
>
> Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands are both unincorporated
> territories of the United States, whose tax-paying residents are not
> permitted to vote in federal (i.e., presidential) elections, yet send an
> elected representative (a Resident Commissioner and Delegate,
> respectively) to the US House of Representatives. Guam and American
> Samoa are also US territories whose tax-paying residents send Delegates
> to the Congress.
>
> What we are *not* is part of Maryland! We do not live in, pay taxes in
> or vote in Maryland. If the contesting community wants more greater
> participation, the NAQPs are especially well suited for the role -
> short, sweet and simple to do.
>
> Make DC a multiplier and sure, more will jump in and give it a go!
>
> Thoughts? Comments?
>
> Now is the time for justice to be served by NCJ contest managers moving
> in a positive direction to right this wrong!
>
> 73,
> Eric W3DQ
> Washington, DC
> "taxation, but no multiplier representation"
> _______________________________________________
> CQ-Contest mailing list
> CQ-Contest@contesting.com
> http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/cq-contest
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