[Nodxa] ARRL Announces New DXCC Fee Structure!
Tedd Mirgliotta (KB8NW)
kb8nw at barf80.nshore.org
Fri Mar 16 08:54:20 PDT 2012
03/15/2012
The DX Century Club (DXCC) is the premier Amateur Radio operating award.
Available to hams around the world, tens of thousands of awards have
been issued since 1945 under the modern award program. In 2012, the DXCC
program is not only still thriving, but it is growing, both in
participation and in numbers of award options. The addition of Logbook
of the World (LoTW) and soon, the addition of an Online DXCC Application
utility, will continue to help the program grow. Effective Monday, April
2, the way DXCC fees are assessed will change. These changes will
include both rate increases and rate decreases.
The ARRL continues to add new and exciting twists to the DXCC platform,
including a special 75th anniversary Diamond DXCC Challenge award for
2012. The DXCC Challenge -- which counts total entities confirmed on
160-6 meters -- has proven to be extremely popular as a competitive
supplement for everyone, complementing the lifetime achievement of the
DXCC Honor Roll. The ARRL website continues to add to the fun with many
pages of award statistics and information, including DXCC standings for
each award that are updated daily. Inside Logbook of The World, each
user can see which records are stored in the DXCC system for all of his
or her entities on each band and mode. In 2011, the DXCC Desk processed
more than 11,450 DXCC applications and endorsements.
As a direct result of the terrific popularity of the DXCC program, our
customer service has lagged a bit. DXCC participants know that when the
end-of-year deadline is reached, the load on the staff is quite heavy
and the turnaround time increases to more than 10 weeks. Our staff want
to provide better service and will continue to try to do so. The old fee
structure is one of the culprits that increased the workload. Most
participants submitted one or two applications each year, with each of
those applications loaded with at least 120 QSOs and included a Logbook
application component, as well.
One of the reasons these applications have been so large is that for
many years, DXCC charged extra fees for second and subsequent
applications each year. Additionally, application fees were waived for
LoTW applications if they were tied to a paper application, adding a
large amount of work for the staff as they matched applications.
Frequently, there were hundreds of applications on both the paper
application side and on the LoTW side, waiting for their “hybrid match”
to arrive, delaying processing and setting the whole operation back.
For applications received on April 2, 2012 and after, we are changing
the fee structure for several reasons:
Promoting more frequent applications
Removing the “hybrid application” problem
Simplifying the price structure for DXCC
Raising the rates slightly to help offset ARRL’s increased costs
Improving customer service
The rates for DXCC have not changed since 2003. While the rates are
going up for some single applications, for those who continue to submit
multiple applications each year, the costs will be less. Accompanying
the end of the “hybrid application” is a lower per-QSO fee for using
credits in LoTW and the addition of a small application fee. “We want
participants to use LoTW as often as they can and like” explained
Membership and Volunteer Programs Department Manager Dave Patton, NN1N.
“LoTW applications are easier for everyone to process and remain the
‘way of the future’ to participate in awards programs. The costs of
using LoTW are far less than traditional QSLing, when one considers the
costs of obtaining QSLs which then need to be stored, recorded and
carried to a card checker or sent to HQ.” As in the past, US
participants must be ARRL members to receive a DXCC award. See the link
below for an explanation of the new fees.
As indicated earlier, ARRL HQ will very soon launch an Online DXCC
Application. This new tool will allow the client to supply the data from
traditional paper QSLs in a digital form, so that DXCC staff will not
have to perform the data entry.
The way the Online Application works is that the participant can select
the cards that he or she would like to have checked by a card checker
and, at his or her convenience, type that data into a form (which can be
saved and retrieved at any time until submitted) and make an application
for DXCC. When the application is finished, the participant will be able
to print the list of cards and take the list and the cards (in the same
order that they are entered into the form) to a card checker who will
check the cards, note any changes and send the form to ARRL HQ. The card
checker’s job is exactly the same as before, except he or she does not
need to collect a payment (unless the participant has worked that out
with the card checker), as the client can pay online. At ARRL HQ, DXCC
staff will be able to access the file submitted by the client, quickly
make any changes noted by the card checker and process the application.
The Online DXCC Application will have rates that are half those of a
traditional paper QSL application that is sent to ARRL HQ.
On and after April 2, 2012, here is how the DXCC fee system will change:
No more hybrid applications. Each DXCC application -- be it paper QSLs,
LoTW or Online DXCC -- will be considered separate applications with
separate application fees.
There are no limits on the number of applications that can be submitted.
There will be no more surcharges added to the second or subsequent
applications.
A traditional, paper QSL application will have an application fee of $15
for ARRL members, and $25 for non-members. These applications will be
allowed to include up to 101 QSOs. Additional QSOs in this sort of
application will continue to cost 15 cents each.
A DXCC application submitted using LoTW will have an application fee of
$5 for ARRL members and $10 for non-members. There are no limits on the
number of QSOs that can be included as part of a LoTW application. Each
QSO used in LoTW for an award will cost 12 cents, down from a minimum of
15 cents in 2011. We will no longer sell LoTW “credits” in bulk. If you
have credits stored, you will still be able to use them.
DXCC staff will not mail any paperwork for LoTW applications (credit
matrix or application summary), as all application information will be
available online in the LoTW User account.
An Online DXCC Application will have an application fee of $7.50 for
ARRL members and $12.50 for non-members and will be allowed to include
up to 101 QSOs. Additional QSOs will cost 8 cents. This application is
primarily intended to be used in conjunction with field checkers, but
can be used by applicants who do not have access to a card checker and
are willing to ship cards to ARRL HQ.
Certificates will still cost $14 delivered in the USA, and $16.50
delivered outside the USA. Pins will continue to cost $7 delivered anywhere.
The fee for an initial DXCC award will now be the same as for any DXCC
application.
The free DXCC Yearbook that was sent to ARRL members will now be made
available electronically, and it will appear in an edition of Digital
QST. For those who want a League-printed Yearbook, it will still be
available at a modest cost.
Questions? Please send an e-mail to dxccadmin at arrl.org.
--
Tedd Mirgliotta, KB8NW - kb8nw at barf80.nshore.org --or-- kb8nw at arrl.net
Editor of the "Ohio/Penn DX Bulletin" (OPDX - "DXer's Tool of Excellence")
President of the "Northern Ohio DX Association" (NODXA)
DX Chairman for the "Northern Ohio Amateur Radio Society
ARRL Assistant Director of the Great Lakes Division
Sysop of the "Basic Amateur Radio Frequency BBS" (BARF80.ORG)
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