SaltyC
Well-Known Member
BUT the RYA from memory, had to alter the course to satisfy the EU?
No they didn't.BUT the RYA from memory, had to alter the course to satisfy the EU?
Plenty of clubs are still RTCs. I doubt the RYA has “pushed to take away” any training from clubs which are willing to run them properly.
It's a requirement under Article S47 of the ITU Radio Regulations - 47.1 mandates the requirement for training, 47.24 mandates the certificates allowed for non-SOLAS vessels, 47.27 references the documents that give the detailed requirements for long range and short range certificates. This is ITU Resolution 343 (SRC being the bits of the LRC syllabus required in sea area A1).
A General knowledge of radiocommunications in the maritime mobile service
A.1 The general principles and basic features of the maritime mobile service.
B Detailed practical knowledge and ability to use radio equipment
B.1 The VHF radio installation. Use of VHF equipment in practice.
B.2 The MF/HF radio installation. Use of MF/HF equipment in practice.
B.3 Purpose and use of digital selective calling facilities and techniques.
C Operational procedures of the GMDSS and detailed practical operation of GMDSS
subsystems and equipment
C.1 Basic introduction to GMDSS procedures.
C.2 Distress, urgency and safety communication procedures in the GMDSS.
C.3 Distress, urgency and safety communication procedures by radiotelephony in the old
distress and safety system.
C.4 Protection of distress frequencies.
C.5 Maritime safety information (MSI) systems in the GMDSS.
C.6 Alerting and locating signals in the GMDSS.
C.7 Procedures for cancelling an inadvertent false alert transmission.
D Operational procedures and regulations for radiotelephone communications
D.1 Ability to exchange communications relevant to the safety of life at sea.
D.2 Regulations, obligatory procedures and practices.
D.3 Practical and theoretical knowledge of radiotelephone procedures.
D.4 Use of the international phonetic alphabet and, where appropriate, parts of the IMO
Standard Marine Communication Phrases.
E Optional examination module for the maritime mobile-satellite service for vessels
not subject to a compulsory fit
E.1 The general principles and basic features of the maritime mobile-satellite service.
E.2 Operational procedures and detailed practical operation of ship earth stations in the
GMDSS.
For pleasure vessels in Europe, the syllabus and examination tailored to ITU Region 1 is published by CEPT (not ETSI, sorry) in ERC REC. 31-04. The RYA has an authority from MCA to examine against that syllabus. The RYA does not have any ability to alter the syllabus or examination unilaterally.
You can have a syllabus but how you test it is up to nation states. You don't have to make a song and dance about a relatively simple form of communication. The RYA does.None of that says anything about the reason being interference.
....and the ITU Radio Regulations allow administrations to decide how licensing is implemented domestically. - America is also signed up to the ITU and they don't bother with licenses domestically.
The entire raison d'etre of the radio regs is to prevent interference.None of that says anything about the reason being interference.
....and the ITU Radio Regulations allow administrations to decide how licensing is implemented domestically. - America is also signed up to the ITU and they don't bother with licenses domestically.
More boring than Neeves in an anchor thread.You can have a syllabus but how you test it is up to nation states. You don't have to make a song and dance about a relatively simple form of communication. The RYA does.
I don’t disagree clubs struggle for volunteer capacity - the same is true of many sports. But the suggestion is that the RYA were intentionally pushing away clubs from running training. I’ve seen clubs train volunteers who then go and get paid work and aren’t available any more. I’ve seen clubs get coaching funding that can only be used to train coaches not instructors. (Same issue in a number of sports - fundamentally a gov / SportEngland thing chasing medals). But are the RYA trying to stop clubs from being RTCs to help professional schools do better? I very much doubt it.Not so IME. Clubs that are RTCs are really struggling for volunteers, and the barrier is the vast amount of training time to volunteer, just to help out.
It's crippling.
Bored by views you don't agree with? Your life must be so frustrating!More boring than Neeves in an anchor thread.
No, bored that every time the question of the internationally recognised qualification comes up the same people have the same opinion based rant and lay the blame squarely at the RYA’s door but in the meantime do nothing to lobby the RYA, MCA, Offcom, their MP etc to actually get the change they claim to crave (or at least to understand the true facts about what is or is not possible). It tells me you enjoy moaning more than you actually want the issue solved.Bored by views you don't agree with? Your life must be so frustrating!
Give us a vote!No, bored that every time the question of the internationally recognised qualification comes up the same people have the same opinion based rant and lay the blame squarely at the RYA’s door but in the meantime do nothing to lobby the RYA, MCA, Offcom, their MP etc to actually get the change they claim to crave (or at least to understand the true facts about what is or is not possible). It tells me you enjoy moaning more than you actually want the issue solved.
But the suggestion is that the RYA were intentionally pushing away clubs from running training.
The word I’ve put in bold is where the disconnect comes. In isolation I don’t think you could look a parent, coroner, jury, in the face and say “that course (or any other process) is completely unnecessary to safely take young people on the water”. Trying to get people from no quals to “instructor” level quickly is a major time commitment (probably less so for VHF course!). There may be issues where they aren’t accrediting prior learning sufficiently - that is a common issue between sport governing bodies. There are bits of all sports instructor / coaching courses which I am sure could be delivered more efficiently if students were willing to sacrifice flexibility which usually is a bigger barrier to uptake.If piling needless overhead on volunteers doesn’t drive clubs away from offering affordable training, what would!
It didn’t! I’ve no idea how this discussion started when all I asked was if anyone knew how to book the bloody examevery time the question of the internationally recognised qualification comes up
The exam is booked centrally by an RTC and has a fixed fee (£76, I think). Problem is the prerequisite is a course completion certificate (or a related certificate such as the SOLAS Restricted Operator Certificate, aviation VHF operator etc.)It didn’t! I’ve no idea how this discussion started when all I asked was if anyone knew how to book the bloody exam![]()
I don’t know what RTC is. How do I as a person go about booking an exam after doing an online course?The exam is booked centrally by an RTC and has a fixed fee (£76, I think). Problem is the prerequisite is a course completion certificate (or a related certificate such as the SOLAS Restricted Operator Certificate, aviation VHF operator etc.)
I was involved with a kayak club which did frequent training (adults, or children if their parent came too) for free on a continual basis. Most weeks, in fact, with swimming pool and outdoor. We put many people through the basics and onto more complicated waters.