2026 Membership Renewals Are Due
at the January Club ActivityMembership renewals for 2026 are due at the January Club Activity.
Membership renewals for 2026 are due at the January Club Activity.
You must be a member in good standing to be eligible to vote in the RRRA leadership election at the February Business Meeting
Either bring your dues payment—cash (exact change only), check, or money order—or pay online with a credit card, debit card, or with your PayPal account.
New members, and those updating their member information, should send a membership application form to the .
Amateur radio is an activity that falls between two camps, those who think of it as a service and those who approach it as a hobby.
I think that the notion of amateur radio as a service is often repeated, but in my time as part of this community, I’ve seen little evidence of actual service. That said, the idea of amateur radio as a service is often linked to emergency communications, for example, a phrase used by the Wireless Institute of Australia is “Amateur Radio - A Trusted Partner in Emergency Response” on a page outlining the long and fabled history of our hobby in service to the community in times of emergency, mind you, none of them in the past decade.
RRRA Officer elections will be conducted during the February Meeting.
This is your opportunity to help guide your club in the direction you would like it to go; and to give our current office holders an opportunity to re-engage with our hobby.
I’m an accidental Board member of the Mount Baker Amateur Radio Club and thus I’m part of the planning for future meetings of the club, so now I’m paying a bit more attention to the relevance of Amateur Radio clubs and their meetings.
In Zero Retries newsletter 135, Editor Steve Stroh N8GNJ inaugurated a series of articles about the future of Amateur Radio with one titled Techies, Data Communications, and Experimentation with New Radio Technologies Could “Save” Amateur Radio which starts with: