
gocart wrote:I don't remember that particular email. Can you give some specifics? Such has who was the sender? What was the date it was sent? That way I can check to see if I received it or not.
martinreinhardt wrote:The email was sent on June 3rd, but I believe it was only sent to the chairs and board members NOT all members.
I agree with the $10 charge for non-members, rather than $5, but I don't agree with charging members an extra $5 for non-Porsches. Membership should have its benefits, and if your P-car is in the shop, or you want to run one of your other cars in X class, there shouldn't be a penalty for that, IMHO. It doesn't take me any longer to tech an X car than a Porsche, especially a Porsche like a Panamera or Cayenne that we rarely see and I have no more familiarity with than an S2000 or Miata. The cars that are showing up are of a few types that are routinely tracked, like Lotus, BMW, S2000, Miata, Corvette--the tech crew is growing more familiar with them all the time and it will be less of a problem as time goes by. It does present a problem sometimes when people are not familiar with our particular safety rules and procedures, but this is no different than when a P-car newbie shows up, and is a matter of education that can be overcome in time by making more info readily available to non-members. I like seeing X cars at our events. I like driving X cars at our events. I want to compare my P-car times against X car times and vice versa. The "exclusiveness" of the marque means little to me. Having our AX series survive at a reasonable cost means a lot to me. In these economic times, I think we need to encourage non-member X-car participation. When we regularly have 100 Porsches show up again, we could limit X cars to 20 or 30 per event. When we are regularly drawing 130-140 P-cars again, we could consider excluding them. I don't think now is the time to do that.Steve Grosekemper wrote: Additional $10 for non members...Additional $5 for non P cars.
This is not really true. The SCCA championship events can draw 2-300 entrants and you only get 3-4 laps, but their practice events (which are almost as numerous) are very similar to our own. They limit entrants to 100 and you get 12-15 laps just like our events, with the added benefit that it can all be done in half a day of time commitment instead of all day--you can tech, walk the track, run all your laps in one session and corner-work another in either the morning or afternoon sessions, and be done in 4-5 hours. They charge $40 for this kind of event. You do indeed have to have an SCCA national membership now, either paying $75-85 for the year or buying a $15 "weekend" membership each time, as well as a SDR Solo card, which is a $10/year renewal after an original $25 dues. I think we have to keep in mind the competition that exists in the "AX scene" in San Diego from events like this, as well as the ones run by the BMW club, etc., if we want to attract non-Porsche drivers to keep our series solvent. There is also the draw of the very similar events OCR is running at the El Toro venue, which is just a 90-minute drive away. I think if we price our events higher than $60, we will be shooting ourselves in the foot.This is a huge bargain compared to what SCCA members are paying for each minute of track time and helps offset the fact that they are not paying local dues.
I can't agree with this more. If we are looking for cost-cutting measures, this should be first on the list. Alcoholic beverages are far more expensive and not as universally desired or necessary, with the added detriment that we are one unfortunate incident and a hungry personal injury lawyer away from a disastrous lawsuit by doing this.Supplying alcohol to a bunch of tired dehydrated drivers with empty stomachs? Really? Can’t believe we actually still do this and haven’t gotten bitten...
I think people who are running in our events should have access to the forum to take part in the discussions about them just like every member does. I am kind of surprised that there is so much resistance to this idea being expressed. It could be a powerful educational and recruitment tool for the club, getting newbies oriented more quickly and helping them move into fuller participation/volunteerism and even formal membership faster/easier/sooner. Why exclude them? There are more than a few of them who would like to become members, at least as affiliates until they take the step of actually buying a Porsche. Other than the limited, infrequent direct contact we have at events, where is there a better path for them to introduce themselves, develop relationships, and perhaps solicit a sponsorship as an affiliate from an existing member than on this forum? They are kind of in a "Catch-22" situation here if they have to be a member to post about wanting to be a member. This is a "pre-screened" bunch of potential recruits with like-minded interests that we would be foolish to ignore if we want to increase club membership. How long will it take them to realize that Jackie and Leigh and Herb are thumping their Miatas and S2000s in very reasonably priced 944 and 914 Porsches that are not beyond their reach? They are a trade-in away from becoming full-fledged PCA members and valuable long-time participants and volunteers. As a forum admin, I have already had to turn down an increasing number of these requests due to our existing club policy regarding the forum, and actually ended up sponsoring one of them as my affiliate who expressed a definite interest in contributing further at our events (the very S2000 driver mentioned in another thread who worked the start line for half the day on Sat.) I think we should change this policy, and allow non-member participants in our events to post here, subject to the same forum rules that we all abide by. I also think we should be allowing qualified X-car drivers to become instructors and take some of the load off our instructor corps, especially in handling the influx of new X-car drivers in similar cars.If we want to include non-members on the forum we can do this with a car number and date code for members who have already run driving events with us. It will not be automatic; these members will have to contact forum administration directly. But that is a board decision.

You are hired Monte

ttweed wrote:I can't agree with this more. If we are looking for cost-cutting measures, this should be first on the list. Alcoholic beverages are far more expensive and not as universally desired or necessary, with the added detriment that we are one unfortunate incident and a hungry personal injury lawyer away from a disastrous lawsuit by doing this.Steve Grosekemper wrote:Supplying alcohol to a bunch of tired dehydrated drivers with empty stomachs? Really? Can’t believe we actually still do this and haven’t gotten bitten...
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