Over there in the VATSIM forums is a 20 page long thread that started out to discuss the creation of "major facility off-peak certification" by a number of ARTCCs, the VATSIM leadership's response to same (negative) which then blossomed into a full throated discussion of where the network is going that parallels this one.
In that thread, the question of standards for pilots and controllers came to the fore. After all the shouting moderated, and after I finished re-reading the posts for the 5th time, I offered this, which seems germane to this discussion as well.
Indulge me for a moment, please.
It seems that we actually agree on the "what", just not on how rigorous the "how" should be.
There should, and need to be, standards for both pilots and controllers. That's the what.
How and under what circumstances one acquires the level of expertise necessary to achieve those standards is where I part company with what seems to be the new reality espoused by leadership as they invoke "the Founders."
Recognizing that this IS NOT the real world; that engines flame out only if we set the sim to "random failure" mode; that the average controller sees 5 to 10 aircraft an hour (if he's lucky) and not 5 to 10 a minute; that if and when we screw up, nobody dies; still -- even with that recognition that VATSIM is a hobby-oriented entity, most hobbyists I know take pride in overcoming the challenges of being good at their avocation, of achieving excellence and, if they're lucky, getting recognized for it.
This is what I think VATSIM needs to continue to offer: a challenge to its members to be the best that they can be, not to just be good enough. And this has to be posited as the overriding theme, not just something we hope will sort of kind of trickle down maybe. It begs the question, what is the charge you give to your Supervisors as they monitor the network. How militant should they be when adjudicating differences between pilots and controllers? Or are they necessary at all, if this is to be a non-judgemental, inclusive world of minimal standards?
My fear is that if we, the members, allow things to drift and descend to a "lowest common denominator," standard, VATSIM will become nothing more than a very complex game site, where anyone with a computer, a copy of MSFS and an internet connection, can just do as they damn well please. (My wife, who has, shall we say, a puckish sense of humor, frequently asks me why I don't just boot up my FA-18 and go chase guys in 737s around the sky, or vector aircraft into one another when I am controlling just for shifts and giggles.)
Keep lowering the standards and that scenario might not be just a figment of my bride's twisted sense of humor and VATSIM could end being no more than what ol' Cactus Jack described (a reference to a statement by a former VP of the United States quoted by one VATSIM forum member. You could look it up in Wikipedia.)
Regards,
Justin Friedland
DATM - ZNY