Thanks for asking. Since I had to stop the magazine there has been a constant chorus of " it's the end of PAMPA", "no reason to join now", "what do I get for my money", "PAMPA is dying because we have no magazine", and inversely, "printing something will grow our membership". As I have stated recently in the course of this conversation our membership has been dropping since the 1980's and actually took it's largest drop 'WHILE' we were printing the BEST of the magazines. Our kind are simply aging out with not near enough replacements coming along behind. Once we were given a new life financially I have been reluctant to repeat the path that led to our near-closure with respect to spending more on printing magazines than we were taking in in dues.
David Shorts came to me and Chris (and I brought before the Board) the sort of same arguments I listed above but with a willingness to give of his time and effort on a volunteer basis to put this together. I originally rejected the idea solely on financial grounds but after some reflection I told him we'd take a chance with;
1. A very minimally priced product with a small page count on simply white paper-no color and no special cover. This is something I envision could be made without contracting or hiring, done at Staples etc. They have a target of no more than $2.50 per copy per member, plus postage.
2. We'd have a trial run of one year, four issues after which the Executive Counsel AND the editors will re-evaluate whether it will continue and determine actual costs to decide whether a dues increase will be required. (it will I'm sure but not huge).
I do understand how many of our members enjoyed opening the mailbox and having a hard copy of material like we grew up with and is now sadly a thing of history as most all hobby magazines are gone (because not enough subscription base left to make them worthwhile) and times have changed as we move as a whole into the computer age. To many this is an integral part of their hobby that was taken from them. I did say this could bring back temporarily a few old timers but doubt it will bring in many new members-I hope they prove me wrong.
In any event rowing upriver makes one tired. If we can strike a right-balance of cost and benefit with this then maybe we can make (almost) EVERYONE HAPPY. It's worth a try I guess.
Thanks for asking,
Dave