Another thread got me thinking about this and thought I'd ask what you guys thought.
First I wanted to mention that I am aware that BJCP is moving towards an online "written" portion. Conceivably, this will weed out a lot of people that aren't quite ready or don't have the commitment level. This should reduce the demand for in-person seats during the tasting test.
With that said, it's been extremely frustrating finding an open seat at an exam site. For the most part, the exams take place at locations because either a homebrew shop is running a study course or a location chosen by a homebrew club where a proctor was convinced to come out.
My concern and issue is that once a location is booked, the BJCP wants the reservations to be first come, first served. To me, what that means is that it gets posted on the website, a contact person is listed, and if there are 6 out of 12 seats still open, it should be filled with Joe Homebrewer from the next state over or a club member just the same.
In reality, what clubs are doing is holding all of the seats as "pre-reserved" just about all the way up to the exam date and then finally opening them up to the general public when they are good and convinced it won't be filled locally.
I see two solutions to the problem.
1. Concede that a club that organizes an exam has the earned right to give priority reservation to the club members. I have no problem with this but BJCP should define a window of time. If the exam is to take place in one year, giving the club members two months to reserve is completely fair in my opinion.
2. Have all reservations handled by an unbiased 3rd party. The BJCP could even take deposits to hold the reservations right on the website and act as an escrow account. A lot of the money goes to them eventually anyway after proctor expenses.
Thoughts?
First I wanted to mention that I am aware that BJCP is moving towards an online "written" portion. Conceivably, this will weed out a lot of people that aren't quite ready or don't have the commitment level. This should reduce the demand for in-person seats during the tasting test.
With that said, it's been extremely frustrating finding an open seat at an exam site. For the most part, the exams take place at locations because either a homebrew shop is running a study course or a location chosen by a homebrew club where a proctor was convinced to come out.
My concern and issue is that once a location is booked, the BJCP wants the reservations to be first come, first served. To me, what that means is that it gets posted on the website, a contact person is listed, and if there are 6 out of 12 seats still open, it should be filled with Joe Homebrewer from the next state over or a club member just the same.
In reality, what clubs are doing is holding all of the seats as "pre-reserved" just about all the way up to the exam date and then finally opening them up to the general public when they are good and convinced it won't be filled locally.
I see two solutions to the problem.
1. Concede that a club that organizes an exam has the earned right to give priority reservation to the club members. I have no problem with this but BJCP should define a window of time. If the exam is to take place in one year, giving the club members two months to reserve is completely fair in my opinion.
2. Have all reservations handled by an unbiased 3rd party. The BJCP could even take deposits to hold the reservations right on the website and act as an escrow account. A lot of the money goes to them eventually anyway after proctor expenses.
Thoughts?