[SBE] Industry retirement situation

Gary Stewart gstewart at ctvn.org
Fri Mar 14 15:26:55 EDT 2008


Maybe the SBE has our birth years in its records and can run a report on
what percentage of members will reach a certain age in each of the next
10 years.

I know we have been thinking about it here. We have 6 traditional
technical employees of varying involvement and specializations within TV
engineering. (2 fewer than 2 years ago) (22 years ago we had 4 just
taking care of studio cameras) Our weak point, of course, is IT.

Our current ages are: 63, 62, 60, 57, 51, 50

The nice thing is that of the two youngest, one is RF and the other
isn't. With technology moving the way it is, maybe they are all we will
need in 6 years. Maybe by the time they retire the receptionist can do
it.

The only area at our station where the number of engineers is the same
as it was 22 years ago is RF. I think our radio brothers can't say that,
at least at the city wide level. Do very small market radio stations
still each have an RF engineer?

Gary Stewart
Cornerstone TV


-----Original Message-----
From: sbe-bounces at sbe.org [mailto:sbe-bounces at sbe.org] On Behalf Of k7cr
Sent: Thursday, March 13, 2008 11:29 PM
To: sbe member discussion mail list
Subject: Re: [SBE] Discussion topics

Fred posed this question -


> Are there any figures on what percentage of current SBE members are

> within five years of retirement? Ten years? It goes by rather

> quickly...and then what?


This issue goes well beyond the matter of where SBE will find it's new
members.
I am within 5 years of retirement (my choice) and as I look over my
shoulder
I find no-one chomping at the bit to take my job...much less even apply
for
it.

No one wants to get dirty, put on chains on all 4 and head up the
mountain
in the middle of the night to work on something analog with 8kv on the
inside.

When I started in this business back in 1961 there were plenty of young
Hams that were eager to apply their skills to things in a broadcast
operation...
but today those folks are old too.

Largely broadcasting, Radio and TV, have become computer based
operations
with the bit of analog tossed in just to rattle the minds of those that
think that
15 volts is high-voltage and who are totally confused by schematics.
In
many
ways these folks are disconnected from the world that we knew and, in
some
cases, continue to operate within.

I could go on and on -

My $.02

Clay Freinwald, K7CR
Member of the Board


More information about the SBE mailing list