Does this mean that you, as a Final Signatory, bypass Paul Hronjak, the Eastern Vice-Chair, and send your stuff straight to the registrar?
Color Copies Are a Bad Idea
Color copies for course maps have negative effects in several areas:
1) Those people needing multiple copies must use a color copier to generate them, unless great care is taken to use colors that copy well in black and white. Even there, photographs rarely reproduce well when copied in black and white.
2) The registrar’s job gets complicated when material starts coming in as daily email instead of weekly envelopes. Paper certificates can be stacked and dealt with as time permits, and keeping track of what has been dealt with is easy. Email map attachments must be dealt with on a real-time basis, as they come in. This adds work, especially if the material is not exactly as needed. The scanning method presently in use is repetitive and simple, but the color email attachments must be dealt with one at a time, and kept track of.
One person sending in the occasional color map may not be a big burden, but if everything starts coming in electronically it will be a hell of a job for the registrar to keep track of things.
Also - what about paper copies on file? Where is the backup?
3) This is a unilateral decision of Neville’s, and before we decide to abandon what has been present practice I believe that some discussion as to costs and benefits needs to take place. Thus far it seems that Neville has decided for himself, and somehow gotten Stu and Paul Hronjak to go along. What should our map policy be?
Aside from some esthetic improvements I do not see that the benefit justifes the use of color in course maps.
What may be sent to the race director, of course, is up to him and the measurer.
Neville, I think you jumped the gun, and that Chairman Gene Newman needs to get in and straighten this out.