Back when we formed the USHGA out of the SCHGA there was a push for a hang gliding rating system. As one who built and learned to fly his own glider I was one of those individuals who felt like it was an infringement on my personal freedom of choice. At that time no sites I was flying, or knew of, were run by anyone and no rating was needed. However, I could see "the hand writing on the wall" so to prevent being excluded from some future flying site I reluctantly got my "Intermediate" hang rating. Then at some later date USHGA changed the entire rating system to what they have now. i was sent a congratulatory letter stating that I was now a member of the pioneering rating system and a part of history. Oh, wow, thank you, thank you, i am so blessed. The letter indicated that I was "grandfathered" in as rated. That rating lasted on my membership cards each year until some point at which it disappeared. It's possible that happened when I renewed my membership as non-flying for several years. This problem came up when I was signing up to fly at Dockweiler Beach. What rating should I put down. Persona non grata? The site operator decided for me to just put H2.
Now to my point.
I've been boating whitewater rivers for 38 years. In my younger days I ran rapids up to class V rating, which are identified as "high risk of serious injury or death and requiring a high degree of skill to navigate safely". Most whitewater rivers in the USA require permits from the managing agency for anyone wanting to boat the river. I have done many of those rivers and I have never been asked what my "rating" or skill level was when I applied for a permit. It is always left to my judgement as to whether I should boat the river. Of course there are boaters who attempt beyond their skill level and they have a higher risk of accidents. The managing agency deals with this minority of people by running rescues and recovery operations. Sometimes they will close rivers when conditions are highly dangerous, usually flood stage, or landslides, or log jams. Many times boaters object to those closures as well.
Most rivers are rated for difficulty, not the people who run them. HG sites could be rated on degree of danger from many criteria, chance of heavy turbulence, time of year relation to difficulty, obstacles to avoid, etc., etc.
So, if management of rivers doesn't require skill ratings for people doing something much more dangerous than hang gliding (I've been scared many more times on rivers than I ever have been hang gliding) why do we need these "stinkin ratings" just to fly?


Frank Colver
BTW - I don't remember if BobK said the USHPA took his ratings away when they kicked him out of the org. If they did, then that is a pure travesty and totally wrong. Acquired skill level has nothing to do with what club one belongs to.