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Anonymous Donor Kicks In $4725 And Six Sections Of Air Fence It Is!

An anonymous donor has kicked in another $4725 to our Air Fence fund and made it six beautiful 30-foot sections to protect our racers from hitting solid walls and embankments at AMA Nationals.

That’s $17,400 raised in 24 hours, plus another $250 personal donation from Al Ludington, who works for Team Kawasaki with Eric Bostrom. Ludington’s personal donation should in no way be considered an endorsement of this project by his employers, who have not yet seen fit to contribute. New total: $17,650.

No one who saw the TV footage of Grant Lopez hitting a concrete wall during the 1999 AMA National at Phoenix International Raceway, or watched the helicopter carry him away, or saw the look on the faces of his mother and sister, needs us to explain why we are doing this.

It is a shame that AMA Pro Racing has its collective head so far up its collective ass that individual racers, mechanics, parents of racers, race team owners, enthusiasts and fans have to collect the money to buy the Air Fence so urgently needed, but if that’s the way it is, it’s still worth the effort to not have to watch another rider air-lifted away after hitting a bare wall.

The current contributor list looks like this:

Anonymous $4725
John Ulrich/Roadracing World $2900
Marc Salvisberg/Factory Pro Tuning $1450
Bob Dragich/Roadracing World $1450
Bob Blandford/N.E. Sportbike Assn. $1100
Chuck Warren/Arclight Suzuki $1000
Jim Rashid/4&6 Cycle $1000
Don Lemelin/Scuderia West $500
Kevin Erion/Erion Racing $500
Edward S. Siccardi, Jr. $300
Brian Mitchell $250
Al Ludington $250
Papa Thiam/WERA BBS $200
Pat Stricker $ 100
Gary Rand $100
Michael Roberson/WERA BBS $100
Sean Jordan/WERA BBS $100
Army Of Darkness $100
Stuart Gregg $100
Pinky’s Pizza/Lippman Racing $100
Bob Szoke $100
TyrSox $100
Ron West/Omzig Productions $100
Joe Facer $100
Preston Rash $100
Geoff Maloney/GP Tech $100
Melissa Berkoff/Neighbor Of The Beast $100
Ceasar Gonzales/WERA BBS $100
Dorina Groves $100
Tyler Sandell $ 50
David J. Kopfinger $ 50
Aaron Loyd $50
Martin Voelker $50
Steve Hopkins $50
Louis DeBlois $50
Leigh Taunton/EMGO $50
Randy Sinisi $50
Josh Loverant $25

To pledge a contribution, call Roadracing World at (800) 464-8336 between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time, when operators will be standing by. Credit cards accepted.

Pledges can also be made by e-mailing [email protected]

Readers should feel free to call their parts, tire and accessory suppliers and urge them to make a contribution to improve safety conditions for AMA racers. For that matter, contact local dealers and ask them to encourage their OEMs to contribute.

For background information, see Time To Take Back The AMA post from Tuesday morning.

Stay tuned for more details.

Big Donation From North East Sportbike Association Puts Air Fence Fund Well On Way To Five Sections

An $1100 donation from Bob Blandford of the North East Sportbike Association put our Air Fence fund well on the way to buying five 30-foot sections. All of which means that soon we’ll be able to protect riders from hitting 150 feet of solid wall or embankment at AMA Superbike Nationals.

The total raised in less than 24 hours is now $12,675. Significantly, motorcycle manufacturers remain on the sidelines while dealers, race team owners, parents of racers, and individual riders and enthusiasts are stepping up to buy the Air Fence that AMA Pro Racing has not been able to figure out how to pay for. Donations are flowing in to Roadracing World headquarters by check made out to AMA Pro Racing and via credit card.

The current list of contributors follows:

John Ulrich/Roadracing World $2900
Marc Salvisberg/Factory Pro Tuning $1450
Bob Dragich/Roadracing World $1450
Bob Blandford/N.E. Sportbike Assn. $1100
Chuck Warren/Arclight Suzuki $1000
Jim Rashid/4&6 Cycle $1000
Don Lemelin/Scuderia West $500
Kevin Erion/Erion Racing $500
Edward S. Siccardi, Jr. $300
Brian Mitchell $250
Papa Thiam/WERA BBS $200
Pat Stricker $ 100
Gary Rand $100
Michael Roberson/WERA BBS $100
Sean Jordan/WERA BBS $100
Army Of Darkness $100
Stuart Gregg $100
Pinky’s Pizza/Lippman Racing $100
Bob Szoke $100
TyrSox $100
Ron West/Omzig Productions $100
Joe Facer $100
Preston Rash $100
Geoff Maloney/GP Tech $100
Melissa Berkoff/Neighbor Of The Beast $100
Ceasar Gonzales/WERA BBS $100
Dorina Groves $100
Tyler Sandell $ 50
David J. Kopfinger $ 50
Aaron Loyd $50
Martin Voelker $50
Steve Hopkins $50
Louis DeBlois $50
Leigh Taunton/EMGO $50
Randy Sinisi $50
Josh Loverant $25

To pledge a contribution, call Roadracing World at (800) 464-8336 between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time, when operators will be standing by. Credit cards accepted.

Pledges can also be made by e-mailing [email protected]

Readers should feel free to call their parts, tire and accessory suppliers and urge them to make a contribution to improve safety conditions for AMA racers. For that matter, contact local dealers and ask them to encourage their OEMs to contribute.

For background information, see Time To Take Back The AMA post from Tuesday morning.

Stay tuned for more details.

Contributions Toward AMA Air Fence Off To A Good Start

Significant contributions to buy Air Fence for AMA Pro Racing came in after our first post on the subject Tuesday, kicked off by the first two contributors, Arclight Suzuki owner Chuck Warren and roadracingworld.com reader Pat Stricker.

While individual readers, private race teams and motorcycle dealers are calling and pledging money or putting donations on credit cards, no money has yet been pledged by any of the manufacturers involved in AMA Pro Racing.

But AMA Superbike racer Jordan Szoke’s father, Bob Szoke, has called and contributed.

Contributions paid or pledged so far equal $11,575 or just $25 less than the $11,600 needed to buy four 30-foot sections of Air Fence, and came from the following:

John Ulrich/Roadracing World $2900
Marc Salvisberg/Factory Pro Tuning $1450
Bob Dragich/Roadracing World $1450
Chuck Warren/Arclight Suzuki $1000
Jim Rashid/4&6 Cycle $1000
Don Lemelin/Scuderia West $500
Kevin Erion/Erion Racing $500
Edward S. Siccardi, Jr. $300
Brian Mitchell $250
Papa Thiam/WERA BBS $200
Pat Stricker $ 100
Gary Rand $100
Michael Roberson/WERA BBS $100
Sean Jordan/WERA BBS $100
Army Of Darkness $100
Stuart Gregg $100
Pinky’s Pizza/Lippman Racing $100
Bob Szoke $100
TyrSox $100
Ron West/Omzig Productions $100
Joe Facer $100
Preston Rash $100
Geoff Maloney/GP Tech $100
Melissa Berkoff/Neighbor Of The Beast $100
Ceasar Gonzales/WERA BBS $100
Dorina Groves $100
Tyler Sandell $ 50
David J. Kopfinger $ 50
Aaron Loyd $50
Martin Voelker $50
Steve Hopkins $50
Louis DeBlois $50
Leigh Taunton/EMGO $50
Randy Sinisi $50
Josh Loverant $25

To pledge a contribution, call Roadracing World at (800) 464-8336 between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time, when operators will be standing by. Credit cards accepted.

Pledges can also be made by e-mailing [email protected]

Readers should feel free to call their parts, tire and accessory suppliers and urge them to make a contribution to improve safety conditions for AMA racers. For that matter, contact local dealers and ask them to encourage their OEMs to contribute.

For background information, see Time To Take Back The AMA post from Tuesday morning.

Stay tuned for more details.

Wegman Benefit Fund To Raffle Off Yamaha Dirt Bike

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The Wegman Benefit Fund, which raises money for injured road racers, is raffling off a Yamaha TT-R125 dirt bike, with chances selling for $10 each. The raffle will be held April 27-29 during a CCS weekend at Road America. Details are available at www.wegmanfund.org

The Wegman Benefit Fund is a 501(3)c non-profit organization and is endorsed by Roadracing World. Contributions are tax deductible.

What Is Air Fence?

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Air Fence is an inflatable energy-absorbing system placed in front of anything hard that might be hit by a crashing road racer, like a steel barrier or an embankment. For more about Air Fence, click on this link:

http://www.airfence.com

Fate Of Isle Of Man TT To Be Announced Tomorrow

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The Isle of Man Council Of Ministers met today to discuss the fate of the famed TT, and the recent cancellation of the Northwest 200 in Northern Ireland to stem the spread of foot and mouth disease (aka hoof and mouth disease)from England is likely to influence the decision.

Farmers favor the cancellation, saying that missing the TT will set back the tourism industry one year while an invasion of foot and mouth disease will force the destruction of herds that have been built up over decades.

Up-to-date information is available from www.iomonline.co.im

Now Suzuki’s In And It’s 10 Sections Of Air Fence

Moments ago, an e-mail came in from American Suzuki Motor Corporation’s Mel Harris pledging $2900 for a section of Air Fence.

That brings our total to $29,199 or 10 full sections (300 feet) of Air Fence for our AMA racers.

American Suzuki is one of the most active manufacturers in AMA racing, fielding many teams in various classes and types of racing.

We thank American Suzuki for standing up and kicking down cash for all AMA racers.

The contribution list now looks like this:
Anonymous $4725
John Ulrich/Roadracing World $2900
Aprilia USA $2900
American Suzuki Motor Corp. $2900
Dennis Smith/Sport Tire Services $1500
Marc Salvisberg/Factory Pro Tuning $1450
Bob Dragich/Roadracing World $1450
Bob Blandford/N.E. Sportbike Assn. $1100
Chuck Warren/Arclight Suzuki $1000
Jim Rashid/4&6 Cycle $1000
Scott Willock $1000
Don Lemelin/Scuderia West $500
Kevin Erion/Erion Racing $500
Pinky’s Pizza of Walnut Creek $500
Doug Gonda $500
Edward S. Siccardi, Jr. $300
Dan Fischer/Copier1.com $300
David Finniff $300
Brian Mitchell $250
Al Ludington $250
Tim Simpson $250
Papa Thiam/WERA BBS $200
Bill Capshaw/ICE Motorsports $200
Scott Decker $200
Jim Williams/13x.com $125
Pat Stricker $ 100
Gary Rand $100
Michael Roberson/WERA BBS $100
Sean Jordan/WERA BBS $100
Army Of Darkness $100
Stuart Gregg $100
Pinky’s Pizza/Lippman Racing $100
Bob Szoke $100
TyrSox $100
Ron West/Omzig Productions $100
Joe Facer $100
Preston Rash $100
Geoff Maloney/GP Tech $100
Melissa Berkoff/Neighbor Of The Beast $100
Ceasar Gonzales/WERA BBS $100
Dorina Groves $100
Philip Rusin/RC51.net $100
Allen “Spence” Spencer $100
Matt Wadsworth $100
Dean N. De St. Croix $100
Tony Tugwell $100
Bart Fuqua $100
Tyson Kamp $75
Nelo Hakola $50
Tyler Sandell $ 50
David J. Kopfinger $ 50
Aaron Loyd $50
Martin Voelker $50
Steve Hopkins $50
Louis DeBlois $50
Leigh Taunton/EMGO $50
Randy Sinisi $50
Danny Hull $50
Team Skidmark Racing $50
Greg Gabis $29
Josh Loberant $25
S.C. Pittman $20

To pledge a contribution, call Roadracing World at (800) 464-8336 between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time, when operators will be standing by. Credit cards accepted.

Pledges can also be made by e-mailing [email protected]

Readers should feel free to call their parts, tire and accessory suppliers and urge them to make a contribution to improve safety conditions for AMA racers. For that matter, contact local dealers and ask them to encourage their OEMs to contribute.

For background information, see Time To Take Back The AMA post from Tuesday morning.

Stay tuned for more details.

Buell Takes The Lead With $5800 Donation And Now We’re Close To 13 Sections Of Air Fence

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Former AMA road racer Erik Buell, now Chief Technical Officer at Buell Motorcycle Company, kicked in $5800 for two complete sections of Air Fence. That, along with $500 from Jerry Wood of the Penguin Racing School and individual donations from Patrick Mee, Dave and Jason Parker, Vance Hacecky, Ned “Peanut” Brown of NESBA/TPM, David McElvain of NEDOD, racers Brian Stokes and Chris “Opie” Caylor, Brendan Guy, Charles P. Tomes and Marietta Motorsports, puts our Air Fence fund at $36,824 or almost 13 complete sections (390 feet) of Air Fence to protect our AMA racers.

Our goal is to raise $87,000 to buy 30 sections of Air Fence, which will give AMA racers 900 linear feet of inflatable barrier protection, or 810 more feet than they now have from the three sections of Air Fence (one of which leaks) purchased by AMA Pro Racing many years ago.

In his e-mail making his pledge, Erik Buell wrote “Cool deal, John. Thanks for putting this together, my friend. Where were you and those fences when I was racing? I might walk a little younger today if they had been around!”

In a FAX to Roadracing World following his $300 pledge, Brendan Guy issued this challenge to members of the AMA Pro Racing Board of Directors:
“Like you, I am tired of watching my heros (and tomorrow’s heros) get hurt needlessly. I challenge the AMA Board of Directors to each match my small donation ($300). It’s their job to care about racer safety, and if they can’t care as much as I do, or you do, then we ought to throw them out and bring in people that can and do care.”


The contribution list now looks like this:

Erik Buell/Buell Motorcycle Company $5800
Anonymous $4725
John Ulrich/Roadracing World $2900
Aprilia USA $2900
American Suzuki Motor Corp. $2900
Dennis Smith/Sport Tire Services $1500
Marc Salvisberg/Factory Pro Tuning $1450
Bob Dragich/Roadracing World $1450
Bob Blandford/N.E. Sportbike Assn. $1100
Chuck Warren/Arclight Suzuki $1000
Jim Rashid/4&6 Cycle $1000
Scott Willock $1000
Don Lemelin/Scuderia West $500
Kevin Erion/Erion Racing $500
Pinky’s Pizza of Walnut Creek $500
Doug Gonda $500
Jerry Wood/Penguin School $500
Edward S. Siccardi, Jr. $300
Dan Fischer/Copier1.com $300
David Finniff $300
Marietta Motorsports $300
Brendan Guy $300
Brian Mitchell $250
Al Ludington $250
Tim Simpson $250
Papa Thiam/WERA BBS $200
Bill Capshaw/ICE Motorsports $200
Scott Decker $200
Jim Williams/13x.com $125
Pat Stricker $ 100
Gary Rand $100
Michael Roberson/WERA BBS $100
Sean Jordan/WERA BBS $100
Army Of Darkness $100
Stuart Gregg $100
Pinky’s Pizza/Lippman Racing $100
Bob Szoke $100
TyrSox $100
Ron West/Omzig Productions $100
Joe Facer $100
Preston Rash $100
Geoff Maloney/GP Tech $100
Melissa Berkoff/Neighbor Of The Beast $100
Ceasar Gonzales/WERA BBS $100
Dorina Groves $100
Philip Rusin/RC51.net $100
Allen “Spence” Spencer $100
Matt Wadsworth $100
Dean N. De St. Croix $100
Tony Tugwell/TZ250.com $100
Bart Fuqua $100
Brian Stokes $100
Chris “Opie” Caylor $100
David McElvain/NEDOD $100
Ned “Peanut” Brown/NESBA/TPM $100
Vance Hacecky $100
Patrick Mee $100
Dave and Jason Parker $100
Tyson Kamp $75
Nelo Hakola $50
Tyler Sandell $ 50
David J. Kopfinger $ 50
Aaron Loyd $50
Martin Voelker $50
Steve Hopkins $50
Louis DeBlois $50
Leigh Taunton/EMGO $50
Randy Sinisi $50
Danny Hull $50
Team Skidmark Racing $50
Greg Gabis $29
Josh Loberant $25
Charles Tomes $25
S.C. Pittman $20


To pledge a contribution, call Roadracing World at (800) 464-8336 between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time, when operators will be standing by. Credit cards accepted.

Pledges can also be made by e-mailing [email protected]

Readers should feel free to call their parts, tire and accessory suppliers and urge them to make a contribution to improve safety conditions for AMA racers. For that matter, contact local dealers and ask them to encourage their OEMs to contribute.

For background information, see Time To Take Back The AMA post from Tuesday morning.

Stay tuned for more details.

Now It’s Eight Sections Of Air Fence For Our Racers

Individual donations from Spence Spencer, Scott Decker, David Finniff, Danny Hull, Matt Wadsworth, Dean De St. Croix, Greg Gabis, Scott Willock, Tim Simpson, S.C. Pittman, Tony Tugwell, Bart Fuqua and Doug Gonda as well as business donations from Jim Williams/13x.com, Pinky’s Pizza Parlor of Walnut Creek, California and Team Skidmark have pushed our Air Fence Fund to $23,399 or enough for eight sections (that’s over 240 feet) of beautiful Air Fence to protect AMA racers from hitting hard stuff if they crash.

Special thanks go to Scott Willock for a generous $1000, Pinky’s Pizza for $500 and Doug Gonda for $500.

The donation list now looks like this:

Anonymous $4725
John Ulrich/Roadracing World $2900
Dennis Smith/Sport Tire Services $1500
Marc Salvisberg/Factory Pro Tuning $1450
Bob Dragich/Roadracing World $1450
Bob Blandford/N.E. Sportbike Assn. $1100
Chuck Warren/Arclight Suzuki $1000
Jim Rashid/4&6 Cycle $1000
Scott Willock $1000
Don Lemelin/Scuderia West $500
Kevin Erion/Erion Racing $500
Pinky’s Pizza of Walnut Creek $500
Doug Gonda $500
Edward S. Siccardi, Jr. $300
Dan Fischer/Copier1.com $300
David Finniff $300
Brian Mitchell $250
Al Ludington $250
Tim Simpson $250
Papa Thiam/WERA BBS $200
Bill Capshaw/ICE Motorsports $200
Scott Decker $200
Jim Williams/13x.com $125
Pat Stricker $ 100
Gary Rand $100
Michael Roberson/WERA BBS $100
Sean Jordan/WERA BBS $100
Army Of Darkness $100
Stuart Gregg $100
Pinky’s Pizza/Lippman Racing $100
Bob Szoke $100
TyrSox $100
Ron West/Omzig Productions $100
Joe Facer $100
Preston Rash $100
Geoff Maloney/GP Tech $100
Melissa Berkoff/Neighbor Of The Beast $100
Ceasar Gonzales/WERA BBS $100
Dorina Groves $100
Philip Rusin/RC51.net $100
Allen “Spence” Spencer $100
Matt Wadsworth $100
Dean N. De St. Croix $100
Tony Tugwell $100
Bart Fuqua $100
Tyson Kamp $75
Nelo Hakola $50
Tyler Sandell $ 50
David J. Kopfinger $ 50
Aaron Loyd $50
Martin Voelker $50
Steve Hopkins $50
Louis DeBlois $50
Leigh Taunton/EMGO $50
Randy Sinisi $50
Danny Hull $50
Team Skidmark Racing $50
Greg Gabis $29
Josh Loberant $25
S.C. Pittman $20

To pledge a contribution, call Roadracing World at (800) 464-8336 between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time, when operators will be standing by. Credit cards accepted.

Pledges can also be made by e-mailing [email protected]

Readers should feel free to call their parts, tire and accessory suppliers and urge them to make a contribution to improve safety conditions for AMA racers. For that matter, contact local dealers and ask them to encourage their OEMs to contribute.

For background information, see Time To Take Back The AMA post from Tuesday morning.

Stay tuned for more details.

A Call For Action: Take Back The AMA Now

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Copyright 2001 Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

OPINION:

Time To Take Back The AMA

By John Ulrich

Yesterday I was informed that I am anti-AMA.

This, I was told, is the view from the bunker that is AMA headquarters.

For the record, I am not anti-AMA.

I am a 22-year paying member, I think. (I’m not sure because when I re-upped my membership for three years they sent me a member pin with 23 years or 24 years on it, signifying the number of years I’ll have been a member after the renewal runs out, not how many years I actually have been a member now.)

I have volunteered to help write rules that cannot be interpreted eight different ways, and I have been ignored. (Funny, AFM and WERA seemed happy with my rewrites of their rulebooks in 1978 and 1986, respectively.)

I have volunteered to serve on the AMA Road Racing Advisory Board, and have been refused. There is a problem, I am told—-I might tell AMA license holders and “stakeholders’ (AMA Pro Racing’s new-age term for riders and team owners and sponsors) what happens in the meetings, and we can’t have that.

I have walked the paddock at an AMA race and talked to riders, found near-unanimous opposition to an insane rule, collected signatures from nearly all affected riders asking that the rule be immediately revoked—and have been told that I was a troublemaker. (Although, six months later, without comment, the rule was eliminated.)

And I have advocated that the research and collection of comments from riders and other stakeholders take place before rules are even considered, that a chance for comment be built into the rule-making process.

More than anything, I have invested in AMA Pro Racing. I have spent time and effort and money running an AMA-Championship-winning racing team currently fielding three riders and employing five full-time mechanics and three part-time mechanics. I have also spent time and money sponsoring my own son—who has led an AMA National, reached the podium and twice ended the year in the top five in points–in AMA Pro Racing. And I’ve gone to the hospital with my son and my riders too many times as a direct or indirect result of action or inaction on the part of AMA Pro Racing officials on site at an AMA National.

I have buried a rider who crashed one of my bikes into an embankment unshielded by haybales during practice for an AMA National, and my original racing partner is a wheelchair pilot as the result of crashing our bike into a steel barrier during an AMA National.

I have had a contract with a 17-year-old rider–a rider I and my son considered a personal friend–who didn’t get to race for my team because he hit a fence unprotected by haybales or foam blocks or Air Fence at an AMA dirt track and died a lingering death before the deal started.

I have a bigger investment in AMA Pro Racing than anybody who actually works for the AMA, and have paid a dearer price for that investment.

No, I am not anti-AMA. But I am anti-stupidity, anti-ignorance, and anti-arrogance. I have no problem with the organization, the concept, the association. I have a big problem with many actions and inactions on the part of the people charged with running the AMA and AMA Pro Racing in recent years.

Is a person who objected to Clinton’s executive orders closing public lands to off-road motorcyclists “anti-America”?

Is a person who objects to proposed government regulations allowing insurance companies to discriminate against motorcyclists among group policy holders “anti-government”?

I am not “anti-AMA” any more than a person who advocates open use of public land is “anti-America.” I am not “anti-AMA” any more than a person who advocates equal treatment of all persons covered by group medical insurance is “anti-government.”

But I am against the view that motorcycle racing, especially motorcycle road racing organized by AMA Pro Racing, somehow must look outside to car racing organizations and officials to figure out what to do, or for validation.

I am a motorcycle racer, a motorcycle race team owner, a motorcycle magazine and website owner.

I don’t like sitting around and waiting for a bureaucrat to take a survey to figure out how car guys do it before making a move that is as plain as day and as easy to figure out as common sense. Motorcycle guys are into action, not inaction.

It took AMA Pro Racing years to figure out and get rid of the insane rule that required racers to run dry-pattern DOT-labeled tires in rainy Supersport races. It was a rule that, had anybody known it was coming other than the fool who proposed it and the fools who wrote it and approved it, would have been hooted down in seconds.

I am against a corrupt system whereby a rule that affects a very few—–an example being the proposed ban on powered quick-lifts used in Superbike pit stops—–is instantly postponed when a few factory teams complain that they’ve already built the equipment. Yet rules that affect many more people—–people not associated with factory Superbike teams–—have no chance of being stayed or delayed no matter how great the hardship, no matter how late the announcement, no matter how flawed the concept.

I am for fair, logical rules, applied equally to everyone in the paddock.

I am against the corrupt, pork-barrel, good-old-boys appointment-by-one-man system that is responsible for the non-representative Road Racing Advisory Board. It is stacked with representatives of manufacturers and of factory-affiliated Superbike teams with a couple of token 250 guys. There are no representatives of independent, multi-rider teams with non-factory primary sponsorship running in the Supersport or Formula Xtreme classes, nor of teams running in Pro Thunder.

A key concept in the American Revolution was: No taxation without representation. Every American understands how unfair it is to be dictated to without representation—–every American, it seems, except the men in charge of AMA Pro Racing.

AMA Pro Racing Directors have been talking about rationalizing the rule-making procedures–allowing racers at large a chance to comment before a rule is made—for at least 18 months. They’ve been promising imminent action for at least five months. So far all that has happened is that a former car racing guy has been hired to figure out how to create a process that any one of a dozen or two dozen team owners/racers/businessmen within the AMA ranks could fully develop and implement in a matter of days. At this rate, if we’re really lucky, maybe something will be proposed in 2001 and implemented in 2002.

And AMA Pro Racing has been talking about buying more Air Fence for years, yet while there is budget for hiring a former car racing guy to explain the obvious in regards to making rules, somehow there is no budget for Air Fence.

I’m tired of waiting and waiting on the grid, of watching for a green flag that never comes, of hoping for fairness and concern for everybody in the paddock, not just the factory few.

I’m tired of waiting for Air Fence that never comes, of delays, of excuses, of hoping my son and my riders and the sons and riders of my friends don’t hit a wall where there should be Air Fence but is there is not because AMA Pro Racing can’t get its act together and figure out what is really important here, the safety of racers versus the post-retirement employment of retired car racing executives.

I am against the way AMA Pro Racing conducts—–or, more accurately, does not conduct—–its business.

The way I figure it, it is time for AMA members involved in Pro Racing to take back the AMA, to take action, to get something done, starting here and now.

AMA Pro Racing needs 30 sections of Air Fence at $2900 each. I’ve already written a check for one section.

I need 29 other people (or groups of people) who are sick and tired of waiting for something to happen to each kick in $2900 and buy a section of Air Fence. Just 29 people out of 240 million Americans, 29 people who care about a son, a brother, a rider, a friend. Just 29 people who are tired of excuses and inaction. Just 29 people willing to get it done right now.

Make the check payable to Roadracing World Publishing, Inc., and mail it to me at the address below. Do it right now.

I’ll collect the money and personally deliver it to the Chairman of the Board of Directors of AMA Pro Racing, with a simple message: Here’s the money, now get it done. If the AMA Pro Racing Board of Directors decides it doesn’t need to take our money and buy Air Fence, I’ll buy the Air Fence myself and make arrangements with individual racetracks and promoters to deply the Air Fence at races.

Any donors who buy a complete section of Air Fence ($2900) and wish will also get a free 15-inch ad in Roadracing World in which to congratulate the AMA on committing to using the donations to speedily buy and install Air Fence at AMA Nationals. And everybody who donates will get a listing in a new “Take Back The AMA” donor section on www.roadracingworld.com.

Will this work? I honestly don’t know. But trying anything beats the approach typically taken by AMA Pro Racing, which is, do nothing. Or maybe talk a lot, accomplish nothing. Or promise a lot, deliver nothing.

Other than to declare a critic to be anti-AMA.

Send those checks, made out to Roadracing World Publishing, Inc., to:

Take Back The AMA Action Fund
c/o Roadracing World
P.O. Box 1428
Lake Elsinore, CA 92530-1428

Do it now, and help take back the AMA.

Anonymous Donor Kicks In $4725 And Six Sections Of Air Fence It Is!

An anonymous donor has kicked in another $4725 to our Air Fence fund and made it six beautiful 30-foot sections to protect our racers from hitting solid walls and embankments at AMA Nationals.

That’s $17,400 raised in 24 hours, plus another $250 personal donation from Al Ludington, who works for Team Kawasaki with Eric Bostrom. Ludington’s personal donation should in no way be considered an endorsement of this project by his employers, who have not yet seen fit to contribute. New total: $17,650.

No one who saw the TV footage of Grant Lopez hitting a concrete wall during the 1999 AMA National at Phoenix International Raceway, or watched the helicopter carry him away, or saw the look on the faces of his mother and sister, needs us to explain why we are doing this.

It is a shame that AMA Pro Racing has its collective head so far up its collective ass that individual racers, mechanics, parents of racers, race team owners, enthusiasts and fans have to collect the money to buy the Air Fence so urgently needed, but if that’s the way it is, it’s still worth the effort to not have to watch another rider air-lifted away after hitting a bare wall.

The current contributor list looks like this:

Anonymous $4725
John Ulrich/Roadracing World $2900
Marc Salvisberg/Factory Pro Tuning $1450
Bob Dragich/Roadracing World $1450
Bob Blandford/N.E. Sportbike Assn. $1100
Chuck Warren/Arclight Suzuki $1000
Jim Rashid/4&6 Cycle $1000
Don Lemelin/Scuderia West $500
Kevin Erion/Erion Racing $500
Edward S. Siccardi, Jr. $300
Brian Mitchell $250
Al Ludington $250
Papa Thiam/WERA BBS $200
Pat Stricker $ 100
Gary Rand $100
Michael Roberson/WERA BBS $100
Sean Jordan/WERA BBS $100
Army Of Darkness $100
Stuart Gregg $100
Pinky’s Pizza/Lippman Racing $100
Bob Szoke $100
TyrSox $100
Ron West/Omzig Productions $100
Joe Facer $100
Preston Rash $100
Geoff Maloney/GP Tech $100
Melissa Berkoff/Neighbor Of The Beast $100
Ceasar Gonzales/WERA BBS $100
Dorina Groves $100
Tyler Sandell $ 50
David J. Kopfinger $ 50
Aaron Loyd $50
Martin Voelker $50
Steve Hopkins $50
Louis DeBlois $50
Leigh Taunton/EMGO $50
Randy Sinisi $50
Josh Loverant $25

To pledge a contribution, call Roadracing World at (800) 464-8336 between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time, when operators will be standing by. Credit cards accepted.

Pledges can also be made by e-mailing [email protected]

Readers should feel free to call their parts, tire and accessory suppliers and urge them to make a contribution to improve safety conditions for AMA racers. For that matter, contact local dealers and ask them to encourage their OEMs to contribute.

For background information, see Time To Take Back The AMA post from Tuesday morning.

Stay tuned for more details.

Big Donation From North East Sportbike Association Puts Air Fence Fund Well On Way To Five Sections

An $1100 donation from Bob Blandford of the North East Sportbike Association put our Air Fence fund well on the way to buying five 30-foot sections. All of which means that soon we’ll be able to protect riders from hitting 150 feet of solid wall or embankment at AMA Superbike Nationals.

The total raised in less than 24 hours is now $12,675. Significantly, motorcycle manufacturers remain on the sidelines while dealers, race team owners, parents of racers, and individual riders and enthusiasts are stepping up to buy the Air Fence that AMA Pro Racing has not been able to figure out how to pay for. Donations are flowing in to Roadracing World headquarters by check made out to AMA Pro Racing and via credit card.

The current list of contributors follows:

John Ulrich/Roadracing World $2900
Marc Salvisberg/Factory Pro Tuning $1450
Bob Dragich/Roadracing World $1450
Bob Blandford/N.E. Sportbike Assn. $1100
Chuck Warren/Arclight Suzuki $1000
Jim Rashid/4&6 Cycle $1000
Don Lemelin/Scuderia West $500
Kevin Erion/Erion Racing $500
Edward S. Siccardi, Jr. $300
Brian Mitchell $250
Papa Thiam/WERA BBS $200
Pat Stricker $ 100
Gary Rand $100
Michael Roberson/WERA BBS $100
Sean Jordan/WERA BBS $100
Army Of Darkness $100
Stuart Gregg $100
Pinky’s Pizza/Lippman Racing $100
Bob Szoke $100
TyrSox $100
Ron West/Omzig Productions $100
Joe Facer $100
Preston Rash $100
Geoff Maloney/GP Tech $100
Melissa Berkoff/Neighbor Of The Beast $100
Ceasar Gonzales/WERA BBS $100
Dorina Groves $100
Tyler Sandell $ 50
David J. Kopfinger $ 50
Aaron Loyd $50
Martin Voelker $50
Steve Hopkins $50
Louis DeBlois $50
Leigh Taunton/EMGO $50
Randy Sinisi $50
Josh Loverant $25

To pledge a contribution, call Roadracing World at (800) 464-8336 between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time, when operators will be standing by. Credit cards accepted.

Pledges can also be made by e-mailing [email protected]

Readers should feel free to call their parts, tire and accessory suppliers and urge them to make a contribution to improve safety conditions for AMA racers. For that matter, contact local dealers and ask them to encourage their OEMs to contribute.

For background information, see Time To Take Back The AMA post from Tuesday morning.

Stay tuned for more details.

Contributions Toward AMA Air Fence Off To A Good Start

Significant contributions to buy Air Fence for AMA Pro Racing came in after our first post on the subject Tuesday, kicked off by the first two contributors, Arclight Suzuki owner Chuck Warren and roadracingworld.com reader Pat Stricker.

While individual readers, private race teams and motorcycle dealers are calling and pledging money or putting donations on credit cards, no money has yet been pledged by any of the manufacturers involved in AMA Pro Racing.

But AMA Superbike racer Jordan Szoke’s father, Bob Szoke, has called and contributed.

Contributions paid or pledged so far equal $11,575 or just $25 less than the $11,600 needed to buy four 30-foot sections of Air Fence, and came from the following:

John Ulrich/Roadracing World $2900
Marc Salvisberg/Factory Pro Tuning $1450
Bob Dragich/Roadracing World $1450
Chuck Warren/Arclight Suzuki $1000
Jim Rashid/4&6 Cycle $1000
Don Lemelin/Scuderia West $500
Kevin Erion/Erion Racing $500
Edward S. Siccardi, Jr. $300
Brian Mitchell $250
Papa Thiam/WERA BBS $200
Pat Stricker $ 100
Gary Rand $100
Michael Roberson/WERA BBS $100
Sean Jordan/WERA BBS $100
Army Of Darkness $100
Stuart Gregg $100
Pinky’s Pizza/Lippman Racing $100
Bob Szoke $100
TyrSox $100
Ron West/Omzig Productions $100
Joe Facer $100
Preston Rash $100
Geoff Maloney/GP Tech $100
Melissa Berkoff/Neighbor Of The Beast $100
Ceasar Gonzales/WERA BBS $100
Dorina Groves $100
Tyler Sandell $ 50
David J. Kopfinger $ 50
Aaron Loyd $50
Martin Voelker $50
Steve Hopkins $50
Louis DeBlois $50
Leigh Taunton/EMGO $50
Randy Sinisi $50
Josh Loverant $25

To pledge a contribution, call Roadracing World at (800) 464-8336 between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time, when operators will be standing by. Credit cards accepted.

Pledges can also be made by e-mailing [email protected]

Readers should feel free to call their parts, tire and accessory suppliers and urge them to make a contribution to improve safety conditions for AMA racers. For that matter, contact local dealers and ask them to encourage their OEMs to contribute.

For background information, see Time To Take Back The AMA post from Tuesday morning.

Stay tuned for more details.

Wegman Benefit Fund To Raffle Off Yamaha Dirt Bike

The Wegman Benefit Fund, which raises money for injured road racers, is raffling off a Yamaha TT-R125 dirt bike, with chances selling for $10 each. The raffle will be held April 27-29 during a CCS weekend at Road America. Details are available at www.wegmanfund.org

The Wegman Benefit Fund is a 501(3)c non-profit organization and is endorsed by Roadracing World. Contributions are tax deductible.

What Is Air Fence?

Air Fence is an inflatable energy-absorbing system placed in front of anything hard that might be hit by a crashing road racer, like a steel barrier or an embankment. For more about Air Fence, click on this link:

http://www.airfence.com

Fate Of Isle Of Man TT To Be Announced Tomorrow

The Isle of Man Council Of Ministers met today to discuss the fate of the famed TT, and the recent cancellation of the Northwest 200 in Northern Ireland to stem the spread of foot and mouth disease (aka hoof and mouth disease)from England is likely to influence the decision.

Farmers favor the cancellation, saying that missing the TT will set back the tourism industry one year while an invasion of foot and mouth disease will force the destruction of herds that have been built up over decades.

Up-to-date information is available from www.iomonline.co.im

Now Suzuki’s In And It’s 10 Sections Of Air Fence

Moments ago, an e-mail came in from American Suzuki Motor Corporation’s Mel Harris pledging $2900 for a section of Air Fence.

That brings our total to $29,199 or 10 full sections (300 feet) of Air Fence for our AMA racers.

American Suzuki is one of the most active manufacturers in AMA racing, fielding many teams in various classes and types of racing.

We thank American Suzuki for standing up and kicking down cash for all AMA racers.

The contribution list now looks like this:
Anonymous $4725
John Ulrich/Roadracing World $2900
Aprilia USA $2900
American Suzuki Motor Corp. $2900
Dennis Smith/Sport Tire Services $1500
Marc Salvisberg/Factory Pro Tuning $1450
Bob Dragich/Roadracing World $1450
Bob Blandford/N.E. Sportbike Assn. $1100
Chuck Warren/Arclight Suzuki $1000
Jim Rashid/4&6 Cycle $1000
Scott Willock $1000
Don Lemelin/Scuderia West $500
Kevin Erion/Erion Racing $500
Pinky’s Pizza of Walnut Creek $500
Doug Gonda $500
Edward S. Siccardi, Jr. $300
Dan Fischer/Copier1.com $300
David Finniff $300
Brian Mitchell $250
Al Ludington $250
Tim Simpson $250
Papa Thiam/WERA BBS $200
Bill Capshaw/ICE Motorsports $200
Scott Decker $200
Jim Williams/13x.com $125
Pat Stricker $ 100
Gary Rand $100
Michael Roberson/WERA BBS $100
Sean Jordan/WERA BBS $100
Army Of Darkness $100
Stuart Gregg $100
Pinky’s Pizza/Lippman Racing $100
Bob Szoke $100
TyrSox $100
Ron West/Omzig Productions $100
Joe Facer $100
Preston Rash $100
Geoff Maloney/GP Tech $100
Melissa Berkoff/Neighbor Of The Beast $100
Ceasar Gonzales/WERA BBS $100
Dorina Groves $100
Philip Rusin/RC51.net $100
Allen “Spence” Spencer $100
Matt Wadsworth $100
Dean N. De St. Croix $100
Tony Tugwell $100
Bart Fuqua $100
Tyson Kamp $75
Nelo Hakola $50
Tyler Sandell $ 50
David J. Kopfinger $ 50
Aaron Loyd $50
Martin Voelker $50
Steve Hopkins $50
Louis DeBlois $50
Leigh Taunton/EMGO $50
Randy Sinisi $50
Danny Hull $50
Team Skidmark Racing $50
Greg Gabis $29
Josh Loberant $25
S.C. Pittman $20

To pledge a contribution, call Roadracing World at (800) 464-8336 between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time, when operators will be standing by. Credit cards accepted.

Pledges can also be made by e-mailing [email protected]

Readers should feel free to call their parts, tire and accessory suppliers and urge them to make a contribution to improve safety conditions for AMA racers. For that matter, contact local dealers and ask them to encourage their OEMs to contribute.

For background information, see Time To Take Back The AMA post from Tuesday morning.

Stay tuned for more details.

Buell Takes The Lead With $5800 Donation And Now We’re Close To 13 Sections Of Air Fence

Former AMA road racer Erik Buell, now Chief Technical Officer at Buell Motorcycle Company, kicked in $5800 for two complete sections of Air Fence. That, along with $500 from Jerry Wood of the Penguin Racing School and individual donations from Patrick Mee, Dave and Jason Parker, Vance Hacecky, Ned “Peanut” Brown of NESBA/TPM, David McElvain of NEDOD, racers Brian Stokes and Chris “Opie” Caylor, Brendan Guy, Charles P. Tomes and Marietta Motorsports, puts our Air Fence fund at $36,824 or almost 13 complete sections (390 feet) of Air Fence to protect our AMA racers.

Our goal is to raise $87,000 to buy 30 sections of Air Fence, which will give AMA racers 900 linear feet of inflatable barrier protection, or 810 more feet than they now have from the three sections of Air Fence (one of which leaks) purchased by AMA Pro Racing many years ago.

In his e-mail making his pledge, Erik Buell wrote “Cool deal, John. Thanks for putting this together, my friend. Where were you and those fences when I was racing? I might walk a little younger today if they had been around!”

In a FAX to Roadracing World following his $300 pledge, Brendan Guy issued this challenge to members of the AMA Pro Racing Board of Directors:
“Like you, I am tired of watching my heros (and tomorrow’s heros) get hurt needlessly. I challenge the AMA Board of Directors to each match my small donation ($300). It’s their job to care about racer safety, and if they can’t care as much as I do, or you do, then we ought to throw them out and bring in people that can and do care.”


The contribution list now looks like this:

Erik Buell/Buell Motorcycle Company $5800
Anonymous $4725
John Ulrich/Roadracing World $2900
Aprilia USA $2900
American Suzuki Motor Corp. $2900
Dennis Smith/Sport Tire Services $1500
Marc Salvisberg/Factory Pro Tuning $1450
Bob Dragich/Roadracing World $1450
Bob Blandford/N.E. Sportbike Assn. $1100
Chuck Warren/Arclight Suzuki $1000
Jim Rashid/4&6 Cycle $1000
Scott Willock $1000
Don Lemelin/Scuderia West $500
Kevin Erion/Erion Racing $500
Pinky’s Pizza of Walnut Creek $500
Doug Gonda $500
Jerry Wood/Penguin School $500
Edward S. Siccardi, Jr. $300
Dan Fischer/Copier1.com $300
David Finniff $300
Marietta Motorsports $300
Brendan Guy $300
Brian Mitchell $250
Al Ludington $250
Tim Simpson $250
Papa Thiam/WERA BBS $200
Bill Capshaw/ICE Motorsports $200
Scott Decker $200
Jim Williams/13x.com $125
Pat Stricker $ 100
Gary Rand $100
Michael Roberson/WERA BBS $100
Sean Jordan/WERA BBS $100
Army Of Darkness $100
Stuart Gregg $100
Pinky’s Pizza/Lippman Racing $100
Bob Szoke $100
TyrSox $100
Ron West/Omzig Productions $100
Joe Facer $100
Preston Rash $100
Geoff Maloney/GP Tech $100
Melissa Berkoff/Neighbor Of The Beast $100
Ceasar Gonzales/WERA BBS $100
Dorina Groves $100
Philip Rusin/RC51.net $100
Allen “Spence” Spencer $100
Matt Wadsworth $100
Dean N. De St. Croix $100
Tony Tugwell/TZ250.com $100
Bart Fuqua $100
Brian Stokes $100
Chris “Opie” Caylor $100
David McElvain/NEDOD $100
Ned “Peanut” Brown/NESBA/TPM $100
Vance Hacecky $100
Patrick Mee $100
Dave and Jason Parker $100
Tyson Kamp $75
Nelo Hakola $50
Tyler Sandell $ 50
David J. Kopfinger $ 50
Aaron Loyd $50
Martin Voelker $50
Steve Hopkins $50
Louis DeBlois $50
Leigh Taunton/EMGO $50
Randy Sinisi $50
Danny Hull $50
Team Skidmark Racing $50
Greg Gabis $29
Josh Loberant $25
Charles Tomes $25
S.C. Pittman $20


To pledge a contribution, call Roadracing World at (800) 464-8336 between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time, when operators will be standing by. Credit cards accepted.

Pledges can also be made by e-mailing [email protected]

Readers should feel free to call their parts, tire and accessory suppliers and urge them to make a contribution to improve safety conditions for AMA racers. For that matter, contact local dealers and ask them to encourage their OEMs to contribute.

For background information, see Time To Take Back The AMA post from Tuesday morning.

Stay tuned for more details.

Now It’s Eight Sections Of Air Fence For Our Racers

Individual donations from Spence Spencer, Scott Decker, David Finniff, Danny Hull, Matt Wadsworth, Dean De St. Croix, Greg Gabis, Scott Willock, Tim Simpson, S.C. Pittman, Tony Tugwell, Bart Fuqua and Doug Gonda as well as business donations from Jim Williams/13x.com, Pinky’s Pizza Parlor of Walnut Creek, California and Team Skidmark have pushed our Air Fence Fund to $23,399 or enough for eight sections (that’s over 240 feet) of beautiful Air Fence to protect AMA racers from hitting hard stuff if they crash.

Special thanks go to Scott Willock for a generous $1000, Pinky’s Pizza for $500 and Doug Gonda for $500.

The donation list now looks like this:

Anonymous $4725
John Ulrich/Roadracing World $2900
Dennis Smith/Sport Tire Services $1500
Marc Salvisberg/Factory Pro Tuning $1450
Bob Dragich/Roadracing World $1450
Bob Blandford/N.E. Sportbike Assn. $1100
Chuck Warren/Arclight Suzuki $1000
Jim Rashid/4&6 Cycle $1000
Scott Willock $1000
Don Lemelin/Scuderia West $500
Kevin Erion/Erion Racing $500
Pinky’s Pizza of Walnut Creek $500
Doug Gonda $500
Edward S. Siccardi, Jr. $300
Dan Fischer/Copier1.com $300
David Finniff $300
Brian Mitchell $250
Al Ludington $250
Tim Simpson $250
Papa Thiam/WERA BBS $200
Bill Capshaw/ICE Motorsports $200
Scott Decker $200
Jim Williams/13x.com $125
Pat Stricker $ 100
Gary Rand $100
Michael Roberson/WERA BBS $100
Sean Jordan/WERA BBS $100
Army Of Darkness $100
Stuart Gregg $100
Pinky’s Pizza/Lippman Racing $100
Bob Szoke $100
TyrSox $100
Ron West/Omzig Productions $100
Joe Facer $100
Preston Rash $100
Geoff Maloney/GP Tech $100
Melissa Berkoff/Neighbor Of The Beast $100
Ceasar Gonzales/WERA BBS $100
Dorina Groves $100
Philip Rusin/RC51.net $100
Allen “Spence” Spencer $100
Matt Wadsworth $100
Dean N. De St. Croix $100
Tony Tugwell $100
Bart Fuqua $100
Tyson Kamp $75
Nelo Hakola $50
Tyler Sandell $ 50
David J. Kopfinger $ 50
Aaron Loyd $50
Martin Voelker $50
Steve Hopkins $50
Louis DeBlois $50
Leigh Taunton/EMGO $50
Randy Sinisi $50
Danny Hull $50
Team Skidmark Racing $50
Greg Gabis $29
Josh Loberant $25
S.C. Pittman $20

To pledge a contribution, call Roadracing World at (800) 464-8336 between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time, when operators will be standing by. Credit cards accepted.

Pledges can also be made by e-mailing [email protected]

Readers should feel free to call their parts, tire and accessory suppliers and urge them to make a contribution to improve safety conditions for AMA racers. For that matter, contact local dealers and ask them to encourage their OEMs to contribute.

For background information, see Time To Take Back The AMA post from Tuesday morning.

Stay tuned for more details.

A Call For Action: Take Back The AMA Now

Copyright 2001 Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

OPINION:

Time To Take Back The AMA

By John Ulrich

Yesterday I was informed that I am anti-AMA.

This, I was told, is the view from the bunker that is AMA headquarters.

For the record, I am not anti-AMA.

I am a 22-year paying member, I think. (I’m not sure because when I re-upped my membership for three years they sent me a member pin with 23 years or 24 years on it, signifying the number of years I’ll have been a member after the renewal runs out, not how many years I actually have been a member now.)

I have volunteered to help write rules that cannot be interpreted eight different ways, and I have been ignored. (Funny, AFM and WERA seemed happy with my rewrites of their rulebooks in 1978 and 1986, respectively.)

I have volunteered to serve on the AMA Road Racing Advisory Board, and have been refused. There is a problem, I am told—-I might tell AMA license holders and “stakeholders’ (AMA Pro Racing’s new-age term for riders and team owners and sponsors) what happens in the meetings, and we can’t have that.

I have walked the paddock at an AMA race and talked to riders, found near-unanimous opposition to an insane rule, collected signatures from nearly all affected riders asking that the rule be immediately revoked—and have been told that I was a troublemaker. (Although, six months later, without comment, the rule was eliminated.)

And I have advocated that the research and collection of comments from riders and other stakeholders take place before rules are even considered, that a chance for comment be built into the rule-making process.

More than anything, I have invested in AMA Pro Racing. I have spent time and effort and money running an AMA-Championship-winning racing team currently fielding three riders and employing five full-time mechanics and three part-time mechanics. I have also spent time and money sponsoring my own son—who has led an AMA National, reached the podium and twice ended the year in the top five in points–in AMA Pro Racing. And I’ve gone to the hospital with my son and my riders too many times as a direct or indirect result of action or inaction on the part of AMA Pro Racing officials on site at an AMA National.

I have buried a rider who crashed one of my bikes into an embankment unshielded by haybales during practice for an AMA National, and my original racing partner is a wheelchair pilot as the result of crashing our bike into a steel barrier during an AMA National.

I have had a contract with a 17-year-old rider–a rider I and my son considered a personal friend–who didn’t get to race for my team because he hit a fence unprotected by haybales or foam blocks or Air Fence at an AMA dirt track and died a lingering death before the deal started.

I have a bigger investment in AMA Pro Racing than anybody who actually works for the AMA, and have paid a dearer price for that investment.

No, I am not anti-AMA. But I am anti-stupidity, anti-ignorance, and anti-arrogance. I have no problem with the organization, the concept, the association. I have a big problem with many actions and inactions on the part of the people charged with running the AMA and AMA Pro Racing in recent years.

Is a person who objected to Clinton’s executive orders closing public lands to off-road motorcyclists “anti-America”?

Is a person who objects to proposed government regulations allowing insurance companies to discriminate against motorcyclists among group policy holders “anti-government”?

I am not “anti-AMA” any more than a person who advocates open use of public land is “anti-America.” I am not “anti-AMA” any more than a person who advocates equal treatment of all persons covered by group medical insurance is “anti-government.”

But I am against the view that motorcycle racing, especially motorcycle road racing organized by AMA Pro Racing, somehow must look outside to car racing organizations and officials to figure out what to do, or for validation.

I am a motorcycle racer, a motorcycle race team owner, a motorcycle magazine and website owner.

I don’t like sitting around and waiting for a bureaucrat to take a survey to figure out how car guys do it before making a move that is as plain as day and as easy to figure out as common sense. Motorcycle guys are into action, not inaction.

It took AMA Pro Racing years to figure out and get rid of the insane rule that required racers to run dry-pattern DOT-labeled tires in rainy Supersport races. It was a rule that, had anybody known it was coming other than the fool who proposed it and the fools who wrote it and approved it, would have been hooted down in seconds.

I am against a corrupt system whereby a rule that affects a very few—–an example being the proposed ban on powered quick-lifts used in Superbike pit stops—–is instantly postponed when a few factory teams complain that they’ve already built the equipment. Yet rules that affect many more people—–people not associated with factory Superbike teams–—have no chance of being stayed or delayed no matter how great the hardship, no matter how late the announcement, no matter how flawed the concept.

I am for fair, logical rules, applied equally to everyone in the paddock.

I am against the corrupt, pork-barrel, good-old-boys appointment-by-one-man system that is responsible for the non-representative Road Racing Advisory Board. It is stacked with representatives of manufacturers and of factory-affiliated Superbike teams with a couple of token 250 guys. There are no representatives of independent, multi-rider teams with non-factory primary sponsorship running in the Supersport or Formula Xtreme classes, nor of teams running in Pro Thunder.

A key concept in the American Revolution was: No taxation without representation. Every American understands how unfair it is to be dictated to without representation—–every American, it seems, except the men in charge of AMA Pro Racing.

AMA Pro Racing Directors have been talking about rationalizing the rule-making procedures–allowing racers at large a chance to comment before a rule is made—for at least 18 months. They’ve been promising imminent action for at least five months. So far all that has happened is that a former car racing guy has been hired to figure out how to create a process that any one of a dozen or two dozen team owners/racers/businessmen within the AMA ranks could fully develop and implement in a matter of days. At this rate, if we’re really lucky, maybe something will be proposed in 2001 and implemented in 2002.

And AMA Pro Racing has been talking about buying more Air Fence for years, yet while there is budget for hiring a former car racing guy to explain the obvious in regards to making rules, somehow there is no budget for Air Fence.

I’m tired of waiting and waiting on the grid, of watching for a green flag that never comes, of hoping for fairness and concern for everybody in the paddock, not just the factory few.

I’m tired of waiting for Air Fence that never comes, of delays, of excuses, of hoping my son and my riders and the sons and riders of my friends don’t hit a wall where there should be Air Fence but is there is not because AMA Pro Racing can’t get its act together and figure out what is really important here, the safety of racers versus the post-retirement employment of retired car racing executives.

I am against the way AMA Pro Racing conducts—–or, more accurately, does not conduct—–its business.

The way I figure it, it is time for AMA members involved in Pro Racing to take back the AMA, to take action, to get something done, starting here and now.

AMA Pro Racing needs 30 sections of Air Fence at $2900 each. I’ve already written a check for one section.

I need 29 other people (or groups of people) who are sick and tired of waiting for something to happen to each kick in $2900 and buy a section of Air Fence. Just 29 people out of 240 million Americans, 29 people who care about a son, a brother, a rider, a friend. Just 29 people who are tired of excuses and inaction. Just 29 people willing to get it done right now.

Make the check payable to Roadracing World Publishing, Inc., and mail it to me at the address below. Do it right now.

I’ll collect the money and personally deliver it to the Chairman of the Board of Directors of AMA Pro Racing, with a simple message: Here’s the money, now get it done. If the AMA Pro Racing Board of Directors decides it doesn’t need to take our money and buy Air Fence, I’ll buy the Air Fence myself and make arrangements with individual racetracks and promoters to deply the Air Fence at races.

Any donors who buy a complete section of Air Fence ($2900) and wish will also get a free 15-inch ad in Roadracing World in which to congratulate the AMA on committing to using the donations to speedily buy and install Air Fence at AMA Nationals. And everybody who donates will get a listing in a new “Take Back The AMA” donor section on www.roadracingworld.com.

Will this work? I honestly don’t know. But trying anything beats the approach typically taken by AMA Pro Racing, which is, do nothing. Or maybe talk a lot, accomplish nothing. Or promise a lot, deliver nothing.

Other than to declare a critic to be anti-AMA.

Send those checks, made out to Roadracing World Publishing, Inc., to:

Take Back The AMA Action Fund
c/o Roadracing World
P.O. Box 1428
Lake Elsinore, CA 92530-1428

Do it now, and help take back the AMA.

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