Dude.
All it takes to register a club with the AHA is a club name, street address, city, state, country, zip code, website, contact first name, contact last name, contact email address, contact phone number. Nothing else.
When you do that, they list you as an AHA club. That's it. In my state, there's even a single-person brew club.
I looked at https://spreadsheets.google.com/viewform?formkey=dG1VUUNYS1BnRUxySm1sNTlIZkFxSVE6MA and didn't see any other rules for clubs, you'd think that's where they'd be.
So if I live out in the sticks, what club do I use? If I formed my own single-person club, do I pay dues? Do I attend meetings?
The answer is no. The arguments about dues and meetings are unnecessary and only cloud the issue. Do you report your dues & meeting notes to the AHA? No, you don't, so for all we know, you could have had 10 meetings or none. You could have collected $500 or $0.
The Brewing Network fills a need for those who don't have a club or choose not to be in any other club. I guess I fail to see the difference in The BN and your "club" (in quotes, as you put it). What makes your "club" a club?
The AHA themselves awarded TheBN club of the year, nobody else did. They may change the definition of a club, but from what I can see, they haven't even defined it beyond what is listed on the registration form.
The brewers that entered the NHC contests voluntarily used "The Brewing Network" as their club, and why not?
None of my arguments are bullshit. Clearly The BN is a club or they couldn't have won the award.



Promotions 

