I don't agree. I think once you get to be a high-experience senior rp then yes, it is fairly easy most of the time. But I've seen many newbie's eyes get big when they have to do crazy hi contam/ hi rad job coverage, or go cover cavity decon, help with diver ops near fuel. Stuff like that, there is plenty more. Knowing all the ins and outs to make decisions in complex, different, and ever changing radiological environments is fairly tough, for me anyway. Plus contract technicians have to know more than one way to do it right according to the site they are at. I was at north anna one year and we had some techs who had the experience on paper but couldn't do the job. They panicked and let the pressure get to them. Some hid, some tried and failed (multiple dose alarms for one ex-rad engineer with little field experience). If it was as simple as you say, I don't think these people would have failed so badly or ran away. Have I seen and been on easy jobs? Plenty, but that doesn't mean there aren't plenty of hard ones out there as well. It can be a daunting job at times. I'll admit there are plenty of times I was uneasy with what I was asked to do but got enough of it right not to ever be sat in a corner. Doable yes, easy in some situations, yes, never difficult or challenging, no. You may be the bees knees sundog, and more power to you, but for the average HP tech, is this job really that simple? If you say yes, I don't think you are looking at it from the average tech's point of view considering the varying difficulty of jobs out there.