Don't know what a VEC is, but when I took the obligatory quiz in either 2001 or 2002 (it was right after all classes went no-code) it was held at a local well-known hotel on the lower west side. Due to its lack of publicity, there were only 11 people there, including myself. The way they did it then was they gave us a stack of Xerox papers (I think it was 10 pages front/back; 40 questions, but it was also in fairly big type), all multi-choice, and they were answered by circling whichever letter corresponded to the answer. What they did after that is anybody's guess, but everybody there scored very near 100. (I only got one question wrong myself.)
It makes one wonder, since the quizzes are so simple, why even bother doing them at all? Why not just have the user fill out a form, post it to the F¢¢ and get their ticket a week later, as used to be the case with CB (and supposedly still is the case with GMRS?) Is it just some obscure tradition that they can't get themselves past?
"We are willing to play by the rules and be gentlemen. The problem is the licensed folks don't seem to want to introduce anyone to the hobby unless it's family or close friends and if one doesn't fit the mold, they are shunned."
FINALLY somebody gets it. This is precisely the reason why regulation HAM is dying, and it will continue to do so as long as such attitudes prevail.
That, and the hostility the "old timers" seem to have to newcomers (and their seeming inability to hold back such hostility when newcomers key up) is just another nail in its proverbial casket. For such a supposedly "close-knit" "warm and welcoming" community that allegedly "take newcomers under their wings" (as I recently heard one of HAM's boosters describe it) it certainly proved itself to be the exact opposite in my experiences with it. I have no plans to renew my ticket because of it.
As long as the "this is our private eden; you're not clean because you're young, we're old so we're superior to you" attitude continues, HAM will continue to fail to gain peoples' long-term interest. (How much are you willing to bet that a lot of the people who get these HAM tickets don't even make use of them; just sit on the call letters until they run out? I'm willing to guess that's a pretty fair percentage of the alleged "influx" of new applicants.) Try as its boosters will to convince everybody otherwise, I don't see it going anywhere but down. It'll probably be either dead or deregulated within the next 20 years or so.