Like a true flying geek, I sometimes monitor the RNO approach control freq with my handheld while sitting here working. Last night, while it was snowing, and the ceiling was down, there was some interesting chatter.
A pilot called in to say he'd be holding for better conditions for the ILS approach. A few minutes later another pilot called in to ask if "the last guy had gone missed." The controller responded that the last pilot hadn't even tried the approach, that "he didn't have the silver." At first I thought, "geez, that controller is kind of pushing the boundaries there, does 'silver' mean 'balls'? Is he taunting the holding pilot?"
A few minutes later my question was answered when the controller queried the holding pilot, saying "according to my note here, your company should have and is certified for the Silver approach, why aren't you taking it? Is it a personal pilot thing?" The pilot responded that they had it, but company rules said they couldn't take it because the RNO middle marker was out.
As a greenhorn instrument student, does "silver" mean Cat II? Or is it the name of an actual approach here in RNO? I looked up all the official procedures on the NACO site, no "Silver."

