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REVISED Oct 13, 2006 10:40 ET

FCC Releases Long-Awaited "Omnibus" Amateur Radio Report and Order

NEWINGTON, CT, Oct 11, 2006 -- Ending a protracted waiting period, the FCC's Report and Order (R&O) in the so-called "omnibus" Amateur Radio proceeding, WT Docket 04-140, was adopted October 4 and released October 10. In it, the FCC adopted nearly all of the changes it had put forth in its 2004 Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) in the proceeding. The R&O the FCC released this week does not include action on the Commission's proposal to eliminate the Morse code requirement for all license classes. A Report and Order in that proceeding, WT Docket 05-235, is pending. ARRL President Joel Harrison, W5ZN, expressed the League's gratitude to the FCC for acting this week in the wide-ranging proceeding.

"On behalf of the ARRL and the Commission's licensees in the Amateur Radio Service I want to express appreciation for your release yesterday of the Report and Order in WT Docket 04-140 (FCC 06-149) amending Part 97 of the Commission's Rules," Harrison wrote October 11. "The Commission's action in clearing this pending proceeding will assist the Amateur Radio Service in meeting its objectives, particularly with regard to providing emergency and public service communications."

The Highlights

In its October 10 Report and Order, the FCC:

The FCC also took several other miscellaneous actions.

"Novice Band Refarming"

In response to an ARRL Petition for Rule Making, the Commission agreed to "refarm" the HF segments currently authorized to Novice and Technician Plus licensees. The reallocation will expand the phone subbands for General, Advanced and Amateur Extra licensees, although not all commenters agreed with the idea.

"We are persuaded, however, by ARRL's contention that increasing the amount of spectrum for voice communications will reduce interference among stations using voice communications," the FCC said in its R&O, "thereby benefiting all licensees, and that authorizing more spectrum for voice communications will more closely reflect licensees' operating preferences, thereby resulting in more efficient use of amateur service spectrum."

On 75 meters, Generals will be able to operate on phone from 3800-4000 kHz, an increase of 50 kHz. Advanced class licensees will be able to use voice from 3700-4000, an increase of 75 kHz, and Amateur Extras will be able to use voice from 3600 to 4000 kHz -- a generous increase of 150 kHz and substantially more spectrum than the League had requested for phone operation on 75. The ARRL had sought an additional 25 kHz. The FCC provided 150 kHz.

"Indeed, a number of commenters argue that the NPRM proposal to increase the amount of spectrum permitted for voice communications would still not meet the demand for voice communication spectrum in the HF bands, particularly in the 80 meter band," the FCC noted in the R&O.

On 40 meters, Advanced and Extra Class licensees will be able to use voice from 7125-7300 kHz, an increase of 25 kHz. General class licensees will be able to use voice on 7175-7300 kHz, an increase of 50 kHz.

On 15 meters, General class operators will have phone privileges on 21275-21450 kHz, an increase of 25 kHz.

To accommodate the remaining Novice and Tech Plus (or Technician with Element 1 credit) licensees on HF CW, the FCC affirmed its intention to permit these licensees to operate CW in the current General exclusive-CW allocations on 80, 40, 15 and 10 meters.

"In this connection, we note that the comments generally support maintaining HF frequency allocations for Novice and Technician Plus Class licensees stating, for example, that the Commission's proposal 'would simplify the band plans and ... also provide Novice and Technician Class licensees the opportunity to contact a greater number of other amateur operators,'" the FCC said. "Other commenters support the Commission's proposal on the grounds that it would 'increase utilization of the three bands involved' and 'generate and continue the effective and efficient use of valuable and priceless spectrum, generate experimentation, and further the advance of the industry.'"

Novice/Tech Plus licensees still may only run no more than 200 W PEP on those HF CW segments, but the Commission has done away with similar power limitations on HF segments for higher-class licensees, with the exception of the 200 W PEP power limitation already in place on 30 meters and the 50 W ERP restriction on 60 meters.

Vanity Call Sign Applications

The FCC has revised its vanity call sign rules to discourage the filing of multiple applications for the same call sign on the same day, and many commenters supported this concept. As implemented in §97.19(d)(1), if the FCC receives more than one application requesting a vanity call sign from a single applicant on the same receipt day, it will process only the first application entered into the Universal Licensing System. "Subsequent vanity call sign applications from that applicant with the same receipt date will not be accepted," the rule concludes.

Current Commission rules and procedures do not preclude applicants from filing multiple applications on the same day for the same vanity call sign, provided that they pay the filing fee for each application.

"We are persuaded that we should adopt rule amendments to discourage multiple vanity call sign applications," the FCC said in the R&O, "and we believe that a one-application-per-day-per-applicant rule, as requested by ARRL and others, will eliminate multiple applications requesting the same assignable call sign on the same day."

The FCC concedes that its one-application-per-day rule "will not prevent an individual from requesting multiple vanity call signs per se," because an applicant may request up to 25 call signs at a time.

When the FCC receives multiple valid applications from several individuals requesting the same vanity call sign as a first choice on the same day, it uses a lottery system to decide which application to process first.

RF Power Amplifiers

The R&O also affirms changes to Part 2 and Part 97 rules the FCC had proposed regarding the manufacture, marketing and sale of external RF power amplifiers. Current FCC rules prohibit commercial manufacturers from marketing RF power amplifiers capable of transmitting on the 12 and 10 meter bands. The rules were put in place as a way to prevent use of such amplifiers by CBers.

"We agree with ARRL that the requirements imposed on Amateur Radio operators by the current rule are unnecessary because, under the present rules, 'the equipment, once authorized, can be modified to transmit on all amateur service frequency allocations,' and that revising the rule 'will enhance use of the 12 and 10 meter amateur bands,'" the FCC said.

To prevent the use of Amateur Radio amplifiers by CBers, the FCC says it's still necessary to require manufacturers of Amateur Radio amplifiers design their products to avoid operation on the CB frequencies.

"We will, therefore, retain the requirement that amplifiers exhibit no amplification capability between 26 MHz and 28 MHz and require manufacturers to certify that amplifiers are not capable of amplification between 26 MHz and 28 MHz and are not easily modifiable to operate between 26 MHz and 28 MHz prior to the grant of an equipment certification," the FCC said.

The FCC also concluded that the definition of an external RF power amplifier kit is no longer needed in Part 97.

The Commission said it may deny certification of external radio frequency power amplifiers to prevent their use in services other than the Amateur Radio Service. Non-amateur licensees will not be permitted to construct or modify an RF amplifier capable of operation below 144 MHz without a grant of certification from the FCC. Radio amateurs may build or modify RF amplifiers for use at an Amateur Radio station without a certification grant, however.

Effective Date

The changes spelled out in the R&O go into effect 30 days after their publication in the Federal Register.


   



Page last modified: 12:33 PM, 13 Oct 2006 ET
Page author: awextra@arrl.org
Copyright © 2006, American Radio Relay League, Inc. All Rights Reserved.