Subj : ARRL Advocates for Radio Amateurs as FCC Proposes Changes to 60-Meter Band
To : QST
From : ARRL de WD1CKS
Date : Fri Apr 28 2023 02:17 pm
04/28/2023
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is seeking comments about changing
the secondary allocation available to radio amateurs on 60 meters. The FCC
issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) on April 21, 2023, that deals
with the band. In a prior petition, ARRL The National Association for Amateur
Radio[1]� urged protecting the existing use of the band by amateurs when adding
a new allocation adopted internationally.
Currently, radio amateurs in the US have access to five discrete channels on a
secondary basis: 5332 kHz, 5348 kHz, 5358.5 kHz, 5373 kHz, and 5405 kHz. Users
of these channels are limited to an effective radiated power (ERP) of 100 W
PEP.
The FCC proposes to allocate 15 kHz of contiguous bandwidth between 5351.5 -
5366.5 kHz on a secondary basis with a maximum power of 15 W EIRP (equivalent
to 9.15 W ERP). This allocation was adopted at the 2015 World
Radiocommunication Conference (WRC-15).
The federal government is the primary user of the 5 MHz spectrum. The
government's manager of spectrum use, the National Telecommunications and
Information Administration (NTIA), has expressed support for implementing the
allocation as adopted at WRC-15. Doing so would result in amateurs losing
access to four of the five discrete channels, and power limits would be reduced
from 100 W ERP to 9.15 W ERP. However, it would provide access to a new
contiguous 15 kHz band that includes one of the current five channels.
In 2017, ARRL petitioned the FCC[2] to keep the four 60-meter channels that
fall outside the new band, as well as the current operating rules, including
the 100 W PEP ERP limit.
The ARRL petition stated, "Such implementation will allow radio amateurs
engaged in emergency and disaster relief communications, and especially those
between the United States and the Caribbean basin, to more reliably, more
flexibly, and more capably conduct those communications."
ARRL said that years of amateur radio experience using the five discrete
channels have shown that amateurs can coexist with primary users at 5 MHz while
complying with the regulations established for their use. The petition also
stated, "Neither ARRL, nor, apparently, NTIA, is aware of a single reported
instance of interference to a federal user by a radio amateur operating at 5
MHz to date."
In the NPRM[3], the FCC recognizes that Canada has already adopted 60-meter
allocations and related rules that align with those proposed by ARRL. The
Commission wrote, "Finally, we note that Canada has essentially implemented the
same rules as ARRL has requested."
The FCC proposed to allocate the 15 kHz bandwidth, but stopped short of making
a proposal on whether the existing channels should remain allocated to amateur
radio and what the power limitations should be. They requested comments on
their proposal and the related channel and power issues.
Comments will be due 60 days after the NPRM is published in the Federal
Register, which is expected within the next two weeks.
[1]
http://www.arrl.org/
[2]
http://www.arrl.org/files/file/Regulatory/Petition20Rule20520FINAL2012,%202017.pdf
[3]
https://www.fcc.gov/document/fcc-implements-and-proposes-final-acts-wrc-19-and-wrc-15
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