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FCC SETS ASIDE K1MAN'S LICENSE RENEWAL
FCC SETS ASIDE K1MAN'S LICENSE RENEWAL
The FCC's Wireless Telecommunications Bureau (WTB) has set aside its grant of license renewal to Glenn A. Baxter, K1MAN, of Belgrade Lakes, Maine. According to correspondence the FCC released recently, the WTB took the action soon after it had granted Baxter's renewal application, received on July 22 via the W5YI VEC. "The application has been set aside for enforcement review," Associate Chief of Licensing Operations Tracy Simmons told Baxter in a July 25 letter from the FCC's Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, office. Simmons said the WTB took the action in accordance with 47 CFR §1.113(a). That section says: "Within 30 days after public notice has been given of any action taken pursuant to delegated authority, the person, panel, or board taking the action may modify or set it aside on its own motion." Baxter's Amateur Radio license is set to expire October 17, 2005. In early June, the FCC issued a Notice of Apparent Liability for Forfeiture (NAL) proposing to fine Baxter $21,000. In the NAL, the FCC alleges that Baxter has violated several sections of the Part 97 Amateur Service Rules. The list includes rules proscribing interference with ongoing communications, transmitting communications in which he has a pecuniary interest, failure to provide information the FCC requested, engaging in broadcasting, and failure to exercise control of his station. The FCC has not yet affirmed the NAL by issuing a Forfeiture Order. Baxter has insisted in correspondence with the Commission that he has operated his station in full compliance with FCC rules and regulations. On July 31, Baxter responded to Simmons' setaside notification to assert that the FCC has "intentionally violated my constitutional rights of due process" by not renewing his timely filed renewal application. Baxter said it's his "legal position" that he may continue to operate K1MAN "indefinitely," until a final legal determination in the case. |
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"According to the United States Federal Communications Commission, the
agency that regulates radio and telecommunications in that country, amateur radio serves the following purposes: a.. Promotion and enhancement of the Amateur Radio Service as a voluntary noncommercial public communications service. b.. Continual advancement of the art of radio communication. c.. Expansion of the reservoir of trained radio operators and electronic experts. d.. Enhancement of international goodwill at the grass roots level." |
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