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In article . net, "Bill Sohl"
writes: Did US rules change before Senate ratification? Hey Jim (N2EY), got your history of the FCC and ham rules handy? I'll have to go look that one up for exact dates, but here's a general scheme of what happened: At WARC-79, the allocation table was changed to allow amateurs access to new bands at 30, 17 and 12 meters. 30 meters was shared; I'll have to look up 12 and 17. But the changes did not take place instantly, because the then-current users of those bands had to be given time to move elsewhere, and the various governments had to be given time to amend their rules. Most of all, however, signatory countries did not *have to* let their hams use those bands, nor was there any specific allocation of modes, power levels, license classes, etc. Some countries moved quickly; the US less so. I recall ARRL repeatedly petitioning FCC to open at least some of the bands (12 meters?) because *years* had passed and some other countries had full access. I don't recall that Senate ratification had anyhting to do with it. With WRC-2003, the situation is somewhat different. Changes to S25.5 do not affect users of other services directly (nobody has to move). The change to the Morse Code test requirement is straightforward and simple: Before WRC-2003, the treaty itself required code testing for an HF ham license, and FCC interpretation backed that up and referenced it as a prime and later only reason to keep Element 1. After WRC-2003, the treaty requires code testing policy to be set by each signatory country. Each country's code-test policy can be anything that country wants it to be. No requirement to change anything, nor to retain anything. Yet so far, the US rules are the same as they were on April 16, 2000 - four-and-a-half years ago almost exactly. Obviously this isn't a high priority to FCC. What's odd is that in the R&O for 98-143, FCC specifically cited the treaty requirement as the one-and-only reason they kept Element 1. Yet they also refused the idea of a sunset clause that would eliminate Element 1 if the treaty requirement vanished. 15 months ago, I thought that Senate ratification would be an issue, but that's obviously not the case. I also thought FCC would just dump Element 1 without the whole NPRM cycle, but that's obviously not the case either. (And I'm gald to have been mistaken!) Back in 2003, ARRL predicted two years (2005) before we'd see rules changes resulting from WRC-2003. Now ARRL says 2006 - three years. So far, most of us who entered a date in The Pool have seen the date come and go with no action. So what's going on? Some speculations (in order of wildness): 1) Perhaps FCC is simply doing the NPRM cycle. With over a dozen proposals out there, thousands of comments and reply comments, and limited resources, it simply takes FCC a while to decide what to do. 2) Perhaps FCC has looked at the comments, seen how much widespread support Element 1 has, and is not about to do anything at all. 3) Perhaps the whole issue is simply not a big deal to the FCC. The existing test, complete with all the authorized accomodations, just isn't that hard for most people to pass. (Remember that VEs can do all kinds of things in the line of accomodation, even replacing the receiving test with a sending test). 4) Perhaps, as Mike suggests, this administration isn't big on paying attention to treaties. Look at the flip-flop on support for the Kyoto treaty back in 2001. 5) Perhaps FCC is more focused on BPL, Howard Stern and Janet Jackson than on requirements for a ham license. (Devil's Advocate mode = ON) 6) Perhaps FCC has bought the claim that the code test reduces growth in the ARS, and is keeping it in place for just that reason (!) After all, the vast majority of opponents to BPL have been hams and ham organizations. Why do anything to increase our numbers - particularly on HF? (Devil's Advocate mode = OFF) Take your pick! 73 de Jim, N2EY |
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