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From: Alun L. Palmer on Aug 31, 3:37 am
" wrote in oups.com: NPRM 05-143, the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking that would eliminate morse code test element 1 from all amateur radio license examinations was supposedly released on 15 July 2005. It is marked "approved" as of 19 July 2005. A scanned copy of that NPRM was marked "received" by date stamp as 20 July 2005 and introduced to WT Docket 05-235 supposedly on 15 July 2005...but did not appear to anyone accessing the ECFS until 21 July 2005. NPRM 05-143 is clearly marked as to the Comment Perior being "60 Days after published in the Federal Register." That's on the first page and page 25 of that 30-page NPRM document. One problem: NPRM 05-143 HAS NOT BEEN PUBLISHED IN THE FEDERAL REGISTER AS OF THE MORNING OF 30 AUGUST 2005! A month and a half has elapsed since the middle of July, 1962 Comments have been filed on WT Docket 05-235 as of 29 August 2005. snip I doubt if the League have that much pull, although they probably would if they could. Someone certainly got s25 kept off the ITU docket for years, otherwise the international code test requirement would have gone in 1993 or thereabouts, so sandbagging has certainly been a part of this. Hello Alun, did I call it or what? smirk :- The day after I posted that, Cross and company got the Federal Register NOTICE in...six weeks after the NPRM was released. Six weeks and 1968 filed Comments later... I don't believe in coincidences that "justify" some rather obvious hanky-panky going on behind the scenes that us ordinary folks can't see. Us ordinary folk don't have communications-law firms on retainer nor can we generally afford Lobbyist firms to "represent" us in DC. One thing important in the Federal Register notice that is NOT in the body of text of NPRM 05-143: SPECIFIC DATES for the end of the Comment period and for the end of Reply to Comments period. 31 October 2005 for end of Comments, 14 November 2005 for end of Reply to Comments. Had the FR notice been timely, the end of Comments would have been 15th or 16th September 2005, end of Reply to Comments about 30 September for the "60/75 day" normal sequencing. It was SIX WEEKS LATE. "Human error?" Highly unlikely. Specific scheduling, quite likely. A rather small group of staff is going to be stuck with sorting through the "old" Comments (over 1800 unambiguous ones) and whatever comes in from 31 August 2005 until the end of October. The poor schlumphs who have to wade through all the documents will have at least until year-end Holidays to complete their task. Will we get a "reading" on what the FCC is going to do with those 1800+ unambiguous filings that came in prior to 31 August? We don't know yet. The Supreme Amateur Court of Newington hasn't issued a Ruling as of this morning of the 31st of August. We must await their Final Disposition or whatever. ["oyez, oyez"] --- As to what went on in DC and with the IARU and WARCs/WRCs prior to WRC-03 and revision of S25, all we have is PARTIAL INFORMATION. The U.S. government wasn't fully on-line with archives in 1993 (Internet went public in 1991). It's difficult for us in farther states to get to the big Reading Room at 445 12th St., SW, and see all the various correspondence that went on in regards to U.S. amateur radio regulations from two decades ago. We get second-hand "information" from "insiders" (such as Miccolis, and now Stevenson) who "know" what went on. The only REAL insider is Phil Kane who actually worked IN the FCC...but he hasn't been talking much lately. Kane left the FCC some time ago. Our easiest-to-get sources of old information are the periodicals of the 1980s (ink on real paper isn't ephemeral, is hard to change all after the many press runs of 50 thousand+ copies each done years ago). The "movement" to end code testing began to be more earnest about the mid-1980s, just barely moving then...but enough to come to the attention of the FCC. Witness the wordings in the NPRM and final R&O of 1990 that created the no-code Technician class license in 1991. In 1990 the FCC stated publicly that it did not consider the morse code test as an indicator of the qualifications of any amateur to be granted a license. The FCC did not make a sudden decision on that; it already had some documentation on hand from citizens by then (that is in their Reading Room archives). Gleanings from paper periodicals internationally show to me that the IARU was split several ways on code testing until about 2000. [others' take on that will vary no doubt] From about then the no-code-test movement gathered speed, pushed first by New Zealanders and then spreading with the speed and efficiency of the Internet. By 2001 it was unmistably for changing and revising S25 of the international regulations, not just for code testing but to modernize them entire. That was done in 2003. Since then up to 23 administrations have either eliminated the code test or made the code test an alternate qualifier (not an absolute) for below-30-MHz privileges. Up to June 2003 the ARRL had NOT budged on its adamant stand in favor of code testing. Since the FCC denied the ARRL's Petition (RM-10867 of 18 Mar 04) the League hasn't said much. Their in-house seer and editorializer, executive president Dave Sumner, seems to have lost his pen somewhere on that. They seem to be building a case of invading something to find those WMDs though (Weapons of Morse Destruction), perhaps laying in body bags and such? This is building to be a Fight To The Death over Ham Radio As The League Knows It. A Jihad in the making... :-) |
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