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FCC Regulations - Part 97 Amateur Radio Service
[Revised 2001.]
The rules and regulations in this Part are designed to
provide an amateur radio service having a fundamental
purpose as expressed in the following principles:
- (a) Recognition and enhancement of the value of the amateur
service to the public as a voluntary noncommercial
communication service, particularly with respect to
providing emergency communications.
(b) Continuation and extension of the amateur's proven
ability to contribute to the advancement of the radio art.
- (c) Encouragement and improvement of the amateur service
through rules which provide for advancing skills in both the
communications and technical phases of the art.
- (d) Expansion of the existing reservoir within the amateur
radio service of trained operators, technicians, and
electronics experts.
- (e) Continuation and extension of the amateur's unique
ability to enhance international goodwill.
- (a) The definitions of terms used in Part 97 are:
- (1) Amateur operator. A person holding a written
authorization to be the control operator of an amateur
station.
- (2) Amateur radio services. The amateur service, the
amateur-satellite service and the radio amateur civil
emergency service.
- (3) Amateur-satellite service. A radiocommunication service
using stations on Earth satellites for the same purpose as
those of the amateur service.
- (4) Amateur service. A radiocommunication service for the
purpose of self-training, intercommunication and technical
investigations carried out by amateurs, that is, duly
authorized persons interested in radio technique solely with
a personal aim and without pecuniary interest.
- (5) Amateur station. A station in an amateur radio service
consisting of the apparatus necessary for carrying on
radiocommunications.
- (6) Automatic control. The use of devices and procedures for
control of a station when it is transmitting so that
compliance with the FCC Rules is achieved without the
control operator being present at a control point.
- (7) Auxiliary station. An amateur station, other than in a
message forwarding system, that is transmitting
communications point-to-point within a system of cooperating
amateur stations.
- (8) Bandwidth. The width of a frequency band outside of
which the mean power of the transmitted signal is attenuated
at least 26 dB below the mean power of the transmitted
signal within the band.
- (9) Beacon. An amateur station transmitting communications
for the purposes of observation of propagation and reception
or other related experimental activities.
- (10) Broadcasting. Transmissions intended for reception by
the general public, either direct or relayed.
- (11) Call sign system. The method used to select a call sign
for amateur station over-the-air identification purposes.
The call sign systems are:
- (i) Sequential call sign system. The call sign is selected
by the FCC from an alphabetized list corresponding to the
geographic region of the licensee's mailing address and
operator class. The call sign is shown on the license. The
FCC will issue public announcements detailing the procedures
of the sequential call sign system.
- (ii) Vanity call sign system. The call sign is selected by
the FCC from a list of call signs requested by the licensee.
The call sign is shown on the license. The FCC will issue
public announcements detailing the procedures of the vanity
call sign system.
- (iii) Special event call sign system. The call sign is
selected by the station licensee from a list of call signs
shown on a common data base coordinated, maintained and
disseminated by the amateur station special event call sign
data base coordinators. The call sign must have the single
letter prefix K, N or W, followed by a single numeral
through 9, followed by a single letter A through W or Y or Z (for example K1A). The special event call sign is
substituted for the call sign shown on the station license
grant while the station is transmitting. The FCC will issue
public announcements detailing the procedures of the special
event call sign system.
- (12) Control operator. An amateur operator designated by the
licensee of a station to be responsible for the
transmissions from that station to assure compliance with
the FCC Rules.
- (13) Control point. The location at which the control
operator function is performed.
- (14) CSCE. Certificate of successful completion of an
examination.
- (15) CEPT radio-amateur license. A license issued by a
country belonging to the European Conference of Postal and
Telecommunications Administrations (CEPT) that has adopted
Recommendation T/R 61-01 (Nice 1985, revised in Paris 1992
and by correspondence August 1992)
- (16) Earth station. An amateur station located on, or within
50 km of the Earth's surface intended for communications
with space stations or with other Earth stations by means of
one or more other objects in space.
- (17) EIC. Engineer in Charge of an FCC Field Facility.
- (18) External RF Power Amplifier. A device capable of
increasing power output when used in conjunction with, but
not an integral part of, a transmitter.
- (19) External RF power amplifier kit. A number of electronic
parts, which, when assembled, is an external RF power
amplifier, even if additional parts are required to complete
assembly.
- (20) FAA. Federal Aviation Administration.
- (21) FCC. Federal Communications Commission.
- (22) Frequency coordinator. An entity, recognized in a local
or regional area by amateur operators whose stations are
eligible to be auxiliary or repeater stations, that
recommends transmit/receive channels and associated
operating and technical parameters for such stations in
order to avoid or minimize potential interference.
- (23) Harmful interference. Interference which endangers the
functioning of a radionavigation service or of other safety
services or seriously degrades, obstructs or repeatedly
interrupts a radiocommunication service operating in
accordance with the Radio Regulations.
- (24) Indicator. Words, letters or numerals appended to and
separated from the call sign during the station
identification.
- (25) Information bulletin. A message directed only to
amateur operators consisting solely of subject matter of
direct interest to the amateur service.
- (26) International Morse code. A dot-dash code as defined in
International Telegraph and Telephone Consultative Committee
Code.
- (27) IARP. International Amateur Radio Permit. A document
issued pursuant to the terms of the Inter-American
Convention on an International Amateur Radio Permit by a
country signatory to that Convention, other than the United
States. Montrouis, Haiti.
- (28) ITU. International Telecommunication Union.
- (29) Line A. Begins at Aberdeen, WA, running by great circle
arc to the intersection of 48° N, 120° W, thence along
parallel 48° N, to the intersection of 95° W, thence by
great circle arc through the southernmost point of Duluth,
MN, thence by great circle arc to 45° N, 85° W, thence
southward along meridian 85° W, to its intersection with
parallel 41° N, thence along parallel 41° N, to its
intersection with meridian 82° W, thence by great circle arc
through the southernmost point of Bangor, ME, thence by
great circle arc through the southernmost point of
Searsport, ME, at which point it terminates.
- (30) Local control. The use of a control operator who
directly manipulates the operating adjustments in the
station to achieve compliance with the FCC Rules.
- (31) Message forwarding system. A group of amateur stations
participating in a voluntary, cooperative, interactive
arrangement where communications are sent from the control
operator of an originating station to the control operator
of one or more destination stations by one or more
forwarding stations.
- (32) National Radio Quiet Zone. The area in Maryland,
Virginia and West Virginia bounded by 39° 15' N on the
north, 78° 30' W on the east, 37° 30' N on the south and 80°
30' W on the west.
- (33) Physician. For the purposes of this Part, a person who
is licensed to practice in a place where the amateur service
is regulated by the FCC, as either a Doctor of Medicine (MD)
or a Doctor of Osteopathy (DO).
- (34) Question pool. All current examination questions for a
designated written examination element.
- (35) Question set. A series of examination questions on a
given examination selected from the question pool.
- (36) Radio Regulations. The latest ITU Radio Regulations to
which the United States is a party.
- (37) RACES (radio amateur civil emergency service). A radio
service using amateur stations for civil defense
communications during periods of local, regional or national
civil emergencies.
- (38) Remote control. The use of a control operator who
indirectly manipulates the operating adjustments in the
station through a control link to achieve compliance with
the FCC Rules.
- (39) Repeater. An amateur station that simultaneously
retransmits the transmission of another amateur station on a
different channel or channels.
- (40) Space station. An amateur station located more than 50
km above the Earth's surface.
- (41) Space telemetry. A one-way transmission from a space
station of measurements made from the measuring instruments
in a spacecraft, including those relating to the functioning
of the spacecraft.
- (42) Spurious emission. An emission, on frequencies outside
the necessary bandwidth of a transmission, the level of
which may be reduced without affecting the information being
transmitted.
- (43) Telecommand. A one-way transmission to initiate,
modify, or terminate functions of a device at a distance.
- (44) Telecommand station. An amateur station that transmits
communications to initiate, modify, or terminate functions
of a space station.
- (45) Telemetry. A one-way transmission of measurements at a
distance from the measuring instrument.
- (46) Third-party communications. A message from the control
operator (first party) of an amateur station to another
amateur station control operator (second party) on behalf of
another person (third party).
- (47) ULS (Universal Licensing System). The consolidated
database, application filing system and processing system
for all Wireless Telecommunications Services.
- (48) VE. Volunteer examiner.
- (49) VEC. Volunteer-examiner coordinator.
- (b) The definitions of technical symbols used in this Part
are:
- (1) EHF (extremely high frequency). The frequency range 30-
300 GHz.
- (2) HF (high frequency). The frequency range 3-30 MHz.
- (3) Hz. Hertz.
- (4) m. Meters.
- (5) MF (medium frequency). The frequency range 300-3000 kHz.
- (6) PEP (peak envelope power). The average power supplied to
the antenna transmission line by a transmitter during one RF
cycle at the crest of the modulation envelope taken under
normal operating conditions.
- (7) RF. Radio frequency.
- (8) SHF (super-high frequency). The frequency range 3-30
GHz.
- (9) UHF (ultra-high frequency). The frequency range 300-3000
MHz.
- (10) VHF (very-high frequency). The frequency range 30-300
MHz.
- (11) W. Watts.
- (c) The following terms are used in this Part to indicate
emission types. Refer to §2.201 of the FCC Rules, Emission,
modulation and transmission characteristics, for information
on emission type designators.
- (1) CW. International Morse code telegraphy emissions having
designators with A, C, H, J or R as the first symbol; 1 as
the second symbol; A or B as the third symbol; and emissions
J2A and J2B.
- (2) Data. Telemetry, telecommand and computer communications
emissions having designators with A, C, D, F, G, H, J or R
as the first symbol; 1 as the second symbol; D as the third
symbol; and emission J2D. Only a digital code of a type
specifically authorized in this Part may be transmitted.
- (3) Image. Facsimile and television emissions having
designators with A, C, D, F, G, H, J or R as the first
symbol; 1, 2 or 3 as the second symbol; C or F as the third
symbol; and emissions having B as the first symbol; 7, 8 or
9 as the second symbol; W as the third symbol.
- (4) MCW. Tone-modulated international Morse code telegraphy
emissions having designators with A, C, D, F, G, H or R as
the first symbol; 2 as the second symbol; A or B as the
third symbol.
- (5) Phone. Speech and other sound emissions having
designators with A, C, D, F, G, H, J or R as the first
symbol; 1, 2 or 3 as the second symbol; E as the third
symbol. Also speech emissions having B as the first symbol;
7, 8 or 9 as the second symbol; E as the third symbol. MCW
for the purpose of performing the station identification
procedure, or for providing telegraphy practice interspersed
with speech. Incidental tones for the purpose of selective
calling or alerting or to control the level of a demodulated
signal may also be considered phone.
- (6) Pulse. Emissions having designators with K, L, M, P, Q,
V or W as the first symbol; 0, 1, 2, 3, 7, 8, 9 or X as the
second symbol; A, B, C, D, E, F, N, W or X as the third
symbol.
- (7) RTTY. Narrow-band direct-printing telegraphy emissions
having designators with A, C, D, F, G, H, J or R as the
first symbol; 1 as the second symbol; B as the third symbol;
and emission J2B. Only a digital code of a type specifically
authorized in this Part may be transmitted.
- (8) SS. Spread-spectrum emissions using bandwidth-expansion
modulation emissions having designators with A, C, D, F, G,
H, J or R as the first symbol; X as the second symbol; X as
the third symbol.
- (9) Test. Emissions containing no information having the
designators with N as the third symbol. Test does not
include pulse emissions with no information or modulation
unless pulse emissions are also authorized in the frequency
band.
- (a) The station apparatus must be under the physical control
of a person named in an amateur station license grant on the
ULS consolidated license database or a person authorized for
alien reciprocal operation by §97.107 of this part, before
the station may transmit on any amateur service frequency
from any place that is:
- (1) Within 50 km of the Earth's surface and at a place where
the amateur service is regulated by the FCC;
- (2) Within 50 km of the Earth's surface and aboard any
vessel or craft that is documented or registered in the
United States; or
- (3) More than 50 km above the Earth's surface aboard any
craft that is documented or registered in the United States.
- (b) The types of station license grants are:
- (1) An operator/primary station license grant. One, but only
one, operator/primary station license grant may be held by
any one person. The primary station license is granted
together with the amateur operator license. Except for a
representative of a foreign government, any person who
qualifies by examination is eligible to apply for an
operator/primary station license grant.
- (2) A club station license grant. A club station license
grant may be held only by the person who is the license
trustee designated by an officer of the club. The trustee
must be a person who holds an Amateur Extra, Advanced,
General, Technician Plus, or Technician operator license
grant. The club must be composed of at least four persons
and must have a name, a document of organization,
management, and a primary purpose devoted to amateur service
activities consistent with this part.
- (3) A military recreation station license grant. A military
recreation station license grant may be held only by the
person who is the license custodian designated by the
official in charge of the United States military
recreational premises where the station is situated. The
person must not be a representative of a foreign government.
The person need not hold an amateur operator license grant.
- (4) A RACES station license grant. A RACES station license
grant may be held only by the person who is the license
custodian designated by the official responsible for the
governmental agency served by that civil defense
organization. The custodian must be the civil defense
official responsible for coordination of all civil defense
activities in the area concerned. The custodian must not be
a representative of a foreign government. The custodian need
not hold an amateur operator license grant.
- (c) The person named in the station license grant or who is
authorized for alien reciprocal operation by §97.107 of this
Part may use, in accordance with the applicable rules of
this Part, the transmitting apparatus under the physical
control of the person at places where the amateur service is
regulated by the FCC.
- (d) A CEPT radio-amateur license is issued to the person by
the country of which the person is a citizen. The person
must not:
- (1) Be a resident alien or citizen of the United States,
regardless of any other citizenship also held;
- (2) Hold an FCC-issued amateur operator license nor
reciprocal permit for alien amateur licensee;
- (3) Be a prior amateur service licensee whose FCC-issued
license was revoked, suspended for less than the balance of
the license term and the suspension is still in effect,
suspended for the balance of the license term and
relicensing has not taken place, or surrendered for
cancellation following notice of revocation, suspension or
monetary forfeiture proceedings; or
- (4) Be the subject of a cease and desist order that relates
to amateur service operation and which is still in effect.
- (e) An IARP is issued to the person by the country of which
the person is a citizen. The person must not:
- (1) Be a resident alien or citizen of the United States,
regardless of any other citizenship also held;
- (2) Hold an FCC-issued amateur operator license nor
reciprocal permit for alien amateur licensee;
- (3) Be a prior amateur service licensee whose FCC-issued
license was revoked, suspended for less than the balance of
the license term and the suspension is still in effect,
suspended for the balance of the license term and
relicensing has not taken place, or surrendered for
cancellation following notice of revocation, suspension or
monetary forfeiture proceedings; or
- (4) Be the subject of a cease and desist order that relates
to amateur service operation and which is still in effect.
When transmitting, each amateur station must have a control
operator. The control operator must be a person:
- (a) For whom an amateur operator/primary station license
grant appears on the ULS consolidated licensee database, or
- (b) Who is authorized for alien reciprocal operation by §97.107 of this part
- (a) The classes of amateur operator license grants are:
Novice, Technician, Technician Plus (until such licenses
expire, a Technician Class license granted before February
14, 1991, is considered a Technician Plus Class license),
General, Advanced, and Amateur Extra. The person named in
the operator license grant is authorized to be the control
operator of an amateur station with the privileges
authorized to the operator class specified on the license
grant.
- (b) The person named in an operator license grant of Novice,
Technician, Technician Plus, General or Advanced Class, who
has properly submitted to the administering VEs a FCC Form
605 document requesting examination for an operator license
grant of a higher class, and who holds a CSCE indicating
that the person has completed the necessary examinations
within the previous 365 days, is authorized to exercise the
rights and privileges of the higher operator class until
final disposition of the application or until 365 days
following the passing of the examination, whichever comes
first.
- (a) The installation and operation of an amateur station on
a ship or aircraft must be approved by the master of the
ship or pilot in command of the aircraft.
- (b) The station must be separate from and independent of all
other radio apparatus installed on the ship or aircraft,
except a common antenna may be shared with a voluntary ship
radio installation. The station's transmissions must not
cause interference to any other apparatus installed on the
ship or aircraft.
- (c) The station must not constitute a hazard to the safety
of life or property. For a station aboard an aircraft, the
apparatus shall not be operated while the aircraft is
operating under Instrument Flight Rules, as defined by the
FAA, unless the station has been found to comply with all
applicable FAA Rules.
- (a) Before placing an amateur station on land of
environmental importance or that is significant in American
history, architecture or culture, the licensee may be
required to take certain actions prescribed by §§ 1.1305-
1.1319 of this chapter.
- (b) A station within 1600 m (1 mile) of an FCC monitoring
facility must protect that facility from harmful
interference. Failure to do so could result in imposition of
operating restrictions upon the amateur station by a
District Director pursuant to § 97.121 of this Part.
Geographical coordinates of the facilities that require
protection are listed in § 0.121(c) of this chapter.
- (c) Before causing or allowing an amateur station to
transmit from any place where the operation of the station
could cause human exposure to RF electromagnetic field
levels in excess of those allowed under § 1.1310 of this
chapter, the licensee is required to take certain actions.
- (1) The licensee must perform the routine RF environmental
evaluation prescribed by § 1.1307(b) of this chapter, if the
power of the licensee's station exceeds the limits given in
the following table:
Wavelength Band | Evaluation Required if Power* (watts) Exceeds: |
| MF | |
| 160m | 500 |
| HF | |
| 80m | 500 |
| 75m | 500 |
| 40m | 500 |
| 30m | 425 |
| 20m | 225 |
| 17m | 125 |
| 15m | 100 |
| 12m | 75 |
| 10m | 50 |
| VHF | |
| (all bands) | 50 |
| UHF | |
| 70cm | 70 |
| 33cm | 150 |
| 23cmv | 200 |
| 13cm | 250 |
| SHF | |
| (all bands) | 250 |
| EHF | |
| (all bands) | 250 |
| Repeater stations | |
| (all bands)
| non-building-mounted antennas: height above ground level to lowest point of
antenna < 10 m and power > 500 W ERP
building-mounted antennas: power > 500 W ERP
|
* Power = PEP input to antenna except, for repeater stations
only, power exclusion is based on ERP (effective radiated
power).
- (2) If the routine environmental evaluation indicates that
the RF electromagnetic fields could exceed the limits
contained in § 1.1310 of this chapter in accessible areas,
the licensee must take action to prevent human exposure to
such RF electromagnetic fields. Further information on
evaluating compliance with these limits can be found in the
FCC's OET Bulletin Number 65, "Evaluating Compliance with
FCC Guidelines for Human Exposure to Radiofrequency
Electromagnetic Fields."
- (a) Owners of certain antenna structures more than 60.96
meters (200 feet) above ground level at the site or located near or
at a public use airport must notify the Federal Aviation
Administration and register with the Commission as required
by Part 17 of this chapter.
- (b) Except as otherwise provided herein, a station antenna
structure may be erected at heights and dimensions
sufficient to accommodate amateur service communications.
[State and local regulation of a station antenna structure
must not preclude amateur service communications. Rather, it
must reasonably accommodate such communications and must
constitute the minimum practicable regulation to accomplish
the state or local authority's legitimate purpose. See PRB-
1, 101 FCC 2d 952 (1985) for details.]
- (a) Any qualified person is eligible to apply for a new
operator/primary station, club station or military
recreation station license grant. No new license grant will
be issued for a Novice, Technician Plus, or Advanced Class
operator/primary station or RACES station.
- (b) Each application for a new amateur service license grant
must be filed with the FCC as follows:
- (1) Each candidate for an amateur radio operator license
which requires the applicant to pass one or more examination
elements must present the administering VEs with all
information required by the rules prior to the examination.
The VEs may collect all necessary information in any manner
of their choosing, including creating their own forms.
- (2) For a new club or military recreation station license
grant, each applicant must present all information required
by the rules to an amateur radio organization having tax-
exempt status under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986 that provides voluntary, uncompensated
and unreimbursed services in providing club and military
recreation station call signs ("Club Station Call Sign
Administrator'') who must submit the information to the FCC
in an electronic batch file. The Club Station Call Sign
Administrator may collect the information required by these
rules in any manner of their choosing, including creating
their own forms. The Club Station Call Sign Administrator
must retain the applicants information for at least 15
months and make it available to the FCC upon request. The
FCC will issue public announcements listing the qualified
organizations that have completed a pilot autogrant batch
filing project and are authorized to serve as a Club Station
Call Sign Administrator.
- (c) No person shall obtain or attempt to obtain, or assist
another person to obtain or attempt to obtain, an amateur
service license grant by fraudulent means.
- (d) One unique call sign will be shown on the license grant
of each new primary, club and military recreation station.
The call sign will be selected by the sequential call sign
system.
- (a) The person named in an operator/primary station license
grant or in a club station license grant is eligible to make
application for modification of the license grant, or the
renewal thereof, to show a call sign selected by the vanity
call sign system. RACES and military recreation stations are
not eligible for a vanity call sign.
- (b) Each application for a modification of an
operator/primary or club station license grant, or the
renewal thereof, to show a call sign selected by the vanity
call sign system must be filed in accordance with §1.913 of
this chapter.
- (c) Unassigned call signs are available to the vanity call
sign system with the following exceptions:
- (1) A call sign shown on an expired license grant is not
available to the vanity call sign system for 2 years
following the expiration of the license.
- (2) A call sign shown on a surrendered, revoked, set aside,
canceled, or voided license grant is not available to the
vanity call sign system for 2 years following the date such
action is taken.
- (3) Except for an applicant who is the spouse, child,
grandchild, stepchild, parent, grandparent, stepparent,
brother, sister, stepbrother, stepsister, aunt, uncle,
niece, nephew, or in-law, and except for an applicant who is
a club station license trustee acting with the written
consent of at least one relative, as listed above, of a
person now deceased, the call sign shown on the license of
person now deceased is not available to the vanity call sign
system for 2 years following the person's death, or for 2
years following the expiration of the license grant,
whichever is sooner.
- (d) The vanity call sign requested by an applicant must be
selected from the group of call signs corresponding to the
same or lower class of operator license held by the
applicant as designated in the sequential call sign system.
- (1) The applicant must request that the call sign shown on
the license grant be vacated and provide a list of up to 25
call signs in order of preference.
- (2) The first assignable call sign from the applicant's list
will be shown on the license grant. When none of those call
signs are assignable, the call sign vacated by the applicant
will be shown on the license grant.
- (3) Vanity call signs will be selected from those call signs
assignable at the time the application is processed by the
FCC.
- (4) A call sign designated under the sequential call sign
system for Alaska, Hawaii, Caribbean Insular Areas, and
Pacific Insular areas will be assigned only to a primary or
club station whose licensee's mailing address is in the
corresponding state, commonwealth, or island. This
limitation does not apply to an applicant for the call sign
as the spouse, child, grandchild, stepchild, parent,
grandparent, stepparent, brother, sister, stepbrother,
stepsister, aunt, uncle, niece, nephew, or in-law, of the
former holder now deceased.
- (a) A person holding a valid amateur station license grant:
- (1) Must apply to the FCC for a modification of the license
grant as necessary to show the correct mailing address,
licensee name, club name, license trustee name or license
custodian name in accordance with §1.913 of this chapter.
For a club, military recreation or RACES station license
grant, it must be presented in document form to a Club
Station Call Sign Administrator who must submit the
information thereon to the FCC in an electronic batch file.
The Club Station Call Sign Administrator must retain the
collected information for at least 15 months and make it
available to the FCC upon request.
- (2) May apply to the FCC for a modification of the
operator/primary station license grant to show a higher
operator class. Applicants must present the administering
VEs with all information required by the rules prior to the
examination. The VEs may collect all necessary information
in any manner of their choosing, including creating their
own forms.
- (3) May apply to the FCC for renewal of the license grant
for another term in accordance with §1.913 of this chapter.
Application for renewal of a Technician Plus Class
operator/primary station license will be processed as an
application for renewal of a Technician Class
operator/primary station license.
(i) For a station license grant showing a call sign
obtained through the vanity call sign system, the
application must be filed in accordance with §97.19 of this
Part in order to have the vanity call sign reassigned to the
station.
- (ii) For a primary station license grant showing a call sign
obtained through the sequential call sign system, and for a
primary station license grant showing a call sign obtained
through the vanity call sign system but whose grantee does
not want to have the vanity call sign reassigned to the
station, the application must be filed with the FCC in
accordance with §1.913 of this chapter. When the application
has been received by the FCC on or before the license
expiration date, the license operating authority is
continued until the final disposition of the application.
- (iii) For a club station or military recreation station
license grant showing a call sign obtained through the
sequential call sign system, and for a club or military
recreation station license grant showing a call sign
obtained through the vanity call sign system but whose
grantee does not want to have the vanity call sign
reassigned to the station, the application must be presented
in document form to a Club Station Call Sign Administrator
who must submit the information thereon to the FCC in an
electronic batch file. The Club Station Call Sign
Administrator must retain the collected information for at
least 15 months and make it available to the FCC upon
request. RACES station license grants will not be renewed.
- (b) A person whose amateur station license grant has expired
may apply to the FCC for renewal of the license grant for
another term during a 2 year filing grace period. The
application must be received at the address specified above
prior to the end of the grace period. Unless and until the
license grant is renewed, no privileges in this Part are
conferred.
- (c) A call sign obtained under the sequential or vanity call
sign system will be reassigned to the station upon renewal
or modification of a station license.
Each license grant must show the grantee's correct name and
mailing address. The mailing address must be in an area
where the amateur service is regulated by the FCC and where
the grantee can receive mail delivery by the United States
Postal Service. Revocation of the station license or
suspension of the operator license may result when
correspondence from the FCC is returned as undeliverable
because the grantee failed to provide the correct mailing
address.
An amateur service license is normally granted for a 10-year
term.
- (a) The FCC may modify a station license grant, either for a
limited time or for the duration of the term thereof, if it
determines:
- (1) That such action will promote the public interest,
convenience, and necessity; or
- (2) That such action will promote fuller compliance with the
provisions of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, or
of any treaty ratified by the United States.
- (b) When the FCC makes such a determination, it will issue
an order of modification. The order will not become final
until the licensee is notified in writing of the proposed
action and the grounds and reasons therefor. The licensee
will be given reasonable opportunity of no less than 30 days
to protest the modification; except that, where safety of
life or property is involved, a shorter period of notice may
be provided. Any protest by a licensee of an FCC order of
modification will be handled in accordance with the
provisions of 47 U.S.C. §316.
Each grantee whose amateur station license grant document is
lost, mutilated or destroyed may apply to the FCC for a
replacement in accordance with §1.913 of this chapter.
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