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FCC Regulations - Part 97 Amateur Radio Service
[Effective May 3, 2006.]
Subpart B Station Operation Standards
- (a) In all respects not specifically covered by FCC Rules each amateur station must be
operated in accordance with good engineering and good amateur practice.
- (b) Each station licensee and each control operator must cooperate in selecting
transmitting channels and in making the most effective use of the amateur service
frequencies. No frequency will be assigned for the exclusive use of any station.
- (c) At all times and on all frequencies, each control operator must give priority to
stations providing emergency communications, except to stations transmitting
communications for training drills and tests in RACES.
- (d) No amateur operator shall willfully or maliciously interfere with or cause
interference to any radio communication or signal.
- (a) The station licensee is responsible for the proper operation of the station in
accordance with the FCC Rules. When the control operator is a different amateur
operator than the station licensee, both persons are equally responsible for proper
operation of the station.
- (b) The station licensee must designate the station control operator. The FCC will
presume that the station licensee is also the control operator, unless documentation
to the contrary is in the station records.
- (c) The station licensee must make the station and the station records available for
inspection upon request by an FCC representative. When deemed necessary by an
EIC to assure compliance with FCC Rules, the station licensee must maintain a
record of station operations containing such items of information as the EIC may
require in accord with §0.314(x) of the FCC Rules.
- (a) The control operator must ensure the immediate proper operation of the station,
regardless of the type of control.
- (b) A station may only be operated in the manner and to the extent permitted by the
privileges authorized for the class of operator license held by the control operator.
A non-citizen of the United States (“alien”) holding an
amateur service authorization granted by the alien’s government is authorized to be the
control operator of an amateur station located at places where the amateur service is
regulated by the FCC,
provided there is in effect a multilateral or bilateral reciprocal operating arrangement, to
which the United States and the alien’s government are parties, for amateur service
operation on a reciprocal basis. The FCC will issue public announcements listing the
countries with which the United States has such an arrangement. No citizen of the United
States or person holding an FCC amateur operator/primary station license grant is eligible
for the reciprocal operating authority granted by this section. The privileges granted to a
control operator under this authorization are:
- (a) For an amateur service license granted by the Government of Canada:
- (1) The terms of the Convention Between the United States and Canada (TIAS No.
2508) Relating to the Operation by Citizens of Either Country of Certain Radio
Equipment or Stations in the Other Country;
- (2) The operating terms and conditions of the amateur service license issued by the
Government of Canada; and
- (3) The applicable rules of this part, but not to exceed the control operator
privileges of an FCC-granted Amateur Extra Class operator license.
- (b) For an amateur service license granted by any country, other than Canada, with
which the United States has a multilateral or bilateral agreement:
- (1) The terms of the agreement between the alien’s government and the United
States;
- (2) The operating terms and conditions of the amateur service license granted by the
alien’s government;
- (3) The applicable rules of this part, but not to exceed the control operator
privileges of an FCC-granted Amateur Extra Class operator license; and
- (c) At any time the FCC may, in its discretion, modify, suspend or cancel the reciprocal
operating authority granted to any person by this section.
- (a) Each amateur station must have at least one control point.
- (b) When a station is being locally controlled, the control operator must be at the
control point. Any station may be locally controlled.
- (c) When a station is being remotely controlled, the control operator must be at the
control point. Any station may be remotely controlled.
- (d) When a station is being automatically controlled, the control operator need not be at
the control point. Only stations specifically designated elsewhere in this Part may
be automatically controlled. Automatic control must cease upon notification by a
District Director that the station is transmitting improperly or causing harmful
interference to other stations. Automatic control must not be resumed without prior
approval of the District Director.
- (a) An amateur station may transmit the following types of two-way
communications:
- (1) Transmissions necessary to exchange messages with other stations in the
amateur service, except those in any country whose administration has notified
the ITU that it objects to such communications. The FCC will issue public
notices of current arrangements for international communications;
- (2) Transmissions necessary to exchange messages with a station in another FCC-
regulated service while providing emergency communications;
- (3) Transmissions necessary to exchange messages with a United States government
station, necessary to providing communications in RACES; and
- (4) Transmissions necessary to exchange messages with a station in a service not
regulated by the FCC, but authorized by the FCC to communicate with amateur
stations. An amateur station may exchange messages with a participating United
States military station during an Armed Forces Day Communications Test.
- (b) In addition to one-way transmissions specifically authorized elsewhere in this Part, an amateur
station may transmit the following types of one-way communications:
- (1) Brief transmissions necessary to make adjustments to the station;
- (2) Brief transmissions necessary to establishing two-way communications with
other stations;
- (3) Telecommand;
- (4) Transmissions necessary to providing emergency communications;
- (5) Transmissions necessary to assisting persons learning, or improving proficiency
in, the international Morse code;
- (6) Transmissions necessary to disseminate information bulletins;
- (7) Transmissions of telemetry.
- (a) No amateur station shall transmit:
- (1) Communications specifically prohibited elsewhere in this Part;
- (2) Communications for hire or for material compensation, direct or indirect, paid
or promised, except as otherwise provided in these rules;
- (3) Communications in which the station licensee or control operator has a
pecuniary interest, including communications on behalf of an employer.
Amateur operators may, however, notify other amateur operators of the
availability for sale or trade of
apparatus normally used in an amateur station, provided that
such activity is not conducted on a regular basis;
- (4) Music using a phone emission except as specifically provided elsewhere in this
section; communications intended to facilitate a criminal act; messages encoded
for the purpose of obscuring their meaning, except as otherwise provided herein;
obscene or indecent words or language; or false or deceptive messages, signals
or identification;
- (5) Communications, on a regular basis, which could reasonably be furnished
alternatively through other radio services.
- (b) An amateur station shall not engage in any form of broadcasting, nor may an
amateur station transmit one-way communications except as specifically provided in
these rules; nor shall an amateur station engage in any activity related to program
production or news gathering for broadcasting purposes, except that communications
directly related to the immediate safety of human life or the protection of property
may be provided by amateur stations to broadcasters for dissemination to the public
where no other means of communication is reasonably available before or at the
time of the event.
- (c) A control operator may accept compensation as an incident of a teaching position
during periods of time when an amateur station is used by that teacher as a part of
classroom instruction at an educational institution.
- (d) The control operator of a club station may accept compensation for the periods of
time when the station is transmitting telegraphy practice or information bulletins,
provided that the station transmits such telegraphy practice and bulletins for at least
40 hours per week; schedules operations on at least six amateur service MF and HF
bands using reasonable measures to maximize coverage; where the schedule of
normal operating times and frequencies is published at least 30 days in advance of
the actual transmissions; and where the control operator does not accept any direct
or indirect compensation for any other service as a control operator.
- (e) No station shall retransmit programs or signals emanating from any type of radio
station other than an amateur station, except propagation and weather forecast
information intended for use by the general public and originated from United States
Government stations and communications, including incidental music, originating
on United States Government frequencies between a space shuttle and its associated
Earth stations. Prior approval for shuttle retransmissions must be obtained from the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Such retransmissions must be for
the exclusive use of amateur operators. Propagation, weather forecasts, and shuttle
retransmissions may not be conducted on a regular basis, but only occasionally, as
an incident of normal amateur radio communications.
- (f) No amateur station, except an auxiliary, repeater or space station, may
automatically retransmit the radio signals of other amateur stations.
- (a) An amateur station may transmit messages for a third party to:
- (1) Any station within the jurisdiction of the United States.
- (2) Any station within the jurisdiction of any foreign government when transmitting
emergency or disaster relief communications and any station within the
jurisdiction of any foreign government whose administration has made
arrangements with the United States to allow amateur stations to be used for
transmitting international communications on behalf of third parties. No station
shall transmit messages other than emergency or disaster relief communications
for a third party to any station within the jurisdiction of any foreign government
whose administration has not made such an arrangement. This prohibition does
not apply to a message for any third party who is eligible to be a control
operator of the station.
- (b) The third party may participate in stating the message where:
- (1) The control operator is present at the control point and is continuously
monitoring and supervising the third party’s participation; and
- (2) The third party is not a prior amateur service licensee whose 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. The third party
may not be the subject of a cease and desist order which relates to amateur service operation
and which is still in effect.
- (c) At the end of an exchange of international third party communications, the station
must also transmit in the station identification procedure the call sign of the station
with which a third party message was exchanged.
Transmissions to a different country, where permitted, shall be shall be limited to
communications incidental to the purposes of the amateur service and to remarks of
a personal character.
- (a) Each amateur station, except a space station or telecommand station, must transmit
its assigned call sign on its transmitting channel at the end of each communication,
and at least every ten minutes during a communication, for the purpose of clearly
making the source of the transmissions from the station known to those receiving
the transmissions. No station may transmit unidentified communications or signals,
or transmit as the station call sign, any call sign not authorized to the station.
- (b) The call sign must be transmitted with an emission authorized for the transmitting
channel in one of the following ways:
- (1) By a CW emission. When keyed by an automatic device used only for identification, the speed
must not exceed 20 words per minute;
- (2) By a phone emission in the English language. Use of a standard phonetic
alphabet as an aid for correct station identification is encouraged;
- (3) By a RTTY emission using a specified digital code when all or part of the
communications are transmitted by a RTTY or data emission;
- (4) By an image emission conforming to the applicable transmission standards,
either color or monochrome, of §73.682(a) of the FCC Rules when all or part of
the communications are transmitted in the same image emission.
- (c) One or more indicators may be included with the call sign. Each indicator must be
separated from the call sign by the slant mark (/) or by any suitable word that
denotes the slant mark. If an indicator is self-assigned, it must be included before,
after, or both before and after, the call sign. No self-assigned indicator may conflict
with any other indicator specified by the FCC Rules or with any prefix assigned to
another country.
- (d) When transmitting in conjunction with an event of special significance, a station
may substitute for its assigned call sign a special event call sign as shown for that
station for that period of time on the common data base coordinated, maintained and
disseminated by the special event call sign data base coordinators. Additionally, the
station must transmit its assigned call sign at least once per hour during such
transmissions.
- (e) When the operator license class held by the control operator exceeds that of the
station licensee, an indicator consisting of the call sign assigned to the control
operator’s station must be included after the call sign.
- (f) When the control operator who is exercising the rights and privileges authorized by
§97.9(b) of this Part, an indicator must be included after the call sign as follows:
- (1) For a control operator who has requested a license modification from Novice to
Technician Class: KT;
- (2) For a control operator who has requested a license modification from Novice,
Technician or Technician Plus Class to General Class: AG;
- (3) For a control operator who has requested a license modification from Novice,
Technician, Technician Plus, General, or
Advanced Class operator to Amateur Extra Class: AE.
- (g) When the station is transmitting under the authority of §97.107 of this part, an
indicator consisting of the appropriate letter-numeral designating the station
location must be included before the call sign that was issued to the station by the
country granting the license. For an amateur service license granted by the
Government of Canada, however, the indicator must be included after the call sign.
At least once during each intercommunication, the identification announcement
must include the geographical location as nearly as possible by city and state,
commonwealth or possession.
- (a) If the operation of an amateur station causes general interference to the reception of
transmissions from stations operating in the domestic broadcast service when
receivers of good engineering design, including adequate selectivity characteristics,
are used to receive such transmissions, and this fact is made known to the amateur
station licensee, the amateur station shall not be operated during the hours from 8
p.m. to 10:30 p.m., local time, and on Sunday for the additional period from 10:30
a.m. until 1 p.m., local time, upon the frequency or frequencies used when the
interference is created.
- (b) In general, such steps as may be necessary to minimize interference to stations
operating in other services may be required after investigation by the FCC.
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