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AA7BQ
11-13-2004, 04:28 PM
FCC RESUMES PROCESSING AMATEUR SERVICE APPLICATIONS

The FCC is back in the business of issuing Amateur Service license grants
after a shutdown of several days. The Commission's Wireless
Telecommunications Bureau (WTB) halted processing of Amateur Service
applications November 5 after a Universal Licensing System (ULS)
<http://wireless.fcc.gov/uls/> computer programming problem caused
application grants to go awry. Besides creating an application backlog,
the glitch resulted in the issuance of nearly 130 out-of-sequence Group D
(2x3) amateur call signs. Those erroneous grants now have been set aside,
and licensees have been issued new, in-sequence call signs.

"The Commission appears to have corrected the earlier erroneous call sign
assignments," ARRL Volunteer Examiner Coordinator Manager Bart Jahnke,
W9JJ, said November 11. "In the past 24 hours, the FCC has issued 1915
Amateur Service grants, some of which were corrections for the earlier
call sign anomalies." Jahnke says the rest of the grants represented the
application backlog and an initial run of some 600 applications for
license renewal, license modification, vanity call signs and
administrative updates the WTB did November 10 to check out the system.

WTB personnel auditing the results of that initial run apparently were
satisfied that the trouble wouldn't resurface and removed the "alert"
posted on the ULS Web site five days earlier to announce the suspension of
Amateur Service grants.

Jahnke says that each of the 130 or so licensees issued out-of-sequence
call signs will get a set-aside letter from the FCC via Certified Mail,
pointing out the assignment error and listing the corrected call sign. The
problem seems to have affected only new 2x3 call sign grants.

The 130 affected licensees can learn their new call signs by searching the
ULS database by licensee name or by FCC Registration Number (FRN), if they
know it. Records of the erroneous call sign grants will be maintained in
the ULS archive.

The difficulties began in late October, when a ULS software change shunted
all amateur applications from the nation's VECs into "Pending 2" status
and flagged them for manual review without any justification. Attempts to
correct the error only seemed to make things worse, however.

After regrouping, the WTB thought it had things under control by November
2, and it reprocessed all the applications in the queue. That time, the
system not only failed to grant some routine requests for new sequential
call signs but erroneously began issuing out-of-sequence Group D call
signs from brand-new call sign blocks in several districts. At that point,
the WTB stopped amateur processing altogether.

Despite the processing error, Jahnke emphasized, the anomalous Group D
call sign grants, which included numerous WQ-prefixes, were legal to use
on the air.


Material from The ARRL Letter may be republished or reproduced in whole or
in part in any form without additional permission. Credit must be given to
The ARRL Letter and The American Radio Relay League.

N4LI
11-13-2004, 09:44 PM
I am glad the FCC has been able to stop the hiccups in the system.

But, it's sort of a shame that the "odd" callsigns have been replaced. #They issued some interesting -- and certainly valid -- calls. #They would have been interesting conversation pieces for the recipients.

If I had been issued a call like WQ4AAA or WI7AAA, I might have been happy to have been given it. #Sure, those calls are always available as Vanity calls, but there is a certain cache about getting them through the system.

Oh, well... back to the KI4s.

Peter, N4LI

n0zu
11-13-2004, 10:07 PM
<span style='color:green'><span style='font-size:12pt;line-height:100%'>It is not as bad as when the goverment went on #strike years ago when I got my ticket

I had to waite #14 weeks before I got my ticket http://www.qrz.com/iB_html/non-cgi/emoticons/smile.gif</span></span>]

WS2L
11-14-2004, 02:20 PM
I remember sometime during the mid 1980's when I had decided to upgrade from General to Advanced the FCC had such a backlog of applications to go through that 14 weeks was pretty normal. In fact I had upgraded to Extra weeks before my Advanced license arrived in the mail, that was aggrivating.

I agree with N4LI though, it would be pretty cool to get issued an obviously way out of senquence callsign without having to go through the Vanity system. My original call was WD2AHD and now that I have pretty much put the major contests aside I have been pondering for a long time weather to try to get it back as a Vanity.

k3pd
11-16-2004, 03:16 AM
(November 15, 2004) Camp Hill, PA. 65 students are new hams licensed at Trinity High School with calls KB3LPT-KB3LQZ and KB3LRB-KB3LSG.

On Tuesday November 9, 2004 the Harrisburg Radio Amateurs Club, Inc. VE Team completed a Laurel VE Session at Trinity High School in Camp Hill, PA. The end result was that 65 new hams were licensed at Trinity. The FCC stopped issuing amateur radio licenses during the same week, so the students patiently awaited the assignment of their callsign a whole week until the FCC resumed issuing amateur radio licenses.

The entire Harrisburg Radio Amateurs Club (HRAC), Laurel VE Team consisting of N3YB, KA3PDQ, K3PD, AD3L, N3JQ, & AA3PI was in awe with the results of this years testing. To test 65 students in one day was a feat in itself, then to see 100% pass the exams was nothing short of a record milestone for our team.

HRAC Laurel VE Leader George Burkett, N3YB notes that "The session was held at the Trinity H.S. in Camp Hill, PA. Trinity is a two-time winner of the U.S. Dept of Education's Blue Ribbon Award and emphasizes the college preparatory curriculum."

Laurel VEC Diane Zimmerman, AA3OF who is also Chairman for the Foundation For Amateur Radio (FAR) Scholarship Committee notes that "What could be a more heartwarming story than one about a class of 65 and they all passed!"

Harrisburg Radio Amateurs Club President, Pete deVolpi, K3PD, notes that "It is imperative to the continuation of youth training and licensing get local club support with both physical and financial assistance to keep the program of free testing for youth going. Our club requires that each VE on our team be ARRL Certified, before we will allow them to become Laurel Certified. Impeccable VE credentials is of the highest importance to us because of the high volume of youth licensing we are processing. Last year we were pleased to see the Trinity examinees fill a complete block of FCC callsigns, this year they will fill over two complete blocks of callsigns."

I think that is a good test that the FCC system is now back in service.
http://www.qrz.com/iB_html/non-cgi/emoticons/smile.gif http://www.qrz.com/iB_html/non-cgi/emoticons/biggrin.gif

W6EZV
11-16-2004, 05:07 AM
Quote[/b] (n0zu @ Nov. 13 2004,15:07)]<span style='color:green'><span style='font-size:12pt;line-height:100%'>It is not as bad as when the goverment went on #strike years ago when I got my ticket

I had to waite #14 weeks before I got my ticket http://www.qrz.com/iB_html/non-cgi/emoticons/smile.gif</span></span>]
Please, sir...the government did not go on strike, it was shut down because Congress could not agree on a budget. The two concepts are not synonymous.

nf0a
11-16-2004, 11:50 PM
Quote[/b] (W6EZV @ Nov. 15 2004,22:07)]Quote[/b] (n0zu @ Nov. 13 2004,15:07)]<span style='color:green'><span style='font-size:12pt;line-height:100%'>It is not as bad as when the goverment went on #strike years ago when I got my ticket

I had to waite #14 weeks before I got my ticket http://www.qrz.com/iB_html/non-cgi/emoticons/smile.gif</span></span>]
Please, sir...the government did not go on strike, it was shut down because Congress could not agree on a budget. The two concepts are not synonymous.
"Synonomous concept" or not,who cares! it still took 14 weeks to process.... : http://www.qrz.com/iB_html/non-cgi/emoticons/tounge.gif