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The ARRL Letter, September 9, 2021

Discussion in 'Amateur Radio News' started by WW1ME, Sep 9, 2021.

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  1. WW1ME

    WW1ME Ham Member QRZ Page

    The ARRL Letter
    September 9, 2021

    Rick Lindquist, WW1ME, Editor

    [Note: Clicking on the story links below will take you to the news article as it appears in The ARRL Letter on the ARRL website.]


    20th Anniversary of 9/11


    ARRL The national association for Amateur Radio® honors the memories of those who died in the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, at the World Trade Center, the Pentagon, and in Shanksville, Pennsylvania, including these radio amateurs:

    Steven A. “Steve” Jacobson, N2SJ, 53, of New York City (WTC); William V. “Bill” Steckman, WA2ACW, 56, of West Hempstead, New York (WTC); Michael G. Jacobs, AA1GO, 54, an ARRL member from Danbury, Connecticut (WTC); Lt. Robert D. “Bob” Cirri, Sr., KA2OTD, 39, an ARRL member from Nutley, New Jersey and Port Authority police officer who was helping to evacuate workers from the building when it collapsed; William R. “Bill” Ruth, W3HRD, 57, of Mt. Airy, Maryland (Pentagon); Gerard J. “Rod” Coppola, KA2KET, 46, of New York City (WTC); and Winston A. Grant, KA2DRF, 59, of West Hempstead, New York (WTC). An assembly of articles, stories, and messages from the November 2001 issue of QST magazine is available at tinyurl.com/ARRL-QST-9-11.

    Several special events will commemorate the attacks of September 11, 2001, and honor the victims.

    • Saturday, September 11, 1200 – 2359 UTC, the Somerset County Amateur Radio Club and Nittany Amateur Radio Club will activate N3M. Frequencies: 14.293, 7.293, and 3.993 MHz. QSL c/o Nittany Amateur Radio Club, P.O. Box 614, State College, PA 16801.
    • Saturday, September 11, 1400 – 1900 UTC, the Harrisburg (PA) Radio Amateurs Club (HRAC) will operate W3M. Frequencies: 7.265 and 14.265 MHz. For a certificate, visit www.w3uu.org/w3mqsl/.
    • Saturday, September 11, 1200 – 2400 UTC, the Pentagon Amateur Radio Club (PARC) will sponsor special event station K4P. Operation will be in the General-class portions of 80, 40, 20, 15, and 10 meters on CW and RTTY. There will be a special QSL card available via PARC, P.O. Box 2322, Arlington, VA 22202. For more information, contact Gary Sessums, KC5QCN.
    • Saturday, September 11, 1400 UTC – 2400 UTC, members of the Great South Bay Amateur Radio Club (GSBARC), and the Northeast Wireless Radio Club will activate special event call sign W2T.
    • Through September 13, 1600 – 0200 UTC, members of the American Legion Post 10 Amateur Radio Club, Albany, Oregon, will be active as N7F. QSL with SASE to American Legion Post 10, 1215 Pacific Blvd. SE, Albany, OR 97321. Email for more information.
    • Through September 13, 0000 – 0003 UTC, the Wireless Association of New York City, Staten Island, will activate WA2NYC. Frequencies: 28.450, 21.350, 14.340, and 7.238 MHz. D-STAR Reflector XLX020B will be monitored at the top of the hour QSL to Wireless Association of New York City, 233 Wolverine St., Staten Island, NY 10306. Email for more information.
    • Through September 14, N3U will be on the air from Pennsylvania to remember all victims of 9/11. QSL via W3PN. Operation will be mostly on SSB and CW, with some digital activity.
    Search the Special Events calendar on the ARRL website for more details on these operations.

    Louisiana ARES Returning to Normal Status in Storm-Affected Parishes

    Louisiana ARES Section Emergency Coordinator James Coleman, AI5B, said this week that ARRL Amateur Radio Emergency Service® (ARES®) teams in his Section “should now be on normal status, with the affected parishes’ status as appropriate for local conditions.” Emergency Coordinators in some hard-hit parishes have activated volunteers for relief and recovery operations. More than 30 parishes were affected by the storm, although cell telephone outages in the affected area now stand at 3.7% as of September 8 and recovering rapidly. All 911 systems were reported operational as of September 8.

    The Louisiana ARES Emergency Net is now on standby. “If it becomes necessary, the net will be active from 2 PM to 6 PM CDT on 7.255 MHz, and from 6 PM to 10 PM CDT on 3.878 MHz,” Coleman’s report said. The Louisiana Traffic Net is operating 7 days a week at 6 PM CDT on 3.910 MHz.

    ARRL Headquarters shipped Ham Aid kits to Louisiana Region 3 for use during recovery efforts. Region 3 District Emergency Coordinator (DEC) Miriam Barrett, KG5BNH, and St. Mary Parish’s Emergency Coordinator Jacki Price, KA5LMZ, have coordinated their efforts to assist the Council on Aging in Terrebonne Parish. The Ham Aid kits include equipment for HF, VHF, and UHF, including handheld transceivers and “base-station antennas.

    The W5RAR VHF repeater (146.805 MHz) was in use over a four-parish area — La Fourche, St. Charles, St. John, and Terrebonne — that suffered significant wireless system damage as well as a 911 system outage in St. John Parish. The St. Charles Emergency Operations Center (EOC) was transmitting requests via the Livingston Wide Area Repeater Network (LWARN) 440 MHz linked repeater system to WB5LHS.

    A communications team in support of Florida Baptist Disaster Relief established operations in a communications trailer at the Metairie Baptist Church. The Jefferson Parish Emergency Operations Center (EOC) with DEC Nick Frederick, W4NDF, and the City of Kenner EOC with Mary Vernoy, WB5IOE, assisting maintained a VHF net. Kenner’s fiber optic cable that provided internet was cut by Entergy so it could access one of its lines for repair. That left “two erratic cellphones and a VHF net” as the only communications Kenner had with Jefferson Parish. Vernoy had to climb onto the roof of the EOC to pick up the 2-meter antenna that had been knocked down by the wind. She was cheered by the arrival of the Baptist team from Florida.

    Gordon Gibby, KX4Z, reported that Metairie was hard-hit, with power outages and boil water notices, although the areas around hospitals have had power restored. “Hams can be a big benefit by partnering with organizations like Florida Baptist and work to meet their specific communications needs,” said Gibby, who has connections with the Florida group that drove from Florida to help out. He said hams were embedded within the volunteer organization.

    A report from Tangipahoa Parish said that as weather conditions deteriorated on August 29 — the day Hurricane Ida made landfall — local repeaters lost power and went on battery backup. Two repeaters were lost when a tower collapsed. Formal weather nets were not conducted to conserve power for emergency transmissions only. As of September 6, both the WB5NET and W5TEO repeaters remained on battery backup power and conserving power. Read an expanded version. — Thanks to Louisiana ARES Section Emergency Coordinator James Coleman, AI5B

    ARRL Board of Directors Bestows Awards

    The ARRL Board granted several awards at its July 2021 meeting.

    • The ARRL Doug DeMaw, W1FB Technical Excellence Award went to Steve Franke, K9AN; Bill Somerville, G4WJS, and Joe Taylor, K1JT, for their July/August 2020 QEX article, “The FT4 and FT8 Communications Protocols.” The DeMaw award honors the author of an article or article series judged to possess the highest degree of technical merit in ARRL periodicals for the past year.
    • John Levo, W8KIW, of Hillsboro, Ohio, was designated as the recipient of the 2021 ARRL Philip J. McGan Memorial Silver Antenna Award. This award honors a Public Information Officer who successfully promotes all aspects of amateur radio that enhance the understanding of amateur radio’s contributions to education, public safety, and recreation. The Board said Levo’s efforts over time have captured “the many avenues of opportunities of amateur radio as a hobby, an education tool, and a service for public safety.”
    • The 2021 ARRL Technical Service Award 2021 award recipient is James Baxter, K0UA, of Branson, Missouri. The Board said Baxter “exemplifies the spirit of this award due to his diligent work assisting hundreds of hams to get on the air, particularly with FT8, and by spending countless hours on web sessions with them to work out their configuration issues, show them best practices, and to help track down RFI issues.”
    • The Board bestowed the 2021 ARRL Technical Innovation Award on Steve Haynal, KF7O; Wojciech Kaczmarski, SP5WWP, and Roger Clark, VK3KYY. Haynal was cited as the instrumental and driving force behind the Hermes Lite 5 W HF SDR transceiver as a fully open-source hardware and software project. Kaczmarski was recognized for developing the open-source digital radio communication protocol M17, leading to the development of DROID-Star (an Android application) by Doug McLain, AD8DP. Clark was cited for spearheading a successful effort to augment a low-cost handheld radio for use by visually impaired operators, significantly lowering the cost of entry for such amateurs.
    • The 2021 Herb S. Brier Instructor of the Year Award went to David Ritter, ND4MR. ARRL sponsors this award in conjunction with the Lake County Indiana Amateur Radio Club in Brier’s memory to recognize superior amateur radio instruction and recruitment. An ARRL Member for nearly 40 years, Ritter is an ARRL Registered Instructor and a full-time faculty member at Wilkes Community College in North Wilkesboro, North Carolina, where he’s been the lead — and sole — Technician licensing course instructor since 2010.
    ARRL Podcasts Schedule

    The latest episode of the On the Air podcast (Episode 21) features a chat with Steve Goodgame, K5ATA, about the new edition of The ARRL Handbook and how it can be useful to new hams.

    The latest edition of Eclectic Tech (Episode 42) features a conversation with ARRL Lab Manager Ed Hare, W1RFI, about the changes to the FCC RF exposure rules.

    The On the Air and Eclectic Tech podcasts are sponsored by Icom. Both podcasts are available on iTunes (iOS) and Stitcher (Android) as well as on Blubrry — On the Air | Eclectic Tech.

    GENESIS Satellites among Payloads Lost in Launch Failure

    The GENESIS-L and GENESIS-N ham radio satellites were among several carrying amateur radio payloads lost following the failure of the Firefly Alpha rocket during its first launch on September 2 from the Vandenberg Space Force Base in California. This was sad news for AMSAT-EA (Spain), as GENESIS-L and GENESIS-N were the first satellites they had built themselves.

    According to the AMSAT-EA website, the GENESIS satellites were destroyed after the Firefly Alpha vehicle presented an anomaly as it hit a velocity of Mach 1 and reached Max Q, a point of maximum aerodynamic pressure on the vehicle. The launch had been halted a few seconds before takeoff, but the countdown was subsequently resumed.

    GENESIS-L and GENESIS-N were to conduct a series of telecommunications-related experiments, while a ground-station analysis of the received signals would try to attain Doppler variations in order to perform orbit determination and satellite identification from radio amateur stations around the world. Read an expanded version.

    August 2021 Volunteer Monitor Program Report

    The Volunteer Monitor (VM) Program is a joint initiative between ARRL and the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to enhance compliance in the Amateur Radio Service.

    • Licensees in Pawcatuck, Connecticut; Wamego, Kansas; Valley Cottage, New York; Long Valley, New Jersey; Columbia, South Carolina, and Maryville, Tennessee, were sent Advisory Notices concerning operation on frequencies that were set aside for Haiti earthquake emergency communications by the International Amateur Radio Union (IARU) Region 2 Emergency Coordinator.
    • Licensees in Prineville, Winston, Silver Lake, and Roseburg, Oregon; Sioux Falls, South Dakota, and Houston, Texas, were sent Advisory Notices concerning failure to identify, as required by Section 97.119(a) of the FCC Amateur Radio Service, pursuant to a nationwide rule compliance review of operations on 3.819 MHz and 3.953 MHz.
    • A former licensee in Seabrook, Texas, was sent an Advisory Notice concerning operation with an expired license.
    • An FT8 operator in Orion, Michigan, was sent to an Advisory Notice reminding him of the 200 W power limit on 30 meters.
    • A licensee in New Caney, Texas, was sent a final notice that his case was being referred to the FCC for license revocation or deletion of voice privileges from his license.
    • A Good Operator commendation was sent to an operator in Roseville, California, for Exemplary Amateur Procedure on May 21, 2021, during the 40-meter California Rescue Communications Net.
    The revised total for VM monitoring in July was 5,746 hours — the highest number of hours monitored since the inception of the VM Program.

    The IT staff at ARRL Headquarters completed work on an automated system for Volunteer Monitors to report monthly monitoring hours and Incident Reports. — Thanks to Riley Hollingsworth, K4ZDH, Volunteer Monitor Program Administrator

    The Volunteer Monitor (VM) Program is a joint initiative between ARRL and the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to enhance compliance in the Amateur Radio Service.

    California Club Assists Animal Rescue Group with Communication Support

    The El Dorado County Amateur Radio Club (EDCARC) has been providing radio communication support for small and large animal rescue efforts during the Caldor Fire. Members of the South County Large Animal Rescue (SCLAR) group, El Dorado County Animal Services, and other volunteers have been addressing the need. Many of the EDCARC volunteers are also members of the Club’s Neighborhood Radio Watch program.

    As the California Caldor Fire destroyed the community of Grizzly Flats, threatened Lake Tahoe, and caused evacuations in dozens of communities throughout the county, thousands of area residents were forced to flee their homes without having time to round up their pets and livestock.

    “We desperately love our animal companions, whether big or small, and being separated and unable to care for them in the midst of a disaster is truly heart-wrenching,” said Alan Thompson, W6WN, the club’s Public Information Officer. “Because of the mountainous terrain, many of our neighborhoods already had little or no cell or internet communication, and the fire only made things worse.”

    Thompson said the club quickly deployed its Mobile ARRL Amateur Radio Emergency Services (ARES®) Communications Center, maintained by Jay Harmor, KE6GLA, which is in service as central net operations. Several members stepped up, including Dale Dennis, KJ6HHY, from Yolo ARES, and Tom Newman, NN6H, from Alameda County Radio Amateur Civil Emergency Service (RACES®) and part of the Alameda County Sheriff’s Communications Team. They volunteered their time and radios to accompany the animal rescue teams dispatched into impacted areas.

    Teams of SCLAR members, Animal Services personnel, public employees, and radio communications staff have been conducting daily animal rescue missions and welfare checks throughout the impacted areas. Until residents are permitted to return, these teams are providing food, water, and care to abandoned animals.

    Thompson said those seeking an animal evacuation or welfare check should contact El Dorado County Animal Services — western slope, (530) 621-5795 or the shelter at (530) 621-7631. In the South Tahoe area, call (530) 573-7925.

    SCLAR will respond as directed by El Dorado County Animal Services. They cannot self-deploy or respond directly to phone calls for assistance, Thompson said.

    Announcements
    • ARRL CEO David Minster, NA2AA, is the banquet speaker at the W9DXCC Convention on September 10 – 11, hosted by the Northern Illinois DX Association, at the Marriott in Naperville, Illinois. Presentation topics will include the South Orkney Island VP8PJ DXpedition, transceiver performance for contesting and DXing, solid-state amplifiers, and an ARRL member forum.
    • The ARRL-TAPR Digital Communications Conference (DCC) will take place as a virtual event, September 17 – 18. Tentative schedule. Registration.
    • Special event stations mark 200 years since all of Central America gained independence from Spain; the region had been a single country, the Federal Republic of Central America, split into five entities — Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, and El Salvador. Radio clubs from all five entities will field stations containing 200 and the letter “I” in the suffix. Listen for YS200I, TI200I, YN200I, TG200I, HP200I, and HQ200I. Some participants may operate from their home stations. Operation will continue at least through September on SSB, CW, and satellites.
    • The venerable AO-7 satellite entered a period of full illumination on September 9 that will last until April 11, 2022. While in full illumination, the satellite’s 24-hour timer will automatically switch between Mode A (145 MHz up, 29 MHz down) and Mode B (432 MHz up/145 MHz down). The Mode A transponder (145.850 – 145.950 MHz/29.400 – 29.500 MHz down) is non-inverting; the Mode B transponder is inverting. — Thanks to AMSAT News Service
    ARRL Learning Network Webinars

    Visit the ARRL Learning Network (a members-only benefit) to register, check on upcoming webinars, and to view previously recorded sessions.

    ARRL members may register for upcoming presentations and view previously recorded Learning Network webinars. ARRL-affiliated radio clubs may also use the recordings as presentations for club meetings, mentoring new and current hams, and discussing amateur radio topics.

    Working the Pileup, presented by Ron Delpiere-Smith, KD9IPO / Tuesday, October 5, 2021 @ 1:00 pm EDT (1700 UTC)

    Ron Delpiere-Smith, KD9IPO, Vice President of the Chicago Suburban Radio Association and an ARRL Assistant Section Manager in Illinois, will offer an enlightening discussion on working a pileup from both sides of the contact. Whether your interest lies in ARRL Field Day, contesting, special events, or rare DX, this is a must-see presentation. Ron will discuss search-and-pounce and running techniques, when to use them, and some tips on working them to your advantage.

    The ARRL Learning Network schedule is subject to change.

    Amateur Radio in the News

    ARRL Public Information Officers, Coordinators, and many other member-volunteers help keep amateur radio and ARRL in the news.
    Share any amateur radio media hits you spot with us.

    Nathaniel Frissell, W2NAF, Awarded $481,260 NASA Research Grant

    Ham Radio Science Citizen Investigation HamSCI founder Nathaniel Frissell, W2NAF — an assistant professor in The University of Scranton’s Physics and Engineering Department — has been awarded a $481,260 grant through the NASA Space Weather Applications Operations Phase II Research Program. Frissell will serve as principal investigator for a research project entitled, “Enabling Space Weather Research with Global Scale Amateur Radio Datasets.” He’ll collaborate with Philip Erickson, W1PJE, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Haystack Observatory and Bill Engelke, AB4EJ, at the University of Alabama.

    “This grant includes significant funding for participation of Scranton undergraduate students in this research, as well as support for new computation resources,” Frissell said. He explained that the grant will fund “the development of an empirical model for the prediction of traveling ionospheric disturbances (TIDs) in high-frequency radio communications while investigating the geophysical drivers of these disturbances.” The grant will cover 2 years of work.

    Frissell said that the predictive, empirical TID models will be developed using data collected by the Reverse Beacon Network, WSPR, and PSKReporter — automated, global-scale radio communication observation networks operated by the amateur radio community. Undergraduate students will help the faculty researchers to create algorithms used for the model development.

    This new NASA award complements a 5-year National Science Foundation grant of more than $616,000 that Frissell received in 2020. That investigation aims to understand the source of TIDs observed in amateur radio and other scientific datasets.

    In 2019, Frissell received a $1.3 million National Science Foundation grant to fund a 3-year initiative to measure modulations produced in the Earth’s upper atmosphere.

    This is Frissell’s second NASA grant. Read an expanded version.

    The K7RA Solar Update

    Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: Sunspot activity increased dramatically this week. Sunspot numbers peaked at 87 on September 8, and on September 7, solar flux was 101.2.

    Average daily sunspot numbers rose by 14, to 64.6, while average daily solar flux increased from 88 to 92.9. New sunspots appeared on September 2 and 3, and three new sunspot groups arrived on September 4. Another new one appeared on September 8, and on that day the total sunspot area was 1,000 micro-hemispheres.

    Both the daily planetary and middle latitude A index reached a high of 14 on September 8. The averages were 7 and 7.7, down from 9.6 and 10.7 last week.

    Predicted solar flux looks quite promising, at 100 on September 9 – 11; 98 on September 12; 95 on September 13 – 16; 85 on September 17 – 18; 88 on September 19 – 23; 90 on September 24 – 28; 88 on September 29 – October 1; 86 on October 2; 90 on October 3 – 6; 92 and 90 on October 7 – 8, and 85 on October 9 – 15. Flux values may rise to 90 again after October 20.

    Predicted planetary A index is 8 on September 9; 5 on September 10 – 20; 8 on September 21; 5 on September 22 – October 1; 8 on October 2 – 3, and 5 on October 4 – 17.

    On Sunday September 5, Spaceweather.com reported, “The sudden profusion of so many sunspots is a sign of strength for young Solar Cycle 25. The solar cycle is actually running ahead of schedule. NOAA and NASA predicted that it will peak in the year 2025. Outbreaks like this one support the idea that solar max could come a year early.”

    On September 8, Spaceweather.com reported a shortwave blackout over the Pacific Rim caused by a coronal mass ejection (CME) on September 8 at 1736 UTC.

    Sunspot numbers for September 2 – 8 were 33, 33, 68, 66, 80, 85, and 87, with a mean of 64.6. The 10.7-centimeter flux was 85.8, 83.8, 86.5, 93.3, 99.5, 101.2, and 100.4, with a mean of 92.9. Estimated planetary A indices were 4, 6, 5, 6, 6, 8, and 14, with a mean of 7. Middle latitude A index was 3, 6, 5, 8, 8, 10, and 14, with a mean of 7.7.

    A comprehensive K7RA Solar Update is posted Fridays on the ARRL website. For more information concerning radio propagation, visit the ARRL Technical Information Service, read “What the Numbers Mean…,” and check out the Propagation Page of Carl Luetzelschwab, K9LA.

    A propagation bulletin archive is available. For customizable propagation charts, visit the VOACAP Online for Ham Radio website.

    Share your reports and observations.

    Just Ahead in Radiosport

    • September 11 — Ohio State Parks on the Air (phone)
    • September 11 — FOC QSO Party (CW)
    • September 11 – 12 — WAE DX Contest (SSB)
    • September 11 – 12 — SARL Field Day Contest (CW, phone, digital)
    • September 11 – 12 — YB7-DX Contest (phone)
    • September 11 – 12 — SKCC Weekend Sprintathon (CW)
    • September 11 – 12 — Alabama QSO Party (CW, phone)
    • September 11 – 12 — Russian Cup Digital Contest
    • September 11 – 13 — ARRL September VHF Contest (CW, phone, digital)
    • September 12 — North American Sprint, CW
    • September 13 — Four State QRP Second Sunday Sprint (CW, phone)
    • September 15 — RSGB 80-Meter Autumn Series (CW)
    • September 16 — NAQCC CW Sprint (CW)
    • September 16 — BCC QSO Party (CW, phone)
    For more information, visit the ARRL Contest Calendar.

    Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions

    Some conventions and hamfests may have been canceled or postponed due to the coronavirus pandemic. Check the calendar of canceled events on the ARRL website.

    Find conventions and hamfests in your area.

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  2. K0UO

    K0UO Platinum Subscriber Platinum Subscriber QRZ Page

    What is this all about?

    • Licensees in Prineville, Winston, Silver Lake, and Roseburg, Oregon; Sioux Falls, South Dakota, and Houston, Texas, were sent Advisory Notices concerning failure to identify, as required by Section 97.119(a) of the FCC Amateur Radio Service, pursuant to a nationwide rule compliance review of operations on 3.819 MHz and 3.953 MHz.
     
    M1WML likes this.
  3. KF0DHQ

    KF0DHQ Ham Member QRZ Page

    The Volunteer Monitor (VM) Program is a joint initiative between ARRL and the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to enhance compliance in the Amateur Radio Service.




    SO HAM RADIO SNITCHES?????? I thought that ham radio operators have to stick together not snitch on each other because they forgot to say there callsign? The ARRL is useless.
     
    M1WML and N8ZI like this.
  4. N5AF

    N5AF Ham Member QRZ Page

    3.819 MHz in SE Texas (Houston) is home to a group of individuals who operate USB in defiance of normal operating convention for 75m.

    I'm sure they have garnered the attention of the Volunteer Monitors.

    This is not a surprise.
     
    M1WML and K0UO like this.
  5. N1FM

    N1FM Ham Member QRZ Page



    (iii) The functions of individuals recruited and trained under this subparagraph shall be limited to

    (I) the detection of improper amateur radio transmissions;

    (II) the conveyance to Commission personnel of information which is
    essential to the enforcement of this Act (or regulations prescribed by the
    Commission under this Act) relating to the amateur radio service; and

    (III) issuing advisory notices, under the general direction of the Commission,
    to persons who apparently have violated any provision of this Act (or regulations
    prescribed by the Commission under this Act) relating to the amateur radio
    service.

    Nothing in this clause shall be construed to grant individuals recruited and trained under
    this subparagraph any authority to issue sanctions to violators or to take any enforcement
    action other than any action which the Commission may prescribe by rule"


    https://www.fcc.gov/sites/default/files/mou-fcc-arrl-04092019.pdf

    ===

    https://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/97/hr3239/text

    "(iii) The functions of individuals recruited and trained under this subparagraph shall be limited to—

    "(I) the detection of improper amateur radio transmissions;

    "(II) the conveyance to Commission personnel of information
    which is essential to the enforcement of this Act (or regulations
    prescribed by the Commission under this Act) relating to the
    amateur radio service; and

    "(III) issuing advisory notices, under the general direction of
    the Commission, to persons who apparently have violated any
    provision of this Act (or regulations prescribed by the Commis-
    sion under this Act) relating to the amateur radio service.

    Nothing in this clause shall be construed to grant individuals recruited and
    trained under this subparagraph any authority to issue sanctions to violators
    or to take any enforcement action other than any action which the
    Commission may prescribe by rule.

    "(F) Any person who provides services under this paragraph shall
    not be considered, by reason of having provided such services, a
    Federal employee.

    "(G) The Commission, in accepting and employing services of
    individuals under subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C), shall seek to
    achieve a broad representation of individuals and organizations
    interested in amateur station operation.

    "(H) The Commission may establish rules of conduct and other Rules of conduct
    governing the service of individuals under this paragraph.".

    ===

    47 U.S. Code § 154(f)(4)(B)


    (i) The Commission, for purposes of monitoring violations of any provision of this chapter (and of any regulation prescribed by the Commission under this chapter) relating to the amateur radio service, may—

    (I) recruit and train any individual licensed by the Commission to operate an amateur station; and

    (II) accept and employ the voluntary and uncompensated services of such individual.

    (ii) The Commission, for purposes of recruiting and training individuals under clause (i) and for purposes of screening, annotating, and summarizing violation reports referred under clause (i), may accept and employ the voluntary and uncompensated services of any amateur station operator organization.

    (iii) The functions of individuals recruited and trained under this subparagraph shall be limited to—

    (I) the detection of improper amateur radio transmissions;

    (II) the conveyance to Commission personnel of information which is essential to the enforcement of this chapter (or regulations prescribed by the Commission under this chapter) relating to the amateur radio service; and

    (III) issuing advisory notices, under the general direction of the Commission, to persons who apparently have violated any provision of this chapter (or regulations prescribed by the Commission under this chapter) relating to the amateur radio service.

    Nothing in this clause shall be construed to grant individuals recruited and trained under this subparagraph any authority to issue sanctions to violators or to take any enforcement action other than any action which the Commission may prescribe by rule.

    https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/47/154
     
    Last edited: Sep 10, 2021
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  6. K7WFM

    K7WFM Ham Member QRZ Page

    ...
     
    Last edited: Sep 10, 2021
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  7. K0UO

    K0UO Platinum Subscriber Platinum Subscriber QRZ Page

    So what did the hams do wrong on 3.819 MHz and 3.953 MHz?

    I know what the VMs are
     
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  8. K4NXS

    K4NXS XML Subscriber QRZ Page

    "failure to identify"
     
    M1WML, KF0DHQ and K0UO like this.
  9. N1FM

    N1FM Ham Member QRZ Page

    Oh yeah, sorry, failure to ID. I put it in the other thread about this, and forgot to add it here.
     
    M1WML and K0UO like this.
  10. N3FAA

    N3FAA XML Subscriber QRZ Page

    If they didn't identify, how did they know who to send the notices to?
     
    M1WML, K4NXS, KF0DHQ and 1 other person like this.
  11. K4RGN

    K4RGN Premium Subscriber QRZ Page

    VMs are not snitches any more than a driver who sees an obvious DUI on the highway is a snitch for calling 911. The Godfather and Goodfellas weren't written about ham radio. 40 years ago when the FCC was better-funded, the FCC field monitoring stations would have detected these violations.
     
    M1WML and WG5ENE like this.
  12. N1IPU

    N1IPU Ham Member QRZ Page

    From what I understand these where Ammron operators. They did ID but not in the prescribed time frame. It was purely political in nature just like here that one side gets reported and dealt with while the other runs wild.

    They were not harming anyone and I am sure you can hear many each day in qso not identifying in the correct time frame.
     
    K0MRD, M1WML, N3FAA and 6 others like this.
  13. N1IPU

    N1IPU Ham Member QRZ Page

    VM's are snitches. Gross violations fine but these clowns live to report. They just didn't like the operator's and ran a stopwatch. That is Stasi level crap.

    Equating a drunk driver (can kill or maim) to reporting time violations is ridiculous.
     
    Last edited: Sep 11, 2021
    M1WML, N3FAA, KF0DHQ and 3 others like this.
  14. KJ7OES

    KJ7OES Ham Member QRZ Page

    What's so bad about AMMRON? I'm not a member, but think they do good work.....….
     
    K0MRD, M1WML and (deleted member) like this.
  15. N1IPU

    N1IPU Ham Member QRZ Page

    They are not politically correct. Same as politically incorrect are treated here.
     
    M1WML, N3FAA, KF0DHQ and 1 other person like this.

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