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Locked 60m band comments to the FCC


 



Link to article above.

ARRL Urges Comments to FCC on 60-Meter Band

10/10/2023

? is asking that all radio amateurs urge the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to continue the existing use of the 60-meter band. A public comment period is open until October 30, 2023. ARRL encourages expressions of support to the FCC for the current 100 W ERP power limit (instead of reducing the power limit to 15 W EIRP) and continuing secondary access to the current channels.?

ARRL has assembled a web page with instructions on how to submit your comments, as well as background information on the issue:?.?

To submit a filing of your comments for the FCC’s consideration in the rulemaking process, go to the FCC web page for the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking’s (NPRM) Docket Number 23-120 at?.

If you wish to directly enter your comments, select the button labeled??or if you are uploading a document that contains your comments, select?. When submitting your comments, be sure the correct proceeding’s docket number, 23-120, is included on the form.?Your name and comments will be entered into the official public record of the proceedings and will be viewable by anyone who visits the docket web page.

While radio amateurs are encouraged to include any comments they would like in their submissions, they’re especially encouraged to draw upon their personal experiences using the 60-meter band for public service purposes and for its location between the amateur 80- and 40-meter bands, which is critical to ensuring signal propagation to certain geographic areas during variations in time and the solar cycle. For example, ensuring radio amateurs have a continuum of communication capabilities across the 7 MHz, 5 MHz, and 3.5 MHz bands is valuable for emergency communications, especially between the US and Caribbean nations during hurricane season.

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Some of the main points to comment on for this NPRM are:

  • Urging the FCC to keep the four existing channels allocated to amateur radio on a secondary basis.
  • Urging the FCC to keep the 100 W power limit for the four existing channels and the new 15 kHz subband.

ARRL Public Relations and Outreach Manager Sierra Harrop, W5DX, underscored the importance of commenting, urging members to speak up. “ARRL members make up the strongest voice in matters of amateur radio spectrum defense,” said Harrop. “Your membership and participation in the rulemaking process both ensure ARRL continues to make the difference when our band privileges are threatened. Please join us in effort to protect our 60-meter band privileges


 

I'd like to urge everyone to submit a comment to the FCC on the negative effect of the proposed changes to the 60m band.?
I submitted comments on the behalf of myself and the W0SW club. Comments do nott have to be overly complicated, a simple example could be "Please reconsider the changes to the 60m band. A reduction in power limits the effectiveness of emergency communications during disasters and the ability to relay information over a larger effective area".
It's important that the FCC receives a large response from the amateur radio community regarding this issue even if you don't use the 60m band or have HF privileges.


 

The deadline for 60 meter comments to the FCC has been extended until November 28th. Link to overview and comments:?


 

I wish the FCC would drop the channelized 60m arrangement.
Us folks with non resonant antennas have a hard time tuning up due to our radios not allowing anything but USB mode there.
About the only way to make it work is to inject a audio tone and I can't hum that long :)
Anyway, my 2 cents...

73
'QBH


 

The ARRL proposal is to keep the first and last channel and add a wider 15khz operating section to the center of the 60m band, as well as keep the peak envelope power at 100w pep.
The FCC proposal reduces the power to 15w pep.