2015-01-31

QRZ Forums - Amateur Radio News

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The ARRL Letter, January 29, 2015

Posted: 29 Jan 2015 01:26 PM PST
http://forums.qrz.com/showthread.php...5&goto=newpost

The ARRL Letter

January 29, 2015

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.]

ARES, SKYWARN Volunteers Go On Alert for Massive East Coast Winter

StormFCC "Paperless" Amateur Radio License Policy Goes into Effect on

February 17ARRL Board Names Award RecipientsNew Legislative Issues Advocacy

Fund Gets Initial Boost from Hudson DivisionARRL Board Elects Executive

Committee, Hears Reports, Welcomes VisitorsSchool Club Roundup is February

9-13! Unlicensed Religious Broadcaster Who Used Amateur Frequencies Ordered

Off the AirQRZ Logbook Now Offering Reciprocal Confirmation Credit and LoTW

DownloadNASA Opens Application Window for Paid CubeSat, PICetSat

InternshipsMarch Issue of The American Legion Magazine to Feature Amateur

RadioRSGB Welcomes Proposed Crackdown on Interference-Producing Power Line

Data DevicesARRL Assistant Roanoke Division Director Anthony R. "Tony"

Curtis, K3RXK, SKARRL Technical Advisor, Author, AMRAD President Emeritus

André Kesteloot, N4ICK, SKIn Brief...The K7RA Solar UpdateJust Ahead in

RadiosportUpcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions and Events

ARES, SKYWARN Volunteers Go On Alert for Massive East Coast Winter Storm

Amateur Radio Emergency Service (ARES) teams and SKYWARN weather observers

along the US Eastern Seaboard went on alert Monday, January 26, as a winter

storm began working its way into the Northeast. The storm, which brought

blizzard conditions to some areas, shut down transportation and kept

residents at home in several states. Eastern Massachusetts and the City of

Boston may have been hardest hit, with record or near-record snowfall

amounts and storm surge flooding in some coastal communities. ARES units on

Cape Cod deployed to staff six shelters and the Multi-Agency Coordination

Center, which serves Barnstable County. A shelter was opened on Nantucket

Island, after the entire island lost electrical power as well as most

telecommunication services, and ham radio volunteers helped to fill the

gap. Amateur Radio volunteers relayed this information to the National

Weather Service (NWS) Taunton Office, home to WX1BOX, where operations

kicked into high gear on Monday evening and continued for 27 hours.

Hurricane-force wind gusts were recorded on Nantucket Island and on the

western edge of Martha's Vineyard.

"Amateur Radio operators across Southern New England checked into regular

SKYWARN Nets and/or with WX1BOX throughout the storm, even during the

overnight hours, providing tremendous situational awareness and disaster

intelligence information for the National Weather Service, state emergency

management, nongovernmental organizations, and the media," Eastern

Massachusetts Assistant Section Emergency Coordinator and SKYWARN

Coordinator Rob Macedo, KD1CY, told ARRL. "Several hundred snowfall total

and damage reports, including coastal flood reports, were fielded over a

dozen SKYWARN nets across the NWS coverage area."

Macedo said widespread snowfall totals of 15 to 30 inches -- and up to 3

feet in some areas -- occurred in Central and Eastern Massachusetts and

parts of Rhode Island, while up to 2 feet of snow fell in Connecticut and

Southwest Massachusetts. ARRL Headquarters announced on Monday that it

would close on January 27 in anticipation of the severe weather.

Massachusetts' South Shore experienced flooding, as a wind-driven tidal

surge breached one seawall, flooding homes and businesses along the Brant

Rock Esplanade. Flooding was also reported in Scituate, where streets

filled with slushy seawater. Fierce winds caused some minor structural

damage. A few residents had to be evacuated.

ARES and SKYWARN volunteers elsewhere in the Northeast also relayed

ground-level weather conditions to NWS offices as the severe storm

continued its northeasterly trek. The winter storm may not have lived up to

advance hype in some areas, leaving forecasters apologetic, but it was a

significant weather event for Northern New England residents. While the

worst of the storm missed New York City, extreme Long Island saw a couple

of feet of snow. Eastern New York SEC David Galletly, KM2O, said ARES

groups in his Section stood down at midday on January 27.

"The storm track was apparently 50 to 100 miles east of the original

forecast with a very sharp snow boundary," Galletly said. "This resulted in

much less snow accumulation, especially in the Northern District counties."

ARRL New York City-Long Island Section Manager Jim Mezey, W2KFV, said ARES

teams in his Section spent Monday preparing for a storm that was

anticipated to be of "historic proportions." By midday, he said, ARES

members were awaiting marching orders. The American Red Cross had

identified three possible shelter locations in Nassau and Suffolk counties,

where ARES might have supported communication.

"Winds were running at 25 MPH with higher gusts, creating whiteout

conditions for most of the night and early morning," Mezey said. He

reported snowfall accumulations of from 5 to 8 inches in New York City, 13

to 20 inches in Nassau County, and more than 24 inches in Eastern Suffolk

County. By noon on January 27, ARES teams stood down but continued to

monitor the situation a while longer.

In Maine, where heavy snowfall and high winds battered eastern and coastal

communities, ARES bumped up its alert status to Level 2 -- standby.

Scattered power outages were reported, mostly in southern Maine.

Temperatures remained in the teens. Maine ARES Section Emergency

Coordinator Phil Duggan, N1EP, activated ARES Weather and SKYWARN Net

sessions on HF, but no served agencies requested ARES communication support.

More than 1 foot of snow fell along parts of the Maine coast, and stiff

winds out of the northeast caused considerable blowing and drifting of

snow. At times, visibility was less than one-quarter mile. More snow is

forecast for January 30.

FCC "Paperless" Amateur Radio License Policy Goes into Effect on February 17

Starting on February 17, the FCC no longer will routinely issue paper

license documents to Amateur Radio applicants and licensees. The Commission

has maintained for some time now that the official Amateur Radio license

authorization is the electronic record that exists in its Universal

Licensing System (ULS), although the FCC has routinely continued to print

and mail hard copy licenses. That will stop next month.

In mid-December, the FCC adopted final procedures to provide access to

official electronic authorizations, as it had proposed in WT Docket 14-161

as part of its "process reform" initiatives. Under the new procedures,

licensees will access their current official authorization ("Active" status

only) via the ULS License Manager. The FCC will continue to provide paper

license documents to all licensees who notify the Commission that they

prefer to receive one. Licensees will also be able to print out an official

authorization -- as well as an unofficial "reference copy" -- from the ULS

License Manager.

"We find this electronic process will improve efficiency by simplifying

access to official authorizations in ULS, shortening the time period

between grant of an application and access to the official authorization,

and reducing regulatory costs," the FCC Wireless Telecommunications Bureau

(WTB) said. According to the WTB, the new procedures will save at least

$304,000 a year, including the cost of staff resources.

In comments filed November 5, the ARRL had strongly recommended that the

FCC "give serious consideration to continuing a default provision for

sending an initial paper license document to new licensees in the Amateur

Radio Service, along with detailed, simple instructions for how to make the

elections set forth in the notice relative to future modified or renewed

licenses."

Under the new procedures, a new license applicant who already has an FCC

Registration Number (FRN) and provides a valid e-mail address

under "Applicant Information" in the ULS will receive an official

ULS-generated electronic authorization via e-mail. New license applicants

lacking an FRN will receive one in the mail, as well as a temporary

password to access the Commission Registration System (CORES). They will no

longer automatically receive a license document, however, and would have to

request one by changing their "Paper Authorization Preference" in the ULS

License Manager.

The ARRL and other Amateur Radio commenters also worried that unless a

license document is printed on distinctive paper stock, its authenticity

could be questioned in such situations as obtaining vanity call sign

license plates. To address this, the FCC said the watermark "Official Copy"

will be printed on each page of an official authorization that a licensee

prints out from the ULS. The WTB recently stopped using distinctive paper

stock to produce hard copy licenses and has been printing these

on "standard, white recycled paper." The Bureau noted that the distinctive

paper stock it had been using was six times more expensive than the plain

recycled paper it now uses.

The ULS License Manager (left) now includes settings that allow licensees

to notify the WTB that they prefer to receive official authorizations on

paper. Once final procedures go into effect designating electronic access

as the default, licensees can change the ULS License Manager setting so

that the Bureau will print and mail a license document. Licensees also may

contact FCC Support via the web, telephone, or mail to request paper

licenses.

The FCC rejected as "outside the scope of this proceeding" an ARRL argument

that Section 97.23 of the Amateur Service rules be amended to

replace "licensee mailing address" with other alternatives, including

e-mail, for use in Commission correspondence. The rule, which requires that

any licensee mailing address be in an area where the licensee has US Postal

Service access, has precluded FCC issuance of location-specific call signs

in such areas as Navassa Island (KP1) and some Pacific islands.

ARRL Board Names Award Recipients

The ARRL Board of Directors has bestowed the 2014 George Hart Distinguished

Service Award on David B. Colter, WA1ZCN, of New London, New Hampshire. The

Board may grant the award to an ARRL member whose service to the ARRL Field

Organization has been of the most exemplary nature. The award's namesake is

George Hart, W1NJM, long-time Communications Manager at ARRL Headquarters

and chief developer of the National Traffic System.

Colter, a member of the Twin State Amateur Radio Club, was recognized for

nearly 4 decades of service to the Amateur Radio community, including such

leadership positions as Section Emergency Coordinator and Assistant Section

Emergency Coordinator.

Colter designed training and development courses for the New Hampshire ARES

community and was the prime mover behind the New Hampshire ARES Academy --

a day-long springtime event that provides courses and training in various

aspects of public service communication. He also served as editor of the

ARRL Amateur Radio Emergency Communications Course (ARECC) series and as

New England Division representative on the League's Emergency

Communications Advisory Committee.

The Board also honored three professional journalists with the ARRL Bill

Leonard Award for their outstanding coverage of Amateur Radio in video,

print, and aural media. The award honors journalists for excellence in

reporting that highlights the enjoyment, importance, and public service

value of Amateur Radio. The award is a tribute to the late CBS News

President Bill Leonard, W2SKE, an avid Amateur Radio operator and advocate.

The video award went to Christine Kim of KSNV-TV in Las Vegas, for

her "Local Heroes" profile of the Nevada Amateur Radio Emergency Service.

The print award went to Marti Attoun of American Profile magazine, for

her "Radio Active" article that profiled Amateur Radio.

The aural media award went to Steve Kraske and Beth Lipoff of KCUR-FM in

Kansas City, for their "Exploring Ham Radio in a Digital World" interview

of Brian Short, KCØBS; Carolyn Wells, NØCJ, and Matt May, KC4WCG.

The Board announced the award recipients at its 2015 Annual Meeting,

January 16-17, in Windsor, Connecticut.

New Legislative Issues Advocacy Fund Gets Initial Boost from Hudson Division

ARRL Hudson Division Director Mike Lisenco, N2YBB -- acting on behalf of

the members of his Division -- has presented ARRL President Kay Craigie,

N3KN, with an inaugural donation of $4500 to the new ARRL Legislative

Issues Advocacy Fund. President Craigie received the contribution during

the ARRL Board's Annual Meeting January 16-17 in Windsor, Connecticut. The

check, from the Long Island Mobile Amateur Radio Club, represented

contributions from members at the 2014 Hudson Division Awards Luncheon on

November 8. President Craigie generously matched the donation. The Board's

Administration and Finance Committee established the Legislative Issues

Advocacy Fund -- proposed by Lisenco -- to educate and inform members of

Congress of the importance of issues that impact the Amateur Radio Service.

"There is an urgent need to raise money to help offset the cost of sending

our voice to Washington for legislative advocacy, and we need to continue

these expenditures into the future to achieve our goals -- including and

going beyond the current CC&R legislative effort -- as there will always be

issues that require a continuing presence on Capitol Hill," Lisenco said

after the meeting.

Lisenco added that potential issues down the road could include spectrum

allocation -- and especially conflicts stemming from broadband allocations

-- revisions to the Communications Act, the adequacy and efficiency of FCC

enforcement and the use of Amateur Radio volunteers, increased

privatization of Amateur Radio administration, FCC oversight, and radio

frequency interference concerns, "to name a few."

"We must establish a brand for Amateur Radio now, so that we no longer have

to be reactive when it comes to the relationship between the federal

government and Amateur Radio," Lisenco stressed after the meeting.

The ARRL is a tax-exempt 501(c)(3) entity. All donations to the fund are

tax deductable within the limits of the law. For information on how to

donate to the ARRL Legislative Issues Advocacy Fund, contact Development

Manager Lauren Clarke, KB1YDD (tel 860-594-0348).

Legislative Objectives Outlined

At its Annual Meeting, the ARRL Board adopted several legislative

objectives for the 114th US Congress. Accordingly, the ARRL will continue

to secure passage of legislation instructing the FCC to extend the

requirement for "reasonable accommodation" of Amateur Radio station

antennas -- a requirement that now applies to state and local governing

bodies -- to all forms of land use regulation. The League also will

continue to oppose legislation leading to the reallocation of amateur

spectrum or to sharing arrangements that reduce the utility of existing

allocations, as well as legislation that diminishes the rights of federal

licensees in favor of unlicensed emitters or that encourages the deployment

of spectrum-polluting technologies. Read more.

ARRL Board Elects Executive Committee, Hears Reports, Welcomes Visitors

The ARRL Board of Directors has elected members of the Executive Committee.

Chosen during the Board's 2015 Annual Meeting were New England Division

Director Tom Frenaye, K1KI; Hudson Division Director Lisenco; West Gulf

Division Director Dr David Woolweaver, K5RAV; Pacific Division Director Bob

Vallio, W6RGG, and Great Lakes Division Director Dale Williams, WA8EFK.

The Board also chose members of the ARRL Foundation Board. Northwestern

Division Director Jim Pace, K7CEX, was elected to fill the unexpired term

of past ARRL Midwest Division Director Cliff Ahrens, K0CA, who stepped down

from the Foundation Board.

For full 3-year terms on the Foundation Board, the Board elected Director

Frenaye, Rocky Mountain Division Director Brian Mileshosky, N5ZGT, and

Martin Green, K2PLF. Frenaye, as ARRL Foundation President, reported that

the Foundation funded some 80 scholarships in 2014, and that two new

scholarships are in the process of being established.

Other Business

The ARRL Board heard reports from officers during its Annual Meeting.

Chief Technology Officer Brennan Price, N4QX, told the Board that efforts

are in full swing to build support for Amateur Radio-related issues, in

preparation for World Radiocommunication Conference 2015 in November.

General Counsel Chris Imlay, W3KD, pointed out in his report that spectrum

auctions continue to pose a potential threat to Amateur Radio spectrum. He

also told the Board that inadequate FCC attention to Amateur Radio

enforcement issues continues to be a concern.

Also present for the Annual Meeting were International Amateur Radio Union

(IARU) Secretary Rod Stafford, W6ROD, and Radio Amateurs of Canada (RAC)

Vice President Glenn MacDonell, VE3XRA. Stafford brought greetings from

IARU President Tim Ellam, VE6SH, and Vice President Ole Garpestad, LA2RR,

and noted that 2015 is the 90th anniversary of the IARU. The IARU is

preparing for the International Telecommunication Union World

Radiocommunication Conference 2015 this November in Geneva.

Find ARRL on Facebook. Follow us on Twitter!

School Club Roundup is February 9-13!

School clubs are busily prepping their stations for The "Winter/Spring

Term" School Club Roundup, which gets under way Monday, February 9 at 1300

UTC, and continues through Friday, February 13, at 2359 UTC. Stations may

operate no more than 6 hours in any 24 hour period (up to a maximum of 24

hours).

The twice-yearly event is an opportunity for school club stations -- from

elementary school to college -- to get on the air for a friendly radio

activity. Non-school clubs and individuals are encouraged to participate

too. Sponsored by the ARRL, the ARRL Hudson Division Education Task Force,

and the Long Island Mobile Amateur Radio Club (LIMARC), the contest aims to

foster contacts with and among school radio clubs.

Stations exchange signal reports, class ("Individual," "Club,"

or "School"), and US state, Canadian province/territory, or DXCC entity.

Stations may operate on all amateur bands except 60, 30, 17, and 12 meters

(no repeater contacts and VHF/UHF contacts must be on recognized simplex

frequencies, except calling frequencies). Stations may operate phone, CW,

and digital modes, or a combination. The most popular time for younger

students is during after-school hours, but older students may be on the air

anytime. All groups are limited to one transmitter on the air.

If you'd just like to get on the air and hand out contacts, enter in the

Individual category. Tune around in any mode and listen for SCR stations

calling CQ, or call CQ yourself and see who answers (call "CQ School

Clubs," if you are not a club station). Logs are due no more than 15 days

after the operating period has ended and can be submitted online via the

WA7BNM website.

The top three entries in each category -- Elementary,

Middle/Intermediate/Junior High School, Senior High School

College/University -- will receive an Award Certificate. Non-school clubs

or multiop groups and individuals are also eligible for certificates.

See "Getting Organized for School Club Roundup" for some helpful tips! Stay

up to date on SCR by subscribing to the School Club Roundup reflector.

Unlicensed Religious Broadcaster Who Used Amateur Frequencies Ordered Off

the Air

The FCC has ordered an unlicensed California religious broadcaster, who

sometimes broadcast on a frequency in the 40 meter phone band, to shut down

his station. On December 31, the FCC's Los Angeles District Office issued a

Notice of Unlicensed Operation to Martin K. Elliott of Inyokern,

California. The FCC said it issued the Notice in response to a complaint of

unlicensed operation on multiple HF frequencies, including some allocated

to aeronautical stations. The FCC said its agents used radio

direction-finding techniques to confirm that signals on 6280 kHz and 11,595

kHz were emanating from a residence located near Inyokern, and property

records indicated that Elliott was the current owner and resident.

"The Commission's records show that no license was issued for operation of

a station on either the frequencies of 6280 kHz or 11,595 kHz at this

location," the FCC wrote. "Unlicensed operation of this radio station must

be discontinued immediately."

The pirate station, which identified itself as "YHWH," was not cited for

operating on Amateur Radio frequencies, although ARRL Official Observers

had monitored the station in the past on 7185 kHz LSB. One short-wave

listener said the operator of YHWH changed frequencies regularly.

The FCC warned Elliott that operation of radio transmitting equipment

without valid authorization violates federal law and could subject the

operator to severe penalties including, but not limited to, substantial

monetary forfeitures, equipment seizure, and criminal sanctions.

The Commission gave him 10 days to respond. The FCC said its Notice "does

not preclude this office from pursuing additional sanctions based upon our

investigation of this incident."

QRZ Logbook Now Offering Reciprocal Confirmation Credit and LoTW Download

QRZ Logbook now recognizes contact confirmations from ARRL's Logbook of The

World (LoTW). QRZ Logbook users now can download their contacts from LoTW

directly into their QRZ Logbook. Contacts that exist in LoTW but not in QRZ

Logbook will be added to your QRZ Logbook. LoTW automatically puts contacts

made under a previous call sign into a user's current call sign account.

QRZ will automatically put contacts into the logbook associated with the

call sign used when the contact was logged.

"Not only will this improve your confirmation rates, because you are

receiving credit for your confirmations on LoTW, but it will also import

records that exist on LoTW and not QRZ Logbook," QRZ.com said in announcing

the new service. "Those QSOs may match another record on QRZ, resulting in

even more confirmations."

In addition, all contact data in your LoTW database -- whether or not the

contact is new to your QRZ account -- will include the LoTW QSL Received

Date, as well as the LoTW Sent (Y/N) flag set in the QRZ Logbook. Contacts

confirmed in LoTW, whether or not they are new to QRZ, will automatically

be confirmed in your QRZ Logbook. Read more. -- Thanks to QRZ.com

NASA Opens Application Window for Paid CubeSat, PICetSat Internships

The NASA Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) seeks applicants to fill paid

CubeSat and PICetSat-related internships for the Summer 2015 semester.

These positions may be of interest to Amateur Radio licensees pursuing

degrees in electrical or computer engineering and now in their junior or

senior years. Applications are being taken on the NASA One Stop Shopping

Initiative (OSSI) recruiting website. The openings are CubeSat Simulator

Upgrade Plus -- advertised previously but now reopened -- as well as

CubeSat Ground Station Development, and PICetSat Module and PCB

Development. Other internship opportunities are available at each of the

other 10 NASA field center locations as well, said Pat Kilroy, N8PK, of

GSFC. The official application deadline is March 1, but Kilroy is hoping

applications will be submitted sooner.

"The word to the wise student is to get one's application in ASAP -- and

certainly within the next 3 weeks," Kilroy said. Applications from Amateur

Radio licensees should include a call sign.

Details on each internship are available through the OSSI page. Contact Pat

Kilroy for more information. Applications must be submitted via the OSSI

web page.

March Issue of The American Legion Magazine to Feature Amateur Radio

Amateur Radio will be featured in the March 2015 issue of The American

Legion Magazine. The article, by best-selling author Don Keith, N4KC, will

explain how ham radio remains exciting, important, and relevant, even after

more than a century in existence and changes in technology. The article

will also talk about the American Legion

Amateur Radio Club (TALARC) -- home to club station K9TAL at American

Legion Headquarters in Indianapolis, which sponsors regular operating

events. It also will explain how the American Legion is integrating Amateur

Radio into its organization and for its members, how members can become

licensed, and perhaps establish a club station at an American Legion post.

The Legion has an agreement with the Department of Homeland Security to

provide assistance during emergencies, and Keith's article will discuss how

Amateur Radio meshes with that effort. Keith has written more than 2 dozen

books, including Riding the Shortwaves: Exploring The Magic of Amateur

Radio, Firing Point -- a submarine thriller -- and Wizard of the Wind,

which includes a ham as a key character. He has also written extensively

about World War II history.

RSGB Welcomes Proposed Crackdown on Interference-Producing Power Line Data

Devices

The Radio Society of Great Britain (RSGB) has said it welcomes a recent

initiative by telecommunications regulator Ofcom to combat interference

from home power line data transmission (PLT) devices. The

Ofcom "consultation" -- similar to an FCC Notice of Proposed Rule Making --

has invited responses by February 16. The RSGB Electromagnetic

Compatibility (EMC) Committee has lobbied Ofcom to assume greater authority

in cases involving violations of EMC rules.

"These proposals make the regulations more resilient to evolving

technology, when it causes undue interference to wireless telegraphy

apparatus," the RSGB said. "The proposed changes aim to catch apparatus

that exceeds the permissible levels in service," The RSGB said.

A recent news article reported that Ofcom was proposing that individuals

using power line networking equipment could face prosecution if it

interferes with radio communications. The article, in The Telegraph, also

said that GCHQ -- a security and intelligence organization similar to the

US Department of Homeland Security -- has become increasingly concerned

about PLT in recent years.

The RSGB said the Ofcom proposals would provide additional enforcement

authority with respect to a particular piece of equipment, not just a range

of devices. "These changes are essential to prevent compromising important

communication systems, particularly those that ensure public safety," the

RSGB said.

ARRL Assistant Roanoke Division Director Anthony R. "Tony" Curtis, K3RXK, SK

ARRL Assistant Roanoke Division Director Anthony R. "Tony" Curtis, K3RXK,

of Laurinburg, North Carolina, died on January 23. He was 74. Curtis served

twice as an Assistant Director -- from 1986 until 1997 and again from 2002

until his death. Known as "Dr Tony" to his mass communication students at

the University of North Carolina at

Pembroke, Curtis -- who was licensed at 14 -- was a space and Amateur Radio

satellite enthusiast and occasional guest speaker. He also contributed to

QST. An ARRL Life Member, Curtis was involved in emergency preparedness and

held ARRL Field Organization appointments as Official Emergency Station and

Volunteer Examiner.

"The department lost a valued colleague and a good friend, and he'll be

deeply missed," Dr Jason Hutchens, chair of the Mass Communication

department, said.

At UNCP, he received an Outstanding Teaching Award in 2012 and was named

the Most Valuable Professor in 2012 and 2013. He had served as chair of the

faculty senate and as president of the Friends of the Library Board. Read

more.

ARRL Technical Advisor, Author, AMRAD President Emeritus André Kesteloot,

N4ICK, SK

ARRL Technical Advisor, author, and Amateur Radio Research and Development

Corporation (AMRAD) President Emeritus André V. Kesteloot, N4ICK, of

McLean, Virginia, died on January 4. He was 77. Kesteloot was the author of

Spread Spectrum Sourcebook, published in 1991, and he contributed to QST

and QEX. A native of Belgium, Kesteloot was an electrical engineer and

spent a decade in the Middle East installing TV and radio transmitters in

the 1950s and 1960s. He subsequently signed on with the Central

Intelligence Agency and spent 25 years as a CIA operative. Kesteloot was a

recipient of a CIA Intelligence Star for Valor, and he served as executive

vice president of the Association of Former Intelligence Officers.

After retiring in 1994, Kesteloot joined the faculty of Phoenix Consulting,

and trained Iraq-bound Special Forces units and intelligence agencies. An

active AMRAD member, he was a frequent contributor to the organization's

newsletter and papers. He also assisted in taking field measurements of

Broadband over Power Line (BPL) systems in Virginia and Maryland. Kesteloot

was an ARRL member and life senior member of the Institute of Electrical

and Electronics Engineers.

In Brief...

DXpedition Goings and Comings: As of January 26, the three-person "boat

team" heading to Navassa Island for the K1N DXpedition had made it to Great

Inagua in the Bahamas. There was no official word yet from the Navassa

Island DXpedition team as to when the other operators, now in Jamaica with

the equipment containers, would depart. The DXpedition to one of the

most-wanted DXCC entities is expected to get under way in the next few

days. "We plan to sail from Great Inagua the afternoon of January 30," the

K1N team announced January 27. The DXpeditioners hope to start offloading

their gear on January 31 and February 1. Meanwhile, on Kish Island, Iran,

the Belgian EP6T DXpedition team finished up operations on January 27

(UTC). The EP6T operators logged more than 68,000 contacts during 9 days on

the air -- nearly 70 percent of them with stations in Europe. Just under 10

percent of the EP6T contacts were with North American stations, although

the operators reported persistent noise issues that prevented them from

hearing many callers. -- Thanks to The Daily DX

Ralph Fedor, K0IR, to be Dayton RTTY Contest Dinner Speaker: DXpeditioner

Ralph Fedor, K0IR, will be the keynote speaker at the 2015 RTTY Contest

Dinner, Thursday, May 14, at 7:15 PM, at the Crowne Plaza in downtown

Dayton. Tickets will be on sale until May 1. No tickets will be sold at the

door. The NAQP RTTY plaques will be presented at the event. -- Thanks to

Fred Dennin, WW4LL

SSTV Transmissions Scheduled from the International Space Station: The

Russian Amateur Radio on the International Space Station (ARISS) team plans

to activate slow-scan television (SSTV) from the ISS on Saturday January

31, and on Sunday, February 1. The anticipated SSTV mode will be PD180 on

145.800 MHz with 3-minute off periods between transmissions. Twelve

different images will be transmitted during the operational period. This is

the second series of pictures to be transmitted. The SSTV transmission are

scheduled to begin around 1000 UTC on January 31 and around 0900 UTC on

February 1. Transmissions should terminate around 2130 UTC each day. --

Thanks to ARISS-EU Chair Gaston Bertels, ON4WF

The K7RA Solar Update

Average daily sunspot numbers for the January 22-28 period rose from 61.9

on the previous 7 days to 89.1. Average daily solar flux climbed from 126.2

to 136.8 over the same period.

There were two new sunspot regions on February 22, another one on February

23 and again on February 25, four more on February 26, and another two on

February 28.

The average daily solar flux for January 29 through February 4 is predicted

to be 165.7 -- nearly 29 points higher than the previous week.

Predicted solar flux is 165 on January 29, 170 for January 30 through

February 2, then 160, 155, 145 and 125 for February 3-6, 130 for February

7-9, 125 for February 10-11, 120 for February 12-13, and 125 for February

14-16. Flux values will reach of low of 115 on February 18, then a high of

135 during the period February 26-28.

Predicted planetary A index is 12 on January 29, 15 for January 30 through

February 1, 12 on February 2, 10 for February 3-4, 5 on February 5, 10 for

February 6-7, 8 for February 8-9, 5 for February 10-14, 12 on February 15,

and 10 for February 16-18.

This weekly "Solar Update" in The ARRL Letter is a preview of

the "Propagation Bulletin" issued each Friday. The latest bulletin and an

archive of past propagation bulletins is on the ARRL website.

In the Friday, January 30, bulletin expect an updated forecast for the near

term and reports from readers. Send me your reports and observations.

Just Ahead in Radiosport

January 31 -- Feld-Hell WAAAEO Sprint

January 31-February 1 -- UBA Contest (SSB)

January 31-February 1 -- Worldwide EME Contest

February 2 -- OK1WC Memorial Contest (SSB, CW)

February 3 -- ARS Spartan Sprint (CW)

February 3 -- CWOps Weekly Mini-CWT Tests (CW)

February 6 -- NS Weekly Sprint (CW)

February 6 -- YL-OM Contest (SSB, CW, Digital)

February 6-8 -- Triathlon DX Contest (SSB, CW, Digital)

February 7 -- Straight Key Weekend Sprintathon

February 7 -- FYBO Winter QRP Field Day (SSB, CW)

February 7 -- Minnesota QSO Party (SSB, CW, Digital)

February 7 -- Straight Key Party

February 7-8 -- Vermont QSO Party (SSB, CW, Digital)

February 7-8 -- YLISSB QSO Party

February 7-8 -- Ten-Ten Winter Phone QSO Party

February 7-8 -- Black Sea Cup International (SSB, CW)

February 7-8 -- British Columbia QSO Party (SSB, CW, Digital)

February 7-8 -- XE International RTTY Contest

February 7-8 -- AM QSO Party

February 8 -- North American Sprint (CW)

February 8-9 -- Classic Exchange (Phone)

February 8 -- Milwaukee FM Simplex Contest

February 9-13 -- School Club Roundup (SSB, FM, CW)

See the ARRL Contest Calendar for more information.

Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions and Events

February 7 -- Virginia State Convention, Richmond, Virginia

February 13-15 -- Southeastern Division Convention, Orlando, Florida

February 20-21 -- Arizona Section Convention, Yuma, Arizona

February 28 -- New Mexico Techfest Convention, Albuquerque, New Mexico

February 28 -- Vermont State Convention, S Burlington, Vermont

March 7 -- Santa Clara Valley Section Convention, Del Rey Oaks, California

March 13-14 -- North Carolina Section Convention, Concord, North Carolina

March 14 -- West Texas Section Convention, Midland, Texas

March 20-21 -- Louisiana State Convention, Rayne, Louisiana

March 21 -- MicroHAMS Digital Conference, Redmond, Washington

March 21 -- Nebraska State Convention, Lincoln, Nebraska

March 21 -- Southern Florida Section Convention, Stuart, Florida

March 28 -- Texas State Convention, Rosenberg, Texas

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///////////////////////////////////////////

Breaking news: Fcc inaugurates paperless amateur radio licensing february

17

Posted: 29 Jan 2015 08:10 AM PST
http://forums.qrz.com/showthread.php...7&goto=newpost

BRAKING NEWS: FCC INAUGURATES PAPERLESS AMATEUR RADIO LICENSING FEBRUARY 17

(Courtesy ARRL)

SB QST @ ARL $ARLB004

ARLB004 FCC "Paperless" Amateur Radio License Policy Goes into

Effect on February 17

ZCZC AG04

QST de W1AW

ARRL Bulletin 4 ARLB004

From ARRL Headquarters

Newington CT January 29, 2015

To all radio amateurs

SB QST ARL ARLB004

ARLB004 FCC "Paperless" Amateur Radio License Policy Goes into

Effect on February 17

Starting February 17, the FCC no longer will routinely issue paper

license documents to Amateur Radio applicants and licensees. The

Commission has maintained for some time now that the official

Amateur Radio license authorization is the electronic record that

exists in its Universal Licensing System (ULS), although the FCC has

continued to print and mail hard copy licenses. In mid-December the

FCC adopted final procedures to provide access to official

electronic authorizations, as it had proposed in WT Docket 14-161 as

part of its "process reform" initiatives.

Under the new procedures, licensees will access their current

official authorization ("Active" status only) via the ULS License

Manager. The FCC will continue to provide paper license documents to

all licensees who notify the Commission that they prefer to receive

one. Licensees also will be able to print out an official

authorization - as well as an unofficial "reference copy" - from the

ULS License Manager.

"We find this electronic process will improve efficiency by

simplifying access to official authorizations in ULS, shortening the

time period between grant of an application and access to the

official authorization, and reducing regulatory costs," the FCC

Wireless Telecommunications Bureau (WTB) said. According to the WTB,

the new procedures will save at least $304,000 a year, including the

cost of staff resources.

In comments filed November 5, the ARRL had strongly recommended that

the FCC "give serious consideration to continuing a default

provision for sending an initial paper license document to new

licensees in the Amateur Radio Service, along with detailed, simple

instructions for how to make the elections set forth in the notice

relative to future modified or renewed licenses."

The FCC said that applicants or licensees who include a valid e-mail

address under "Applicant Information" in the ULS will receive an

official electronic authorization via e-mail. New license applicants

who do not provide a FCC Registration Number at the examination

point will receive a printed license as well as an FRN and a

temporary password to access the Commission Registration System

(CORES).

The ARRL and other Amateur Radio commenters also worried that unless

a license document is printed on distinctive paper stock, its

authenticity could be questioned in such situations as obtaining

vanity call sign license plates. To address this, the FCC said the

watermark "Official Copy" will be printed on each page of an

official authorization that a licensee prints out from the ULS. The

WTB recently stopped using distinctive paper stock to produce hard

copy licenses and has been printing these on "standard, white

recycled paper." The Bureau noted that the distinctive paper stock

it had used was six times more expensive than the plain recycled

paper it now uses.

The ULS License Manager now includes settings that allow licensees

to notify the WTB that they prefer to receive official

authorizations on paper. Once the final procedures go into effect

designating electronic access as the default, licensees can change

the ULS License Manager setting so that the Bureau will print and

mail a license document. Licensees also may contact FCC Support via

the web at,

http://esupport.fcc.gov/index.htm?jo...ct_fcc_support , or via

telephone or mail to request paper licenses.

The FCC rejected as "outside the scope of this proceeding" an ARRL

argument that Section 97.23 of the Amateur Service rules be amended

to replace "licensee mailing address" with other alternatives,

including e-mail, for use in Commission correspondence. The rule,

which requires that any licensee mailing address be in an area where

the licensee has US Postal Service access, has precluded FCC

issuance of location-specific call signs in such areas as Navassa

Island (KP1) and some Pacific islands.

NNNN

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