Alexa Seleno
@alexaseleno

ARRL to Gather Comments from Members on FCC’s Public Notice

Dear ARRL Member,

On March 12, 2025, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) issued a Public Notice titled “In Re: Delete, Delete, Delete,” seeking input from the public on FCC rules that may be outdated, unnecessary, or in need of modification. This inquiry is part of the FCC’s ongoing effort to alleviate regulatory burdens across various services, including the Amateur Radio Service.

As part of this review, ARRL is conducting a thorough examination of the provisions in Part 97 and related rules that affect amateur radio operators. ARRL’s written comments, which will be prepared by our FCC Counsel and the ARRL Executive Committee, will include consideration of feedback we received from members.

Members who want to share comments and concerns about this matter are urged to share your feedback directly with ARRL. Please submit your comments by March 31, 2025 and use the following feedback form:

www.arrl.org/fcc-public-notice-march-2025

ARRL will submit our official filing to the FCC by the April 11 deadline. After that, there will be an opportunity for reply comments at the FCC until April 28, and then later, opportunities for public comment on any rules the FCC proposes to delete or modify.

 

While the FCC Public Notice is a broad inquiry that does not single out any specific radio service, ARRL is nonetheless committed to protecting the Amateur Radio Service, promoting its public interest goals, and ensuring your right to access radio spectrum.

 

ARRL will continue to work on this matter, and we will inform members as more news develops.

 

Thank you,

 

73

 

ARRL Executive Committee

WX4NHC at the National Hurricane Center

Amateur Radio station WX4NHC is located at the National Hurricane Center (NHC) in Miami, Florida. The station has been totally assembled from donated equipment and is operated by an organized group of volunteer amateur radio operators since 1980. Read about its history.

WX4NHC activates whenever a hurricane is within 300 miles of landfall in the areas of the western Atlantic, the Caribbean or the eastern Pacific. The team of operators also provides emergency backup communications from NHC to NWS Offices and other agencies in case of local landfall. The NHC operators work in conjunction with the Hurricane Watch Net, VoIP WX-Talk Hurricane Net and other volunteer networks to collect real-time surface reports for the NHC hurricane specialists via amateur radio using many modes such as HF and VHF/UHF voice, VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) systems, EchoLink and IRLP, and Automatic Packet Reporting System (APRS). Input also comes from two non-amateur volunteer weather observer networks–ON-NHC (Observers Network), and CWOP (Citizens Weather Observers Program), using on-line reporting, email and fax. WX4NHC also relays hurricane advisories via the amateur radio nets to the hurricane affected areas and governmental agencies when conventional means of communications have been interrupted.

Observers’ surface reports provide the forecasters with supplemental weather and damage data that are not normally available to them and are frequently incorporated into their advisories as they provide a human perspective and eyewitness accounts of what people are experiencing during a hurricane. The WX4NHC team has been nationally recognized for its volunteer international humanitarian efforts by the National Hurricane Conference and the South Florida Hurricane Conference.

Field Day Is Just Around the Corner

ARRL Field Day is the most popular on-the-air event held annually in the US and Canada. During the fourth weekend of June, more than 31,000 radio amateurs gather with their clubs, groups, or friends to operate from remote locations.

 

We welcome the public to come learn more about ham radio! Use our Field Day Locator to search for a Field Day site near you.

 

Find more information and the latest rules and guidelines, visit www.arrl.org/field-day.

 

Improve Your Club’s Message Fair Using the Radiogram Gateway!

Your club is planning to staff a table at a local community fair or event. Offer to send radiograms. Recruit volunteers to explain what a radiogram is and, later, send the messages. Who in your radio club is active on the traffic nets? How many members know the radiogram format or know how to send a radiogram message on the air? Fear not! Your club can put its best foot forward and hold an amateur radio message fair with minimal traffic-handling skills using an exciting new tool: the Radiogram Portal!

Jonathan Taylor, K1RFD, inventor of EchoLink, has developed a web-based tool that the public can use to enter a short message by following simple instructions. The message will be picked up by a participating amateur radio volunteer operator (called a “radiogrammer”) who logs in to a restricted portion of the website, takes the message off the gateway, and sends it over the air on a National Traffic System (NTS) net for relay to its destination. The recipient will get a local phone call from a nearby ham. Along the way, ham operators will relay the messages by voice, digital, or even Morse code and get valuable practice in emergency public service.

“It’s not a problem if your club lacks an active traffic handler to check into the traffic nets,” says Phil Temples, K9HI, who chairs the ARRL EC-FSC NTS subcommittee. “You merely set up a laptop at your message fair using a Wi-Fi connection and allow members of the public to enter their own messages. Later, a skilled traffic handler in your area will pull the message off the portal and send it in a timely fashion.”

The Radiogram Portal was successfully demonstrated at the 2024 New England Division Convention. An extensive display sponsored by the Nashua (New Hampshire) Area Radio Society highlighted the NTS and the Radiogram Portal running on a computer, along with a trifold that pictured the NTS2 website, the NTS Letter, training videos, and a downloadable handout available for clubs and public gatherings.

For more information on the Radiogram Portal, visit nts2.arrl.org/radiogram.

By Phil Temples, K9HI

2025 Contesting Related Events Dayton Hamvention

May 14th – Wednesday night
6:00 PM to 8:00 PM Dayton Contest University 2025 Registration at the Hope Hotel
7:00 PM Contest Super Suite at the Hope Hotel opens hosted by the Mad River Radio Club (MRRC), Frankford Radio Club (FRC)  North Coast Contesters (NCC), and Kansas City DX Club (KCDXC).
10:00 PM Pizza Party at the Hope Hotel sponsored by Dayton Contest University 2025.   http://www.contestsupersuite.com.

May 15th – Thursday daytime
7:00 AM Dayton Contest University 2025 Registration opens at the Hope Hotel.  Must sign up in advance – http://www.contestuniversity.com.
8:00 AM – 5:00 PM Dayton Contest University 2025 at the Hope Hotel.

May 15th – Thursday night
6:00 pm Digital Contest Dinner – at the Hope Hotel in the Mustang Room.  Speaker is Roger Hoffman, N4RR – RTTY Contesting as PJ4R.  Tickets from W0YK
7:00 PM Contest Super Suite at the Hope Hotel hosted by the Mad River Radio Club (MRRC), Frankford Radio Club (FRC) North Coast Contesters (NCC), and Kansas City DX Club (KCDXC).
10:00 PM Pizza Party at the Hope Hotel sponsored by the Society of Midwest Contesters (SMC). http://www.contestsupersuite.com

May 16th – Friday daytime
7:00 AM – First Bus Pickup from the Hope Hotel to the Fairgrounds.  (Bus runs on a continuous loop between the hotel and the fairgrounds).  Friday and Saturday only.
9:15 – 10:35 AM Digital Contest Forum at Hamvention in Xenia, Ohio, Room 4 Moderator:  Ed Muns, W0YK
“ RTTY and FT8 Contest Insights,, Tim Shoppa, N3QE
“Recent Advances in RigSelect Pro, Courtney Krehbiel, KD6X
“The New FT Challenge Contest, Ed Muns, W0YK
“Understanding Log Checking, Ed Muns, W0YK
2:00 PM – 5:00 PM Antenna Forum at Hamvention in Xenia, Ohio, Room 1 Moderator:  Tim Duffy, K3LR.
“Comparison of Short Vertical Arrays for Low Band Receiving” Joel Harrison, W5ZN
“Wideband Wire Antennas” Fred Lass, K2TR
“All Choked up! Feedline Choking Without Suffocating” Greg Ordy, W8WWV
“Solar Cycle 25 Lessons Learned for Amateur Radio” Dr. Tamitha Skov, WX6SWW
5:30 PM – Final Bus Pickup from the Fairgrounds to the Hope Hotel.

May 16th – Friday night
7:00 PM Contest Super Suite at the Hope Hotel hosted by the Mad River Radio Club (MRRC), Frankford Radio Club (FRC) North Coast Contesters (NCC), and Kansas City DX Club (KCDXC).
7:00 PM 34th Annual Top Band Dinner at the Hope Hotel.  Speaker John Crovelli, W2GD.  Tickets in advance from http://www.topbanddinner.com.
9:30 PM-11:00 PM – Spurious Emissions Band performing live at the Hope Hotel
11:00 PM Pizza Party at the Hope Hotel sponsored by the Potomac Valley Radio Club (PVRC).  http://www.contestsupersuite.com

May 17th – Saturday daytime
7:00 AM – First Bus Pickup from the Hope Hotel to the Fairgrounds.  (Bus runs on a continuous loop between the hotel and the fairgrounds).  Friday and Saturday only.
1:35 PM – 3:50 PM Contest Forum at Hamvention in Xenia, OH, Room 1 Moderator:  Doug Grant, K1DG.
“Great Montana Sweepstakes Shootout of 2024” – Chris Hurlbut, KL9A/KM7W and Pat Barkey, N9RV
“Youth Contesting in Europe” – Jules Benkemoun, F4IEY
“QSO Party Roving in Style” – Chris Knox, KI1P
“Introducing Tina – the N3QE AI op” – Tim Shoppa, N3QE
“Real Time Contesting – HAMSCORE.com” – Victor Androsov, VA2WA and Craig Thompson, K9CT
5:30 PM – Final Bus Pickup from the Fairgrounds to the Hope Hotel.

May 17th – Saturday evening
6:30 PM 31st Annual Dayton Contest Dinner hosted by North Coast Contesters at the Hope Hotel.  Dinner speaker Chris Hurlbut, KL9A.  Space is limited.  Details and tickets in advance are available at http://www.contestdinner.com.
7:00 PM Contest Super Suite at the Hope Hotel hosted by The Mad River Radio Club (MRRC), Frankford Radio Club (FRC) North Coast Contesters (NCC), and Kansas City DX Club (KCDXC).
8:00 PM to 12:00 AM Kansas City DX Club CW Pileup Competition at the Hope Hotel.
10:30 PM Pizza Party at the Hope Hotel sponsored by the Yankee Clipper Contest Club (YCCC).  http://www.contestsupersuite.com