There should be no public news release or official mention until March 17. 

 

The draft is public, and people certainly can discuss; but (1) ARRL advocacy continues so as to be sure that it doesn’t slip backwards and (2) to see if some additional time can be found for the upper transition.  This is not the time to declare happiness with the result since our ask was for more and we are not publicly abandoning that until the final decision on March 17.

 

Thanks es 73,

 

Dave K3ZJ

 

From: "rjairam@gmail.com" <rjairam@gmail.com>
Date: Sunday, February 28, 2021 at 12:22 PM
To: "Baker, Mickey, N4MB (Dir, SE)" <mbaker@arrl.org>
Cc: arrl-odv <arrl-odv-bounces@reflector.arrl.org>, "david@davidsiddall-law.com" <david@davidsiddall-law.com>
Subject: Re: [arrl-odv:32071] Re: Draft FCC Decision on 3.4 GHz

 

I see it as completely not bad news, however I would strongly advise that we wait until it is final before declaring any kind of victory. This is a draft and we definitely don’t want to be premature on this. 

 

So, let’s hold our fire. It’s only a couple of weeks.

 

Ria

N2RJ

 

On Sun, Feb 28, 2021 at 12:00 PM Baker, Mickey, N4MB (Dir, SE) <mbaker@arrl.org> wrote:

This is potentially excellent news, David. Good work.

 

Since it is public information, should Mr. Minster declare a potential victory for ARRL and ask our PR folks to generate a release to membership?

 

Spectrum protection is “top of mind” for most of our active members.

 

73,

 

Mickey N4MB

 


From: arrl-odv <arrl-odv-bounces@reflector.arrl.org> on behalf of david davidsiddall-law.com <david@davidsiddall-law.com>
Sent: Saturday, February 27, 2021 10:07:05 AM
To: arrl-odv <arrl-odv-bounces@reflector.arrl.org>
Subject: [arrl-odv:32069] Draft FCC Decision on 3.4 GHz

 

ODV,

 

The following describes a draft FCC decision on the 3.4 GHz (9 cm) matter.  The draft is not official FCC action.  Final action is scheduled for March 17.  Changes may be made to the below description before final adoption by the Commission.

 

The FCC has released a draft of its decision on 3.4 GHz (9 cm) and scheduled consideration at its meeting on Wednesday, March 17.  The Commission had proposed limiting amateur operations to the 3.3 – 3.4 GHz band while negotiations continue on the future use of that spectrum. (The entire 3.3-3.5 GHz band is within spectrum internationally allocated for 5G and other mobile services, including in our ITU Region 2.)

 

The draft decision agrees with ARRL that the (relatively) low power of amateur operations is conducive to allowing amateurs to continue to operate up to the band edge with future commercial operations at 3450 MHz.  This change will accommodate substantially more digital operations, notably those using Ubiquiti equipment that is said to be difficult to move much below 3400 MHz.  It also will allow the weak signal work and beacons to move just below 3450 within much better range of their current 3456 GHz operations.  It also will allow moon bounce (EME) operators  to continue to use the spectrum just above 3400.

 

More generally, the draft proposes that amateurs be authorized to continue to use 3300 – 3450 MHz under the same secondary status as at present.  The top quarter of the band, 3450 – 3500 MHz, will be withdrawn from all amateur use effective 90 days after public notice of the close of the auction to commercial interests.  I predict that operations in this upper portion will have to cease in about one year (somewhere around April or May, 2022).  Congress statutorily required the FCC to begin the auction for this spectrum by no later than December 31, 2021. 

 

Operations can continue below 3450 MHz after the auction, and those in the 3450 – 3500 MHz segment can move lower in frequency subject to secondary status to federal users (as at present).  The Commission and other agencies of the federal government (the primary users of this band) are continuing discussions on making some or all of the 3300 – 3450 MHz spectrum available for commercial use, and the FCC believes that those decisions will result in expanding commercial use there and suggest closing all secondary amateur operations in this band.  So for now it looks like amateurs will continue to have access to 3300 – 3450  MHz for some (unknown) period of time.

 

Please let me know if you have any questions.

 

73, Dave K3ZJ

 

 

 

David R. Siddall

Managing Partner

DS Law, PLLC

1629 K St. NW, Ste 300

Washington, DC 20006

direct: +1 202 559 4690

 

Default Line

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