SB QST @ ARL $ARLB055 ARLB055 ARRL officials upbeat about reaching 5-MHz compromise ZCZC AG55 QST de W1AW ARRL Bulletin 55 ARLB055 From ARRL Headquarters Newington CT September 20, 2002 To all radio amateurs SB QST ARL ARLB055 ARLB055 ARRL officials upbeat about reaching 5-MHz compromise ARRL President Jim Haynie, W5JBP, and General Counsel Chris Imlay, W3KD, say they're optimistic about reaching a resolution to issues that could otherwise block plans for a new 5 MHz band. Until surprise opposition surfaced from the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), the FCC appeared to have put ARRL's request for a new, domestic-only, secondary amateur allocation at 60 meters on the fast track. In an eleventh-hour move a month ago, the NTIA recommended in a letter to the FCC--sent after the comment deadline--that the Commission not go forward with a proposal for an Amateur Radio allocation at 5250 to 5400 kHz. The NTIA regulates radio spectrum allocated to the federal government. ''We are working together with the Federal agencies involved toward a solution of the impasse raised by the NTIA letter,'' Imlay said after he and Haynie attended a series of meetings September 19 in Washington, DC. In an August 21 letter, acting NTIA Associate Administrator for Spectrum Management Fredrick R. Wentland worried that the 5 MHz proposal the FCC put forth last May at the ARRL's request ''does not adequately provide for protection from harmful interference to these critical government operations'' in the band. After initially huddling this week with NTIA and FCC officials and staff members, Haynie and Imlay met face-to-face with representatives of the agencies involved to share mutual concerns. ''They are willing to work with us,'' Haynie said. ''I don't think we'll get everything we want, but it's certainly a start.'' One difficulty in the negotiations is that some of the information on the government's use of the 5-MHz frequencies involved is classified. Imlay said the discussions tended to center on power restrictions and frequencies but emphasized that no decisions were reached. The ARRL proposal called for a 150-kHz wide band and the full legal power limit. Imlay hinted, however, that perhaps a smaller band than the one requested coupled with some power output limitations, was a real possibility. The ARRL has called the 5 MHz allocation ''an urgent priority of the Amateur Service.'' Until the latest snafu, the FCC had been expected by early next year to issue a Report and Order on proposals for the 5-MHz band, a new low-frequency allocation in the vicinity of 136 kHz and primary Amateur and Amateur-Satellite status at 2400 to 2402 MHz. NNNN /EX