Recently on another reflector I read a rumor about the ARRL proposing a maximum 
bandwidth limitation on subbands of 3.5 Kcy.  I sent the following message to 
the Executive Director of the ARRL and here is his answer.  I post for you 
consumption.  Is it time to get involved with the directors?

73   Jim
de W5JPW




 -----Original Message-----
From: WILHITE, JIM [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, August 14, 2002 1:34 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Rumors


Hi Dave:

Another rumor has surfaced about the ARRL being supportive of limiting the 
bandwidth of signals.  The rumor is 3.5 kHz for wideband signals.  If this is 
true, I want you to know how adamantly I am opposed to the proposal.  In a time 
when frequency allocations are increasing and band usage is much more 
congenial, I find it hard to believe that anyone would support this kind of 
proposal.

The rumor is that the ARRL is prepared to sumit a notice of proposed rulemaking 
concerning this issue.  Can you please tell me if that is the case and is the 
notice being prepared?   

Tnx and 73

Jim Wilhite
member #  0008432524
de W5JPW





Well, Jim, all I can tell you is that the ARRL opposed a 3.5-kHz bandwidth 
limitation the last time it was proposed, by the FCC in 1976 (Docket 20777), 
and I don't know anything that's changed in the meantime to alter that position.

Probably what set this off was Minute 64 of the July 2002 Board Meeting which 
reads in its entirety: 64. On motion of Mr. Frenaye, seconded by Mr. Stinson, 
it was VOTED that at the next practical opportunity the ARRL shall petition the 
FCC to revise Part 97 to regulate subbands by signal bandwidth instead of by 
mode.

The Board has given us no instruction as to what the petition should propose 
with regard to bandwidth. Absent instructions to the contrary, what we draft 
(nothing's been done on this as of now) will not propose new restrictions. But 
it's certainly true that in going from a regulatory regime based on mode of 
emission to one based on bandwidth there are bound to be consequences, intended 
and otherwise, that will have to be considered very carefully.

73,
David Sumner, K1ZZ


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