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N9PMO  > LETTER   18.01.19 04:03l 534 Lines 24280 Bytes #999 (0) @ ARRL
BID : ARRL3703
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Subj: ARRL3703 ARRL Letter
Path: IZ3LSV<IW8PGT<CX2SA<N9PMO
Sent: 190118/0157Z 13831@N9PMO.#SEWI.WI.USA.NA BPQ6.0.18

ARRL Board of Directors' Annual Meeting to Welcome New Members

Court Rules Excessive Antenna Application Fees Violated Reasonable
Accommodation

The Doctor Will See You Now!

New 2019 Repeater Directory is Now Shipping

Winter Field Day 2019 is January 26 - 27, W1AW to Participate

AMSAT Announces 50th Anniversary Awards Program

December YOTA Month Activity Records More Than 80,000 Contacts

US Islands Awards Program Announces 25th Anniversary Award, Recent
Rule Changes

In Brief...

The K7RA Solar Update

Just Ahead in Radiosport

Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions

ARRL Board of Directors' Annual Meeting to Welcome New Members

Newly elected ARRL Directors from four Divisions and one new Vice
Director will be welcomed to the conference table when the ARRL Board
of Directors meets for its Annual Meeting on January 18 - 19 in
Windsor, Connecticut.

New to the Board are Hudson Division Director Ria Jairam, N2RJ, of
Sussex, New Jersey, who edged out incumbent Mike Lisenco, N2YBB, in
last fall's balloting. The New England Division also will have new
representation, as Fred Hopengarten, K1VR, of Lincoln, Massachusetts,
succeeds Director Tom Frenaye, K1KI, who lost his re-election bid.
Hopengarten, an attorney, is the author of Antenna Zoning for the
Radio Amateur and has served as an ARRL Volunteer Counsel.

(From left to right) Ria Jairam, N2RJ; Bud Hippisley, W2RU; Mike Ritz,
W7VO; Robert Wareham, N0ESQ; Fred Hopengarten, K1VR, and Mark Tharp,
KB7HDX. [Michelle Patnode, W3MVP, photo]

In the Northwestern Division, Mike Ritz, W7VO, of Scappoose, Oregon,
has succeeded Jim Pace, K7CEX, who opted not to seek a new term after
serving since 2014. New Northwestern Division Vice Director -- and
past Eastern Washington Section Manager -- Mark Tharp, KB7HDX, is
another fresh face. He topped a three-candidate field to succeed
Bonnie Altus, AB7ZQ. In the Roanoke Division, George "Bud" Hippisley,
W2RU, of Penhook, Virginia, is the new Director after outpolling
Director Dr. Jim Boehner, N2ZZ, in last fall's voting. Hippisley
served as ARRL Atlantic Division Vice Director from 1982 until 1985
and is the co-author of Practical Antenna Handbook. He was a 2010
recipient of the ARRL George Hart Distinguished Service Award.

Also attending his first Board meeting will be Rocky Mountain Division
Vice Director Robert Wareham, N0ESQ, of Highlands Ranch, Colorado. He
was appointed last November to serve the remaining term of Jeff Ryan,
K0RM, who assumed the position of Rocky Mountain Director upon the
resignation of Dwayne Allen, WY7FD.

New Director/Vice Director orientation was held on January 16 at ARRL
Headquarters. The LoTW, ministration & Finance, and Programs &
Services committees also met this week at Headquarters.

The Board will elect ARRL officers, a new secretary, a new Executive
Committee, and ARRL Foundation Directors. It will receive and consider
reports from CEO Howard Michel, WB2ITX; Treasurer Rick Niswander,
K7GM, and Chief Financial Officer Diane Middleton, W2DLM.

According to the published agenda, the Board will hear reports from
the Executive, ministration & Finance, and Programs & Services
committees. The Board also will hear proposals for amendments to the
Articles of Association and Bylaws.

In addition, the Board will review recommendations contained in
various other committee reports.

Court Rules Excessive Antenna Application Fees Violated Reasonable
Accommodation

Long-pending Amateur Radio antenna litigation that ARRL helped to fund
has finally borne fruit. The Supreme Court of the State of New York,
Appellate Division: Second Judicial Department has ruled in the case
of Myles Landstein, N2EHG, that the Town of LaGrange, New York, not
only overstepped its state-granted authority by assessing excessive
fees, but violated the limited federal preemption PRB-1 in the
process. PRB-1 requires municipalities and states to "reasonably"
accommodate Amateur Radio antennas and to apply the "minimum
practicable regulation" in handling Amateur Radio antenna
applications. The ruling is slated to be published as a case decision.
Landstein, who lives in the Bronx, had wanted to erect a 70-foot
antenna support structure for a multioperator station in the Hamlet of
Lagrangeville; the Town of LaGrange has a 35-foot height limit.

"This case, which goes back to 2013, was about applying PRB-1 to a
situation in which a municipality attempted to thwart the installation
and maintenance of ham radio antennas by imposing excessive permit
application costs on the ham applicant," said communications attorney
Chris Imlay, W3KD, who is familiar with the case. Imlay said the FCC
has refused to clarify the cost-prohibition issue as it relates to
PRB-1's "minimum practicable regulation" and reasonable accommodation
provisions of PRB-1.

"The Town incurred more than $17,000 in legal consulting fees in
connection with [Landstein's] applications, and informed the
petitioner that he was required to reimburse the Town for these fees
before any determination would be made with respect to the
applications," the court decision recounted. "The Town subsequently,
as 'an accommodation to the petitioner,' reduced the
amount...to...$5,874, but also required the petitioner to maintain a
minimum advance continuing escrow balance of at least $1,000 to cover
the Town's future consulting costs..."

"We hold that, because the Town did not limit the consulting fees
charged to the petitioner to those necessary to the decision-making
function of the town's Planning Board and Zoning Board of Appeals, the
town exceeded its state-granted authority by requiring payment of the
consulting fees and, moreover, violated a rule promulgated by the
[FCC]," the court concluded.

Given the significant delay, Imlay said both he and Landstein had lost
hope that the case would ever be resolved in Landstein's favor -- and
in the favor of radio amateurs in New York, generally -- much less be
a case that would "create favorable precedent for Amateur Radio."

"ARRL originally was drawn to this case, because New York is the only
state that, due to a very old case decision, has held that Amateur
Radio antennas are not necessarily a 'normal accessory use' to
residential real property," Imlay explained. "Because the issue in the
case dealt with both that issue and the issue of cost prohibitions in
the permitting process relative to the cost of the antenna
installation, we decided to fund the case." Landstein lost at trial,
and an appeal was filed in about 2015, for which ARRL provided
memoranda of law about the cost-prohibition issue. "The antenna at
issue and the support structure was to cost no more than $1,000,"
Imlay said.

The court concluded that the town "may not use its land-use regulatory
authority to construct 'hoop after hoop' for the petitioner to jump
through in order to erect his radio antenna tower [and] cannot impose
unreasonable expenses so as to create an insurmountable financial
barrier to the pursuit of the project. In this context, not only must
the consultant fees be reasonable..., but the underlying services must
be necessarily related to those municipal regulatory functions which
are not preempted by federal law."



The Doctor Will See You Now!

"Life Above 50 MHz" is the topic of the new (January 17) episode of
the "ARRL The Doctor is In" podcast. Listen...and learn!

Sponsored by DX Engineering, "ARRL The Doctor is In" is an informative
discussion of all things technical. Listen on your computer, tablet,
or smartphone -- whenever and wherever you like!

Every 2 weeks, your host, QST Editor-in-Chief Steve Ford, WB8IMY, and
the Doctor himself, Joel Hallas, W1ZR, will discuss a broad range of
technical topics. You can also email your questions to
doctor@arrl.org, and the Doctor may answer them in a future podcast.

Enjoy "ARRL The Doctor is In" on Apple iTunes, or by using your iPhone
or iPad podcast app (just search for "ARRL The Doctor is In"). You can
also listen online at Blubrry, or at Stitcher (free registration
required, or browse the site as a guest) and through the free Stitcher
app for iOS, Kindle, or Android devices. If you've never listened to a
podcast before, download our beginner's guide.

New 2019 Repeater Directory is Now Shipping

The new 2019 ARRL Repeater Directory® includes crowdsourced listings
contributed by users, repeater owners, and volunteer frequency
coordinators. This means more listings that are updated more often.
With 28,000 listings, the ARRL Repeater Directory is the most complete
printed directory of on-the-air repeaters, covering systems throughout
the US and Canada.

Repeater systems are listed by state/province, city, and operating
mode. Digital repeater systems are included: System Fusion, D-STAR,
DMR, NXDN, and P25 systems. It is available in one size -- 6 × 9
inches -- with a convenient lay-flat spiral binding. To make it your
own, the cover includes space to personalize your directory. Pages of
supplemental information include VHF/UHF and microwave band plans, and
repeater operating practices.

For decades, The ARRL Repeater Directory has been an invaluable source
for locating repeater frequencies while traveling. New hams often use
the Repeater Directory to find local activity after purchasing a new
handheld radio, and public service volunteers keep a copy nearby or in
their emergency go-kit.

The 2019 ARRL Repeater Directory is now shipping. Order from the ARRL
Store, or find an ARRL publication dealer; ARRL Item No. 1045, ISBN:
978-1-62595-104-5, $19.95 retail; ARRL member price $17.95. For
additional questions or ordering, call 860-594-0355 (toll-free in the
US, 888-277-5289).



Winter Field Day 2019 is January 26 - 27, W1AW to Participate

The Winter Field Day Association (WFDA) sponsors the 2019 running of
Winter Field Day, January 26 - 27. WFDA says that the ability to
conduct emergency communication in a winter environment is just as
important as the preparation and practice that take place each summer,
but with some additional unique operational concerns.

"We believe that maintaining your operational skills should not be
limited to fair-weather scenarios," WFDA said in announcing this
year's event. "The addition of Winter Field Day will enhance those
already important skills of those that who generously volunteer their
time and equipment to these organizations. Preparedness is the key to
a professional and timely response during any event, and this is what
local and state authorities are expecting when they reach out to
emergency service groups that offer their services." The event is open
to all radio amateurs.

Members of the Warren County (NY) Radio Club (WCARC) will activate
Maxim Memorial Station W1AW during 2019 Winter Field Day. Club members
will work a rotating 24-hour operating schedule to ensure the most
band/mode coverage.

AMSAT Announces 50th Anniversary Awards Program

AMSAT has announced its 50th Anniversary Awards Program, to help
celebrate 50 years of keeping Amateur Radio in space. Satellite and HF
contacts can help participants to earn one of these awards:

50th Anniversary AMSAT OSCAR Satellite Communications Achievement
Award

50th Anniversary AMSAT Satellite Friends of 50 Award

AMSAT on HF 50th Anniversary Award

The 50th anniversary AMSAT OSCAR Satellite Communications Achievement
Award will be issued on one of the original goldenrod paper stock
certificates and signed by AMSAT's founding President, Perry Klein,
W3PK (ex-K3TJE). "With only 20 original certificates  available, this
award will certainly become a collector's item," AMSAT said.

Complete details are on the AMSAT website. Awards cost $25, plus
postage. Certificates will be sequentially numbered.

To receive the 50th Anniversary AMSAT Satellite Friends of 50 Award,
work 50 stations on any satellite -- with a limit of one contact per
day -- during 2019. Contacts may be made from various locations, as
long as the operator uses his or her personal call sign (with any
appropriate locators). This award is $15, plus postage. Complete
details are on the AMSAT website.

To achieve the AMSAT on HF 50th Anniversary Award, work at least one
AMSAT member on any HF band in any mode. ditional award levels are
based on the number of AMSAT members you contact on the HF bands.
Complete details are on the AMSAT website. -- Thanks to Robert
Bankston, KE4AL, AMSAT-NA Vice President of User Services

German Satellite Special Event to Commemorate AMSAT 50th Anniversary

AMSAT's 50th anniversary will be celebrated with AMSAT-DL (Germany)
special event call sign DL50AMSAT. The station will be on the air from
Saxony on the Czech Republic border via satellites only, and will
debut during the IG Hamspirit Satellite Weekend, January 18 - 20. Also
planned in conjunction with the weekend are antenna building and
practical testing. Track the event on Instagram and Twitter with the
hashtag #satelliteweekend. -- Thanks to AMSAT-DL



December YOTA Month Activity Records More Than 80,000 Contacts

More than 80,000 contacts went into logs at YOTA suffix stations and
others participating in December Youngsters on the Air (YOTA) Month,
with most operations in International Amateur Radio Union Region 1
(IARU-R1). The final tally included 46,989 on SSB, another 28,064 on
CW, some 3,814 on FT8, and the rest on various other modes.

"This year, as many as 44 participating stations made 82,938 QSOs in
December, proving once again that neither the weather nor the holidays
can keep a radio amateur away from the station," Gergana Ruseva,
LZ1ZYL, said in the 2018 YOTA Month report.

YOTA Month station OL18YOTA was operated during December from several
places within the Czech Republic. [Photo courtesy of YOTA]

Ruseva said YOTA was happy to bring young radio amateurs together by
hosting this event, which "inspires them to be more active on the
bands and shows them there are many people listening on the other
side."

The most active station during YOTA Month 2018 was II5YOTA in Italy,
which logged 8,387 contacts. The preferred bands turned out to be 40
and 20 meters, with more than 30,000 contacts logged from YOTA Month
participants on each band. Complete statistics are on the YOTA
website.

YOTA also has announced that the YOTA Youth Sked will start up again
in 2019. The on-the-air event will take place every fourth Thursday
from 1900 to 2200 UTC, with a different group of youngsters acting as
net control. The YOTA Youth Sked will convene on or about 7.175 MHz,
shifting later to 3.675 MHz.

US Islands Awards Program Announces 25th Anniversary Award, Recent
Rule Changes

The US Islands (USI) Awards Program celebrates its 25th anniversary
this year and is offering a commemorative award for both chasers and
activators for contacts made between January 1 and December 31.

To qualify, chasers must confirm 25 islands during 2019, as a club or
individual, and activators must qualify or activate 25 islands in any
combination, making at least 15 contacts for both new island
qualification and island activation. This award can be issued to
multiple club members using a single call sign, or to an individual.
Send a list of confirmed or activated islands to Award Chairman Jay
Chamberlain, NS4J. The list should include name, call sign, address,
email, USI number, island name, date worked or activated, and call
sign used or worked.

The following permanent rule changes went into effect on January 1:
The minimum contact count for island qualifications has been lowered
from 25 to 15; the contact requirement of two DXCCs during an island
qualification has been dropped, and the bands eligible for island
qualifications have been expanded to include 6 meters and satellite
contacts.



In Brief...

On-Orbit Frequency Change Announced for UWE-4 CubeSat The Satellite
Technology group at the University of Würzburg has announced a change
of frequency for the UWE-4 CubeSat, launched on a December 27 Soyuz
flight. The 1U CubeSat carries an electric propulsion experiment and a
70-centimeter 9.6 k AX.25 digipeater. "After 2 weeks in orbit, UWE-4
is in very good shape," the group reported. "After the early-orbit
phase, we are looking forward to some interesting experiments with the
attitude determination sensors and the propulsion system.
Unfortunately, our uplink success rate is very poor, which currently
prevents these experiments." The university team said that the problem
appears to be a "substantial noise floor" at the original frequency.
"For this reason, we filed a request for the change of our radio
frequency to 435.600 MHz with IARU, which has already been approved,"
the group said. The procedure to change the UWE-4 frequency began on
January 10. The Satellite Technology Group requested that radio
amateurs forward any UWE-4 telemetry files via email. -- Thanks to the
UWE-4 Team via Trevor, M5AKA, and AMSAT News Service

ISS Fan Club Website Closed, New ISS Fan Club Site Opened The ISS Fan
Club website closed on January 1, 2019, after nearly 17 years. The
site offered information on tracking the International Space Station
and on crew activity. It provided frequencies and ISS digipeating
assistance, as well as a place to showcase ISS slow-scan TV (SSTV)
images and to meet fellow ISS fans. Brian Clark, KF6FES, has told ARRL
that one of the founding members of the ISS Fan Club site, Claudio
Ariotti, IK1SLD, and several members of the ARISS team, including
Clark, have launched a new ISS Fan Club site. "This new site is
growing by the day, and very soon we will also offer much of the
historical voice QSOs from the original site, as well as SSTV photos,"
Clark said. An unrelated International Space Station Fan Group
Facebook page offers similar information.

Japanese Ham Receives License to Operate in Myanmar Akio Taguchi,
JE2QIZ/AC7XZ, reports that he has received a license from the Myanmar
(formerly known as Burma) Ministry of Transportation and Communication
and has been on the air as XZ2B. Taguchi explained that Myanmar only
permits Amateur Radio operation from 20 MHz to 300 MHz at a power of
just 25 W, and he plans to operate a fishing rod antenna from his
hotel. Because license fees in Myanmar are assessed in terms of
spectrum used, Taguchi said his license authorizes operation within 20
kHz of the band edge. He will operate CW only. As of January 12, he
reported having contacted fewer than 30 stations, including New
Zealand, Australia, China, the Philippines, and Russia. His license is
valid for 150 days. More information is on the XZ2B QRZ.com profile.
Myanmar is the 49th most-wanted DXCC entity, according to Club Log.

Registration is Open for QRP-ARCI "Four Days in May" 2019 Registration
is open for the QRP Amateur Radio Club International (QRPARCI) "Four
Days in May" (FDIM), Thursday - Sunday, May 16 - 19, at the Holiday
Inn, Fairborn, Ohio. The annual FDIM event for QRP enthusiasts and
builders takes place in conjunction with Hamvention®. Sign-in begins
the evening of Wednesday, May 15. Most of Thursday will be taken up
with seminars, "meet the speakers" opportunities, and an open room for
casual show and tell. Most of Friday and Saturday are open to attend
Hamvention and visit the QRP-ARCI Toy Store. Friday evening activities
typically include "show and tell," vendor displays, and a homebrew
contest. Saturday evening features social activities and a banquet,
while Sunday is open for Hamvention. Attendees are invited to display
their QRP-related projects at FDIM. Reservations and group room rates
for FDIM are available via the QRP-ARCI website. For more information,
contact FDIM 2019 Chair Norm Schklar, WA4ZXV.

The K7RA Solar Update

Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: No sunspots were observed since
January 6, so average daily sunspot numbers declined from 7.7 to 0 for
the January 10 - 16 reporting week. Average daily solar flux dropped
from 71.6 to 69.4 over the same period. The average daily planetary A
index went from 7.4 to 4.9, and the average mid-latitude A index
dipped from 6.1 to 4.

Predicted solar flux for the next 45 days is 70 on January 17 - 20; 72
on January 21 - 23; 71 on January 24 - February 1; 70 on February 2 -
4; 69 on February 5 - 13; 70 on February 14 - 15; 71 on February 16 -
28, and 70 on March 1 - 2.

Predicted planetary A index is 5 on January 17 - 22; 8, 20, 12, and 8
on January 23 - 26; 5 on January 27 - 30; 10, 15, 12, and 8 on January
31 - February 3; 5 on February 4 - 10; 12 and 10 on February 11 - 12;
5 on February 13 - 19; 18, 10, and 8 on February 20 - 22; 5 on
February 23 - 26, and 12, 18, 15, and 10 on February 27 - March 2.

Predicted smoothed sunspot number for the month of January 2019 is 9.
Sunspot numbers for January 10 - 16 were 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, and 0, with
a mean of 0. The 10.7-centimeter flux was 70.1, 68.1, 69.6, 68.9, 70,
69.5, and 69.7, with a mean of 69.4. Estimated planetary A indices
were 4, 7, 3, 3, 6, 5, and 6, with a mean of 4.9. Estimated
mid-latitude A indices were 3, 5, 2, 3, 6, 4, and 5, with a mean of 4.

Share your reports and observations.

Just Ahead in Radiosport

January 18 -- LZ Open Contest (CW)

January 19 -- RSGB AFS Contest (Data)

January 19 -- WAB 1.8 MHz Phone

January 19 - 20 -- Hungarian DX Contest (CW, phone)

January 19 - 20 -- North American QSO Party, SSB

January 19 - 20 -- Feld Hell Sprint

January 19 - 21 -- ARRL January VHF Contest (CW, phone, digital)

January 21 -- Run for the Bacon QRP Contest (CW)

January 23 -- SKCC Sprint (CW)

January 23 -- NAQCC CW Sprint

See the ARRL Contest Calendar for more information. For in-depth
reporting on Amateur Radio contesting, subscribe to The ARRL Contest
Update via your ARRL member profile email preferences.

Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions

January 18 - 19 -- Southern Florida Section Convention, Fort Myers,
Florida

January 18 - 19 -- North Texas Section Convention, Forest Hill, Texas

January 20 - 26 -- Quartzfest Convention, Quartzsite, Arizona

January 25 - 26 -- Mississippi State Convention, Jackson, Mississippi

February 2 -- South Carolina State Convention, North Charleston, South
Carolina

February 2 -- Roanoke Division Convention, Richmond, Virginia

February 8 - 10 -- Southeastern Division Convention, Orlando, Florida

February 15 - 16 -- Southwestern Division Convention, Yuma, Arizona

February 16 -- LCARC Winter-Fest, Hoxie, Arkansas

February 22 - 23 -- TECHCON Conference, Tampa, Florida

February 23 -- New Mexico TechFest, Albuquerque, New Mexico

February 23 -- Vermont State Convention, S. Burlington, Vermont

March 8-9 -- Louisiana State Convention, Rayne, Louisiana

March 8-9 -- North Carolina Section Convention, Concord, North
Carolina

March 9 -- Nebraska State Convention, Lincoln, Nebraska

March 16 -- West Texas Section Convention, Midland, Texas

March 22 - 23 -- Texas State Convention, Rosenberg, Texas

March 23 -- MicroHAMS Digital Conference, Redmond, Washington

March 23 -- West Virginia Section Convention, Charleston, West
Virginia

March 29 - 30 -- Maine State Convention, Lewiston, Maine

March 30 -- Tennessee Section Convention, Sevierville, Tennessee

Find conventions and hamfests in your area.

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