The FCC has agreed with ARRL and other commenters that its proposed $50 fee for certain amateur radio applications was “too high to account for the minimal staff involvement in these applications.” In a Report and Order (R&O), released on December 29, the FCC scaled back to $35 the fee for a new license application, a special temporary authority (STA) request, a rule waiver request, a license renewal application, and a vanity call sign application. All fees are per application. There will be no fee for administrative updates, such as a change of mailing or email address.
This fall, ARRL filed comments in firm opposition to the FCC proposal to impose a $50 fee on amateur radio license and application fees and urged its members to follow suit.
As the FCC noted in its R&O, although some commenters supported the proposed $50 fee as reasonable and fair, “ARRL and many individual commenters argued that there was no cost-based justification for application fees in the Amateur Radio Service.” The fee proposal was contained in a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) in MD Docket 20-270, which was adopted to implement portions of the “Repack Airwaves Yielding Better Access for Users of Modern Services Act” of 2018 — the so-called “Ray Baum’s Act.”
Read more – via American Radio Relay League | Ham Radio Association and Resources http://www.arrl.org/news/view/fcc-reduces-proposed-amateur-radio-application-fee-to-35
More Stories
PODCAST: This Week in Amateur Radio Edition #1414 – Full Version (With repeater ID breaks every 10 minutes)
PODCAST: This Week in Amateur Radio Edition #1414 – LPFM Version (no commercial breaks)
via the ARRL: FCC Warns Licensee on Out-of-Band Transmissions