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FCC requires Arizona BPL field trial operator to work with amateur radio club.The FCC has required Electric Broadband LLC (EB), which is running a BPL field trial in Cottonwood, Arizona, to maintain contact with a local Amateur Radio club. The Commission granted EB a Part 5 Experimental license WD2XMB for the
company's BPL pilot on November 19, although the ARRL earlier this year
asked the Commission to withdraw its authorization for the operation. Under a "Special Conditions" section in the WD2XMB experimental
license, the FCC stipulated that the licensee "must establish and
maintain a liaison relationship with the Verde Valley Amateur Radio Association."
The Commission also required EB to respond to interference complaints
"in a Shipton said Mountain Telecommunications Inc, which handles system operations,
has worked with the VVARA and "expressed sincerity" in resolving
interference to any amateur frequencies affected by their equipment. "Although
progress with notching has been made, the representative samples in a
trial that is statistically too small in EB and utility APS have been operating the BPL experiment at two Yavapai County, Arizona, sites since June, and relations with the amateur community have not always been so placid. The first Amateur Radio complaint, filed in June, cited VVARA testing at HF that asserted BPL interference was making attempts at ham radio communication useless. VVARA submitted a lengthy and comprehensive report to the two companies and the FCC in late July detailing interference issues. In support of the VVARA effort, the ARRL has twice asked the FCC to shut down the Cottonwood BPL field trial for interfering with Amateur Radio communication. The League's own testing of the Cottonwood system this past summer indicated "extremely high" levels of radiated RF energy on amateur HF allocations - well in excess of the FCC Part 15 levels with which EB told the FCC it would comply. The League's second shutdown request, sent October 11, accused the FCC of doing "absolutely nothing" to enforce its rules or to protect licensed services from interference. The ARRL said the Commission should not reinstate or extend the Special Temporary Authorization, under which the EB system had operated until the STA's expiration in September, and "no experimental authorization should be permitted for this system." In an accompanying 12-page technical analysis, the ARRL also cast serious doubt on the accuracy - and possibly the integrity - of the BPL system's FCC-required six-month report, filed more than two months late. The FCC's Office of Engineering and Technology, which handles grants
applications for STAs and Part 5 Experimental licenses, has yet to respond
to the League's assertions and requests regarding operation of the Replying to FCC inquiries prompted by Amateur Radio interference complaints, Electric Broadband has claimed to have spent "significant time and effort" looking into interference complaints from hams, running tests and "taking steps to mitigate any possible interference" the system might be causing, and it invited the FCC to visit and see for itself. For additional information, visit the "Broadband
Over Power Line (BPL) and Amateur Radio" page on the ARRL Web
site. To support the League's efforts in this area, visit the ARRL's secure
BPL
Web site.
Source: ARRL Letter - courtesy of The American Radio Relay League
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