Goto Section: 2.101 | 2.103 | Table of Contents
FCC 2.102
Revised as of October 5, 2017
Goto Year:2016 |
2018
§ 2.102 Assignment of frequencies.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this section, the assignment of
frequencies and bands of frequencies to all stations and classes of
stations and the licensing and authorizing of the use of all such
frequencies between 8.3 kHz and 275 GHz, and the actual use of such
frequencies for radiocommunication or for any other purpose, including
the transfer of energy by radio, shall be in accordance with the Table
of Frequency Allocations in § 2.106.
(b) On the condition that harmful interference will not be caused to
services operating in accordance with the Table of Frequency
Allocations the following exceptions to paragraph (a) of this section
may be authorized:
(1) In individual cases the Commission may, without rule making
proceedings, authorize on a temporary basis only, the use of
frequencies not in accordance with the Table of Frequency Allocations
for projects of short duration or emergencies where the Commission
finds that important or exceptional circumstances require such
utilization. Such authorizations are not intended to develop a service
to be operated on frequencies other than those allocated such service.
(2) [Reserved]
(3) Experimental stations, pursuant to part 5 of this chapter, may be
authorized the use of any frequency or frequency band not exclusively
allocated to the passive services (including the radio astronomy
service).
(4) In the event a band is reallocated so as to delete its availability
for use by a particular service, the Commission may provide for the
further interim use of the band by stations in that service for a
temporary, specific period of time.
(c) Non-Federal stations may be authorized to use Federal frequencies
in the bands above 25 MHz if the Commission finds, after consultations
with the appropriate Federal agency or agencies, that such use is
necessary for coordination of Federal and non-Federal activities:
Provided, however, that:
(1) Non-Federal operation on Federal frequencies shall conform with the
conditions agreed upon by the Commission and NTIA (the more important
of which are contained in paragraphs (c)(2), (c)(3), and (c)(4) of this
section);
(2) Such operations shall be in accordance with NTIA rules governing
the service to which the frequencies involved are allocated;
(3) Such operations shall not cause harmful interference to Federal
stations and, should harmful interference result, that the interfering
non-Federal operation shall immediately terminate; and
(4) Non-Federal operation has been certified as necessary by the
Federal agency involved and this certification has been furnished, in
writing, to the non-Federal licensee with which communication is
required.
(d) Aircraft stations may communicate with stations of the maritime
mobile service. They shall then conform to those provisions of the
international Radio Regulations which relate to the maritime mobile
service. For this purpose aircraft stations should use the frequencies
allocated to the maritime mobile service. However, having regard to
interference which may be caused by aircraft stations at high
altitudes, maritime mobile frequencies in the bands above 30 MHz shall
not be used by aircraft stations in any specific area without the prior
agreement of all administrations of the area in which interference is
likely to be caused. In particular, aircraft stations operating in
Region 1 should not use frequencies in the bands above 30 MHz allocated
to the maritime mobile service by virtue of any agreement between
administrations in that Region.
(e) Non-Federal services operating on frequencies in the band 25-50 MHz
must recognize that it is shared with various services of other
countries; that harmful interference may be caused by skywave signals
received from distant stations of all services of the United States and
other countries radiating power on frequencies in this band; and that
no protection from such harmful interference generally can be expected.
Persons desiring to avoid such harmful interference should consider
operation on available frequencies higher in the radio spectrum not
generally subject to this type of difficulty.
(f) The stations of a service shall use frequencies so separated from
the limits of a band allocated to that service as not to cause harmful
interference to allocated services in immediately adjoining frequency
bands.
(g) In the bands above 25 MHz which are allocated to the non-Federal
land mobile service, fixed stations may be authorized on the following
conditions:
(1) That such stations are authorized in the service shown in Column 5
of the Table of Frequency Allocations in the band in question;
(2) That harmful interference will not be caused to services operating
in accordance with the Table of Frequency Allocations.
(h) Special provisions regarding the use of spectrum allocated to the
fixed and land mobile services below 25 MHz by non-Federal stations.
(1) Only in the following circumstances will authority be extended to
stations in the fixed service to operate on frequencies below 25 MHz.
(i) With respect to aeronautical fixed stations, only when a showing
can be made that more suitable facilities are not available.
(ii) With respect to fixed stations, except aeronautical fixed
stations, only to:
(A) Provide communication circuits in emergency and/or disaster
situations, where safety of life and property are concerned;
(B) Provide standby and/or backup facilities to satellite and cable
circuits used for international public correspondence;
(C) Provide standby and/or backup communications circuits to regular
domestic communication circuits which have been disrupted by disasters
and/or emergencies;
(D) Provide communication circuits wholly within the State of Alaska
and the United States insular areas in the Pacific; and
(E) Provide communication circuits to support operations which are
highly important to the national interest and where other means of
telecommunication are unavailable.
(2) Only in the following circumstances will authority be extended to
stations in the land mobile service to operate below 25 MHz.
(i) Provide communication circuits in emergency and/or disaster
situations, where safety of life and property are concerned;
(ii) Provide standby and/or backup communications circuits to regular
domestic communication circuits which have been disrupted by disasters
and/or emergencies;
(iii) Provide communication circuits wholly within the State of Alaska
and the United States insular areas in the Pacific; and
(iv) Provide communication circuits to support operations which are
highly important to the national interest and where other means of
telecommunication are unavailable.
(3) Except in the State of Alaska and the United States Pacific insular
areas, the Commission does not intend to seek international protection
for assignments made pursuant to paragraphs (h) (1)(ii) and (2) of this
section; this results in the following constraints upon the
circuits/assignments.
(i) The Commission will not accept responsibility for protection of the
circuits from harmful interference caused by foreign operations.
(ii) In the event that a complaint of harmful interference resulting
from operation of these circuits is received from a foreign source, the
offending circuit(s) must cease operation on the particular frequency
concerned.
(iii) In order to accommodate the situations described in paragraphs
(h)(3) (i) and (ii) of this section, equipments shall be capable of
transmitting and receiving on any frequency in the bands assigned to
the particular operation and capable of immediate change among the
frequencies.
[ 49 FR 2373 , Jan. 19, 1984, 70 FR 46585 , Aug. 10, 2005, as amended at
78 FR 25161 , Apr. 29, 2013; 82 FR 27185 , June 14, 2017]
return arrow Back to Top
Goto Section: 2.101 | 2.103
Goto Year: 2016 |
2018
CiteFind - See documents on FCC website that
cite this rule
Want to support this service?
Thanks!
Report errors in
this rule. Since these rules are converted to HTML by machine, it's possible errors have been made. Please
help us improve these rules by clicking the Report FCC Rule Errors link to report an error.
hallikainen.com
Helping make public information public