FCC Web Documents citing 80.363
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- must maintain a watch on VHF DSC channel 70 (156.525 MHz) whenever the vessel is underway. We seek comment on this proposal. We also seek comment on the need for and the nature of any regulations to ensure adequate watchkeeping facilities and procedures until adequate shore communications are established for GMDSS. e. Frequencies [Subpart H] 25. Background. Sections 80.351 through 80.363 of our Rules relates to the general uses of radiotelegraphy; the distress, urgency, safety, call and reply Morse Code frequencies; Morse Code working frequencies; frequencies for DSC; frequencies for NB-DP; and frequencies for facsimile. These Rules provide the requirements and specific procedures to ensure that all ships are able to receive emergency messages and process them uniformly. In its petition,
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- GENERAL TECHNICAL STANDARDS 80.203 Authorization of transmitters for licensing. 80.205 Bandwidths. 80.207 Classes of emission. 80.211 Emission limitations. 80.213 Modulation requirements. 80.223 Special requirements for survival craft stations. SUBPART G - SAFETY WATCH REQUIREMENTS AND PROCEDURES Watch required by voluntary vessels. SUBPART H - FREQUENCIES 80.355 Distress, urgency, safety, call and reply Morse code frequencies. 80.357 Morse code working frequencies. 80.363 Frequencies for facsimile. 80.371 Public correspondence frequencies. 80.373 Private communications frequencies. Special provisions for frequencies in the 4000-4063 kHz and the 8100-8195 kHz bands shared with the fixed service. 80.375 Radiodetermination frequencies. 80.385 Frequencies for automated systems. 80.387 Frequencies for Alaska fixed stations. SUBPART K - PRIVATE COAST STATIONS AND MARINE UTILITY STATIONS 80.514 Marine VHF frequency coordinating committee(s). SUBPART
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- Commission remove all VPC restrictions relating to maritime traffic and clarify the rules on what inland VPC licenses (and non-inland VPC licenses, when used solely to serve land areas) are permitted to do. Globe Wireless recommends several revisions regarding the Part 80 rules: elimination of sections 80.141(c)(1) and (2), 80.203(b)(3), 80.355, 80.357, and 80.802, modifications to sections 80.203(l), 80.205(a), 80.207(d), 80.363(a), 80.363(a)(1) and (2), 80.371(a) and (b), 80.375 and 80.836, and reevaluation of section 80.373. Recommendation The Part 80 rules commented upon by parties in this proceeding concern licensing, technical, and operational rules, such as technical and operational standards and interference-related issues among Part 80 licensees as well as licensees in adjacent services. As such, the need and purposes for these
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- Commission remove all VPC restrictions relating to maritime traffic and clarify the rules on what inland VPC licenses (and non-inland VPC licenses, when used solely to serve land areas) are permitted to do. Globe Wireless recommends several revisions regarding the Part 80 rules: elimination of sections 80.141(c)(1) and (2), 80.203(b)(3), 80.355, 80.357, and 80.802, modifications to sections 80.203(l), 80.205(a), 80.207(d), 80.363(a), 80.363(a)(1) and (2), 80.371(a) and (b), 80.375 and 80.836, and reevaluation of section 80.373. Recommendation The Part 80 rules commented upon by parties in this proceeding concern licensing, technical, and operational rules, such as technical and operational standards and interference-related issues among Part 80 licensees as well as licensees in adjacent services. As such, the need and purposes for these
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- St. Louis, MO 63197-9000. Subpart B-Hearing Proceedings 3. Section 1.227 is amended by revising the second sentence of paragraph (b)(4) to read as follows: (4) * * * Except for applications filed under part 101, subparts H and O, Private Operational Fixed Microwave Service, and applications for high seas public coast stations (see Sec. Sec. 80.122(b)(1) (first sentence), 80.357, 80.361, 80.363(a)(2), 80.371(a), (b), and (d), and 80.374 of this chapter) mutual exclusivity will occur if the later application or applications are received by the Commission's offices in Gettysburg, PA (or St. Louis, Missouri for applications requiring the fees set forth at part 1, subpart G of the rules) in a condition acceptable for filing within 30 days after the release date
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- number of valid licenses with Morse radiotelegraphy authorizations. The Commission remained unconvinced that deleting the Morse radiotelegraph frequencytables is necessaryor beneficial at this time. The Commission noted that eliminating the Morse rules would not make additional spectrum available to other users in the 4-27 MHz band due to the sharing of this spectrum with facsimile operations. (See47 C.F.R. §§ 80.357(b)(1), 80.363(a)(2)). Therefore, the Commission declined to delete Section 80.355 or Section 80.357. 7 Additional Proposals.TheCommission deleted note 5 to Section 80.207(d) as obsolete because it grandfathers transmitters that are no longer in use; amended Sections 80.207(d) and 80.313 by replacing references to the 1605-27500 kHz band with references to the 1615-27500 kHz band, because maritime mobile operations are not permitted on
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- general uses of radiotelegraphy for distress, urgency, safety, call and reply; working; digital selective calling; narrow-band direct-printing; and facsimile, for stations within the maritime services. Need: This rule informs licensees of the frequencies, and attendant conditions, that ship and coast stations may use for facsimile transmission. Legal Basis: 47 U.S.C. 154, 303, 307, 309, and 332. Section Number and Title: 80.363(c) Frequencies for facsimile. SUBPART J-PUBLIC COAST STATIONS Brief Description: The part 80 rules set forth the conditions under which portions of the radio spectrum are made available and licensed for stations in the maritime services. Subpart J sets forth certain technical and operational requirements for Public Coast stations within the maritime services. Need: This rule informs licensees that public coast
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- § 1.2102 of this chapter are filed in the Private Radio Services, or when there are more such applications for initial licenses than can be accommodated on available frequencies. Except for applications filed under part 101, subparts H and O, Private Operational Fixed Microwave Service, and applications for high seas public coast stations (see §§ 80.122(b)(1) (first sentence), 80.357, 80.361, 80.363(a)(2), 80.371(a), (b), and (d), and 80.374 of this chapter), mutual exclusivity will occur if the later application or applications are received by the Commission's offices in Gettysburg, PA (or Pittsburgh, PA for applications requiring the fees set forth at part 1, subpart G of the rules) in a condition acceptable for filing within 30 days after the release date of
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- or disaggregate their spectrum pursuant to the procedures set forth in this section. Site-based AMTS public coast station licensees may disaggregate their spectrum pursuant to the procedures set forth in this section, provided that the disaggregatee's operations do not extend the disaggregator's service area. (3) Nationwide or multi-region LF, MF, and HF public coast station licensees, see §§ 80.357(b)(1), 80.361(a), 80.363(a)(2), 80.371(b), and 80.374 of this part, may partition their spectrum pursuant to the procedures set forth in this section, except that frequencies licensed to more than one licensee as of date of adoption may be partitioned only by the earliest licensee, and only on the condition that the partitionee shall operate on a secondary, non-interference basis to stations licensed as
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- are not currently in compliance with GMDSS, they must be in compliance with certain other portions of Subparts Q and R. Therefore, we will create a rule for vessels operating pursuant to that exemption and incorporate the necessary standards into that section. The remainder of the rules in Subparts Q and R shall be eliminated. Frequencies Background. Sections 80.351 through 80.363 of our Rules describe the carrier frequencies and general uses of radiotelegraphy. In the Notice, the Commission proposed to adopt Globe's proposal to, in accordance with revised ITU regulations, allow radio-teletypewriter, data, telemetry, and telecommand transmissions on 744 frequencies in the HF band that Section 80.357(a)(3) of our Rules restricts to Morse Code transmissions. Pursuant to a recommendation from the
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- are not currently in compliance with GMDSS, they must be in compliance with certain other portions of Subparts Q and R. Therefore, we will create a rule for vessels operating pursuant to that exemption and incorporate the necessary standards into that section. The remainder of the rules in Subparts Q and R shall be eliminated. Frequencies Background. Sections 80.351 through 80.363 of our Rules describe the carrier frequencies and general uses of radiotelegraphy. In the Notice, the Commission proposed to adopt Globe's proposal to, in accordance with revised ITU regulations, allow radio-teletypewriter, data, telemetry, and telecommand transmissions on 744 frequencies in the HF band that Section 80.357(a)(3) of our Rules restricts to Morse Code transmissions. Pursuant to a recommendation from the
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- kHz, and various United States footnotes would be placed in both the Federal and non-Federal Government Tables. , supra. See 47 C.F.R. § 74.402(a). See 47 C.F.R. § 80.361(a). There are 20 frequencies within the band 26101-26110.5 kHz (in 0.5 kHz steps) that are available for assignment to public coast stations for NBDP and data transmissions. See 47 C.F.R. § 80.363 (a)(2). We note that this rule section describes the "exclusive" maritime mobile HF frequency bands that are available for assignment to coast stations using 3 kHz channels for facsimile, and that within the reallocated band 26100-26175 kHz, the sub-band 26122.5-26145 kHz is listed. See 47 C.F.R. § 80.371(b)(2). Table B lists four additional duplex channels, of which, the coast transmit
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- is substantially amended (as defined by § 1.962(c) of this part) will, for the purpose of this section, be considered to be a newly-filed application as of the receipt date of the amendment. Except for applications filed under part 94, Private Operational Fixed Microwave Service, and applications for high seas public coast stations (see §§ 80.122(b)(1) (first sentence), 80.357, 80.361, 80.363(a)(2), 80.371(a), (b), and (d), and 80.374 of this chapter) mutual exclusivity will occur if the later application or applications are received by the Commission's offices in Gettysburg, PA (or Pittsburgh, PA for applications requiring the fees set forth at part 1, subpart G of the rules) in a condition acceptable for filing within 30 days after the release date of
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- is substantially amended (as defined by § 1.962(c) of this part) will, for the purpose of this section, be considered to be a newly-filed application as of the receipt date of the amendment. Except for applications filed under part 94, Private Operational Fixed Microwave Service, and applications for high seas public coast stations (see §§ 80.122(b)(1) (first sentence), 80.357, 80.361, 80.363(a)(2), 80.371(a), (b), and (d), and 80.374 of this chapter) mutual exclusivity will occur if the later application or applications are received by the Commission's offices in Gettysburg, PA (or Pittsburgh, PA for applications requiring the fees set forth at part 1, subpart G of the rules) in a condition acceptable for filing within 30 days after the release date of
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- Also, we note that the Commission has previously stated that the licensing of incumbent site-based AMTS stations are akin to geographic licensing in many respects because the licensing of each system was tied to fixed geographic features (coastlines and waterways). See Regionet Wireless License, LLC, Order, 15 FCC Rcd 16119, 16122 ¶ 7 (2000). See 47 C.F.R. §§ 80.357(b), 80.361, 80.363(a)(2), 80.371(a)-(b). See generally Amendment of the Commission's Rules Concerning Maritime Communications, Second Memorandum Opinion and Order and Fifth Report and Order, 17 FCC Rcd 6685, 6687 ¶ 4 (2002) (Public Coast Fifth Report and Order). We note, too, that while VHF Public Coast and AMTS stations use frequencies in the very high frequency band, high seas public coast stations use
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- recommends, inter alia, that the Commission delete section 80.141(c)(1)-(2), 47 C.F.R. § 80.141(c)(1)-(2), as obsolete; delete section 80.203(b)(3), 47 C.F.R. § 80.203(b)(3), to accommodate programming of authorized channels through the use of remote computers; revise the list of emission classes in section 80.207, 47 C.F.R. § 80.207; delete rules pertaining to Morse code, 47 C.F.R. §§ 80.355, 80.357; revise section 80.363, 47 C.F.R. § 80.363, to make additional spectrum available for ship station facsimile transmissions; and reassess the demand for private communications frequencies, 47 C.F.R. § 80.373. We note that some of Globe Wireless's recommendations are addressed, or otherwise rendered moot, by actions already taken or proposed in this proceeding. See 47 C.F.R. § 80.207(d), n.5. Id., §§ 80.207(d), 80.313. There
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- licenses with Morse radiotelegraphy authorizations. It should also be noted that eliminating the Morse rules would not make additional spectrum available to other users in the 4-27 MHz band due to the sharing of this spectrum with facsimile operations. We therefore decline to delete Section 80.355 or Section 80.357. Frequency Allotments and Limitations. Globe Wireless requests various amendments of Sections 80.363 and 80.371 of the Commission's Rules. With respect to Section 80.363, which sets forth the frequencies available for facsimile communications, Globe Wireless requests the removal of limitations on use of the frequencies for ``data/fax'' by ship stations, coupled with a freeze on assignments of the listed frequencies to coast stations, in order to address what it deems an insufficiency in
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- any frequency more than 5 Hz from the instantaneous carrier frequency, at least 3 dB, ii) On any frequency more than 250 Hz from the instantaneous carrier frequency, at least 40 dB, and iii) On any frequency more than 7.5 kHz from the instantaneous carrier frequency, at least 43 + 10log (peak power in watts) db. 10 22. In Section 80.363, a new paragraph (c) is added to read as follows: § 80.363 Frequencies for facsimile. * * * * * (c) The frequency 156.425 MHz is assigned by rule to private coast stations and ship stations in Alaska for ship-to-shore and ship-to-ship facsimile transmissions using F2C or F3C emissions. 23. In Section 80.371 the introductory text of paragraph (c) is
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- an offset carrier frequency in order to avoid interference from a co-channel or adjacent channel station in another region or another country. In this case, authorization is given upon coordination and approval by the Interdepartment Radio Advisory Committee (IRAC).237 Federal Communications Commission FCC 97-217 47 C.F.R. §§ 80.371(b), 80.357(b)(2)(ii)(B), 80.361(a)(2), and 80.374(a)(2). 238 47 C.F.R. §§ 80.371(a) and (d), and 80.363(a)(2). 239 47 U.S.C. § 309(j)(4)(B). 240 57 105.Presently, a high seas public coast station may initially be assigned one channel in each of the applicable frequency bands. In the cases of MF and HF radiotelegraph, HF radiotelephone, and HF NB-DP, a station may only be assigned additional frequencies in each band if certain loading criteria are met. A station does
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- systemsoperatingintheIntelligentTransportationSystem("ITS")radioservice,25andtheReport andOrderinIBDocketNo.97-95thatrealignedtheallocationsfrom36GHzto51.4GHz.26 AllamendmentstotheUnitedStatesTablearedescribedbelow,exceptforthoseinternational footnotesthatweremerelyre-numberedorslightlymodified,whicharelistedinAppendixA. Weemphasizethatalloftheseamendmentsarenon-substantiveinnature. 2347C.F.R.§2.106,revisedasofOctober1,1998. 24SeeAmendmentofParts2and95oftheCommission'sRulesToEstablishaMedicalImplant CommunicationsServiceinthe402-405MHzBand,WTDocketNo.99-66andRM-9157,NoticeofProposed RuleMaking,FCC99-23,64FR10266(03/03/99),14FCCRcd3659(1999);ReportandOrder,FCC99-363, releasedNovember29,1999. 25SeeAmendmentofParts2and90oftheCommission'sRulestoAllocatethe5.850-5.925GHzBandto theMobileServiceforShortRangeCommunicationsofIntelligentTransportationServices,ETDocketNo.98- 95;NoticeofProposedRuleMaking,FCC98-119,63FR35558(6/30/98),13FCCRcd14321(1998);Report andOrder,FCC99-305,rel.October22,1999. 26SeeAllocationandDesignationofSpectrumforFixed-SatelliteServicesinthe37.5-38.5GHz,40.5-41.5 GHz,and48.2-50.2GHzFrequencyBands;AllocationofSpectrumtoUpgradeFixedandMobileAllocationsin the40.5-42.5GHzFrequencyBand;AllocationofSpectruminthe46.9-47.0GHzFrequencyBandforWireless Services;andAllocationofSpectruminthe37.0-38.0GHzand40.0-40.5GHzforGovernmentOperations,IB DocketNo.97-95,NoticeofProposedRuleMaking,62FR164129(04/04/97),12FCCRcd10130(1997); ReportandOrder,FCC98-336,64FR2585(01/15/99),13FCCRcd24649(1999);Erratum,64FR6565 (02/10/99);recon.pending.Whilethereisapetitionforreconsiderationpendingconcerningthisrealignment,we willfollowthenormalpracticeofdisplayingtheTablepertheCommission'slastofficialaction,i.e.,perthe ReportandOrder. 6 FederalCommunicationsCommission DA99-2743 ChangestotheU.S.TableintheFrequencyRangefrom3kHzto3000kHz(VLF,LF&MF): 8.Inthe70-90kHzband,theFederalandNon-FederalGovernmentTablesarecorrected bydeletingfootnotereferenceUS288.27Inthe435-495kHzband,theFederalGovernmentTable iscorrectedtoindicatethattheaeronauticalradionavigationserviceisallocatedonasecondary --notprimary--basis.28 9.FootnoteUS221iscorrectedtoreadasfollows:"Useofthemobileserviceinthe bands525-535kHzand1605-1615kHzislimitedtodistributionofpublicserviceinformation fromTravelersInformationstationsoperatingon530kHzand1610kHz."29 10.Inthe535-1705kHzband,theNon-FederalGovernmentTableisrevisedby subdividingthebandintotwosegments,535-1605kHzand1605-1705kHz,30andbytransferring therule-partcrossreferencestotheircorrectcolumn.TheFederalGovernmentTableisrevised bydisplayingthemobileserviceallocationinthe1605-1615kHzbandasaprimary--not secondary--allocation.31 11.Pre-1991frequenciesaredeletedfromfootnoteUS296,whichisrevisedtoreadas follows:"Inthebandsdesignatedforshipwide-bandtelegraphy,facsimileandspecial transmissionsystems,thefollowingassignablefrequenciesareavailabletonon-Federal governmentstationsonasharedbasiswithFederalgovernmentstations:2070.5,2072.5,2074.5, 2076.5,4154.5,4169.5,6235.5,6259.5,8302.5,8338.5,12370.5,12418.5,16551.5,16614.5, 18847.5,18868.5,22181.5,22238.5,25123.5,and25159.5kHz."32 27FootnoteUS288haspreviouslybeendeletedfromthelistofUnitedStatesfootnotes.SeeAmendmentof Parts2,25,80,and87oftheCommission'sRulesRegardingImplementationoftheFinalActsoftheWorld AdministrativeRadioConferencefortheMobileServices,Geneva,1987,GEN.DocketNo.89-103,Reportand Order,4FCCRcd7603(1989). 28SeeNTIAManualatp.4-7. 29SeeReviewoftheTechnicalAssignmentCriteriafortheAMBroadcastService,MMDocketNo.87-267, ReportandOrder,FCC91-303,6FCCRcd6273(1991). 30Wehavesplitthebandinordertohighlightfootnote480(re-numberedatWRC-95asS5.89),which placesrequirementsontheuseofthebandscomprising1605-1705kHz. 31SeeReviewoftheTechnicalAssignmentCriteriafortheAMBroadcastService,MMDocketNo.87-267, MemorandumOpinionandOrder,FCC93-198,8FCCRcd3250(1993).SeealsoNTIAManualatp.4-8. 32InJanuary1991,theCommissionadopted"changestoitsRulesthatsubstantiallyrevisethechanneling plansinthehighfrequencybandsbetween4000kHzand27500kHzallocatedexclusivelytothemaritime mobileservice."AmongtheserulechangesweretheadoptionoffootnoteUS296andtherevisionofthe frequenciesauthorizedforshipstationfacsimile,whicharethepostJuly1,1991frequencieslistedinfootnote US296.See47C.F.R.§80.363(a)(1).TheCommissionorderedthat"thisReportandOrderiseffectiveat0001 hoursUTC[CoordinatedUniversalTime]onJuly1,1991."SeeAmendmentofParts2and80ofthe 7 FederalCommunicationsCommission DA99-2743 ChangestotheUnitedStatesTableintheFrequencyRangefrom3MHzto30MHz(HF): 12.MinortypographicalerrorsarecorrectedinfootnoteG106.33 13.Inthe5060-5450kHzband,theFederalandNon-FederalGovernmentTablesare correctedtoindicatethatthemobileexceptaeronauticalmobileserviceisallocatedona secondary--notprimary--basis.34ExpiredfootnoteUS284isremovedfromthelistofUnited Statesfootnotes.35Inthe6765-7000kHzband,theFederalandNon-FederalGovernmentTables arecorrectedtoindicatethatthemobileserviceisallocatedonasecondary--notprimary-- basis.36Inthe10003-10005kHzband,theNon-FederalGovernmentTableiscorrectedbyadding referencetofootnoteUS340andbydeletingreferencetofootnoteG106. ChangestotheUnitedStatesTableintheFrequencyRangefrom30MHzto300MHz(VHF): 14.WefindthatthefrequencybandslistedinfootnoteNG124canbemoreclosely matchedtothefrequencysegmentslistedinSection90.20(e)(4)oftheCommission'sRules.37 Accordingly,footnoteNG124isrevisedtoreadasfollows:"Withindesignatedsegmentsofthe Commission'sRulesregardingrevisionofthehighfrequency(HF)channelsforthemaritimemobileserviceto implementtheFinalActsoftheWorldAdministrativeRadioConferencefortheMobileServices,Geneva,1987, PRDocketNo.90-133,ReportandOrder,FCC91-17,6FCCRcd786(1991). 33Specifically,twomissingcommasareadded.CorrectedfootnoteG106readsasfollows:"Thebands 2501-2502kHz,5003-5005kHz,10003-10005kHz,15005-15010kHz,19990-19995kHz,20005-20010kHzand 25005-25010kHzarealsoallocated,onasecondarybasis,tothespaceresearchservice.Thespaceresearch transmissionsaresubjecttoimmediatetemporaryorpermanentshutdownintheeventofinterferencetothe receptionofthestandardfrequencyandtimebroadcasts."SeeNTIAManualatp.4-97. 34SeeNTIAManualatp.4-15. 35FootnoteUS284readsasfollows:"UntilJuly1,1991,thecarrierfrequencies6451.9and6455.0kHz maybeauthorizedtonon-GovernmentshiptelephoneandcoasttelephonestationsoperatingontheMississippi Rivermaritimemobileserviceontheconditionthatharmfulinterferencenotbecausedtoservicesoperatingin accordancewiththeTableofFrequencyAllocationsandthatanyinterferencefromsuchservicesmustbe accepted."WhilefootnoteUS284waspreviouslydeletedfromtheTablebecauseithadexpired,US284was inadvertentlynotremovedfromthelistofUnitedStatesfootnotes. 36SeeAmendmentoftheCommission'sRulesConcerningMaritimeCommunications,PRDocketNo.97- 257,SecondReportandOrderandSecondFurtherNoticeofProposedRuleMaking,12FCCRcd16949,17044 (1997). 37Currently,footnoteNG124readsasfollows:"Inthepublicsafetyradioserviceallocationswithinthe bands30-50MHz,150-174MHz,and450-470MHz,policeradioservicelicenseesareauthorizedtooperatelow powerradiotransmittersonasecondary,non-interferencebasisinaccordancewiththeprovisionsofSections 2.803and90.19(f)(5)oftheRules."Initsre-writeofPart90,theCommissionmergedthefrequenciesavailable tothepoliceradioserviceintothepublicsafetyradiopoolandre-numberedSection90.19(f)(5)asSection 90.20(e)(5). 8 FederalCommunicationsCommission DA99-2743 bandsthatcomprise30.85-47.41MHz,150.8-159.465MHz,and453.0125-467.9875MHz,police licenseesareauthorizedtooperatelowpowerradiotransmittersonasecondary,non-interference basisinaccordancewiththeprovisionsof47C.F.R.§§2.803and90.20(e)(5)."Referenceto footnoteNG124isdeletedfromthe35-36MHzand173.2-173.4MHzbandsbecausethesebands arenotamongthedesignatedsegmentslistedinSection90.20(e)(4).Inthe154-156.2475MHz band,referencetofootnotesNG124andNG148isdeletedfromtheFederalGovernmentTable andisaddedtotheNon-FederalGovernmentTable. 15.ExpiredfootnoteNG133,whichdealtwiththe73-74.6MHzband,isremovedfrom thelistofnon-Federalgovernmentfootnotes.38 16.Footnote572hasbeenre-numberedasfootnoteS5.180anditstexthasbeenmodified inordertoremoveanexpiredrequirement,whichreadasfollows:"Until31December1989, administrationsinRegions2and3shouldrefrainfromassigningfrequenciestootherservices inthebands74.6-74.8MHzand75.2-75.4MHz."SincefootnoteS5.180nolongerappliesto the74.6-74.8MHzand75.2-75.4MHzbands,theFederalandNon-FederalGovernmentTables areupdatedbydeletingthereferencetofootnote572inthosebands;footnote572isre-numbered asS5.180intheremaining74.8-75.5MHzband.
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- must maintain a watch on VHF DSC channel 70 (156.525 MHz) whenever the vessel is underway. We seek comment on this proposal. We also seek comment on the need for and the nature of any regulations to ensure adequate watchkeeping facilities and procedures until adequate shore communications are established for GMDSS. e. Frequencies [Subpart H] 25. Background. Sections 80.351 through 80.363 of our Rules relates to the general uses of radiotelegraphy; the distress, urgency, safety, call and reply Morse Code frequencies; Morse Code working frequencies; frequencies for DSC; frequencies for NB-DP; and frequencies for facsimile. These Rules provide the requirements and specific procedures to ensure that all ships are able to receive emergency messages and process them uniformly. In its petition,