SB QST @ ARL $ARLB002 ARLB002 2400-MHz reply made ZCZC AG68 QST de W1AW ARRL Bulletin 2 ARLB002 >From ARRL Headquarters Newington CT January 12, 1995 To all radio amateurs SB QST ARL ARLB002 ARLB002 2400-MHz reply made The ARRL has filed reply comments on an FCC notice of proposed rule making, in ET Docket 94-32, a proposal to reallocate a block of spectrum from federal government to commercial use. Some of that block includes parts of the 2400-MHz band shared by Amateur Radio on a secondary basis with the government. In earlier comments, the ARRL asked that the Amateur Service be given primary allocation status at 2402 to 2417 MHz, that it be given at least co-primary status at 2390 to 2400 MHz, and said it would be desirable to make the entire segment 2390 to 2450 MHz amateur primary. In its reply comments, the ARRL said that most of the comments filed by others in December didn't respond to FCC questions regarding the compatibility of the proposed commercial services with the Amateur Service. The League said that the bulk of comments filed were ''absolutely silent'' on the effect of a new proposed use, either from 2390 to 2400 MHz or from 2402 to 2417 MHz, on the Amateur Service, with the exceptions of comments by In-Flight Phone Corporation and Apple Computer, both of whom suggested ways of coexisting with amateurs. The ARRL called the use of competitive bidding in this case ''a means of avoiding specific allocation planning by the Commission'' and said it was inappropriate. The FCC's ''flexible allocation'' plan would be, on its face, the League said, ''in lieu of making any public interest determination at all as to the highest and best use of the spectrum.'' That highest and best use, the League said, was Amateur Radio. More information was in January 1995 QST, page 91. NNNN /EX