Never had to do this myself, but a friend who's a serious AM DXer has the misfortune of living 3 miles from an AM station that is occupying most of the AM band. He's lived there forever...a new owner took over and that's when the trouble began. He has communicated this to the station's contract engineer who has done little to correct it. Multiple radios on multiple sides of town have verified that the station in question is the source. He finally (after many months) filed an FCC complaint and the response was this :
> Conditions of non-reception, poor reception, and/or electrical interference to radio/TV sets do not indicate an FCC rule violation and the FCC will not investigate these conditions.
> If you believe a licensed broadcast station's signal is experiencing interference, you may consider contacting the affected station. If the station operator believes an interference condition exists, the operator may contact the FCC.
> The FCC will investigate interference complaints submitted by Broadcasters.
> Thank you for contacting the FCC.
How can a well informed listener file a complaint that will get any traction with the FCC?
> Conditions of non-reception, poor reception, and/or electrical interference to radio/TV sets do not indicate an FCC rule violation and the FCC will not investigate these conditions.
> If you believe a licensed broadcast station's signal is experiencing interference, you may consider contacting the affected station. If the station operator believes an interference condition exists, the operator may contact the FCC.
> The FCC will investigate interference complaints submitted by Broadcasters.
> Thank you for contacting the FCC.
How can a well informed listener file a complaint that will get any traction with the FCC?