jras20 said:Just wondering, are they just going to have this station going on and on with no license what so ever?
willdav713 said:I can receive 90.1 for a short distance down 38th near Lamar. I have tuned into the Power Hour before.
Unless the station is causing substansial and harmful interference, I doubt the FCC will continue to prosue this. They should give 90.1 amnesty and assign call letters of course with stipulations. Is 90.1 hurting the adjacent frequencies, if so how?
Now if a pirate was on say 103.3 that would be substansial.
willdav713 said:Unless the station is causing substansial and harmful interference, I doubt the FCC will continue to prosue this. They should give 90.1 amnesty and assign call letters of course with stipulations. Is 90.1 hurting the adjacent frequencies, if so how?
mmnassour said:Well....I guess if minor details such as a license are not important to you, then the little matter of selling commercials in a non-com band won't matter either.
I wish we still had an FCC.
willdav713 said:mmnassour said:Well....I guess if minor details such as a license are not important to you, then the little matter of selling commercials in a non-com band won't matter either.
I wish we still had an FCC.
It is all up to discretion, just like with a speeding ticket. You don't expect every time someone goes a couple of miles over the speed limit to get pulled over and ticketed, do you?
Personally, I wish the FCC would crack down harder on those prerecorded messages to cell phones which are also illegal.
Is there a private right of action when it comes to operating a station without a license somewhere in the code too?
mmnassour said:willdav713 said:mmnassour said:Well....I guess if minor details such as a license are not important to you, then the little matter of selling commercials in a non-com band won't matter either.
I wish we still had an FCC.
It is all up to discretion, just like with a speeding ticket. You don't expect every time someone goes a couple of miles over the speed limit to get pulled over and ticketed, do you?
Personally, I wish the FCC would crack down harder on those prerecorded messages to cell phones which are also illegal.
Is there a private right of action when it comes to operating a station without a license somewhere in the code too?
If a guy with a Ramsey FM100 and an amp is a speeding ticket....90.1 in Austin is Assault with a Deadly Weapon.
Discretion? The FCC has busted this group before, seized equipment, fined them over $10,000 and they still come back on the air. And for some reason this time the FCC appears to look the other way.
I don't get it. All I know is that the best frequency for my FM30 is spewing 1001 reasons why we should sell our clothes and buy gold.
willdav713 said:Another issue is budget, and the costs of enforcement. You are talking about a lot of money, and the FCC is subject to downsizing. Our country is still in a financial crisis. I think they are worried about more important things. If they are for profit how come they except donations for the station?
willdav713 said:According to the stations website, KDX1 and KDX2 operate as a Part 15 station and do not exceed the limits.
Sometimes you can hear stations past their city of license, what you are talking about here, can be described as a case of that. Remember they are two sides to every case, the Plaintiff and the Defendant.
I suggest you watch The Communicators on C-SPAN where they interview just about all things FCC. I think it comes on at 7pm CST?
willdav713 said:All that metal acts as a frequency booster.