It is the FCC not the ARRL.
 
50.060 to 50.080 I agree it should move down
 
Gordon N4LR ---------------   N4LR/B 50.068
 
Part 97 : Sec. 97.203 Beacon station


(a) Any amateur station licensed to a holder of a Technician, General, Advanced or Amateur Extra Class operator license may be a beacon. A holder of a Technician, General, Advanced or Amateur Extra Class operator license may be the control operator of a beacon, subject to the privileges of the class of operator license held. (b) A beacon must not concurrently transmit on more than 1 channel in the same amateur service frequency band, from the same station location.

(c) The transmitter power of a beacon must not exceed 100 W.

(d) A beacon may be automatically controlled while it is transmitting on the 28.20–28.30 MHz, 50.06–50.08 MHz, 144.275–144.300 MHz, 222.05–222.06 MHz or 432.300–432.400 MHz segments, or on the 33 cm and shorter wavelength bands.

(e) Before establishing an automatically controlled beacon in the National Radio Quiet Zone or before changing the transmitting frequency, transmitter power, antenna height or directivity, the station licensee must give written notification thereof to the Interference Office, National Radio Astronomy Observatory, P.O. Box 2, Green Bank, WV 24944.

(1) The notification must include the geographical coordinates of the antenna, antenna ground elevation above mean sea level (AMSL), antenna center of radiation above ground level (AGL), antenna directivity, proposed frequency, type of emission, and transmitter power.

(2) If an objection to the proposed operation is received by the FCC from the National Radio Astronomy Observatory at Green Bank, Pocahontas County, WV, for itself or on behalf of the Naval Research Laboratory at Sugar Grove, Pendleton County, WV, within 20 days from the date of notification, the FCC will consider all aspects of the problem and take whatever action is deemed appropriate.

(f) A beacon must cease transmissions upon notification by a District Director that the station is operating improperly or causing undue interference to other operations. The beacon may not resume transmitting without prior approval of the District Director.

(g) A beacon may transmit one-way communications.

[54 FR 25857, June 20, 1989, as amended at 55 FR 9323, Mar. 13, 1990; 56 FR 19610, Apr. 29, 1991; 56 FR 32517, July 17, 1991; 62 FR 55536, Oct. 27, 1997; 63 FR 41204, Aug. 3, 1998; 63 FR 68980, Dec. 14, 1998; 69 FR 24997, May 5, 2004; 71 FR 66462, Nov. 15, 2006; 75 FR 78171, Dec. 15, 2010]




 

Date: Mon, 6 Jul 2015 15:10:54 -0500
From: k4wi@k4wi.net
To: n0jk@arrl.org
Subject: [SECC] beacon stations
CC: contest@alabamacontestgroup.org; secc@contesting.com

Hello Jon, I am sending you a short note to ask who is in charge of the six meter beacon stations and what are the rules with regard to their frequency allocation? When the band is open for DX they qrm a lot of dx working in the area below 50080. I had a nice opening July 3rd to Europe and a N3***/B on 50079.9 simply took some good dx out underneath him. I think that all the /B stations should stay below 50025 or 050 at the highest. There are more and more of them showing up every day and are becoming a nuisance. I just wondered what you and the ARRL's position on this is? Passing this along to the ACG and SECC reflectors also... not trying to stir up a hornets nest but would like to know. Tnx and 73's Cort K4WI

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