• You can now help support WorldwideDX when you shop on Amazon at no additional cost to you! Simply follow this Shop on Amazon link first and a portion of any purchase is sent to WorldwideDX to help with site costs.

FCC upholds vanity fee policy, sets new fee start date

Randy CDX492

Active Member
Apr 6, 2005
376
0
26
Webb City Missouri
To all radio amateurs



SB SPCL ARL ARLX007

ARLX007 FCC upholds vanity fee policy, sets new fee start date



The FCC has announced that the new Amateur Radio vanity call sign

regulatory fee of $16.30 for the 10-year license term will go into

effect September 9. Until then, applicants for amateur vanity call

signs will continue to pay the current $14.50 fee per vanity call

sign application. The FCC says it expects to collect close to

$160,000 from 9800 Amateur Radio vanity call sign applicants during

Fiscal Year 2003. That's up by almost $30,000 and 800 applications

from FY2002.



In releasing its annual Report and Order on the assessment and

collection of regulatory fees for FY2003, the FCC responded at some

length to comments filed from the amateur community. Some commenters

had questioned the need for the fee, the requirement to pay it when

renewing a vanity call sign and why refunds were not automatic.



Telecommunications Act provisions governing regulatory fee

assessment cover applications for vanity call signs, which, the FCC

said, "are voluntarily requested by licensees" and are "a

value-added benefit not afforded to all licensees." Assessment of a

regulatory fee to cover the FCC's processing and enforcement costs

to make the vanity call sign service available is reasonable, the

FCC concluded.



The FCC said its current policy of assessing "a nominal fee" at the

time of initial application and at each renewal also allows greater

access to vanity call signs. "A high one-time-only fee would be cost

prohibitive for many entities wishing to obtain a vanity call sign,"

the Commission said. The Commission also said it incurs costs to

manage each vanity call sign throughout its existence, not just in

the first 10 years.



Regarding refunds due when the FCC denies an application, the FCC

said its rules require a written request from applicants before it

can process refunds of regulatory fees. "The written request serves

as documentation when cross-referencing each unique file number that

may be entitled to a refund," the FCC added.



The FCC said the documentation was particularly important in the

case of Amateur Radio vanity applications, "because filing trends

indicate that some applicants file several vanity call sign

applications per day for several days on end." Requiring a written

request makes it easier to certify "which fees are to be refunded

for which dismissed applications," the Commission said. In addition,

those processing applications in FCC bureaus and offices don't have

the authority to issue refunds without proper documentation.






Randycdxsig.jpg
</p>
 

dxChat
Help Users
  • No one is chatting at the moment.