The Amateur Radio Parity Act of 2015 -- H.R.1301 in the US House of Representative and S 1685 in the US Senate

Amateur Radio Parity Act – Please Help Get This Law Passed!

More than 23% of American families now live in HOA controlled communities – and this number keeps growing.

As the following video from the ARRL shows, and it is virtually impossible anymore to find a home that is not include the HOA Gestapo from interfering with construction of even the most modest exterior ham radio antenna.

The Amateur Radio Parity Act goes a long way toward solving this problem and your help could make a real difference – with the you live in one of these HOA controlled communities or not.

The Amateur Radio Parity Act of 2015 — H.R.1301 in the US House of Representative and S 1685 in the US Senate —  would direct the FCC to extend its rules relating to reasonable accommodation of Amateur Service communications to private land use restrictions. US Rep Adam Kinzinger (R-IL) introduced HR 1301 on March 4 with 12 original cosponsors from both sides of the aisle — seven Republicans and five Democrats in the US House.  US Senator Roger Wicker (R-MS) introduced S 1685 on June 25, with Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) as the original cosponsor, into the US Senate.

The Amateur Radio Parity Act would require the FCC to amend its Part 97 Amateur Service rules to apply the three-part test of the PRB-1 federal pre-emption policy to include homeowners association regulations and deed restrictions, often referred to as “covenants, conditions, and restrictions” (CC&Rs). At present, PRB-1 only applies to state and local zoning laws and ordinances. The FCC has been reluctant to extend the same legal protections to include private land-use agreements without direction from Congress.

H.R. 1301 has been referred to the House Energy and Commerce Committee. Rep Greg Walden, W7EQI (R-OR), chairs that panel’s Communications and Technology Subcommittee, which will consider the measure. S 1685 has been referred to the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee’s subcommittee on Communications, Technology, Innovation and the Internet, which is chaired by the bill’s sponsor, Wicker.

ARRL members are urged to contact their members of both the House and the Senate, asking them to sign on to the bill as a co-sponsor. Route letters for your member of Congress to:

ARRL
Attn  Amateur Radio Parity Act grassroots campaign
225 Main St
Newington CT 06111

Clarity on Amateur Radio Parity

Some misconceptions about the Amateur Radio Parity Act are being circulated.Please read the document “Clarity on Amateur Radio Parity” here.

For more information on both of the bills, please refer to the information in the two areas below – HR 1301 for information about the House version and S 1685 for the Senate version.