K1MAN vs. FCC: The Real Deal
			 
			 
			
		
		
		
			
			Like a theologian, Glenn Baxter cites chapter and verse of the U.S. 
Constitution.  Trouble is, he hasn't the least idea how it works. 
Despite his strident claims of being denied due process, nothing of the 
kind has occurred.  In fact, he's received more due process than any 
ten hams: If we did a fraction of what he's done in the face of FCC 
citations, we'd have gotten the boot long ago. 
 
His nonsensical invocation of the Constitution has neither rhyme nor 
reason.  He would urge upon us an interpretation that does not take 
into account the huge body of case law coming down from the federal 
courts, which interpret the slim provisions of our great instrument. 
 
A quick analogy spotlights the point: In 1868 the Fourteenth Amendment 
was ratified giving all citizens of these United States due process and 
equal protection of law.  For African-Americans at the start of the 
20th Century, however, equal protection meant separate but equal, only 
to change midway with Brown vs. Board of Education to be truly equal. 
This, of course, gave rise to affirmative action and busing.  So, for 
the real deal on our Constitution, we must look to the courts, a 
direction to which Baxter appears blind. 
 
From reading him, you'd think that we not only should dispense with the 
FCC's interpretation of Part 97 but the Supreme Court's intrepretation 
of agency power as well. 
 
The FCC does indeed have the power of taking draconian measures to 
enforce.  And this includes withholding license renewal pending future 
hearing while requiring the licensee to stay off the air in the 
meantime.  If an agency didn't have such power, it stands to reason 
that we'd be subjected to anarchy of the airwaves, the very thing the 
FCC is empowered to prevent. 
 
Must the FCC take a ham off the air before his administrative hearing? 
No.  Case in point: Herb Schoenbohm, KV4FZ.  Even after he was 
convicted on three felony counts (2 of which were later reversed with 
one remaining that should have been reversed, in this commentators 
view), the FCC allowed him to operate.  He was on the air all the way 
up to the adverse decision in his administrative case  -- at which time 
the FCC granted him a grace period before he was removed.  (He's since 
gotten his license back.) 
 
Riley Hollingsworth is uniquely suited for his enforcement role with 
the Commission because he tempers enforcement with humanism.  He sees 
his job as one in which, by gaining the cooperation of the regulated, 
he obtains volutary compliance. There are many hams, including this 
writer, who have been regulated thusly by Riley and who stand with him. 
A large slice of the discontented do not realize how much this one 
regulator has accomplished without incurring the back breaking expense 
of litigation. 
 
His domain is one area of the U.S. government that works with efficient 
precision, fixing an astonishing array problems with few resources. 
 
Contrary to popular belief, the FCC, loath to judge First Amendment 
subject-matter, doesn't object to information bulletins per se.  In 
reasonably formal language, the agency has equated Baxter's to ARRL 
bulletins.  There are, however, aspects of his operation that 
Hollingsworth has questioned.   In response, Baxter, expressly spoiling 
for a fight, replaces the FCC's interpretation of Part 97 with his own, 
owning a unique position in the panthion of justice of advocate, 
regulator,agency, judge, court and jury. 
 
Whatever arguable equities he brings to his cause, like replicating 
ARRL's practice of starting on a published schedule, he cannot flout 
FCC authority and expect to stay on the air until his administrative 
hearing.  And when that takes place, there is nothing that vitiates his 
declaration that he will continue operating without FCC authority. 
 
This declaration is utterly at cross purposes with staying on the air, 
because no government agency can bend to express non-compliance to such 
important action and hope to be an effective regulator.  Not only that, 
but how can an express law breaker incapable of regulation claim to be 
rehabilitated later? (Perhaps a mental defense.)  Likely he has sealed 
his fate forever as not possessing the integrity to be a ham. 
 
During KV4FZ's long odyssey, he conducted himself with respect toward 
the Commission, and it reacted favorably by affording him lattitude. 
Because K1MAN is conducting himself in opposition, he is and will be 
treated accordingly. 
 
There's an appropriate, hackneyed expression: You can win more friends 
with honey than vinegar!  Aging fast, Baxter's shelf life is short. 
 
Bob Sherin, W4ASX 
 
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
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