Dwight Stewart  wrote in
:
 "Alun Palmer" wrote:
 s97.301(e) reads:
 For a station having a control operator who has
 been granted an operator license of Novice Class
 or Technician Class and who has received credit
 for proficiency in telegraphy in accordance with
 the international requirements.
 (followed by frequency table)
 The 'international requirements' (ITU-R s25.5)
 now read:   (snip)
   The "international requirements" have to ratified, and FCC rules
   changed,
 before any content of those "international requirements" become the law
 of this land. Until that happens, your license is dependant on existing
 FCC rules and regulations. The courts will enforce those existing
 regulations, not some possible future change in them.
That's the point -those existing regulations incorporate by reference an
international requirement that no longer exists
   Further, the changes in the "international requirements" do not
   eliminate
 code testing - it simply leaves it up to individual governments to keep
 or end testing. If the US decides not to end testing, there will be no
 change in our laws for the courts to even consider in your defense.
 Dwight Stewart   (W5NET)
 http://www.qsl.net/w5net/