Goto Section: 1.927 | 1.929 | Table of Contents
FCC 1.928
Revised as of October 1, 2006
Goto Year:2005 |
2007
Sec. 1.928 Frequency coordination, Canada.
(a) As a result of mutual agreements, the Commission has, since May 1950 had
an arrangement with the Canadian Department of Communications for the
exchange of frequency assignment information and engineering comments on
proposed assignments along the Canada-United States borders in certain bands
above 30 MHz. Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, this
arrangement involves assignments in the following frequency bands.
MHz
30.56–32.00
33.00–34.00
35.00–36.00
37.00–38.00
39.00–40.00
42.00–46.00
47.00–49.60
72.00–73.00
75.40–76.00
150.80–174.00
450–470
806.00–960.00
1850.0–2200.0
2450.0–2690.0
3700.0–4200.0
5925.0–7125.0
GHz
10.55–10.68
10.70–13.25
(b) The following frequencies are not involved in this arrangement because
of the nature of the services:
MHz
156.3
156.35
156.4
156.45
156.5
156.55
156.6
156.65
156.7
156.8
156.9
156.95
157.0 and 161.6
157.05
157.1
157.15
157.20
157.25
157.30
157.35
157.40.
(c) Assignments proposed in accordance with the railroad industry radio
frequency allotment plan along the United States-Canada borders utilized by
the Federal Communications Commission and the Department of Transport,
respectively, may be excepted from this arrangement at the discretion of the
referring agency.
(d) Assignments proposed in any radio service in frequency bands below 470
MHz appropriate to this arrangement, other than those for stations in the
Domestic Public (land mobile or fixed) category, may be excepted from this
arrangement at the discretion of the referring agency if a base station
assignment has been made previously under the terms of this arrangement or
prior to its adoption in the same radio service and on the same frequency
and in the local area, and provided the basic characteristics of the
additional station are sufficiently similar technically to the original
assignment to preclude harmful interference to existing stations across the
border.
(e) For bands below 470 MHz, the areas which are involved lie between Lines
A and B and between Lines C and D, which are described as follows:
Line A—Begins at Aberdeen, Wash., running by great circle arc to the
intersection of 48 deg. N., 120 deg. W., thence along parallel 48 deg. N.,
to the intersection of 95 deg. W., thence by great circle arc through the
southernmost point of Duluth, Minn., thence by great circle arc to 45 deg.
N., 85 deg. W., thence southward along meridian 85 deg. W., to its
intersection with parallel 41 deg. N., thence along parallel 41 deg. N., to
its intersection with meridian 82 deg. W., thence by great circle arc
through the southernmost point of Bangor, Maine, thence by great circle arc
through the southern-most point of Searsport, Maine, at which point it
terminates; and
Line B—Begins at Tofino, B.C., running by great circle arc to the
intersection of 50 deg. N., 125 deg. W., thence along parallel 50 deg. N.,
to the intersection of 90 deg. W., thence by great circle arc to the
intersection of 45 deg. N., 79 deg. 30' W., thence by great circle arc
through the northernmost point of Drummondville, Quebec (lat: 45 deg. 52'
N., long: 72 deg. 30' W.), thence by great circle arc to 48 deg. 30' N., 70
deg. W., thence by great circle arc through the northernmost point of
Campbellton, N.B., thence by great circle arc through the northernmost point
of Liverpool, N.S., at which point it terminates.
Line C—Begins at the intersection of 70 deg. N., 144 deg. W., thence by
great circle arc to the intersection of 60 deg. N., 143 deg. W., thence by
great circle arc so as to include all of the Alaskan Panhandle; and
Line D—Begins at the intersection of 70 deg. N., 138 deg. W., thence by
great circle arc to the intersection of 61 deg. 20' N., 139 deg. W.,
(Burwash Landing), thence by great circle arc to the intersection of 60 deg.
45' N., 135 deg. W., thence by great circle arc to the intersection of 56
deg. N., 128 deg. W., thence south along 128 deg. meridian to Lat. 55 deg.
N., thence by great circle arc to the intersection of 54 deg. N., 130 deg.
W., thence by great circle arc to Port Clements, thence to the Pacific Ocean
where it ends.
(f) For all stations using bands between 470 MHz and 1000 MHz; and for any
station of a terrestrial service using a band above 1000 MHz, the areas
which are involved are as follows:
(1) For a station the antenna of which looks within the 200 deg. sector
toward the Canada-United States borders, that area in each country within 35
miles of the borders;
(2) For a station the antenna of which looks within the 160 deg. sector away
from the Canada-United States borders, that area in each country within 5
miles of the borders; and
(3) The area in either country within coordination distance as described in
Recommendation 1A of the Final Acts of the EARC, Geneva, 1963 of a receiving
earth station in the other country which uses the same band.
(g) Proposed assignments in the space radiocommunication services and
proposed assignments to stations in frequency bands allocated coequally to
space and terrestrial services above 1 GHz are not treated by these
arrangements. Such proposed assignments are subject to the regulatory
provisions of the International Radio Regulations.
(h) Assignments proposed in the frequency band 806–890 MHz shall be in
accordance with the Canada-United States agreement, dated April 7, 1982.
[ 64 FR 53238 , Oct. 1, 1999]
Goto Section: 1.927 | 1.929
Goto Year: 2005 |
2007
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