Well, I haven't been able to get any authoritative answers. I emailed the ARRL Regulatory branch last week but haven't received any response to date. I'm not an attorney but I did some more research and learned a few things that have effectively convinced me to operate under local control or remote control but not automatic control. Here's my thinking on this:
1) If you only swapped out the antenna on a part 15 FCC certified radio to one that wasn't certified as part of that radio's original equipment, you can no longer operate it under Part 15. It doesn't matter that you haven't changed the transmitter power, just changing the antenna voids the Part 15 certification. You'll need an appropriate license such as an Amateur Radio license and of course, you can only operate the radio within the limits of your license under Part 97.
2) Part 97.109 says:
(e) No station may be automatically controlled while transmitting third party communications, except a station transmitting a RTTY or data emission. All messages that are retransmitted must originate at a station that is being locally or remotely controlled.
For me that means that even if it was OK to use automatic control to originate those third party messages, they can't be legally retransmitted. Right there, that's a show stopper. In order to effectively route messages, I'm going need to rely on other digital stations automatically forwarding them. The way I read Part 97.109, no stations can legally retransmit my original message unless I used local or remote control. If I used automatic control, they can't retransmit.
So, now, the only remaining question is:
How do control operators meet the requirement to continuously monitor participation of third parties when the third parties are generating emails on their PCs destined to go out over the HSMM-MESH network?
I struggled with this and after a bit, it hit me. IT managers are notoriously protective of their networks and keep their firewalls buttoned up. I'm a retired IT Manager for a State agency and I don't know of anybody in a similar position in any government agency or hospital that's likely allow a connection to an unknown network. Where I worked, we didn't allow contractors or even employees to connect any devices that the agency didn't own and control. I'd guess that connecting directly to a hospital network is not a likely scenario.
Despite my guess, maybe some of the folks who frequent HSMM-MESH.org have had experiences in which they were allowed to directly connect a served organizations PCs to HSMM-MESH. If so, perhaps they can offer some guidance on this issue.
In the meantime, I'm struggling with solutions for getting typed messages in and out without rewriting them.
73 Mark KV4I |