ARRL Affiliated Club in MS Donates 3D Printer, Books, to Local Library

ARRL Affiliated Club in MS Donates 3D Printer, Books, to Local Library

The Jackson Amateur Radio Club (JARC), serving the metropolitan area of Jackson, Mississippi, recently donated two 3D printers with a retail value of $3,000 to the Library System in Madison County (MCLS).

“Thank you, Jackson Amateur Radio Club, for all you have done for our library system. We so appreciate you,” said MCLS Director Tammie Terry. “The $2,000 donation of amateur radio books a few months ago [is] already in circulation.”

JARC President Jim Armstrong, AK5J, added, “We enjoy our hobby a great deal, but public service and teaching the public about it is an integral part of our 75-year history here in the Jackson metropolitan area. We have worked out a formal partnership between our club and the Madison County Library System. We are making our second donation of material and equipment, and STEM-oriented programming to Madison County’s libraries. Our intent is to make this support an ongoing project of our club."

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In Midst of Cyclone, Man Missing for 4 Years Returns Home

Believed to be dead after he had gone missing four years ago, a fish merchant from Bangladesh was reunited with his family even as Cyclone Remal was poised to destroy thousands of others' lives. While evacuating a district in West Bengal to shelters to prepare for the coming storm, a civil defence worker, Anup Sasmal, noticed a man who was sitting alone at an embankment, talking quietly to himself incoherently. According to media reports, authorities recognised that the man was a Bangladeshi who had somehow become displaced. They contacted the West Bengal Radio Club, which has expertise in assisting in missing persons cases. The club had already sent many of its members to Sagar Island to assist with emergency communications during the cyclone but the hams remaining reached out to amateur radio operators in Bangladesh. Radio operators there were able to locate the man's village and ultimately his family by providing a physical description and other details. The man and his family were immediately reunited via an emotional video call and arrangements were made to have him return home after the storm. It is not known how or how long ago the Bangladeshi national ended up across the border from his home country or what happened to him in the years in between.

Source - ARNewsline

Changes to the Four-year Planning Rule in England

The four-year planning rule has offered a degree of protection for antennas and masts that have been erected without planning permission. Under this rule any installations which had been installed and unchanged for four years or more were protected against planning enforcement action. However, as of the 25th April 2024, this rule ceased to exist in its current form in England under changes introduced under the Levelling-up and Regeneration Act 2023. The rule has been replaced by a more stringent ten-year period for the exemption from enforcement for residential dwellings. This change does not affect Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland where the four-year rule will continue to apply. Any installation that was substantially completed prior to the introduction of the Act will still be subject to the four-year rule meaning, for most radio amateurs, the ten-year rule will not apply until the 24th April 2028.

For more information on planning matters visit http://www.rsgb.org/planning

Update 30 June 2024 - The term for the planning rule has changed from 4 years to 10 years planning permission exclusion limit.

Extended clarification of the change to the planning permission rule

The Levelling-up and Regeneration Act 2023 will apply immediately to all newly started installations on or after 25 April 2024 and they will have to completed and unchanged for 10 years to avoid enforcement action for not having planning permission.

The new Act states that any installation that has been completed or substantially completed before the introduction of the Act will still be subject to the 4 year rule. For example if you completed the installation and can prove it to the satisfaction of the Local Planning Authority (usually the Council) on 24 April 2024 and the Council chose to take enforcement action for you not having planning permission on the 23 April 2028 you could claim exemption under the previous 4 year rule, but if you completed it on the 26 April 2024 then it would have to have been there for 10 years or more before escaping enforcement action. The wording of the Act effectively gives a grace period up to 25 April 2028 for completed or substantially completed installations.

There are a couple of points to note:-

  • The installation has to remain present and unchanged for the 4 year/10 year rule to apply. Changing the antenna can restart the clock as can adding additional antennas.

  • This legislation change only applies to England and not the rest of the UK, Chanel Islands and Isle of Man.

  • The Act does not give any guidance on what ‘substantially completed’ means.

Thanks to Len Paget GM0MNX for the further update