ISS FM Repeater, APRS Digipeater Could Be Sunset in Two Years

The International Space Station (ISS) is currently scheduled for retirement in 2030, but Elon Musk has called for an earlier retirement, as soon as 2027. Musk has described the space station as having served its purpose. With the ISS potentially being deorbited in as few as two years, that leaves Hams with only 24 months to continue taking advantage of the FM repeater and APRS digipeater onboard the space station.

I would think that right now was probably not the right time to call it quits. We have probably until 2030 in our agreements, and I think that’s probably really accurate because we should make the most of this space station for our taxpayers and for all of our international partners, and hold our obligations.
— Suni Williams NASA Astronaut

Astronauts onboard the ISS have suggested honouring agreements to keep the ISS in orbit until 2030.


ISS Astronauts Reject Call for Early Retirement of the ISS

ISS Astronauts Reject Call for Early Retirement of the ISS

Astronauts on the International Space Station said they disagreed with Elon Musk’s claim that the station was past its prime and should be deorbited as soon as in two years.

Speaking to reporters March 4, NASA astronauts Suni Williams, KD5PLB and Butch Wilmore, who have been on the station since June on a flawed Starliner test flight and Nick Hague, KG5TMV, the commander of the Crew-9 mission that will bring the two back with him later this month, addressed political issues like an early retirement of the ISS and Musks claim he offered NASA an early return of the Starliner crew.

Musk said on 20th February 2025 that the ISS has served its purpose and has very little incremental utility. He called for deorbiting the ISS as soon as possible, which he said should be in two years.

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VOA, Other International News Services, Marked for Cuts

The US Agency for Global Media has been marked for defunding. Voice of America, Radio Free Europe, Radio Free Asia and Radio Marti are among the international news services that the White House says it is preparing to dismantle. Kent Peterson KCØDGY gives us the details.

Voice of America, a shortwave service launched in 1942 during the Second World to bring news to countries under authoritarian control, is among US-based news programming for overseas audiences targeted in a deep cut by the Trump administration. According to various media reports, VOA employees have been notified that they were all being placed on paid administrative leave with full benefits - effective immediately.

to inform, engage and connect people around the world in support of freedom and democracy
— The Agency for Global Media's mission statement

Cuts to VOA, as well as Radio Free Europe, Radio Free Asia, Radio Marti and others are the result of reductions taking place inside the US Agency for Global Media, where these programs originate. These cuts are part of the ongoing downsizing of the US government. The agency operates with congressional funding to deliver news in 64 languages to listeners around the world via six networks, some of which were created during the Cold War. VOA’s first broadcast, made in 1942, was in German and was transmitted to German listeners to counter Nazi propaganda.

On Friday the 15th of March, Trump signed the executive order for the cuts, noting in the language of the order itself that the services earmarked for reduction have been deemed “unnecessary.”