Subj : Amateur Radio Newsline (B) To : All From : Daryl Stout Date : Fri Dec 27 2019 09:23:31 GRANTS AVAILABLE FOR AUSTRALIAN YLs STEPHEN/ANCHOR: The cost of becoming licensed in Australia has become a little easier for some YLs, thanks to one amateur radio group down under. John Williams, VK4JJW, has the details. JOHN: If you live in Australia, and you're a YL hoping for a licence upgrade - or simply to get your Foundation level - the Australian Ladies Amateur Radio Association, or ALARA, can help. ALARA provides grants to qualifying YLs in an amount that is equal to about half the cost of fees for assessment, licence, and callsign. The grant also provides YLs will a complimentary one-year membership. According to the ALARA website, applicants need to submit their receipts and any other relevant documentation once they have completed the qualification process. They should be submitted to the ALARA secretary Jean, VK5TSX. Application forms and additional details about the timetable for applications are available on the website alara dot org dot au (alara.org.au) For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm John Williams, VK4JJW. (ALARA) ** AMATEUR RADIO EXHIBIT CLOSING IN LOS ALTOS, CALIFORNIA STEPHEN/ANCHOR: If you're in the Los Altos, California area, you have only a few more days to visit the Los Altos History Museum's exhibit on amateur radio, which opened on December 3rd. "Ham for the Holidays: Amateur Radio Operators Then and Now" is set to close on January 5th. The free exhibit in the J. Gilbert Smith House, is a history lesson on amateur radio's public service role, and also highlights various types of amateur radio equipment. The display also shares archival photos of radio operators, and explains how hams communicate with one another. The amateur radio exhibit is complemented by a larger exhibit the museum is hosting in its main gallery on community preparedness. That exhibit, which is also free, will remain open until January 19th. (LOS ALTOS MUSEUM WEBSITE) ** HISTORIC UK CONTROL TOWER NOW HOME TO AMATEUR CLUB STATION STEPHEN/ANCHOR: A control tower in the UK, with an established place in history, is now home to a local radio society. Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, has that story. JEREMY: At one time, the Greenham Control Tower was a focal point for troops during the English Civil War in the 17th century, as well as a significant military establishment in the 18th and 19th centuries. Now the tower, which is owned and restored by the Greenham Parish Council, is a regular assembly spot for amateurs calling QRZ. It officially went on the air on Saturday, 14th December, with the president of the Radio Society of Great Britain, David Wilson, M0OBW, and Newbury's deputy mayor Billy Drummond in attendance. NADARS - The Newbury and District Amateur Radio Society, G5XV - had worked on establishing the station, which will also be able to work the QO-100 geostationary satellite. The club also has access to a Yaesu Fusion combined digital and analogue FM repeater. The club's chairman Jeremy Willis, G4DOQ, told the newspaper [quote]: "NADARS has been looking for somewhere to set up a permanent station for some time, and the location of Greenham Control Tower exactly fits our criteria." [endquote] The tower is also a visitors' centre and community gathering spot, which opened in 2018, to draw the local public's attention to the tower's military legacy. Now with a ham shack on the premises, that story can now be heard around the world. For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jeremy Boot, G4NJH. (GREENHAMTOWERORG.UK, NEWBURY TODAY) ** NEIGHBORS TRY TO BLOCK AMATEUR'S TOWER IN MASSACHUSETTS STEPHEN/ANCHOR: It's a familiar scene to more than a few hams: The plan for a tower stirs the angry neighbors. Kent Peterson, KC0DGY, catches up with the latest case in New England. KENT: Neighbors in Framingham, Massachusetts, filled the hearing room at City Hall on December 11th, hoping their opposition would kill plans for the 80-foot radio tower, being built by local amateur Mikhail Filippov, KD1MF. Mikhail was granted a building permit for the project, but residents have challenged the city's action, taking their case to the local Zoning Board of Appeals. They claim the tower is an eyesore, and will hurt property values. Neighbors believe the city issued the permit improperly, and that the tower doesn't comply with city zoning. The building commissioner has rejected that argument, calling amateur towers exempt from local laws that apply to so-called wireless communication facilities. The case, however, has not gone forward. Mikhail's attorney Fred Hopengarten, notified the zoning board that he was going to be out of town. The board members voted to continue the hearing, and rehear t he case after reviewing material submitted by both sides. Hopengarten previously argued to officials that amateur radio operators have the protection of state and federal laws, because their presence provides an important public service. In the meantime, even with his attorney absent, Mikhail chose to speak directly to his neighbors at the hearing. He told them he would agree to halt construction of the tower, until zoning officials reconvene next month. The next hearing is January 8th. For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Kent Peterson, KC0DGY. (METROWEST DAILY NEWS) --- SBBSecho 3.10-Win32 * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - tbolt.synchro.net (454:1/33) .