FCC:
 TETRA Authorization is Coming to Public Safety The FCC released a 
Notice of Proposed Rule Making and Order Tuesday to modify rules 
permitting the certification and use of Terrestrial Trunked Radio 
(TETRA) equipment.  TETRA is spectrally efficient digital technology, 
but it does not comply with all Part 90 technical rules.  The TETRA 
Association (the Association, comprised of 150 organizations from 35 
countries) recently filed a request for waiver for the Part 90 rules on 
occupied bandwidth limit, to allow implementation of TETRA technology in
 the United States.  Pending the outcome of the rulemaking proceeding, 
the Commission has granted the waiver request in part.   The Association
 asserted that Part 90 technical rules were developed originally for 
analog equipment and technology.  Because digital technology operates 
more efficiently than analog, the rules are not always appropriate for 
digital technologies, therefore they should neither be applicable.   
TETRA offers a digital, trunked radio solution that operates with Time 
Division Multiple Access (TDMA) in four-slot channels utilizing 25 kHz 
bandwidth.  In a request filed in 2009, the Association held that:      
The TETRA standard (developed by the European Technical Standards 
Institute, or ETSI) is currently used worldwide, in coexistence with 
other technologies.     Manufacturers are prepared to distribute 
interoperable TETRA devices in the United States, on various frequency 
bands.     TETRA technology is more efficient, secure, and interoperable
 than alternative solutions.  TETRA's efficiency allows the devices to 
operate on 25 kHz of bandwidth, but without causing harmful interference
 to adjacent channels.  The ETSI standards set limits for adjacent 
channel power and unwanted emissions at different frequency offsets.  
Despite concerned comments from filers stating TETRA causes 
interference, the Association has demonstrated research to the contrary.
  The waiver request was accompanied by a TSB-88 analysis of the 
adjacent channel power ratio (ACPR) of a TETRA signal with a typical 
receiver, which indicated a lower interference potential from the TETRA 
signal.   Although the waiver has been granted in part and under 
specificed conditions, the Commission agreed with commenters in the 
aspect that permanent authorization of TETRA technology must be achieved
 through the rulemaking process.  Therefore, the Commission has formally
 requested comment on multiple issues surrounding their rulemaking 
decision.   
   
  
    
  
 
 
 
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