How long would you be willing to stand down while your petition to change frequencies is processed?
Nauga,
whose time is money
As a business person I would look at this from a pragmatic point of view. I often have to do this with legal cases. I divide them into those I am going to fight for the principle despite the cost and those I will fight if they pay.
Now maybe
@weirdjim is in the first case. He wants to fight for what is right and try to to get these slackers to follow the regs. If he wants to do that, I can sympathize, but it is wise to then realize the price you are going to pay and to have a realistic view of the chances of success.
For this issue, I would treat it as the other case. I would set aside my anger over my right to the allocation being violated and ask what is the most cost effective way to get the tests done. I am not an expert, but since you asked my opinion, here are some of the solutions I would attempt in roughly the order of proceeding:
Try to move the tests to a time of day to avoid the yahoos.
Have someone on the radio to warn people periodically while testing and to ask interlopers to get off, heterodyning them if needed.
Request a frequency change from the FCC.
Ask my Senator or Representative to call the FCC and see if they could perhaps expedite the request.
Setup a small LCC at low cost and make another application for a frequency.
Get with local pilot groups and spread the word about the problems with this illegal use of the testing frequency.
I don’t know that I would ever think that trying to find the interlopers and get an FCC enforce action against them was likely to be cost effective. But I suppose it could have enough of a chance of working and, if not that expensive, I might try it after a few such interruptions. If I thought there was a repeat offender, I might try contacting them and giving them a warning first.
I think some of the acrimony in this discussion occurs between those who think that the regs must be followed at nearly all costs and those who just take a pragmatic attitude about them.
There are a lot of things I feel pretty strongly principled about in life, but FCC frequency allocation regulations are not one of them. So I fall into the second camp on this issue. They should and need to be followed and that is certainly what I do and teach, but it does not strike me as a significant matter of human freedom.