HR1094119th CongressWALLET

Amateur Radio Emergency Preparedness Act

Sponsored By: Representative Pfluger

Introduced

Summary

Protects amateur radio antennas from private land-use bans while allowing narrow safety and appearance rules. The bill would prevent recorded covenants and community association rules from prohibiting or unreasonably impairing amateur station antennas on property an operator controls, and it would set limits on approval processes and exemptions for small antennas.

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Bill Overview

Analyzed Economic Effects

4 provisions identified: 4 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.

Faster approval for home amateur antennas

This bill would limit association prior‑approval for amateur antennas. If approval was not in public land records before you bought or leased, it could not be enforced. The group could not demand more detail than for other home projects. If they do not decide in 45 days, your application would be deemed approved. After approval, no new approval would be needed unless size or structural integrity changes materially. No prior approval would be needed for antennas under 1 meter, flagpoles or verticals up to 43 feet, or minimally obtrusive wire antennas.

Legal protections in amateur antenna disputes

This bill would pause enforcement of an antenna rule while the FCC or a court reviews it. While the case is pending, no penalties or costs could pile up. The enforcer would have to prove its rule complies; anyone alleging a violation would have to prove that claim. You could sue in U.S. district court without first using state remedies.

Stronger rights to install amateur antennas

This bill would block private rules that ban or gut amateur radio antennas on property you control. Control would mean you own, lease, or legally live there, including limited common areas where you can exclude others. A rule would impair your antenna if it unreasonably delays you, raises costs a lot, or harms your signal. Safety and code rules could still apply, and unsafe or deteriorated parts could have to be fixed or removed. You could be required to remove the antenna if you no longer control the property. Screening could be required for ground‑mounted electrical or control enclosures, or guy wire anchors, if visible from the street or next door in unfenced side or rear yards. Any allowed rules would have to be applied reasonably.

FCC rules and timelines for antennas

This bill would require the FCC to issue implementing rules within 180 days of enactment. It would also keep existing FCC rules, like section 97.15(b), in place and unchanged.

Sponsors & CoSponsors

Sponsor

Pfluger

TX • R

Cosponsors

  • Courtney

    CT • D

    Sponsored 2/6/2025

  • Weber (TX)

    TX • R

    Sponsored 2/24/2025

  • Finstad

    MN • R

    Sponsored 4/28/2025

  • Bost

    IL • R

    Sponsored 5/21/2025

  • Rulli

    OH • R

    Sponsored 6/3/2025

  • DeLauro

    CT • D

    Sponsored 6/4/2025

  • Cline

    VA • R

    Sponsored 6/5/2025

  • Panetta

    CA • D

    Sponsored 6/20/2025

  • Larson (CT)

    CT • D

    Sponsored 6/26/2025

  • Alford

    MO • R

    Sponsored 6/26/2025

  • Vasquez

    NM • D

    Sponsored 7/2/2025

  • Barrett

    MI • R

    Sponsored 7/15/2025

  • McGovern

    MA • D

    Sponsored 7/15/2025

  • Hayes

    CT • D

    Sponsored 7/15/2025

  • Bresnahan

    PA • R

    Sponsored 7/22/2025

  • Golden (ME)

    ME • D

    Sponsored 8/22/2025

  • McGuire

    VA • R

    Sponsored 9/16/2025

  • Vindman

    VA • D

    Sponsored 10/3/2025

  • Strickland

    WA • D

    Sponsored 10/24/2025

  • Suozzi

    NY • D

    Sponsored 12/1/2025

  • Carson

    IN • D

    Sponsored 12/1/2025

  • Van Drew

    NJ • R

    Sponsored 12/12/2025

  • Goldman (TX)

    TX • R

    Sponsored 1/7/2026

  • Ezell

    MS • R

    Sponsored 1/14/2026

  • Miller (OH)

    OH • R

    Sponsored 1/20/2026

  • Webster (FL)

    FL • R

    Sponsored 2/10/2026

Roll Call Votes

No roll call votes available for this bill.

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