Title 47 › Chapter CHAPTER 5— - WIRE OR RADIO COMMUNICATION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - SPECIAL PROVISIONS RELATING TO RADIO › Part Part I— - General Provisions › § 308
The Commission can give construction permits and station licenses, or change or renew them, only after it gets a written application. But in three kinds of emergencies it may act without a formal application: when it finds danger to life or property or damage to equipment; during a national emergency declared by the President or Congress or during any war when action is needed for national defense or the war effort; and in nonbroadcast emergencies where getting renewal applications or following the normal process is not feasible. Any emergency authorization ends when the emergency or war ends. The Commission can also send a permit by cable, telegraph, or radio so a U.S. ship at sea can operate a station until it returns to a port of the continental United States. License, modification, or renewal applications must give facts the Commission requires about the person applying (citizenship, character, finances, technical ability), who owns and where the station will be, what other stations it will contact, the frequencies and power, the hours of operation, the station’s purpose, and any other needed information. The Commission can ask for more written facts after filing or during the license term. These statements must be signed in the form the Commission allows, including electronically. For commercial international links, the Commission may add terms like those used for submarine-cable licenses. Anyone renewing a commercial or noncommercial TV license must attach a summary of any written public comments kept by the licensee that call the programming violent.
Full Legal Text
Telegraphs, Telephones, and Radiotelegraphs — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
47 U.S.C. § 308
Title 47 — Telegraphs, Telephones, and Radiotelegraphs
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73