SB QST @ ARL $ARLB042 ARLB042 FCC Staff Member Steve Linn, N4CAK, SK ZCZC AG42 QST de W1AW ARRL Bulletin 42 ARLB042 From ARRL Headquarters Newington CT September 25, 2001 To all radio amateurs SB QST ARL ARLB042 ARLB042 FCC Staff Member Steve Linn, N4CAK, SK The FCC and Amateur Radio communities are mourning the loss of FCC staff member Steve Linn, N4CAK, of Lower Allen Township, Pennsylvania. Linn, 50, and his wife, Lesley Ellen Nearman, 44, died September 21 as a result of an automobile accident in Maryland. The couple's two children survived the wreck. ARRL President Jim Haynie, W5JBP, said he was deeply saddened by the news. ''Steve had not only been a valued employee at the FCC but also a good friend to the Amateur Radio community,'' he said. ''Having just visited with Steve a few days ago in Washington, I will remember his jovial spirit and dedication to the success of ham radio. Our prayers will be with their children, Steve and Lesley's families and all the employees of the FCC who will long feel this great loss.'' The couple's children, Deena, 9, and Andy, 12, were treated and released at a York, Pennsylvania, hospital. Linn was among the FCC staff members who turned out last Tuesday for the ARRL ''Amateur Radio Demo and Education Day'' at FCC Headquarters in Washington, DC. He and Haynie were scheduled to do a forum presentation together at the Virginia Beach Hamfest. FCC Special Counsel for Amateur Radio Enforcement Riley Hollingsworth said Linn was well-liked by the FCC staff members and contractors he worked with at the FCC's Gettysburg office. ''He was a very, very nice guy, a good engineer and he had common sense,'' Hollingsworth said. ''He knew the value of Amateur Radio and saw the big picture. Although he worked for the Wireless Bureau, the Enforcement Bureau was increasingly relying upon him for Land Mobile and Amateur licensing and technical matters. We will miss him very much.'' An Amateur Radio licensee since the 1980s and an ARRL member, Linn was deputy chief of the Licensing and Technical Analysis Branch for private wireless within the Wireless Telecommunications Bureau. His supervisor, Mary Shultz, said called Linn's death ''a major shock'' to the branch. ''He'll be difficult to replace as an employee,'' Shultz told ARRL, ''but impossible to replace as a friend.'' Linn had worked for the FCC for about 25 years, the last six or so years at the Gettysburg office. Among other Amateur Radio-related topics, Linn frequently served as a source of information for the Universal Licensing System and the Commission Registration System, CORES. Linn spoke about ULS during the 2000 Dayton Hamvention FCC Forum. He also was a presenter at local hamfests. Services for the couple were held September 24. NNNN /EX