SB QST @ ARL $ARLB079 ARLB079 Vanity call update ZCZC AG59 QST de W1AW ARRL Bulletin 79 ARLB079 From ARRL Headquarters Newington CT November 13, 1996 To all radio amateurs SB QST ARL ARLB079 ARLB079 Vanity call update The FCC calls them WIPS--''works in process''--applications that need some kind of special handling. But for up to 12 per cent of first-day Gate 2 vanity call sign applicants, WIPS means ''no new call sign.'' It now appears that as many as 550 first-day applications ended up in the WIPS pile for a variety of ''inconsistencies''--some as simple as an address on an application that failed to match one already in the FCC's database. The FCC said this week that it hopes to clear its decks of all first-day vanity WIPS by November 15. An FCC spokeswoman in Gettysburg says that being in the WIPS stack does not necessarily mean you ''missed out'' on getting one of your call sign choices. Depending on the WIPS category (the FCC's not telling what those are), a new call sign already may have been attached to many of the applications that are being held up. New Gate 2 grants since November 4 have brought the grand total of successful applicants to 3805. It's now estimated that some 200 first-day Gate 2 applications were dismissed by the FCC, most because all of the applicants' call sign choices already had been granted to other hams. Still, many 1x2 call signs remain. As of this week, more than 6000 1x2 calls in all US districts remained available--substantially more than the number of vanity call signs the FCC has issued under Gate 2 to date. Still not known is just when Gettysburg will process Gate 2 applications that were received after September 23, the opening day for Gate 2. An FCC spokeswoman said this week she had ''no idea'' when that would happen. Applications from approximately 1400 hams arrived at the FCC in the days following the opening of Gate 2. Although the FCC did not release the initial day-one grants until Tuesday, November 5, the applications actually were processed--and the licenses dated--on November 4. The FCC spokeswoman said that computer problems on the morning of November 5 prevented the release of the database file until late that afternoon. NNNN /EX