I am opposed to the proposal to add a Tyro license class and restructure the 70 cm amateur band. As an Extra class amateur, educator, and volunteer examiner, I believe that the assumptions of the proposal are flawed and that its implementation would not benefit Amateur Radio as planned: 1. Augmentation of CERT capabilities is not a sufficient reason for adding a license class - and other services such as GMRS are already available that can provide limited area FM communication. 2. Adding a license class is exactly the opposite direction taken by the FCC over the last two decades, where the aim has been to streamline the Amateur Radio service. The proposal fails to discuss how the increased costs of implementing the various structures required for the Tyro service will be covered. 3. Implementing a license class that requires no technical knowledge of radio does not support the purpose of Amateur Radio as outlined in CFR47§97.1, "Basis and Purpose" 4. Implementing arbitrary technical standards weakens the Amateur Service. a) Channelization of a portion of the 70 cm band limits other uses of the spectrum. b) Imposing 2.5 kHz "narrowband" FM as the only acceptable modulation means that the radio configurations for this portion of the service are incompatible with present amateur practice. While moving to a narrowbanded FM model is a noble goal, standards should remain consistent across a service as much as is feasible. c) The Tyro service frequencies are segregated from conventional practice by frequency and by repeater frequency split (the proposal specifies 9 MHz T-R frequency splits, as opposed to 5 MHz as the standard practice used in the amateur 70 cm band). d) Some of the technical standards proposed are either obsolete, redundant, or could lead to unintentional interference. For example 4.58 - minimal modulating frequency - is obsolete given the frequency stability of current amateur equipment. 4.29 - "OpenAccessCodes" - appears to limit the Tyro system to only three CTCSS tones, which seems to weaken CTCSS's capacity to reduce interference. e) No mention is made of the cost of building and maintaining an infrastructure of repeaters and other equipment that are dedicated to the Tyro operators. f) Segregating Tyro operators from amateur operations using existing frequencies and modes reduces opportunities for mainstreaming and learning, critical for developing both social and technical skills necessary for growth in Amateur Radio.