MasBel Posted Thursday at 03:55 AM Posted Thursday at 03:55 AM I understand that a volunteer church security team can use GMRS radios as long as one member holds a current FCC GMRS license. It's also my understanding that the "team" would fall under the same rules as "family members". My question is, "Does the FCC license holder have to be present at all times while the team is conducting GMRS comms under that license permissions?" Can anybody educate me on whether I have valid "understandings" on this matter? Thanks, WSLP718 Quote
SteveShannon Posted Thursday at 04:00 AM Posted Thursday at 04:00 AM 2 minutes ago, MasBel said: I understand that a volunteer church security team can use GMRS radios as long as one member holds a current FCC GMRS license. It's also my understanding that the "team" would fall under the same rules as "family members". My question is, "Does the FCC license holder have to be present at all times while the team is conducting GMRS comms under that license permissions?" Can anybody educate me on whether I have valid "understandings" on this matter? Thanks, WSLP718 There’s no such exception in the current rules. Church members may not operate under a non-relative’s license, unless the church has a grandfathered license. AdmiralCochrane, kirk5056, WRYZ926 and 2 others 4 1 Quote
LegitByDefault Posted Thursday at 07:17 AM Posted Thursday at 07:17 AM There's nothing stopping you from using FRS radios. They should work just as well for the purpose and likely cost less, simple operation, etc If using GMRS, everyone on the security team using a GMRS radio would need to be licensed. The only exception would be for those (if any) of you that are blood related... Father, son, brother, sister, etc. amaff, WRHS218, Jaay and 2 others 5 Quote
amaff Posted Thursday at 01:52 PM Posted Thursday at 01:52 PM Yeah, this really seems like where FRS is the solution. Or getting a commercial license for the church. But the FCC regs, if you're trying to follow them, don't say "licensees and their immediate family members... and additionally anyone they happen to go to church with or run into at the grocery store or at daycare or at the gym" Davichko5650, SteveShannon and kirk5056 3 Quote
SteveShannon Posted Thursday at 02:49 PM Posted Thursday at 02:49 PM MURS would also be a good unlicensed option for a church. WRPG745, HHD1, amaff and 2 others 5 Quote
WRYZ926 Posted Thursday at 03:03 PM Posted Thursday at 03:03 PM I have to agree that MURS or FRS would be a better solution unless everyone is willing to get their GMRS licenses. amaff and SteveShannon 2 Quote
Jaay Posted Thursday at 05:24 PM Posted Thursday at 05:24 PM 13 hours ago, MasBel said: I understand that a volunteer church security team can use GMRS radios as long as one member holds a current FCC GMRS license. It's also my understanding that the "team" would fall under the same rules as "family members". My question is, "Does the FCC license holder have to be present at all times while the team is conducting GMRS comms under that license permissions?" Can anybody educate me on whether I have valid "understandings" on this matter? Thanks, WSLP718 Family member does NOT mean members of your congregation. NO, Not legal. Quote
Northcutt114 Posted Thursday at 07:03 PM Posted Thursday at 07:03 PM 4 hours ago, SteveShannon said: MURS would also be a good unlicensed option for a church. I would argue that MURS would probably be a better choice because there's less potential for interference as fewer people are on it. Unless, of course, the church is near a Walmart. HHD1, SteveShannon, amaff and 2 others 2 3 Quote
Jaay Posted Thursday at 10:06 PM Posted Thursday at 10:06 PM 3 hours ago, Northcutt114 said: I would argue that MURS would probably be a better choice because there's less potential for interference as fewer people are on it. Unless, of course, the church is near a Walmart. Except Most Walmarts are now using Motorola ISM radios now, instead of MURS radios, and actually even Churches could use ISM radios, with very little chance of interference, due to the short range on 900 mhz. WRPG745 1 Quote
Bogieboy01 Posted Thursday at 10:30 PM Posted Thursday at 10:30 PM 23 minutes ago, Jaay said: Except Most Walmarts are now using Motorola ISM radios now, instead of MURS radios, and actually even Churches could use ISM radios, with very little chance of interference, due to the short range on 900 mhz. Depending on what sound equipment they are running for wireless mics, 900mhz could interfere... Jaay and amaff 2 Quote
Jaay Posted Thursday at 10:41 PM Posted Thursday at 10:41 PM 7 minutes ago, Bogieboy01 said: Depending on what sound equipment they are running for wireless mics, 900mhz could interfere... The Motorola Radios that Walmarts are using are FHSS so probably not, because each frequency they use is only for a few milliseconds each time it transmits. Quote
MasBel Posted 19 hours ago Author Posted 19 hours ago Thanks to all for the responses, I kind of found the answer via other searches and the responses validate what I learned. Not sure if my security team members are interested in getting GMRS licenses so we'll keep exploring. Quote
WSKY396 Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago 47 minutes ago, MasBel said: Thanks to all for the responses, I kind of found the answer via other searches and the responses validate what I learned. Not sure if my security team members are interested in getting GMRS licenses so we'll keep exploring. From what I can tell the GMRS frequencies are hardly even in use at all. I would just get the radios you want and set them to the shared FRS frequencies. Quote
WSKY396 Posted 17 hours ago Posted 17 hours ago On 2/11/2026 at 7:55 PM, MasBel said: I understand that a volunteer church security team can use GMRS radios as long as one member holds a current FCC GMRS license. It's also my understanding that the "team" would fall under the same rules as "family members". My question is, "Does the FCC license holder have to be present at all times while the team is conducting GMRS comms under that license permissions?" Can anybody educate me on whether I have valid "understandings" on this matter? Thanks, WSLP718 Just to run the question back, you are asking about security communications at a place of worship right? You could get basic duel band monitoring hand held’s with 2 dedicated net controllers communicating with different input and output frequencies assigned to them and then structure communication so that the security team or teams communicate with pre determined frequencies to the controllers who can then coordinate security assets in real time. Unless this is a 24/7 megachurch with concerns then you could go with just the one net controller and a team or two with the same concept at a smaller scale. I am new to this as well and could be completely wrong but this is what I suspect brother, for whatever it’s worth. Quote
WSKY396 Posted 16 hours ago Posted 16 hours ago On 2/11/2026 at 7:55 PM, MasBel said: I understand that a volunteer church security team can use GMRS radios as long as one member holds a current FCC GMRS license. It's also my understanding that the "team" would fall under the same rules as "family members". My question is, "Does the FCC license holder have to be present at all times while the team is conducting GMRS comms under that license permissions?" Can anybody educate me on whether I have valid "understandings" on this matter? Thanks, WSLP718 Navigating the FCC website just to pay the whatever small dollars to get the GMRS license is not that hard for several people to do and it’s probably harder than the technician ham test on a first try to be honest. This a perfect use case in my opinion. No need for further research, an immediate solution is present in FRS with some planning and just a step further your worries about license are solved. Quote
amaff Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago 7 hours ago, WSKY396 said: ...the GMRS frequencies are hardly even in use at all. ...set them to the shared FRS frequencies. *since 2017 WSKY396 and SteveShannon 1 1 Quote
WSKY396 Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago 7 hours ago, amaff said: *since 2017 Lol, this is good. Quote
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