With help from the above replys (thank you) and per the
https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CFR-2009-title47-vol5/pdf/CFR-2009-title47-vol5-part95.pdf. Specifically:
"§ 95.119 Station identification.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph
(e), every GMRS station must transmit a station identification:
(1) Following the transmission of communications or a series of communications; and
(2) Every 15 minutes during a long transmission.
(b) The station identification is the call sign assigned to the GMRS station or system.
(c) A unit number may be included after the call sign in the identification.
(d) The station identification must be transmitted in:
(1) Voice in the English language; or
(2) International Morse code telegraphy.
(e) A station need not identify its transmissions if it automatically retransmits communications from another station which are properly identified."
I Interpret it as all transmitting units (listening units need not ID) must transit the station ID:
- at the end of the "communications". Note that this is plural, not singular.
REASON: "(1) Following the transmission of communications or a series of communications;"
- if transmitting for longer than 15 minutes, then a station identification is needed every 15 minutes.
REASON: "(2) Every 15 minutes during a long transmission."
"if transmitting for longer than 15 minutes" seems to apply to long winded folks where they keyed the transmitter for longer than 15 minutes and GMRS applications that transmit longer than 15 minutes.
So for most users, only stations that transmitted during the communications need to communicate the station ID and only once when the communications end. If any unit transmits for longer than 15 minutes continuously, then they must ID every 15 minutes during that transmission and at the end. There is no requirement to transmit the ID every 15 minutes (like there is for ham radios to transmit ID every 10 minutes).
BTW ... I am subject to being wrong without notice so determine your own practice/actions based on your own decisions, not mine
