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The next FCC chair should appoint one commissioner to lead the ag...

The next FCC chair should appoint one commissioner to lead the agency’s homeland security efforts, FCC Comr. Copps recommended in a speech Mon. at a National Emergency Number Assn. (NENA) forum. The FCC has expertise that would be valuable…

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to homeland security planning but “needs a higher profile,” Copps said. There’s precedent for targeting one commissioner for a particular task, he said. For example, ex- Chmn. William Kennard named then-Comr. Powell to lead Y2K efforts in 1999, Copps said. It’s been 3-1/2 years since the terrorist attacks on N.Y. and Washington, and little has been done to solve communications problems that occurred at the time and were cited in a report last year, he said. Interoperability problems among emergency workers, mobile phones that didn’t work inside damaged buildings and other problems haven’t been fully fixed, Copps said. The FCC has allocated more spectrum to public safety and is tackling a number of homeland security issues such as CALEA but the proceedings remain “a work in progress,” he told NENA. There has to be a plan with “deliverables and timetables,” he said, adding that there needs to be “clarity on where the FCC fits in.” While no one agency can solve preparedness problems, the FCC could play more of a role in coordinating efforts by various entities, Copps said. Copps also recommended the FCC create an office to “focus exclusively” on helping public safety organizations share ideas, prepare plans so govt entities and public safety groups don’t have to “reinvent the wheel” every time they undertake a new initiative. He said the FCC should be working more “proactively with Congress” to help make sure the digital TV spectrum transition is done right “by providing Congress with the good date it needs to make an informed decision.” Copps said the FCC should be able to tell Congress “how much spectrum public safety requires,” but he said he has “never seen a survey of what spectrum public safety is using, what frequencies are working and which are limited by their physical characteristics and interference.”