Transition issues for licensees that the FCC wants cleared from the 2150-2162 MHz band, as well as rural and safe harbor policy calls, are drawing fire after the FCC released its massive report and order on broadband radio service (BRS) and educational broadband service (EBS) spectrum. The Wireless Communications Assn. said it expects to go back to the Commission asking for additional changes to the order. But it’s not clear how many matters it will asked to be reconsidered.
Howard Buskirk
Howard Buskirk, Executive Senior Editor, joined Warren Communications News in 2004, after covering Capitol Hill for Telecommunications Reports. He has covered Washington since 1993 and was formerly executive editor at Energy Business Watch, editor at Gas Daily and managing editor at Natural Gas Week. Previous to that, he was a staff reporter for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution and the Greenville News. Follow Buskirk on Twitter: @hbuskirk
The FCC isn’t giving a date for launching its Public Safety & Homeland Security Bureau, approved at its March 17 agenda meeting, an FCC official told the Land Mobile Communications Council (LMCC) Thurs. Industry and public safety officials at the meeting told us group members have many questions about the bureau -- especially a plan to split spectrum licensing, with part staying in the Wireless Bureau and public safety licensing moving to the new bureau.
The FCC late Tues. released revised designated entity (DE) rules, in time for June’s advanced wireless services auction. They don’t bar ties between DEs and carriers, but do put tough new controls on what a DE can do with spectrum it buys at a reduced rate using bidding credits. DE sources said provisions in the order virtually guarantee many DEs will sit out the AWS auction. Comr. Adelstein partly dissented, saying the order doesn’t go far enough.
NTIA picked D.C.’s Wireless Accelerated Responder Network (WARN) to test spectrum sharing, fulfilling one of 24 recommendations in the Administration’s 21st Century Spectrum policy initiative. NTIA plans to complete a report on WARN this year.
A group appointed by the FCC to address minority issues declared victory Tues. in its fight to keep the agency from significantly broadening proposed restrictions on partnerships between designated entities and carriers. Having won, the Advisory Committee on Diversity for Communications in the Digital Age scuttled a resolution asking the FCC not to ban carriers with annual revenue of more than $125 from teaming up with DEs in the advanced wireless services auction.
Aloha Partners, the largest holder of 700 MHz licenses in the U.S., said it will join with satellite operator SES Americom to test-market mobile TV in Las Vegas in the fall, through a new subsidiary, Hwire, using the digital video broadcasting-handheld (DVB-H) platform. Aloha has a test of wireless broadband on 700 MHz in Phoenix. CEO Charles Townsend told us Mon. the Aloha will look at both tests at year-end and decide which course to pursue.
Despite widespread publicity after last year’s major storms, on the eve of hurricane season the 8 hurricane-zone states “remain dangerously unprepared for another disaster,” the First Response Coalition said in a report. The document sharpens the focus on the individual states, reviewing efforts of each to build interoperable networks. The report comes as the FCC’s Hurricane Katrina Independent Panel also finishes its report.
Barry Ohlson, senor legal advisor to Comr. Adelstein, told an FCBA lunch Fri. he doesn’t expect the imminent arrival of a 5th commissioner, and a 3rd Republican, at the FCC to make a substantial difference on wireless issues. Ohlson, along with Fred Campbell, wireless advisor to Chmn. Martin, and Aaron Goldberger, legal advisor to Comr. Tate, met with communications lawyers.
Chmn. Martin is circulating revised designated entity rules for the advanced wireless services auction that don’t contain a proposal cutting to $125 million the revenue threshold limiting carriers from partnering with a DE, sources said Thurs. The change is a potential win for DEs and small carriers upset about the lower threshold. One source said Martin withdrew his previous proposal late Wed. and is circulating a new plan in its place. The FCC earlier had examined a $5 billion limit, which would block agreements between DEs and the largest carriers, but not with smaller carriers (CD April 20 p5).
The FCC last week may have set too high a bar in imposing a competitiveness test that must be met to avoid blind bidding in the advanced wireless services auction, sources said this week. Save for Verizon Wireless, carriers large and small tend to oppose blind bids. But blind bidding seems all but a certainty when the auction begins June 29.