STANFORD, Calif. -- The benchmarks for whether the National Broadband Plan is making enough progress the first year will be FCC action on universal service and intercarrier compensation, and the creation by the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy of a task force of officials from throughout the government on matters such as health, energy and education as they relate to broadband, said Blair Levin, who headed work on the FCC’s plan. Last summer, the FCC’s broadband staff debated offering just three proposals, he said late Tuesday at Stanford Law School. Then it was inundated with about 2,300 recommendations in filings, Levin said. Research for the plan found state laws to be “huge impediments,” unintentionally, to applying broadband to health and education, he said.
Sprint Nextel lost a total of 75,000 wireless subscribers on a net basis in Q1 vs. a loss of 182,000 in the year-earlier period. The carrier said it had a loss of $865 million, up from $594 million a year earlier. Prepaid momentum is expected to pick up in the second half of the year, CEO Dan Hesse said on a conference call Wednesday, and he expects improving customer growth in both the prepaid and postpaid segments.
If the FCC doesn’t impose net neutrality rules, Congress will step in, Rep. Jay Inslee, D-Wash., told an agency field hearing in Seattle Wednesday. Sen. Maria Cantwell, a Democrat from the state, encouraged the regulator to approve rules proposed by FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski in October. Genachowski welcomed comments from both and said the commission will move forward on the net neutrality proceeding despite the Comcast decision. All three spoke in taped remarks played at the beginning of the forum.
Cable operators are again seeing broadband businesses grow at faster rates, after a few quarters of slowing growth, Comcast executives told investors Wednesday. The renewed growth, which they said was rare for a business line that’s been active for a decade, had to do with its DOCSIS 3.0 deployments and the growing popularity of online video and gaming. “We and other cable companies have started to re-accelerate our net adds,” said Chief Operating Officer Stephen Burke. “In each of the last two quarters our net adds alone were as much as the entire big RBOC footprint combined."
Florida’s House and Senate have until close of business Friday to agree on SB-1034 to overhaul the Public Service Commission. Sponsoring Sen. Mike Fasano (R), whose colleagues passed his version of the bill at the start of the session that’s about to end, sent the House a set of revisions to its rework of his original measure. Fasano’s amendments include replacing the House’s definitions of prohibited ex parte communications with his earlier language. “The concern is that the House language leaves open loopholes that Sen. Fasano meant to close,” a member of his staff told us.
The military is moving toward using long-term bandwidth contracts for satellite communications in place of annual leases, Bruce Bennett, the director of satellite communications at the Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA) said at the Military Satellites Summit in Vienna, Va. DISA has wanted longer contracts for years, but the holders of congressional purse-strings have resisted. But “Congress is weakening,” as DISA and industry have increased lobbying for changes in the system, he said. Longer contracts are part of a major effort to modernize satellite communications networks and acquisition, Bennett said.
Comcast-NBC Universal still may face FCC field hearings even after the Media Bureau denied a request to pause review of the deal until holding the sessions (CD April 6 p10), agency and public interest officials said. Commissioners Mignon Clyburn and Michael Copps have expressed support for the idea, and colleagues may not object if the hearings are scheduled, they said. The commission hasn’t made a decision, they said.
The FCC’s new Spectrum Task Force has a focused goal, to implement and update the National Broadband Plan, Wireless Bureau Chief Ruth Milkman said in an interview Tuesday. The task force may also spin off new ideas in keeping with the plan, for example on additional spectrum bands that could be targeted for reallocation for wireless broadband, she said. The commission unveiled the task force Monday (CD April 27 p10). The new task force differs from the Spectrum Policy Task Force, set up under former Chairman Michael Powell in 2002 to “assist the Commission in identifying and evaluating changes in spectrum policy that will increase the public benefits derived from the use of the radio spectrum.” Its report is at http://xrl.us/bhji9u.
Cablevision’s Supreme Court challenge to federal must-carry rules, if successful, could lead Congress to react and create a new set of rules to preserve some elements of that system, lawyers said Tuesday at a Progress & Freedom Foundation panel on the topic. If successful, the challenge could have implications for the FCC’s plans to reallocate part of the TV band for wireless broadband, they said.
The FCC’s proposed rule changes for the wireless communications band probably would fail legal challenge, and the commission should reject the proposal, Sirius XM told the commission in comments. The rules wouldn’t survive under the Administrative Procedure Act, and adopting them would violate Section 316 of the Communications Act because they improperly change Sirius XM’s licenses without individual hearing procedures, the company said. WCS spectrum should be reauctioned to avoid denying “the U.S. taxpayer the fair proceeds reflecting the true value of the spectrum,” since the changes would dramatically increase the spectrum’s worth, it said.