The FCC Wireline Bureau issued a protective order for submission and disclosure of proprietary or confidential information in its proceeding on inmate calling services Wednesday in docket 12-375. "While we are mindful of the sensitive nature of some of the information involved, we are also mindful of the general right of the public, and our desire for the public, to participate in these proceedings in a meaningful way," the order said.
The Schools, Health & Libraries Broadband Coalition and Consortium for School Networking asked the FCC to extend the Emergency Connectivity Fund's rules and service delivery deadlines, in a waiver request Wednesday. The groups asked that the June 30 service delivery deadline be extended by one year for round one and round two applicants that "received a funding commitment decision letter or revised funding commitment decision letter on or after March 1, 2022." They also sought an extension until June 30, 2024, for round three applicants. The program would "currently provide minimal assistance, at best, to those applicants who are still waiting for funding request approval or to those who are inhibited from fully using their funds" if the current service delivery dates are not extended, the groups said, saying an extension would "be a far better policy outcome" than opening a fourth application window to award any remaining funding.
The FCC Enforcement Bureau took additional action Monday regarding alleged illegal robocalls made by One Eye, issuing its first “initial determination order," said a news release. The bureau sent the company a cease and desist letter in February (see 2302150063). The bureau also said it would issue an order "requiring all immediate downstream providers block all traffic from One Eye" if the company failed to respond. "We will strike back with aggressive new tools," said Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel: "Today, marks the first time we use them -- but it won’t be the last.” The company didn't comment.
More than 17 million households have enrolled in the FCC's affordable connectivity program to date, the agency announced Monday. The FCC partnered with the U.S. Digital Service to develop "a series of enhancements to the online consumer application system," said a news release. Among the changes included "providing clear instructions, to decrease steps and to simplify language while continuing to protect against waste, fraud and abuse and guarding the integrity of the program." The rollout is "part of our ongoing work to improve the consumer experience with the program," said Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel. U.S. Digital Service Deputy Administrator Cori Zarek said the changes will "streamline the process" to ensure "as little friction as possible" during the application process. The enhancements were "developed in consultation with digital navigators, digital equity advocates, and [ISPs]."
The FCC Wireline Bureau denied Ziply's petition to waive Connect America Fund performance testing support recovery requirements in an order Friday in docket 10-90. Ziply said in its petition that it "inherited" an "aging" DSL-based network from Frontier that had a "faulty line card," causing the provider to fail its latency testing requirements in Q4 of 2021. The bureau said Ziply's argument was "not compelling," saying ensuring the network "was in good working order and had reliable back-up" was Ziply's responsibility once it acquired the network. "We find that while Ziply may have experienced supply chain issues, the testing failures were not out of Ziply’s control, and primarily resulted from Ziply’s failure to properly maintain and monitor its network," the order said.
The FCC committed more than $2.8 million in additional Emergency Connectivity Fund support Thursday. The new funding will support 15 schools, five libraries and one consortium, said a news release. “With today’s funding round, we continue our progress in providing students the online access they need to connect with their teachers and keep up with schoolwork,” said Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel.
ATIS asked the FCC to direct the Toll Free Numbering Administration to release the nearly 16,000 "833" toll-free numbers into the spare pool as soon as possible so they can be available to businesses that wish to use the numbers," (see 2206290051), per an ex parte filing posted Thursday in docket 17-192. Meeting with an aide to Commissioner Brendan Carr, the group also sought an "equitable allocation method under which the unassigned “800” TFNs would be made eligible for allocation but with an allocation limit of 125 numbers" per responding organization.
An FCC NPRM reaffirming the Wireline Bureau and Office of Economics and Analytics' Office's data collection authority for inmate calling services is effective Thursday, said a notice for that day's Federal Register. Commissioners adopted an item starting the implementation of the Martha Wright-Reed Just and Reasonable Communications Act during their March meeting (see 2303160009).
Sorenson Communications urged the FCC to address video relay service rates before the next funding year. The COVID-19 pandemic "reshaped how Americans communicate" and VRS has "fallen very far behind services available to the hearing population," Sorenson said in a letter posted Tuesday in docket 03-123, saying the service is "no longer functionally equivalent." VRS users "have been waiting during the pandemic and now beyond for VRS to catch up with services now widely used by the hearing population," it said.
The FCC Wireline Bureau released draft guidance Monday on the type of data to be collected for the affordable connectivity program's data collection. Comments on the proposed information collection are due May 15 in docket 21-450, said a public notice.