The GPS industry is taking its concerns of interference due to LightSquared’s planned wireless network to Capitol Hill. Trimble Navigation General Counsel Jim Kirkland will testify at House Appropriations Committee’s Commerce, Justice and Science Subcommittee Friday with a focus on the LightSquared issue, he said in an interview. Kirkland, along with Garmin, is also helping organize a new ad hoc group called the Coalition to Save Our GPS. Several companies, groups and federal agencies have voiced worries that LightSquared’s proposed service would harm GPS services. LightSquared is in the process of addressing these concerns along with the U.S. GPS Industry Council in a working group, as required by the FCC.
The Supreme Court should consider Council Tree’s challenge to the AWS-1 and 700 MHz auction results, in part to clear up longstanding questions about how courts should interpret Section 706 of the Administrative Procedure Act, the designated entity (DE) said in a reply brief to the high court. The 3rd U.S. Court of Appeals in Philadelphia found problems with the FCC’s revised DE rules challenged by Council Tree, but left intact the auction results (CD Aug 25 p1).
The Wireless Communications Association (WCAI) called on the FCC to increase a limit on white-spaces antennas of 76-meter height above average terrain (HAAT). Making that change would “enable consumers, businesses, and schools in rural, hilly parts of the country to receive broadband via white space spectrum,” the association said. The Wireless Internet Service Provider Association (WISPA) meanwhile offered two concessions on its proposal for raising the HAAT limit. Others also filed reply comments as the commission deals with five petitions for reconsideration filed in January (CD Jan 10 p 4).
Free Press may challenge the FCC’s net neutrality rules after they are published in The Federal Register, incoming Executive Director Craig Aaron said in an interview. Aaron will replace Josh Silver in mid-April as head of the group, which played a big part in the net neutrality debate.
Sprint Nextel has lost its effort to stay an Iowa order requiring payment of intrastate access of interconnected VoIP. That may be the beginning of a series of battles over VoIP as the FCC moves ahead with its Universal Service Fund revamp, said state and industry officials. Meanwhile, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia recently ruled that by refusing to pay access charges for VoIP traffic, Sprint Virginia is in violation of 19 interconnection agreements with CenturyLink business units.
Approval of a final data roaming order -- as recommended in the National Broadband Plan -- could face an uphill fight even though there have long appeared to be three votes in favor with strong support from FCC Democrats, said agency and industry officials. Chairman Julius Genachowski must decide by March 17 whether to seek a vote at the April 7 meeting.
Executives from all four major broadcast networks talked up the coming wave of retransmission consent payments from subscription-video distributors and affiliated TV stations, at two investor conferences in Florida this week. Retrans makes broadcasting a more attractive business, said Disney Chief Financial Officer Jay Rasulo, in response to a question about how the broadcast network and TV stations fit into the company’s overall strategy. Retrans payments are among the more attractive aspects related to turning around the NBC network, Comcast CFO Michael Angelakis said Tuesday at a Credit Suisse investor conference. “We look at the network as having a heck of a lot more upside than downside."
The FCC is working on a pole attachments order for the April 7 meeting that would lower rates for attachers, commission officials told us. No order is circulating -- but Chairman Julius Genachowski has said he would like to finish work on pole attachments by early April, and staff is nearing the end of its work, the officials said. Power companies have lobbied furiously in recent weeks to preserve rates but apparently haven’t swayed the commission, said FCC officials and utility lobbyists.
Judges David Sentelle and David Tatel questioned the standing of a former radio executive to appeal an FCC decision transferring involuntarily the nine stations he used to run and part own to a court-appointed receiver. During oral argument Tuesday at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, the two judges each asked questions of lawyer Dennis Kelly, representing plaintiff Glenn Cherry. Cherry had been CEO of Tama Broadcasting and also a major investor.
Travelers information stations (TIS) broadcasting limited information to drivers should get the FCC permission they seek for a “narrow expansion” of rules so they can provide more types of emergency information, the NAB said in replies in docket 09-19. Other commenters in the docket also supported expanding TIS, some further than what NAB suggested. Highway Information Systems and the American Associations of State Highway and Transportation Officials had asked the Public Safety Bureau to amend TIS rules, which the bureau sought comment on.