Industry, public interest advocates and telecom regulators shouldn’t wait for a new Telecommunications Act and should instead focus on incremental, data-driven reform of spectrum and intercarrier compensation, FCC Commissioner Meredith Baker told a Federal Communications Bar Association luncheon in Washington Wednesday.
The FCC still plans to move forward on net neutrality rules, Chairman Julius Genachowski said Wednesday without specifying the timing or the legal basis. “We have terrific, smart lawyers trying to figure out the best way, the best basis on which we can rest rules, number one” he said at the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco. “That will happen. The other thing is, we've been doing a lot of work to make sure we get the rules right,” so they promote “innovation and investment throughout the ecosystem.”
Net neutrality rules and an open telecommunications infrastructure were urged by FCC Commissioner Michael Copps, Democratic State Representative Antonio Maestas of New Mexico and Chief Geoffrey Blackwell of the FCC Office of Native Affairs and Policy. They spoke Tuesday at a Free Press-sponsored public hearing in Albuquerque. New Mexico ranks 47th in broadband access.
A spate of small and mid-sized cable system deals likely will continue as financing increasingly becomes available, private-equity firms eye more mergers and acquisitions, and existing operators buy other operators, said all the executives and brokers we interviewed. The major deals, some for tens of billions of dollars at peak valuations, that occurred in the late 1990s and early part of last decade probably are a thing of the past, they said. The drought of major deals for cable networks seems likely to continue, industry officials predicted. At the time of our last cable M&A survey, deal activity had just begun picking up (CD May 3 p4).
House Commerce Committee Ranking Member Joe Barton, R-Texas, got support Wednesday from Reps. Cliff Stearns of Florida, John Shimkus of Illinois and six others committee Republicans. His main opponent for the job, Rep. Fred Upton, D-Mich., meanwhile, claimed support of another committee member, Rep. Sue Myrick, R-N.C. With Republicans considering GOP caucus rule changes this week, Barton faces opposition from the GOP Transition Committee in attempts to change the interpretation of a committee leadership term-limit rule that could prevent him from becoming chairman next year.
A group of TerreStar affiliates won court approval of a large loan from EchoStar, allowing the bankrupt mobile satellite services provider to continue operation for the immediate future. The U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan approved the $75 million debtor-in-possession (DIP) financing despite complaints from several creditors over the terms of the financing. EchoStar is also backstopping a $100 million rights offering.
Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., “will prevent the FCC from regulating the Internet,” if he becomes chairman of the Commerce Committee, he said in a memo circulated this week to GOP colleagues. Upton, viewed by many in the industry as the frontrunner for the job, formally announced his intent to lead the committee separately in a letter Monday to GOP Leader John Boehner of Ohio and other Republicans.
The FCC found a wide array of video captioning problems in a first-of-its-kind study of all complaints to the commission about broadcast-TV and subscription-video programming in the 52 weeks through May 7. Equipment from broadcasters, cable operators and DBS providers had technical problems, and so did set-top boxes, said a report on digital closed captions by the Office of Engineering and Technology and the Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau. They studied 107 complaints to the FCC.
ATLANTA -- Cybersecurity is a key component of successful deployment of the smart grid, Howard Schmidt, the White House cybersecurity coordinator, said in a keynote Tuesday at NARUC’s annual conference. State regulators need to be informed about potential threats and solutions, because states play an important role in smart grid expansion, he said.
The time still has not come to require Sprint Nextel to settle up with the government on unpaid 800 MHz rebanding costs, the 800 MHz Transition Administrator (TA) said in a recommendation to the FCC. The rebanding isn’t complete and Sprint continues to rack up costs, the TA said. When the commission approved its landmark 800 MHz rebanding order in 2004, it required Nextel, then an independent company, to pay the full value of the 10 MHz national spectrum license it got as part of the rebanding agreement. Other carriers insisted on the provision, arguing that as a matter of fairness Nextel should have to pay a kind of windfall charge.