NTIA Senior Spectrum Adviser Scott Harris assured the Commerce Spectrum Management Advisory Committee Friday that work on the long-anticipated national spectrum strategy is starting (see 2301090035). Meanwhile, CSMAC unanimously approved a report by its Ultra-Wideband Subcommittee, which recommends better collaboration between NTIA and the FCC on UWB waivers.
All groups and companies that filed urged the FCC to act on service rules allowing use of the 5030-5091 MHz band by drones. The FCC sought comment in a long-awaited January NPRM (see 2301040046), and comments were due Thursday in docket 22-232. Pilots, public safety agencies, NAB, the National Academy of Sciences’ Committee on Radio Frequencies (CORF) and others raised concerns on how the FCC proceeds.
The FCC’s administrative law judge isn’t obligated to resolve the Standard/Tegna transaction’s proceeding (see 2303070081) before the deal’s May 22 breakup date, and the broadcasters haven’t shown the case should be kicked back to the full FCC, said response filings posted Friday in docket 22-162 from the FCC Enforcement Bureau and two sectors of the Communications Workers of America. “The Media Bureau afforded the Applicants extra time and extra opportunity to establish that they were entitled to relief,” said the joint filing from the CWA's NewsGuild and National Association of Broadcast Engineers and Technicians. It isn’t the unions’ “or the Media Bureau’s fault that the Applicants’ sales agreement is about to expire,” the filing said. “This is entirely the parties’ doing.”
Lawmakers are beginning to forward to the White House the names of preferred contenders to replace Gigi Sohn as President Joe Biden's nominee to be the FCC's third Democrat, after the ex-candidate’s Tuesday announcement that she had asked the White House to withdraw her from Senate consideration (see 2303070082). The names of several potential contenders were also circulating among communications sector lobbyists, but several officials told us there's no prohibitive favorite in the immediate aftermath of Sohn's withdrawal. The White House didn't comment on its plans. The administration hadn’t formally withdrawn Sohn Friday.
Tower companies are looking to diversify their revenue streams as 5G unfolds, experts said during a Network Media Group webinar Thursday. The rollout of 5G presents “both challenges and opportunities for tower companies, including the need for infrastructure upgrades, competition in a highly regulated industry and potential for diversifying revenue streams,” said Will Townsend, Moor Insights principal analyst-networking.
Kansas lawmakers Thursday challenged opposition to SB-144, which would explicitly exempt streaming services and direct broadcast satellite operators from video service provider franchise fees. The bill would amend the state's Video Competition Act, making clear that DBS and streaming providers don't need video service provider authorization from the Kansas Corporation Commission. House Energy, Utilities and Telecommunications Committee took no action on the bill.
The FCC's single network future NPRM on its March agenda (see 2302230059) is expected to get 4-0 commissioner support, we were told.
The FCC’s spectrum auction authority was careening toward expiration late Thursday night, after the Senate gaveled out for the week without acting on dueling proposals to extend the mandate. Sen. Mike Rounds, R-S.D., earlier in the afternoon declared that an impasse between him and congressional leaders over the extension bills would continue into next week. Rounds failed Wednesday in his bid to pass his bill to lengthen a new renewal to last through Sept. 30 (S-650) by unanimous consent, as expected (see 2303080081). He also formally objected to advancing a House-passed measure to reauthorize the statute through May 19 (HR-1108). The deadlock will likely influence debate during a Friday House Communications Subcommittee hearing on spectrum legislative issues, lawmakers and lobbyists said in interviews.
Industry won’t support comprehensive state privacy bills that allow consumers to sue businesses for possible violations, trade groups told legislators this week. Maryland senators weighed a bill (SB-698) with a private right of action (PRA) at a livestreamed hearing Wednesday. Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum (D) endorsed her state’s bill (SB-619), which also includes a PRA and gathered support from consumer privacy advocates, at a webcast hearing Tuesday.
The National Hispanic Media Coalition and Free Press (FP) offer dueling guidelines to the White House for selecting a new FCC nominee to replace ex-pick Gigi Sohn, amid continued fallout from the former candidate’s Tuesday announcement she asked President Joe Biden to withdraw her from consideration (see [Ref 2303070082]). Sohn’s supporters continued to lay blame Wednesday on opponents whose treatment of her during an often fractious and acrid year-plus confirmation process led to the withdrawal.