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Pai, O'Rielly Say More to Come Soon on C Band for 5G

FCC Chairman Ajit Pai said he remains hopeful the FCC will soon release an NPRM on sharing the 5.9 GHz band with unlicensed users, at the Americas Spectrum Management Conference Tuesday. “I did not say that I deferred to the…

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Transportation Department on timing, but rather that I was working with DOT,” Pai said: “Those discussions continue and are productive and we hope to make progress in the near future." Pai highlighted the FCC’s three high-band auctions, with the largest to come later this year. Also important, the FCC’s work on the 2.5 GHz band, he said: “This summer, the FCC finally liberalized the rules for the band, allowing more entities to access the spectrum and eliminating unnecessary restrictions.” The FCC continues work on the C band, he said. “I’m optimistic that we will have results to show on this front this fall,” Pai said: “Also, the FCC is studying reallocation of spectrum in the 3.1 to 3.55 GHz band for commercial use, and I hope our federal partners will join us in that effort.” Pai said the work of the upcoming World Radiocommunication meeting will be important. “We need to enable regional and global spectrum harmonization opportunities for all services, including broadcasting, Wi-Fi, mobile technologies, and satellites,” he said: “We need to create international economies of scale, roaming, and interoperability, lowering prices for manufacturers and consumers.” Mid-band spectrum “will effectively serve as catalyst for future wireless services, especially 5G,” FCC Commissioner Michael O’Rielly said at the same event: “While high bands have the capacity and low bands have the coverage, mid bands provide the combination that is needed to realistically deliver the promise of 5G speeds, capacity, and low latency to a large number of Americans, especially those not living in our large cities.” O’Rielly said the C band is the “easiest and most appropriate band identified” for 5G. O’Rielly said he expects a C-band order to be ready soon. “The FCC is near completion of its review process and is finalizing details for its reallocation, which should come later this fall,” he said: “This doesn’t suggest there won’t be some controversy or last-minute details to sort out, but it will mainly involve squabbling over the specifics rather than any fundamental disagreement regarding the premise.” The FCC doesn’t need to run a C band auction itself, he said. If the FCC has to run the auction “we are talking years -- and I mean years -- before completion,” he said: “We can certainly ensure transparency, accountability, fairness, and openness without having to run the auction ourselves.”