The FCC is open, as of Thursday, for in-person meetings, but most industry and FCC officials don’t expect a large early wave of visits to the FCC, with many meetings remaining virtual. Aides to the FCC commissioners told us Friday they haven't been getting calls for in-person visits since Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel announced the reopening Wednesday (see 2206080055).
Howard Buskirk
Howard Buskirk, Executive Senior Editor, joined Warren Communications News in 2004, after covering Capitol Hill for Telecommunications Reports. He has covered Washington since 1993 and was formerly executive editor at Energy Business Watch, editor at Gas Daily and managing editor at Natural Gas Week. Previous to that, he was a staff reporter for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution and the Greenville News. Follow Buskirk on Twitter: @hbuskirk
NAB urged the FCC to reserve 55 MHz of spectrum for licensed mobile operations, including electronic newsgathering (ENG), as part of the agency’s response to U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit’s remand of part of the FCC’s 6 GHz order. Wi-Fi advocates said the FCC should address the court’s concerns and move on to a further liberalization of the rules (see 2204080042). Replies were posted Thursday and Friday in docket 18-295. The court otherwise upheld the order, which opened the band for sharing with Wi-Fi (see 2112280047).
Major industry players expected to play in the 2.5 GHz auction, which starts July 29, were on the list of bidders with complete applications to participate in the FCC’s next big 5G spectrum sale, the FCC said Thursday. AT&T, Dish Network, bidding as Carbonate Wireless, T-Mobile and UScellular are among the 39 with complete applications. Verizon put in an application, deemed incomplete, joining 53 bidders on that list. There appears to be more interest in this auction than in the 3.45 GHz sale, which had 42 applications, while the C-band auction had 74 applications filed. Smaller players are among the qualified bidders, with 17 seeking rural provider bidding credits and nine small business credits. Questions continue over the extent to which small players will jump in or T-Mobile will dominate the auction (see 2204140062). T-Mobile has a dominant position in the band since its buy of Sprint, and is using 2.5 GHz for its 5G rollout. “At first glance, the list of bidders for 2.5 GHz auction (whether qualified or not) does not reveal too many surprises,” emailed Sasha Javid, BitPath chief operating officer. “Submitting an application does not mean that Verizon or AT&T are necessarily interested in bidding for this spectrum,” he said: “It is a low-cost way to muddy the waters for bidders that are truly interested in acquiring the spectrum. If there is one initial takeaway, it is that this auction did not get as many prospective bidders as the [citizens broadband radio service] auction, which also featured smaller county-sized licenses.” The 2020 CBRS auction attracted 271 qualified bidders (see 2007200049). Those with complete short-form applications must submit upfront payments June 23, to be deemed qualified bidders. Others must resubmit their applications, and make an upfront payment, by the same date.
The FCC’s newly reconstituted Technology Advisory Council met for the second time Thursday, dedicated to exploring 6G, as directed by FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel. She and TAC members said 5G is still in early stages, but it’s not too early to focus on the next generation of wireless. TAC heard updates from its working groups on the work they have done so far during a virtual meeting.
The FCC’s public notice seeking a record refresh on improving how wireless 911 calls are routed to the appropriate first responders got only minor changes over the draft version, based on a side-by-side comparison. Commissioners approved the notice Wednesday (see 2206080040), and released it Thursday. Officials said Wednesday they didn’t adopt all the language proposed by APCO (see 2206060052) on emergency services IP networks (ESInets), but some was added. In an added sentence, the FCC now seeks comment “on whether wireless carrier plans and timelines for implementing location-based routing vary depending on whether PSAPs are using legacy E911 technology, are transitioning to NG911 (i.e., have implemented discrete NG911 elements, such as ESInets, but have not fully implemented NG911), or have achieved full end-state NG911 with all elements included.” The final version makes eight references to ESInets, compared with one in the draft. A new sentence asks: “How if at all is location-based routing different for [public safety answering points] that are not connected to an ESInet?” The FCC also added comment dates -- July 11 for initial comments, July 25 for replies -- which were based on the release date.
The FCC unanimously approved a public notice seeking to refresh the record on improving how wireless 911 calls are routed to the appropriate first responders (see 2206060052), as expected. Commissioners at Wednesday's meeting also agreed to propose a $34,000 fine against an Idaho man for allegedly interfering with emergency communications as firefighters took on a wildfire, the largest fine of its kind, officials said.
FCC commissioners approved a notice of inquiry 4-0 Wednesday on how to facilitate access to spectrum for offshore uses and operations. FCC officials said, as expected, there were no major changes over what was circulated three weeks ago by Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel (see 2206030029). Commissioners also adopted an NPRM before the meeting that seeks comment on a statutory requirement to collect annual data on the price and subscription rates of internet offerings through the affordable connectivity program (see 2206020058). The item wasn’t published Wednesday.
The Biden administration appears set on changing the State Department position in charge of communications policy, moving the coordinator for international communications and information policy from a Senate-confirmed political post to one held by a foreign service officer. That's raising concerns the appointee will no longer have the political standing to meet on an equivalent basis with counterparts from other nations or within the federal government, former government officials said.
Vodafone’s goal is for 30% of its network in Europe to be open in 2030, said Francisco Pignatelli, Vodafone head-ORAN, Tuesday at Fierce Wireless’s virtual European open radio access network conference. Other speakers said ORAN is getting more use but warned of continuing confusion over what constitutes an open network.
An FCC record refresh on improving how wireless 911 calls are routed to the appropriate first responders is expected to be approved 4-0 by commissioners at their monthly meeting Wednesday. The final version is likely to incorporate some language sought by APCO (see 2206010027), said FCC and industry officials. The National Emergency Number Association doesn’t support those changes. APCO was the lone party to file comments in docket 18-62 after the FCC posted the draft.