In the Aug. 4 Customs Bulletin (Vol. 55, No. 30), CBP published a proposal to revoke rulings on refrigerator gaskets and costume accessory sets.
DOJ has “grave concerns” about T-Mobile's impending shuttering of its CDMA network and what that means for Dish Network's many Boost customers left in the lurch, said a July letter to Dish and T-Mobile from DOJ antitrust acting Assistant Attorney General Richard Powers that Dish filed Monday with the SEC. Justice said it might “pursue all remedies available” if the CDMA network shutdown means either T-Mobile or Dish not taking necessary steps to ensure Boost customers aren't left stranded without a functioning network. Many think the FCC is unlikely to act on Dish's CDMA complaint (see 2105060024).
DOJ has “grave concerns” about T-Mobile's impending shuttering of its CDMA network and what that means for Dish Network's many Boost customers left in the lurch, said a July letter to Dish and T-Mobile from DOJ antitrust acting Assistant Attorney General Richard Powers that Dish filed Monday with the SEC. Justice said it might “pursue all remedies available” if the CDMA network shutdown means either T-Mobile or Dish not taking necessary steps to ensure Boost customers aren't left stranded without a functioning network. Many think the FCC is unlikely to act on Dish's CDMA complaint (see 2105060024).
DOJ has “grave concerns” about T-Mobile's impending shuttering of its CDMA network and what that means for Dish Network's many Boost customers left in the lurch, said a July letter to Dish and T-Mobile from DOJ antitrust acting Assistant Attorney General Richard Powers that Dish filed Monday with the SEC. Justice said it might “pursue all remedies available” if the CDMA network shutdown means either T-Mobile or Dish not taking necessary steps to ensure Boost customers aren't left stranded without a functioning network. Many think the FCC is unlikely to act on Dish's CDMA complaint (see 2105060024).
NAB told the FCC it should allocate the costs of implementing the Broadband Deployment Accuracy and Technological Availability Act to bureaus associated with broadband mapping instead of raising regulatory fees for broadcasters. President Gordon Smith spoke with acting Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel Monday, per a filing posted in docket 21-90 Thursday: The proposed regulatory fee increase would lead to broadcasters subsidizing 16% of the costs of the mapping effort. The increase is “not only unfair and contrary to the statute, but extremely difficult for radio broadcasters in particular to absorb” with the pandemic, the filing said. NAB asked the FCC to remove the Media Bureau from its calculation of the cost of the mapping effort and distribute the costs to licensees associated with the International, Wireless and Wireline bureaus.
NAB told the FCC it should allocate the costs of implementing the Broadband Deployment Accuracy and Technological Availability Act to bureaus associated with broadband mapping instead of raising regulatory fees for broadcasters. President Gordon Smith spoke with acting Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel Monday, per a filing posted in docket 21-90 Thursday: The proposed regulatory fee increase would lead to broadcasters subsidizing 16% of the costs of the mapping effort. The increase is “not only unfair and contrary to the statute, but extremely difficult for radio broadcasters in particular to absorb” with the pandemic, the filing said. NAB asked the FCC to remove the Media Bureau from its calculation of the cost of the mapping effort and distribute the costs to licensees associated with the International, Wireless and Wireline bureaus.
Senate Minority Whip John Thune, R-S.D., floated a last-minute bid Thursday to kill a $42.5 billion NTIA-led broadband equity, access and deployment grants program included in the bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and redirect it to the FCC for similar purposes. The amendment appears unlikely to get a floor vote, in line with expectations on other GOP bids to strike or pare back the $65 billion broadband section of the infrastructure substitute to shell bill HR-3684 (see 2108040072).
A complaint in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan challenging the seizure of CBD and hemp accessories as "drug paraphernalia" should be scrapped since the importer did not exhaust administrative remedies before challenging the seizure, the Department of Justice argued in an Aug. 2 motion to dismiss. The case, brought by Michigan-based vaporizer, rolling paper and pipe importer ASHH, pushed for the return of the CBD and hemp goods under Rule 41(g) -- a legal authority CBP said the district court didn't have, per U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit precedent (ASHH, Inc. v. United States, E.D. Mich. #21-11210).
Some FCC Rural Digital Opportunity Fund Phase I auction bidders that received letters allowing them to withdraw certain bids without penalties said in recent interviews they plan to keep their provisionally won bids (see 2107260044). One big RDOF winner, LTD Broadband, told us it may take up the agency on its request. Experts said RDOF Phase II may not start for months as a result.
The U.S. requested the chance to take another look at an Enforce and Protect Act investigation to consider documents that were not sent from one CBP office to another, in a July 30 motion for remand in the Court of International Trade. The agency also sought the remand in light of the court's decision in Royal Brush v. United States, in which CIT held that CBP failed to provide adequate public summaries of business confidential information (BCI) (see 2012020050). The plaintiff in the case, Leco Supply, opposed the remand request, arguing that it is "too broad to be justifiable" under the court's standards for allowing remands (Leco Supply, Inc. v. United States, CIT #21-00136).