GENEVA -- Dealing with telecom fraud and misuse of numbering resources and spurring transmission of certain international calling party numbers dominated developing country proposals for an ITU Council group meeting later this month on preparations for the 2012 World Conference on International Telecommunications (WCIT). The group is preparing draft proposals for new ITU resolutions, recommendations and opinions and a final report for consideration by the ITU Council and the conference, the ITU website said. The treaty conference on revision or the possible abrogation of the International Telecommunication Regulations (ITR) is scheduled for next autumn.
The FCC and small and mid-sized wireless carriers are headed to court in November in a case that examines whether the agency acted improperly in a December order that redirected high-cost Universal Service Fund money to a fund that will pay for broadband buildout (CD Jan 4 p2). The carriers challenging the order complain that while the reserved funds may ultimately be used for broadband, the commission does not place them under one of the four existing USF programs. Oral argument before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit is scheduled for Nov. 15 in Rural Cellular Association v. FCC.
A top U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (FWS) expert on migratory birds sharply criticized the FCC for downplaying the risks communications towers pose to birds. The comments came in a draft Programmatic Environmental Assessment (PEA) released by the commission. The FCC found that while communications tower collisions kill millions of birds each year, that must be weighed against the overall U.S. bird population, estimated at 10 billion birds (CD Aug 30 p5). The FCC is examining its tower siting rules in response to a February 2008 remand from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit (CD Feb 20/08 p2). The FCC, which is taking written comments, held a public hearing Wednesday.
The FCC proposed that captions be as good online as shown on TV. The proposal came in a rulemaking notice implementing Internet Protocol captions under the 21st Century Communications Video and Accessibility Act. The commission took industry concerns into account in not proposing the quality be better, it said in a notice released Monday night. It asked, as expected (CD Sept 9 p7), about adopting recommendations from an FCC panel on the act, proposing to require industry to set deadlines to caption various types of IP programming along the lines of what the Video Programming Accessibility Advisory Committee sought.
AT&T and the Department of Justice have been unable to reach agreement on when a trial should get underway before Judge Ellen Huvelle, as AT&T challenges the department’s attempt to block the company’s $39 billion buy of T-Mobile. AT&T is pushing to have the trial start Jan. 16, according to a status update filed at the court by the Justice Department. DOJ wants a March 19 start.
The adoption of the America’s Broadband Connectivity Plan (ABC Plan) for Universal Service Fund and intercarrier compensation revamp would drive small rural carriers out of business, several state commissioners said during a FCBA briefing Monday. Meanwhile, all three revamp proposals ignore the role of wireless, industry officials said.
Deals between CBS and its TV station affiliates that pay the network higher fees for programming have been completed smoothly and quietly, but that could change as larger station groups operating in larger markets renew their affiliations to the network, CBS CEO Leslie Moonves said at a Goldman Sachs investor conference Tuesday. “It’s become accepted, and rightly so, that when an affiliate is getting retrans, he’s getting it a lot because of prime time, David Letterman, 60 Minutes, the NCAA Tournament and the NFL,” Moonves said. “The affiliates are on board with that, they get that."
A fresh House bill to reallocate the 700 MHz D-block to public safety has the support of House Homeland Security Committee Chairman Peter King, R-N.Y. Rep. Steve Rothman, D-N.J., who serves on the Appropriations Committees, on Tuesday introduced the Help Emergency Responders Operate Emergency Systems (HEROES) Act. Using proceeds from spectrum auctions, the bill would provide $5.5 billion for construction, maintenance and operation of the national public safety network and $400 million to set up a grant program to help first responders upgrade their radios to comply with the FCC’s 2004 narrowband mandate.
A Supreme Court decision on videogames may have limited import for broadcasters in an indecency case before the high court, Entertainment Software Association CEO Michael Gallagher said Tuesday. June’s Brown ruling striking down California’s ban on the sale of violent games to kids may help broadcasters some in the consolidated FCC v. ABC and Fox case, he said. But, because TV stations use public airwaves, the videogames ruling may not foretell a clearcut win for broadcasting, Gallagher said in response to a question from a TV executive at an industry lunch in Washington. Gallagher told us it may take time for the commission to approve ESA’s separate waiver request from disabilities accessibility rules for all videogames.
With broadband availability maps up and running in many states, some are looking at ways to gather other broadband information like pricing, experts told us. But gathering pricing information is a challenge, they said. Meanwhile, several state initiatives are under way to expand the use of broadband data, state officials said.