With COVID-19 disproportionately affecting minority and disadvantaged communities, the FCC Advisory Committee on Diversity and Digital Empowerment's working groups adjusted their focus to grapple with the pandemic, according to work plans presented Tuesday at the group’s teleconferenced first meeting under its new charter. Along with reacting to the virus, the committee’s working groups laid out plans for workshops and events aimed at increasing diversity among communications companies. “When the country catches a cold, the most vulnerable catch the flu,” said Brookings Institution Fellow Nicol Turner-Lee and Diversity in Tech WG chair.
The auto industry tried a new way Tuesday to preserve 5.9 GHz for safety. The Auto Innovation Alliance said it reached a “landmark consensus” on how the band could be used by vehicle-to-everything, cellular V2X and dedicated short-range communications systems. But industry and FCC officials said the plan from the main auto industry association likely won’t get much traction at the agency. Commissioners agreed 5-0 in December to examine revised rules, reallocating 45 MHz for Wi-Fi, with 20 reserved for C-V2X and possibly 10 MHz for DSRC (see 1912180019).
The FCC Consumer Advisory Committee approved recommendations to the agency by its Truth-in-Billing (TIB) Working Group. CAC was also warned that scam robocalls are evolving under COVID-19 and consumers need to be vigilant. Members met virtually Monday.
The FCC wants refreshed comments from a 2016 "Team Telecom" NPRM on timely executive branch review of deals involving foreign ownership, said a public notice Monday. The NPRM sought comment on what types of applications should be referred to the executive branch, what information should be included on an application that could help with the review, how applicants would certify compliance with mitigation, and how quickly the executive branch would complete reviews (see 1606030025). Commissioners of both parties backed the PN.
The FCC’s final order allowing unlicensed devices to share 1,200 MHz of 6 GHz spectrum has many changes from the draft. They go beyond additional questions mentioned by commissioners voting 5-0 Thursday (see 2004230059), based on our side-by-side analysis. A section on formation of a multistakeholder group to address technical and operational issues with the automated frequency control (AFC) system was moved within the order. Most changes are technical and don’t address concerns raised by 6 GHz incumbents. The item, released Friday, is 26 paragraphs and 11 pages longer than the draft.
As COVID-19 fallout continues, ISPs are extending how long they hold off disconnecting telecom services (see 2004270048). Within minutes of each other Monday, Cox and Verizon made such commitments. Comcast and AT&T followed later. More companies are expected to do the same.
The FCC is seeking to better assess emergency communications reliability by adding data fields to the network outage reporting and 911 reliability certification systems, the Public Safety Bureau said. On an FCBA CLE webinar, also Monday, T-Mobile officials raised some related cautions. North Carolina, meanwhile, hasn’t faced major challenges with emergency-call delivery amid the coronavirus but can't “let our guard down,” the state’s 911 Board Executive Director Pokey Harris said in a Thursday interview.
CTA slashed 2020 unit sales forecasts for core CE categories Friday “as consumers struggle with economic uncertainty” due to COVID-19.
Southern Nevada health authorities confirmed Friday that their existing COVID-19 testing and contact-tracing protocol give them little way of knowing whether the coronavirus was spreading among the 170,000 who attended CES 2020, as an American Public Media report Thursday inferred. CTA is “not aware of any confirmed cases of COVID-19 connected to CES 2020,” said the association.
Verizon withdrew its full-year revenue outlook Friday due to COVID-19 uncertainty, as AT&T did Wednesday. But Verizon updated earnings, with mild reductions from earlier forecasts. As part of its annual shareholder meeting Friday, AT&T announced that CEO Randall Stephenson will be replaced in that role by President John Stankey on July 1. Stephenson will be executive chairman until January (see 2004240027).