It took White House proxy support and concerns about commercial spectrum being essentially claimed by federal agencies to break the years-old logjam of Ligado's proposed terrestrial use of L-band spectrum with FCC Chairman Ajit Pai's decision to circulate a draft approval order (see 2004160019), we were told Thursday. Swift action could be next, with multiple commissioners' offices expecting to vote on it this week. An array of primarily aerospace interests urged the FCC to close and dismiss the proceeding.
One thing has changed since the COVID-19 lockdown started -- it’s much easier to explain to electric cooperatives why people need fiber connections at home, said Conexon partner Jonathan Chambers during a Wednesday Broadband Breakfast webinar. “Now all the discussions are about how,” he said. “I don’t expect to have to go back to the why.”
Apps that warn citizens to avoid people infected with COVID-19 are a key element in lifting lockdowns, the European Commission said Wednesday. Its European road map toward easing containment measures noted contact tracing can help. Apps must comply with all EU privacy and data protection rules, the EC said. Among unresolved questions are whether the regime should be mandatory and how effective it will be.
House Science Committee leaders and an industry group urged the FCC to pull the orbital debris draft order from April 23's agenda. The agency got increasing resistance to its proposed satellite rules update (see 2004140052), in docket 18-313 Wednesday. A satellite executive told us the agency seemed surprised by the amount of industry criticism.
CTIA is hinting at a legal challenge to FCC rules, set for a vote April 23 (see 2004060062), allowing low-power devices throughout the 6 GHz band without automated frequency control. Reliance on restrictions in the draft rules “as a basis to conclude that an AFC-free regime will protect licensees from harmful interference would be arbitrary and capricious under well-established standards,” CTIA said in a filing posted Wednesday in docket 18-295. The group questions the studies and assumptions the FCC makes on the interference risk.
The FTC created an agency-wide pandemic response team and a pandemic-specific plan to address evolving COVID-19 issues, according to documents we obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request. Chairman Joe Simons declined to share the plan's annex with Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., calling it “nonpublic” in a March 13 letter to the Senate Commerce Committee ranking member. Federal guidance on COVID-19 hasn’t "always kept up with the most pressing concerns expressed by FTC staff,” Simons wrote. He recommended a “timely and consolidated” source or site for federal agencies to plan for and “adapt to quickly changing circumstances.”
Democratic commissioners will likely dissent when the FCC declares broadband is deployed in a reasonable and timely manner, current and former officials predicted in interviews this week. The Communications Act Section 706 report's statutory deadline is Monday (see 2004030074) and a vote isn't expected much sooner. An official said this report follows methodology used in last year's, with updated deployment figures and a few other changes. Commissioners' aides are determining whether there's opportunity to revise the language.
State regulators will scrutinize Frontier Communications as the midsize carrier goes through bankruptcy, commissioners told us Wednesday. Some felt reassured by the company pledging uninterrupted service and no change to selling some systems in the U.S. Northwest and West.
The satellite industry and allies raised red flags about the draft orbital debris order on April 23's FCC members' meeting agenda (see 2004010063). Operators lobbied for changes or deferring decisions. They cited higher costs, in docket 18-313 Tuesday.
Carriers will lead the bidding in the July citizens broadband radio service band auction, but questions remain about the COVID-19 pandemic's effect on credit markets, said Joe Madden, chief analyst at Mobile Experts. The FCC delayed the auction for a month to July 23 (see 2003250052). Speakers Tuesday said another delay isn’t likely.