Senate Communications Subcommittee ranking member Brian Schatz, D-Hawaii, and Senate Commerce Committee Chairman John Thune, R-S.D., filed the Reliable Emergency Alert Distribution Improvement (Readi) Act Wednesday in a bid to further address emergency alert system issues highlighted by a January false alarm in Hawaii (see 1801160054). The bill, which Schatz previewed during an April hearing, would require the FCC set best practices for delivering emergency alerts in a bid to streamline the alerting process. It would update the process for creating and approving state plans and examine the feasibility of expanding EAS to also distribute warnings to online streaming services (see 1804050055). “Even though it was a false alarm, the missile alert exposed real flaws in the way people receive emergency alerts,” Schatz said. “Our bill fixes a number of important problems with the system responsible for delivering emergency alerts.” Schatz led filing of the Authenticating Local Emergencies and Real Threats (Alert) Act (S-2385), which the Senate passed in June (see 1802060055, 1802070052 and 1806270001). S-2385 and House companion HR-4965 would require the Federal Emergency Management Agency National Advisory Council's Integrated Public Alert and Warning System subcommittee “make recommendations on the best practices that state and local governments should follow to maintain the integrity of IPAWS.” There has been no action on the House version.
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- Application programming interfaces must be included in the Lifeline national verifier so carriers can help low-income fund recipients with enrollment, said a NARUC resolution passed Wednesday. NARUC cleared that and other resolutions on separations, IP captioned telephone service (IP CTS) and precision agriculture (see 1807030052). NARUC is following the national verifier closely, with the API resolution setting up a big push planned for Lifeline Awareness Week this September, a spokesperson said.
APCO and the National Emergency Numbering Association urged the FCC to impose new 911 reliability rules. Industry commenters said rules would do nothing to make emergency calling more reliable. The Public Safety Bureau sought comment in June on reliability of 911 networks and whether current rules should be “modified to adapt to advancements in technology or other changes, including notification to Public Safety Answering Points of network outages affecting 911 service." Initial comments were due Monday in docket 13-75.
Commenters said NTIA could improve broadband data quality and accuracy to help mapping efforts, including by using geocoding, but some also noted limitations. An NTIA notice "recognizes that the starting point for any discussion of broadband mapping is the FCC’s Form 477 data program," said NCTA, urging NTIA to work closely with the FCC without duplicating its work. "NTIA could augment the FCC’s broadband availability data" to "ensure that any future national broadband map includes information on locations where providers have committed to future construction in exchange for government subsidies." NTIA hasn't yet posted comments due Monday, but some parties forwarded us their filings.
Commenters said NTIA could improve broadband data quality and accuracy to help mapping efforts, including by using geocoding, but some also noted limitations. An NTIA notice "recognizes that the starting point for any discussion of broadband mapping is the FCC’s Form 477 data program," said NCTA, urging NTIA to work closely with the FCC without duplicating its work. "NTIA could augment the FCC’s broadband availability data" to "ensure that any future national broadband map includes information on locations where providers have committed to future construction in exchange for government subsidies." NTIA hasn't yet posted comments due Monday, but some parties forwarded us their filings.
Tribal groups and Lifeline providers asked a court to stay FCC tribal Lifeline restrictions, pending judicial review of their challenges to an order in late 2017 (see 1711160021). The FCC decisions to prohibit resellers from receiving enhanced tribal Lifeline support and to narrow the geographic scope of tribal lands will "disconnect eligible low-income Tribal members from phone and broadband service," and were made without meaningful consultation with affected tribes, said the motion (in Pacer) Friday of the Crow Creek Sioux Tribe, Oceti Sakowin Tribal Utility Authority, National Lifeline Association, Assist Wireless, Boomerang Wireless and Easy Telephone Services, filed in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit in NLA v. FCC, No. 18-1026. The Wireline Bureau July 8 denied the parties' request for an administrative stay (see 1807060011). The D.C. Circuit Friday granted (in Pacer) an unopposed revised briefing schedule on underlying petitions challenging the order, with the DOJ/FCC brief due July 23, and petitioners' reply brief due Aug. 20. At the FCC, the NLA backed a Q Link Wireless emergency petition asking the FCC to direct Universal Service Administrative Co. to implement an application programming interface for its Lifeline national verifier of consumer eligibility for the low-income USF subsidy program. Comments are due in August on the petition (see 1807120004 and 1807050046).
Tribal groups and Lifeline providers asked a court to stay FCC tribal Lifeline restrictions, pending judicial review of their challenges to an order in late 2017 (see 1711160021). The FCC decisions to prohibit resellers from receiving enhanced tribal Lifeline support and to narrow the geographic scope of tribal lands will "disconnect eligible low-income Tribal members from phone and broadband service," and were made without meaningful consultation with affected tribes, said the motion (in Pacer) Friday of the Crow Creek Sioux Tribe, Oceti Sakowin Tribal Utility Authority, National Lifeline Association, Assist Wireless, Boomerang Wireless and Easy Telephone Services, filed in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit in NLA v. FCC, No. 18-1026. The Wireline Bureau July 8 denied the parties' request for an administrative stay (see 1807060011). The D.C. Circuit Friday granted (in Pacer) an unopposed revised briefing schedule on underlying petitions challenging the order, with the DOJ/FCC brief due July 23, and petitioners' reply brief due Aug. 20. At the FCC, the NLA backed a Q Link Wireless emergency petition asking the FCC to direct Universal Service Administrative Co. to implement an application programming interface for its Lifeline national verifier of consumer eligibility for the low-income USF subsidy program. Comments are due in August on the petition (see 1807120004 and 1807050046).
The FCC drew mixed responses from local government officials Friday to a draft order combining one-touch, make-ready rules with a ban on state and local moratoriums on new wireless and wireline facilities. A Nashville official lauded the agency for validating the Tennessee city’s overturned OTMR policy, but NATOA slammed the FCC’s proposed moratoriums ban. Local government attorneys warned it could lead to litigation.
The FCC drew mixed responses from local government officials Friday to a draft order combining one-touch, make-ready rules with a ban on state and local moratoriums on new wireless and wireline facilities. A Nashville official lauded the agency for validating the Tennessee city’s overturned OTMR policy, but NATOA slammed the FCC’s proposed moratoriums ban. Local government attorneys warned it could lead to litigation.
A possible FCC compromise on the draft kidvid NPRM didn’t materialize and the item was approved with a 3-1 party-line split Thursday (see 1807110051). Though Commissioner Mike O’Rielly acceded to a request from Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel to edit the item to be free of tentative conclusions, Rosenworcel said Thursday the two sides couldn’t come to agreement. She praised O’Rielly’s willingness to negotiate and didn’t identify any other concessions she requested. “I was informed that even with these edits it was not sufficient to garner a bipartisan vote,” O’Rielly said. The version approved Thursday contains the same tentative conclusions as the draft item, O’Rielly and Media Bureau staff said.