Republicans will have more House Commerce Committee muscle as they attempt a Communications Act overhaul this year, with new members from both parties eager to dig into the issues and showing telecom expertise. Net neutrality also will be a major political focal point, with legislation likely on deck at least in the Senate (see 1412310033) and House lawmakers planning an FCC oversight hearing on net neutrality early in 2015.
Newly appointed members of FCC Task Force on Optimal Public Safety Answering Point Architecture: Bernard Aboba, Microsoft; Bradley Blanken, Competitive Carriers Association; Mary Boyd, Intrado; Tom Breen, AT&T; Robert Brown, National Public Safety Telecommunications Council; Alicia Burns, Frontier Communications; Mario DeRango, Motorola; Tracy Felty, Saline County, Illinois; Laurie Flaherty, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration; Mark Fletcher, Avaya; James Goerke, Texas 911 Alliance; Jeanna Green, Sprint; Larry Hatch, Oregon APCO/NENA; Joseph Heaps, National Institute of Justice, U.S. Department of Justice; David Holl, National Association of State 911 Administrators (Pennsylvania); Michael Kennedy, Office of the Director of National Intelligence; Rebecca Ladew, Speech Communications Assistance by Telephone; Chris Littlewood, Center for Public Safety Innovation; Anthony Montani, Verizon; Mehrdad Negahban, beamSmart; Sean Petty, Industry Council for Emergency Response Technologies (iCERT); Richard Ray, National Association for the Deaf; Steve Souder, Department of Public Safety Communications, Fairfax County, Virginia; Brian Tagaban, Navajo Nation; Jeff Wittek, Airbus Defense and Space (Cassidian Communications) ... Audio Precision President Dave Schmoldt adds CEO responsibilities, replacing Bruce Hofer, who will remain chairman and principal hardware engineer ... Internet marketing agency Netmark.com promotes Chief Operating Officer John Broadbent to CEO, replacing Josh Dalton, who will stay on with the company for several months in “an administrative role."
Rules proposed by the FCC in February aren't a viable alternative to the wireless location accuracy road map proposed by the four major carriers, APCO and the National Emergency Number Association last month, said Verizon in reply comments posted in docket 07-114 Monday. Comments were due last week at the FCC (see 1412230037), and some were made public Monday. “Many Roadmap opponents erroneously presume that the NPRM’s proposed rules are technically feasible, contrary to the rulemaking record, and object to the Roadmap simply on the basis that it departs from the NPRM,” Verizon said. The carrier cautioned the FCC not to make major changes to the consensus proposal. “The Roadmap is an integrated combination of enforceable milestones that balances multiple public interest objectives, and supplementing or modifying it will undermine that careful balance,” the carrier said. T-Mobile offered a similar take in its reply comments. “The Roadmap sets into motion the necessary steps to implement and deploy a true dispatchable location solution -- something not one of the Roadmap’s critics has attempted to do and for which none of them has a proposed alternative,” T-Mobile said. NENA also urged adoption of the road map. “The record in this proceeding is replete with references to new technologies that can and will bring significant improvements to wireless location accuracy,” NENA said. “But to suggest that these benefits can somehow magically accrue to the installed base is, at best, disingenuous and, at worst, intentionally misleading.”
The industry road map for ensuring indoor location accuracy for wireless calls to 911 has gathered wide support and the FCC should move quickly to incorporate key provisions into its rules, CTIA said in a filing at the commission. The four major carriers, APCO and the National Emergency Number Association proposed the plan last month. “Public safety representatives and agencies from across the country eager for dispatchable location,” technology companies, members of the accessibility community and the “national carriers and wireless associations including those that represent small carriers” all support the plan, CTIA said in reply comments filed in docket 07-114, posted by the FCC Wednesday. “The Roadmap is a concrete, carefully-negotiated and -balanced solution to help deliver new and better E911 location accuracy,” CTIA said. “To be clear, however, the Roadmap is intended to function as an alternative -- not a supplement -- to the proposed standards and timetables in the Commission’s NPRM.” TruePosition, which offers an alternative solution for indoor location accuracy, however, said it's hardly a “consensus” plan. It's “opposed by the vast majority of public safety officials who have participated in this proceeding” and “there is scant evidence that the Plan would actually work,” TruePosition said. The carriers just want to “postpone fixing” a problem they caused to begin with, the company said: “The premise of the Roadmap is that if the FCC will simply leave the carriers alone they will someday fix the problem of poor indoor location capabilities for emergency 911 calls.” Officials with Telecommunications for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing reported on a meeting at the FCC. The FCC should look at the road map and other solutions, advocates for the group said. “We want the same capacity we had when we had the landline phones,” the officials said. “During those days, all we had to do was to dial 9-1-1, and help would come, with much success. When we call for an emergency, the first objective is for the dispatcher to get our call, and immediately know where the call came from. Then the dispatcher can send police, fire, or paramedics to the scene of the emergency.” “The Roadmap outlines a clear path to delivering first responders the necessary ‘dispatchable location’ information in an accelerated timeframe,” PCIA said in its reply comments. The plan also “leverages technologies that have been proven successful in commercial location services,” like Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, “rather than proprietary technologies without a commercial track record,” the group said. The road map was “the result of tough negotiations between APCO and NENA, on the one hand, and the Carrier Signatories, on the other,” AT&T told the FCC. APCO acknowledged the complaints of some 20 public safety commenters left out of negotiations on the road map. “Since finalizing the Roadmap, APCO has reached out extensively, and will continue to do so, to describe the Roadmap to all interested stakeholders and respond to any questions,” the group said. “Further, APCO welcomes the active assistance of these groups to implement the Roadmap’s solutions to this complex problem.”
The industry road map for ensuring indoor location accuracy for wireless calls to 911 has gathered wide support and the FCC should move quickly to incorporate key provisions into its rules, CTIA said in a filing at the commission. The four major carriers, APCO and the National Emergency Number Association proposed the plan last month. “Public safety representatives and agencies from across the country eager for dispatchable location,” technology companies, members of the accessibility community and the “national carriers and wireless associations including those that represent small carriers” all support the plan, CTIA said in reply comments filed in docket 07-114, posted by the FCC Wednesday. “The Roadmap is a concrete, carefully-negotiated and -balanced solution to help deliver new and better E911 location accuracy,” CTIA said. “To be clear, however, the Roadmap is intended to function as an alternative -- not a supplement -- to the proposed standards and timetables in the Commission’s NPRM.” TruePosition, which offers an alternative solution for indoor location accuracy, however, said it's hardly a “consensus” plan. It's “opposed by the vast majority of public safety officials who have participated in this proceeding” and “there is scant evidence that the Plan would actually work,” TruePosition said. The carriers just want to “postpone fixing” a problem they caused to begin with, the company said: “The premise of the Roadmap is that if the FCC will simply leave the carriers alone they will someday fix the problem of poor indoor location capabilities for emergency 911 calls.” Officials with Telecommunications for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing reported on a meeting at the FCC. The FCC should look at the road map and other solutions, advocates for the group said. “We want the same capacity we had when we had the landline phones,” the officials said. “During those days, all we had to do was to dial 9-1-1, and help would come, with much success. When we call for an emergency, the first objective is for the dispatcher to get our call, and immediately know where the call came from. Then the dispatcher can send police, fire, or paramedics to the scene of the emergency.” “The Roadmap outlines a clear path to delivering first responders the necessary ‘dispatchable location’ information in an accelerated timeframe,” PCIA said in its reply comments. The plan also “leverages technologies that have been proven successful in commercial location services,” like Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, “rather than proprietary technologies without a commercial track record,” the group said. The road map was “the result of tough negotiations between APCO and NENA, on the one hand, and the Carrier Signatories, on the other,” AT&T told the FCC. APCO acknowledged the complaints of some 20 public safety commenters left out of negotiations on the road map. “Since finalizing the Roadmap, APCO has reached out extensively, and will continue to do so, to describe the Roadmap to all interested stakeholders and respond to any questions,” the group said. “Further, APCO welcomes the active assistance of these groups to implement the Roadmap’s solutions to this complex problem.”
GAO found that federal agencies adjusted digital strategies as more consumers embraced mobile devices. “The Office of Management and Budget, in response to the milestones laid out in its Digital Government Strategy, created the Digital Services Advisory Group, which -- together with the General Services Administration‘s Office of Citizen Services and Innovative Technology -- has provided federal agencies with guidance, resources, and tools to enhance access to government services via mobile devices,” GAO said in the 44-page report released Monday. “Five of the six agencies GAO interviewed have taken steps to improve access to their websites via mobile devices. For example, in 2012, the Department of Transportation (DOT) redesigned its main website, www.dot.gov, to provide a platform for mobile access.” It cited data from the Pew Research Center about the growing trend toward mobile services. GAO described ongoing efforts at various agencies, with some changes yet to come. GAO examined the Interior and Transportation departments, Federal Emergency Management Agency, National Weather Service, Federal Maritime Commission and National Endowment for the Arts. “PDFs are difficult to download on a mobile device, in part because of the large amount of data they contain,” GAO said. “Some of these agencies are trying to reduce the number of data-intensive PDF files on their websites, but a number of these data-intensive PDFs are still present.”
GAO found that federal agencies adjusted digital strategies as more consumers embraced mobile devices. “The Office of Management and Budget, in response to the milestones laid out in its Digital Government Strategy, created the Digital Services Advisory Group, which -- together with the General Services Administration‘s Office of Citizen Services and Innovative Technology -- has provided federal agencies with guidance, resources, and tools to enhance access to government services via mobile devices,” GAO said in the 44-page report released Monday. “Five of the six agencies GAO interviewed have taken steps to improve access to their websites via mobile devices. For example, in 2012, the Department of Transportation (DOT) redesigned its main website, www.dot.gov, to provide a platform for mobile access.” It cited data from the Pew Research Center about the growing trend toward mobile services. GAO described ongoing efforts at various agencies, with some changes yet to come. GAO examined the Interior and Transportation departments, Federal Emergency Management Agency, National Weather Service, Federal Maritime Commission and National Endowment for the Arts. “PDFs are difficult to download on a mobile device, in part because of the large amount of data they contain,” GAO said. “Some of these agencies are trying to reduce the number of data-intensive PDF files on their websites, but a number of these data-intensive PDFs are still present.”
Kentucky will partner with the Macquarie Group investment firm to deploy a 3,000-mile fiber “middle mile” network in the state, Democratic Gov. Steve Beshear and Rep. Hal Rogers, R-Ky., said Tuesday. The Next Generation Kentucky Information Highway (I-Way) project is meant to fix the state’s long-standing lack of broadband access, which “has damaged our ability to attract business and to explore modern opportunities in healthcare and education,” Beshear said during a news conference. Kentucky ranks 46th nationally in high-speed broadband availability, with 23 percent of its rural areas lacking broadband connectivity, Beshear’s office said.
Kentucky will partner with the Macquarie Group investment firm to deploy a 3,000-mile fiber “middle mile” network in the state, Democratic Gov. Steve Beshear and Rep. Hal Rogers, R-Ky., said Tuesday. The Next Generation Kentucky Information Highway (I-Way) project is meant to fix the state’s long-standing lack of broadband access, which “has damaged our ability to attract business and to explore modern opportunities in healthcare and education,” Beshear said during a news conference. Kentucky ranks 46th nationally in high-speed broadband availability, with 23 percent of its rural areas lacking broadband connectivity, Beshear’s office said.
The Computer & Communications Industry Association endorsed the industry road map for ensuring indoor location accuracy for wireless calls to 911, released last month by the four major carriers, APCO and the National Emergency Number Association, in reply comments filed at the FCC. But as in the earlier comment round (see 1411180051), many first responders expressed concern about the plan. Replies are due Wednesday at the FCC in docket 07-114. The FCC proposed rules in a February NPRM (see 1402210038).