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GCI Protests 3G Broadband Standard in Lifeline Order

The FCC should carve out Alaskan wireless carriers from a proposed 3G minimum broadband standard for mobile services in the upcoming Lifeline order (see 1603240052), Alaskan carrier General Communication Inc. said in an ex parte filing posted Friday in docket…

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10-90. GCI met Tuesday with Stephanie Weiner, aide to FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler. “By our best estimate, Remote Alaska contains at least 100 communities with a combined population of more than 40,000 that have access only to a 2G network,” GCI said. “A few years ago, many of those consumers had no wireless service at all. As Alaska wireless providers continue to build out and upgrade service in rural Alaska, the Commission should not make it more difficult for such communities to afford the best service available.” GCI said the simplest option is to exclude all facilities-based Alaska wireless carriers from the 3G minimum requirement. Or, it could apply the minimum standard only where commercial 3G service is offered, it said. “As a last resort,” the FCC could request waivers from carriers that offer 2G service in certain areas, said the cable and telecom provider. “That solution, however, would create uncertainty, cause delay, and unnecessarily tie up Commission and carrier resources.” GCI, a backer of the so-called Alaska Plan for a looming FCC rate-of-return USF overhaul (see 1602250025), also lobbied on that broadband deployment proposal.