The FCC Wireline Bureau dismissed seven petitions Friday, all filed in late 2011, seeking reconsideration of parts of the USF/intercarrier compensation transformation order (see 1110280088). USTelecom, Verizon, Sprint Nextel, MetroPCS, the National Exchange Carrier Association, NTCH and others filed the petitions. “No entities had filed comments or ex parte submissions regarding any of the … petitions for several years,” said an order in docket 10-90. The bureau said it sought comment in January and there were no objections.
There are 602,700 cable and wireline subscribers out of service in the area affected by Hurricane Zeta, said Friday’s report from the disaster information reporting service. It included information from South Carolina and Florida, but the agency deactivated the service for those states and portions of Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi and North Carolina the same day. The service remained active for some counties in the latter five states. Friday’s report lists two public safety answering points as out of service and 3.9% of cellsites down. No TV stations were out of service, but six FM and four AM stations were down.
NAB, while mentioning concerns about a petition for an adjustment to FM booster rules, did support it (see 2010280062).
The DOD proposed in a new spectrum strategy Thursday that the Pentagon use “dynamic and bidirectional sharing for facilitating access to commercial spectrum.” The document’s release follows DOD’s September request for information on dynamic spectrum sharing on the 3.45-3.55 GHz band (see 2009210056), a proposal some critics see as a backdoor to 5G nationalization. “This strategy seeks to align [spectrum] resources, capabilities, and activities across” DOD “to support our core national security objectives while remaining mindful of the importance of U.S. economic prosperity,” said Defense Secretary Mark Esper in an introduction to the report. The “traditional model of static frequency allocation is not sufficient and a new model is needed to address the growing demand” for access to “increasingly congested and constrained” spectrum, DOD said. The department believes bidirectional sharing "could help facilitate access to commercial spectrum while addressing the cybersecurity risk of an information sharing infrastructure outside of the [DOD] Information Enterprise, and pursuing machine-to-machine technologies that enable cognitive cohabitation in the spectrum. International and domestic spectrum policy and regulations must continue to evolve to enable spectrum sharing to keep pace with rapidly changing technologies and increased mission requirements.” The strategy calls for DOD to plot an implementation plan within 180 days. The Pentagon has already begun writing that plan and is on target to release it in March, a DOD official said during a call with reporters. DOD understands U.S. “near-peer competitors” like China “are out there operating across all of the spectrum space including commercial, so they don't discern commercial or federal or anything like that, they're just operating across the spectrum space,” an official told reporters. “We have to be able to access and maneuver in any spectrum to be able to defeat our enemies and deny them access in the same way.” That's “going to require us to get access to commercial spectrum in the U.S., as a first step, to be able to train and exercise and do the things we need to do to … fight as we do in war,” the Pentagon official said. “We understand that the industry guys don't like that,” but “we really have to take a whole-of-nation approach to this.” The U.S. “can no longer look at spectrum as a … single win for a single entity,” the official said. “We're really trying to beat our adversaries to 5G or the next G after that. We really have to get to faster decisions as a first step.” The U.S. is consulting with intelligence allies and its NATO partners about the sharing ideas proposed in the strategy, an official said. Some of those ideas are new and untested. DOD said it will continue to work with the FCC and Commerce Department “to shape favorable outcomes.”
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals denied (in Pacer) the FTC’s request for an en banc rehearing in its antitrust case against Qualcomm (see 2009250068). A brief order was filed Wednesday by Judges Consuelo Callahan, Johnnie Rawlinson and Stephen Murphy. “The full court has been advised of the petition for rehearing en banc and no judge has requested a vote on whether to rehear,” the denial said. The agency declined comment. “That not one judge on the Ninth Circuit thought it necessary to consider the merits of the FTC’s petition or to even ask for a response from Qualcomm validates the strength and clarity of the panel’s thorough analysis and conclusions,” said Qualcomm Executive Vice President Donald Rosenberg in a statement.
The Technological Advisory Council will hold its year-end meeting, traditionally the most important of the year, Dec. 1 at 10 a.m. EST via conference call, the FCC said Tuesday. TAC will hear presentations from its four working groups.
NARUC will consider urging state legislatures to authorize commissions to reduce intrastate inmate calling service (ICS) rates to cost-based prices. State utility regulators also proposed Tuesday to vote at their meeting Nov. 5-6 and 9-11 on a resolution on providing state access to the FCC's network outage reporting system (NORS). NARUC President Brandon Presley made good on a July promise to sponsor an ICS resolution, after FCC Chairman Ajit Pai urged action (see 2007240045). The FCC and NARUC urged governors last month to act (see 2009220051). Legislatures are best positioned "to address this issue by allocating additional authority to their State Commissions to investigate and assure cost-based fees,” says NARUC’s draft resolution. The NORS proposal echoes a 2015 recommendation that the FCC grant state agencies access to its NORS database in response to a California Public Utilities Commission 2009 petition (see 1502180058). “Granting States secure access to NORS data is consistent with a history of the FCC sharing confidential information with State commissions when a vital need is shown and the information is properly safeguarded,” says this year’s draft resolution. Republican FCC Commissioner Mike O’Rielly and Democratic former member Mignon Clyburn (D) are on a Nov. 10 panel about the 2020 election’s impact on commission and broadband policy, NARUC announced Tuesday (see agenda).
The Washington, D.C., Homeland Security and Emergency Management Agency asked the FCC for a waiver to do a live wireless emergency alert system test Jan. 8, starting at 11 a.m., in preparation for the Jan. 20 presidential inauguration. The test “involves the use of the WEA text message and city’s official e-mail list portion of the Integrated Public Alert and Warning System” and covers an area including the Capitol and White House, said a filing posted Monday in docket 15-91.
With Chairman Ajit Pai expected to announce Tuesday that the FCC will consider an order reallocating the 5.9 GHz band at the Nov. 18 FCC meeting (see 2010190040), NTIA staked out a position on protecting federal incumbents. Commissioners agreed 5-0 in December to examine revised rules, reallocating 45 MHz for sharing with Wi-Fi, 20 MHz for cellular vehicle to everything (C-V2X) and possibly 10 MHz for dedicated short-range communications (DSRC). DOD “operates fixed and mobile radars for surveillance (including airborne surveillance), test range instrumentation, airborne transponders, and testing in support of the tracking and control of airborne vehicles,” said an NTIA technical report filed last week in docket 19-138. NASA and the Department of Energy “operate radar systems in the 5.9 GHz band,” it said. Operations proposed by the FCC’s NPRM must protect higher-priority federal systems in the 5.9 GHz band, where primary allocations include federal radiolocation services. The report lists locations across the U.S. where extra protections are needed. For indoor use, “the analysis indicates that exclusion zones are not necessary to protect federal operations,” the report said: “NTIA recommends rules be put in place to help ensure the indoor devices are not deployed outdoors and that expedient and effective corrective measures be in place to eliminate interference should it occur.” It recommends C-V2X users be required to comply with rules already in place for DSRC. A broad coalition of groups, on the left and right, plus wireless ISPs, sent a letter to the White House Monday supporting reallocation. The 5.9 GHz band is “mostly unused in the vast majority of the country,” the letter said. It “can make an almost-immediate difference for better, faster, higher-capacity Wi-Fi because the band is directly adjacent to existing 5 GHz unlicensed spectrum,” it said: “This band supports Wi-Fi for millions of consumer devices and critical functions like medical telemetry, airport operations, container ports, railway monitoring and logistics, and the industrial Internet of Things networks used in manufacturing and retail fulfillment.” Among the 97 signers: the Benton Institute for Broadband & Society, Engine, Public Knowledge, the Open Technology Institute at New America, the R Street Institute and Less Government.
A petition for reconsideration of the FCC's selection of CohnReznick as C-band clearinghouse (see 2010220062) "is very much on the table, as are other approaches," Vertix Consulting partner Greg Weiner emailed us Thursday. Vertix challenged the clearinghouse search team's recommendation of the CohnReznick team (see 2008190045).