Verizon Wireless asked the FCC to approve its buy of 122 AWS licenses from cable consortium SpectrumCo, a $3.6 billion deal unveiled Dec. 2 (CD Dec 5 p5). Verizon’s filing makes a case for why approval would be in the public interest. But some critics have emerged who hope the FCC will block the deal as a step away from a competitive wireless market.
Cox Communications agreed to follow three cable peers and sell AWS spectrum licenses to Verizon Wireless. Also like the carrier is doing with Bright House Networks, Comcast and Time Warner Cable (CD Dec 5 p5), Verizon Wireless and Cox will promote and market each other’s service. The agreements take off the table another chunk of AWS spectrum and come at a per-MHz/POP price that appears lower than what Verizon Wireless agreed to pay the SpectrumCo members for their AWS licenses. Foes of industry consolidation said the deals are beginning to raise competition concerns.
AT&T’s buy of T-Mobile is officially on hold, after U.S. District Judge Ellen Huvelle agreed to stay the Justice Department’s lawsuit against the deal until Jan. 18. AT&T and DOJ jointly sought the delay in a motion filed Monday. Huvelle acted quickly, issuing an order putting off other deadlines in the case and scheduling the next status conference in her courtroom on that date. DOJ and AT&T were due back in court Thursday.
AT&T’s proposed buy of 700 MHz spectrum licenses from Qualcomm faces hurdles, and possibly got more complicated Friday with the announcement that Verizon Wireless agreed to buy 122 AWS licenses from SpectrumCo, the cable consortium. The AT&T/Qualcomm order is still in the commission’s electronic voting system. Chairman Julius Genachowski has voted for the item and Commissioner Robert McDowell is likely to as well. But Genachowski would still need another vote from Commissioners Michael Copps or Mignon Clyburn. It isn’t clear either is prepared to vote yes, FCC officials said.
A top AT&T official accused FCC staff in comments released by the company Thursday of not giving the company’s proposed buy of T-Mobile a fair review. The statement by Senior Executive Vice President Jim Cicconi came two days after the FCC released a staff memo on the AT&T/T-Mobile deal, while also allowing AT&T and T-Mobile parent Deutsche Telekom to withdraw their merger application.
New FCC ex parte rules were violated at least 11 times since taking effect June 1, a Communications Daily review of all filings and the agency’s own checks found. Some filings were made late -- from a day in many instances to a few weeks -- and others didn’t contain enough information on what was discussed during lobbying meetings. The filings were made by companies and associations big and small. They covered proceedings ranging from changing the Universal Service Fund to pay for broadband deployment to retransmission consent, ISP speeds, disabilities access legislation passed in 2010 and getting low-power TV stations to fully vacate the 700 MHz band for wireless broadband in the small portion they occupy.
The FCC will let AT&T and Deutsche Telekom withdraw their merger application, while at the same time releasing the staff memo that gave failing grades to AT&T’s buy of DT’s T-Mobile, agency officials said Tuesday. Chairman Julius Genachowski and members of his staff had been pondering how to take both steps (CD Nov 29 p1). Public release of the memo opens the door for the document to be entered as part of the record in the government’s lawsuit to block the deal.
FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski and key FCC staff still have not decided whether to allow AT&T to withdraw its application to buy T-Mobile (CD Nov 28 p1), agency and industry officials said Monday. Genachowski would like to make the staff memo on the deal public, regardless of whether the application is allowed be withdrawn “without prejudice,” officials said. If the staff report is released, it could become part of an upcoming trial of the government’s case against the deal in U.S. District Court in Washington. Commissioners have yet to approve through electronic voting either an order sending the application to an administrative law judge for hearing or an order Genachowski circulated the same day approving AT&T’s buy of 700 MHz spectrum from Qualcomm (CD Nov 23 p1), officials said.
A rule pending before the Office of Government Ethics, to limit government employee attendance at trade shows, could be bad news for associations as well as policymakers, government and industry officials told us. The proposed rule would end the practice of government employees being given free admission to commonly attended events, when the offer comes from groups that employ in-house lobbyists, from CTIA’s annual meeting to the CEA’s International CES.
A rule pending before the Office of Government Ethics, to limit government employee attendance at trade shows, could be bad news for associations as well as policymakers, government and industry officials told us. The proposed rule would end the practice of government employees being given free admission to commonly attended events, when the offer comes from groups that employ in-house lobbyists, from CTIA’s annual meeting to the Consumer Electronics Association’s International CES.