Dish Network for competitive reasons isn't ready to publicly discuss its wireless “go-to-market strategy,” said Chairman Charlie Ergen on a Q4 earnings call Wednesday. “We’re not that stupid to disclose that,” said Ergen.
Likely marquee items for the 2023 World Radiocommunication Conference will include space-to-space satellite links, and big mobile and satellite industry focus on the 6 GHz band, U.S. WRC delegates said at an FCBA event Thursday. Boeing Global Spectrum Management Vice President Audrey Allison said as spectrum use increases, such issues are becoming more contentious.
The FCC is fishing for ideas to incentivize C-band satellite operators beyond costs of moving customers to just the upper portion. That's more complicated since all operators have equal access to the full band, we were told. Momentum is behind the idea of incentivizing incumbents, partly to try to avoid what otherwise is seen as a likely legal challenge to a government move to take back satellite spectrum authorizations.
The 2019 World Radiocommunication Conference was a mixed success for the U.S., FCC Commissioner Mike O’Rielly said, viewing WRC-19 as falling short. Other WRC watchers echoed O’Rielly’s concerns and said questions about ITU process aren’t going away. The conference ended last month after weeks of negotiations (see 1911220014).
Michael Calabrese, director of the Wireless Future Program at New America, expressed general support for an FCC auction of the C band, in a meeting with FCC Commissioner Mike O’Rielly. The FCC “has no legal authority to specify or require any incentive or premium payments to C-band incumbents that extend beyond actual and reasonable relocation costs,” Calabrese said in docket 18-122, posted Wednesday. “Congress has twice passed legislation ensuring that when the TV bands at 700 MHz and 600 MHz were consolidated for auction to mobile carriers, local broadcast stations would either receive no windfall … or receive at most incentive payments limited by a competitive reverse auction,” he said: “Section 309(j) is explicit that every dollar bid in a public auction must be paid to the U.S. Treasury except to the extent that eligible incentive auction payments are made subject to the requirements of Section 309(j)(8)(G), which requires a competitive reverse auction.”
T-Mobile continued the 5G drumroll Monday, lighting up its low-band 600 MHz network and announcing preorders for two phones due in stores Friday. Metro by T-Mobile will launch the first U.S.-wide prepaid 5G Friday, it said. It spans 200 million-plus people, 5,000 towns and 1 million square miles, covering “more people in more places” than rivals, said the carrier. It pitched the $900 and $1,300 5G phones to early adopters. In a promotion, line switchers can get the $900 OnePlus 7T Pro 5G McLaren for free with a trade-in of select smartphones and a 24-month contract. Buyers of the Samsung Galaxy 10 Plus 5G ($1,299) can get up to $1,300 off via 24 or 26 monthly bill credits or any Samsung Galaxy S10 or Note10 of equal or lesser value when they add a line. The phones are ready to use Sprint’s 2.5 GHz 5G spectrum "when available if the merger closes,” it said. T-Mobile CEO John Legere said (see 1902270030) the combination of its low-band and millimeter-wave spectrum and Sprint’s mid-band spectrum would create “the highest capacity network in U.S. history -- a whopping 400 MHz+ total spectrum for customers nationwide on average.” A map shows consumers 5G coverage, "down to their neighborhoods."
Jobs remain an issue in T-Mobile's buying Sprint, stakeholders agreed. They differ on whether the deal would lead to more employment or hurt unionization. At the Capitol Forum Thursday and in Q&A with us, those for and against the deal expanded on existing policy positions. Topics included rollout of attorneys general backing the transaction after reaching pacts for the combined company to locate jobs in their states.
Integration plans between T-Mobile and Sprint are further along than expected, since the deal has taken longer than expected to complete, said T-Mobile CEO John Legere on a Q3 call Monday. “The silver lining is that we have had more time to prepare for the coming integration,” Legere said: “We have detailed integration plans and we are preparing to start deploying Sprint’s 2.5 GHz spectrum soon after closing” on buying that smaller company. He said with the state attorneys general court case to be heard in December, 19 state governments have now endorsed the deal.
T-Mobile Chief Technology Officer Neville Ray briefed FCC Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel on the company’s progress in deploying in the 600 MHz band, said a filing in docket 12-268. Clearing of the 600 MHz band is proceeding on, or ahead of, the schedule the Commission established,” T-Mobile said, posted Thursday. Other T-Mobile executives discussed the C band with Office of Engineering and Technology Chief Julius Knapp and Wireless Bureau Chief Donald Stockdale. “We urged the Commission to make a minimum of 300 megahertz of C-band spectrum available for mobile broadband and provide certainty regarding the amount and timing of the spectrum that will be made available," the company said.
Commissioners are expected to approve, with no dissents and few questions, an order and Further NPRM Friday on the 800 MHz rebanding, FCC and industry officials said. The order is loosely tied to T-Mobile’s proposed buy of Sprint (see 1910020030) but didn’t generate controversy. No parties reported meetings at the FCC on the item in docket 02-55.