EchoStar notified the FCC that Dish Wireless met the drive test component of its 5G build-out requirements, certifying that the company offers speeds of 35 Mbps or greater to more than 70% of U.S. POPs. Meeting the drive test metric fulfills one of the commitments Dish Network made in 2019 when it asked the FCC to extend the construction deadlines for with its AWS-4, AWS H block and lower 700 MHz E block licenses and committed to an accelerated deployment of its 600 MHz licenses (see 2009110054), said a filing posted Thursday in docket 22-212.
The FCC’s recent Section 706 report “provides powerful new evidence of the pro-consumer impact fixed wireless access (FWA) is having in the broadband marketplace,” CTIA Chief Communications Officer Nick Ludlum said in a Thursday blog post. Commissioners approved the report 3-2 (see 2403140050). The report found that without FWA, 60% of U.S. households have zero or one home broadband offering available at 100/20 Mbps speeds, Ludlum said: “When FWA is taken into account, over 54% of U.S. households (over 19 million) now have multiple broadband options. And 18% of U.S. households now have three or more competitive options, thanks in part to FWA.”
CTIA representatives spoke with aides to FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel and Commissioners Brendan Carr and Nathan Simington on how new services, especially network slicing, would be treated under proposed net neutrality rules (see 2403130057). “Proposals to narrow or restrict” nonbroadband internet access “data services would deny the benefits of new technology such as network slicing to broadband users, unduly limit wireless innovation, and undermine American leadership in the mobile economy,” said a filing posted Thursday in docket 23-320. “Network slicing will allow wireless providers to offer over a single physical network a series of logically defined virtual networks configured to satisfy use cases currently under development that may include, for example, public safety communications, robotic surgery, smart grids, and communications at crowded events,” CTIA said.
FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr again slammed NTIA’s implementation plan for the national spectrum strategy (see 2403120056). During a news conference Thursday following the commissioners' open meeting, Carr said the plan makes clear “they’re going to kick the can down the road on spectrum,” he said: “I think it’s a mistake. I think we need to start turning things around.”
A May 13 effectiveness date for the January FCC order requiring that carriers implement location-based routing for calls and real-time texts to 911 (see 2403130028) means the implementation deadline for nationwide carriers is Nov. 13, the Public Safety Bureau clarified Thursday. The deadline for non-nationwide carriers is May 13, 2026. By that second date, all providers must deploy a technology that supports location-based routing for real-time text to 911 originating on their IP-based networks, the bureau said.
Representatives of both companies met virtually with FCC staff on T-Mobile’s proposed acquisition of Mint Mobile (see 2303150032), a low-cost prepaid wireless brand, and other assets from Ka’ena. T-Mobile “provided an overview” of its “internal processes and business policies, including with respect to customer information and data management,” said a filing Tuesday in docket 23-171. The companies “emphasized that the applications have now been pending for eleven months, that no filings opposing the applications were submitted during the comment period, and that Team Telecom carefully reviewed the Applicants and the proposed transaction and filed its no-objection letter with the Commission over two months ago.” The filing references a presentation made at the meeting, which was redacted. Team Telecom refers to the Committee for the Assessment of Foreign Participation in the United States Telecommunications Services Sector.
An FCC rule requiring mobile service providers to "block texts purporting to be from" North American numbering plan numbers on a reasonable do not originate list that includes "numbers that purport to be from invalid, unallocated, or unused numbers" takes effect Sept. 3, said a public notice Wednesday in docket 02-278. Commissioners adopted the item in March 2023 (see 2303170056).
A January FCC order requiring that carriers implement location-based routing (LBR) for calls and real-time texts to 911 is effective May 13, a notice in Wednesday’s Federal Register said. Under the January order, compliance is required within six months of when the rules become effective for nationwide providers and 24 months for small providers. A follow-up notice will announce compliance dates. The order was approved 5-0 (see 2401250044). “Wireless 911 calls have historically been routed to [public safety answering points] based on the location of the cell tower that handles the call,” the notice said: “Sometimes, however, the 911 call is routed to the wrong PSAP because the cell tower is not in the same jurisdiction as the 911 caller.”
Panasonic supported a 5G Automotive Association petition (see 2106030075) asking the FCC to reduce by 20 dB the permitted level of unwanted emissions from the unlicensed services that share the 5.9 GHz band. Panasonic noted it was among the first granted a waiver for early cellular vehicle-to-everything deployments. “Unwanted emissions levels that the FCC adopted for unlicensed services that neighbor C-V2X in the 5.9 GHz spectrum band place the benefits of C-V2X at risk by subjecting the technology to harmful interference,” said a filing Monday in docket 19-138.
The FCC Wireless Bureau sought comments, due April 10, on requests from subsidiaries of utility company Exelon for a waiver of rules to grant two additional 800 MHz channel pairs allowing use of mobile-to-mobile communications on the subsidiaries’ 800 MHz land mobile radio systems. Replies are due April 25, said a Monday notice. The subsidiaries “assert that the mobile-to-mobile communications would be utilized at the same power levels currently permitted for mobile units to ensure there is no increased risk of ‘interference to adjacent channel licensees or co-channel licensees,’” the bureau said.