North American Subaru sought a waiver allowing it to make early deployments using cellular-vehicle-to-everything technology in the 5.9 GHz band. The automaker said it was willing to abide by rules approved last year as part of a joint waiver to use the band for C-V2X, as modified in July (see 2307050048). “Safety is our top priority and we have been pursuing Subaru’s overarching corporate goal of zero fatal traffic accidents in 2030,” said a Friday filing in docket 19-138. “Safety applications based on C-V2X will play a critical role in achieving this goal and will contribute to improving public safety.”
The Open Technology Institute at New America urged the FCC to approve a rule change allowing fixed wireless use of the lower 12 GHz band, but with conditions. In a meeting with Wireless Bureau staff, OTI urged a tribal set aside. “The license rights to all or at least a substantial portion of the 500 megahertz on Tribal lands should be made freely available for broadband deployment at the request of Tribal authorities,” said a filing posted Monday in docket 20-443. The group also said unused spectrum in the band “should be authorized for opportunistic access on a non-interfering basis for fixed wireless services.”
Ookla raised concerns with FCC Broadband Data Task Force staff about problems entering data into the agency’s database. The company discussed concerns carriers and wireless industry groups have raised “about the rules and requirements that are currently preventing tests from third-party apps, including Speedtest by Ookla, from being utilized to capture data needed for challenging claimed coverage reported to the FCC and included on the mobile view of the National Broadband Map,” said a filing posted Monday in docket 20-32. Ookla noted the submission portal requires “fields that are not commonly in use by apps created by the private sector and may, in fact, be collected by only the FCC’s own speed test mobile application.” Ookla asked about “the need for these uncommon data fields in the collection process, the possibility that other applications, such as those from Ookla, may be able to capture the same information, as well as an interest to investigate whether these uncommon data points were necessary for the task force to fulfill its mission.”
The Fixed Wireless Communications Coalition urged the FCC to take a cautious approach in making any changes to power spectral density rules for automated frequency coordination systems in the 6 GHz band, as sought by Broadcom and others. “To ensure transparency in future changes to AFC systems” the group asked the commission to “require operators making changes to their AFC to rerun the test vectors required by the Office of Engineering and Technology’s testing plan public notice and file a copy of the resulting report in the docket for public comment,” said a filing posted Monday in docket 21-352. The Broadcom letter “raises a crucial question about how changes to AFC systems will be made going forward,” the FWCC said: The OET public notice “did not specify what information would be necessary in future public notices regarding changes to an AFC” and the Broadcom letter “gives the Commission the opportunity to provide clarification on that question now.”
Reasonable permitting policies are key for a successful broadband equity, access and deployment program, Wireless Infrastructure Association President Patrick Halley said in a letter to Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo. The letter outlines WIA’s basic positions as the administration starts evaluating and funding BEAD projects. “A constant refrain from our members is that the unpredictability, costs, and delays associated with obtaining permits and approvals to build -- or even upgrade -- infrastructure create real barriers to deployment,” Halley said: “Ensuring predictable, proportionate, and transparent permitting processes balances the needs of government to meaningfully review applications with the needs of communities to get broadband access quickly.” Halley praised NTIA’s work on streamlining reviews under the National Environmental Policy Act, saying it will “have an outsized effect in promoting deployment to the hardest to reach areas.” Halley also called on the department to continue to recognize the importance of work force development, the need for prioritizing spectrum for commercial use and to recognize the importance of fixed wireless access.
Crown Castle named Steven Moskowitz president and CEO, the company said last week. Moskowitz is an industry veteran who helped establish American Tower’s U.S. business, serving as executive vice president and president of the unit. CEO Jay Brown retired in January (see 2312080042). Anthony Melone, a member of the board and former Verizon chief technology officer, replaced him on an interim basis. Moskowitz also becomes a member of the board of directors. "Steven's breadth and depth of experience in domestic and international towers and small cell solutions is unique in the industry, and we know that he will provide valuable insights as we continue our progress on the strategic and operating review of the company's enterprise fiber and small cell business, and tower growth opportunities,” said board Chair Robert Bartolo.
Verizon representatives met with aides to FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr on net neutrality rules and network slicing. A draft order appeared to look for middle ground on how slicing would be treated under the rules (see 2404050053). “Network slicing is a promising technology that will help drive exciting network innovation and enable new capabilities and services for the benefit of consumers in ways that previously were only possible over wireline networks,” said a filing Friday in docket 23-320. The technology will “help enable more efficient use of wireless networks, while also enabling capabilities and services that will support investment to deploy and add capacity to next-generation wireless networks,” Verizon said. Meanwhile, Barbara van Schewick, director of Stanford Law School’s Center for Internet and Society, blogged Thursday that the proposed rules on slicing could create “a huge problem” and make it possible for providers “to start picking applications and putting them in a fast lane.” Major wireless carriers are "testing ways to create … 5G fast lanes for apps such as video conferencing, games, and video where the ISP chooses and controls what gets boosted,” she said: “The FCC’s draft order opens the door … so long as the app provider isn’t charged for them.... These kinds of ISP-controlled fast lanes violate core net neutrality principles and would limit user choice, distort competition, hamper startups, and help cement platform dominance."
The Rural Wireless Association has concerns that a proposed 5G Fund auction “could potentially leave legacy high-cost support mobile carriers’ ongoing investments in their networks stranded,” it told an aide to Commissioner Brendan Carr. RWA argued that if some carriers lose high-cost support for their service areas “because they are not successful bidders in the 5G Rural Fund reverse auction, the significant investments in their network and the service to their communities will be placed in jeopardy,” said a filing posted Thursday in docket 20-32. Smith Bagley executives met with aides to Commissioner Geoffrey Starks on the company’s push for special treatment for tribal areas under the 5G Fund (see 2404080030). Though Smith Bagley has an existing network, “it still expects its bids at auction to be among the highest in the nation due to the expected cost of building hundreds of miles of fiber to its towers,” the provider said. “Without fiber, it will be difficult to meet the Commission’s 5G Fund auction performance requirements.”
The Enterprise Wireless Alliance supported a request by utility company Exelon for a waiver of FCC 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. The Wireless Bureau sought comment on the request, due Wednesday, in docket 24-80 (see 2403120039). “It is not practical or safe for Exelon employees engaged in dangerous activities or working below ground to have to use a different radio for direct communications,” EWA said: “The better solution is the one proposed in the Waiver Requests: 800 MHz channels used only in specific, typically brief instances for mobile-to-mobile transmissions on a secondary basis.” EWA said because of the “very limited, intermittent use” of the channels the interference risks are minimal. EWA filed the only comment so far.
CTA discussed unanswered questions about the FCC’s voluntary cyber trust mark program, which commissioners approved last month (see 2403140034) during a meeting with FCC Public Safety Bureau staff. CTA raised questions in six areas, according to a filing posted Thursday in docket 23-239. Among them was “whether and how portions of data submitted to Cybersecurity Labeling Administrators can or should be treated confidentially” and who “will host the registry website" to access "the manufacturers’ Application Programming Interface.” CTA asked about the treatment of drones and whether manufacturers are “responsible for the security of certain types of pre-installed third-party applications.”