The FCC won’t require broadcasters to submit workforce diversity data on Sept. 30, a public notice said Friday. Workforce data submission is a new requirement that stems from the FCC's February equal employment opportunity order, which is being challenged in the courts and at the FCC (see 2408290045). Broadcast attorneys had expected the submission to be due at the end of September. The Media Bureau has said it would issue a public notice ahead of the due date for the new Form 395-B with details of the filing process. “Because the Bureau has not yet released that Public Notice, the data collection will not be due on September 30th this year,” the PN said. “The Bureau will provide broadcasters ample time to put into place whatever data collection processes they require prior to the first filing deadline.”
The FCC Wireline Bureau dismissed on procedural grounds and rejected Starlink's waiver request regarding its Rural Digital Opportunity Fund application in an order Friday in docket 19-126 (see 2402270083). The bureau said Starlink "did not demonstrate that it was eligible to receive RDOF support" and its petition "does not provide any new information or evidence of changed circumstances that rebut our previous determinations." The bureau also said the petition was "untimely" because requests for reconsideration must be filed within 30 days of a rule being published in the Federal Register. The bureau noted Starlink's petition was filed four years after the final RDOF rules were published.
The FCC Wireline Bureau extended deadlines for additional carriers to remove, replace and dispose of Huawei and ZTE equipment from their networks. In an order posted in Friday’s Daily Digest, the bureau said extensions went to Advantage Cellular Systems, extended to March 10, AST Telecom (April 18), Country Wireless (Feb. 23) and Inland Cellular (Sept. 30). NE Colorado Cellular received an extension to March 9 for part of its system, and April 6 for other parts. Competitive Carriers Association President Tim Donovan told us Friday he remains hopeful Congress will find a spending vehicle this year to fully fund the Secure and Trusted Communications Networks Reimbursement Program to pay for carriers to rip and replace the Chinese gear (see 2408230039). The program faces a $3.08 billion funding gap (see 2404100067).
The Edison Electric Institute urged the FCC to maintain its rules on contractor qualifications for electric utility pole work and large pole orders (see 2408190053). EEI said in a meeting with Wireline Bureau staff that the record "demonstrates the need for a flexible approach to timelines" for larger pole orders, per an ex parte filing Friday in docket 17-84. A "one-size-fits-all timeline would be impractical," EEI said. Utilities also "have a legitimate interest in ensuring that contractors who work on their poles meet certain safety and reliability standards," the group said: "Allowing contractors to unilaterally select their own contractors to work above the communications space bypassing utility vetting and training through a utility’s onboarding process could compromise these standards."
The FCC Wireless Bureau on Friday agreed to delay by three weeks the comment deadlines on a Further NPRM on the broadband data collection process as sought by CTIA, USTelecom and the Competitive Carriers Association (see 2408260010). With the delay, comments are now due Oct. 7, replies Nov. 5 in docket 19-195. “Given the importance of receiving both timely and accurate BDC data submissions as well as robust input on the questions raised in the Fourth Further Notice, we find there is good cause to grant Joint Petitioners’ request,” the bureau said.
After more than a year of meetings, the NAB-led, FCC-involved ATSC 3.0 task force, the Future of TV Initiative, hasn’t reached consensus on controversial topics, we're told. Its members include broadcasters, cable interests, and consumer and public interest groups. Its first meeting was in June 2023, and it was expected to issue a final report in the fall, yet members told us that it's likely merely to reiterate many of the positions stakeholders held going into the effort. It's also unlikely to provide a firm timeline for the sunset of ATSC 1.0. Just before the initiative's launch, ATSC President Madeleine Noland said the goal was for the diverse group to “chart a path forward together,” and NAB told us the goal was to make concrete recommendations to the FCC by June 2024.
The proposed factor for the North American Numbering Plan Administration Fund size for FY25 will be $8.64 million with a contribution factor of 0.0000896, said an FCC Wireline Bureau public notice Wednesday in docket 92-237 (see 2308100068). The proposed decrease in the contribution factor is due to the "higher surplus carried over from the prior year," the bureau said.
The FCC Wireline Bureau granted Alaska's Lower Yukon School District's request that broadband services "to and within on-campus teacher housing owned by the school district is eligible for E-rate funding." In a declaratory ruling Thursday in docket 02-6, the bureau said the district "serves a unique population of students who reside in 10 remote, impoverished villages in a part of rural Alaska with an extremely harsh climate." It determined that the district-owned on-campus housing provided for Lower Yukon teachers "is a non-instructional facility in which the use of broadband service meets the definition of an educational purpose, and thus such service is eligible for category one and category two E-Rate support." In addition, it noted the ruling is limited to the Lower Yukon school district. The on-campus teacher housing is necessary for the district's "unique student population" because Lower Yukon’s "severe weather conditions and remote geography prevents students from having their educational needs met during the unusually frequent on-campus school closures."
Comments are due Sept. 30, replies Oct. 15 on the transfer of Intelsat's FCC licenses and authorizations to SES, said a public notice Thursday in docket 24-267. Responses to replies are due Oct. 25, the FCC Space Bureau, Wireless Bureau and Office of Engineering and Technology notice said. The license transfers are part of SES' proposed $3.1 billion purchase of Intelsat (see 2405310004).
The FCC’s cyber trust mark program should remain focused on cybersecurity, based on NISTIR 8425, the National Institute for Standards and Technology’s IoT core baseline, CTA representatives said during a meeting with FCC Public Safety Bureau staff. “Ensure confidential treatment of both Cybersecurity Label Administrator and manufacturer applications,” a filing posted Thursday in docket 23-239 said. The program should also be “backed by a broad consumer education campaign that is led by the U.S. government,” CTA said.