The FCC Office of Engineering and Technology and Wireless Bureau sought comment Tuesday on a NextNav proposal that the agency reconfigure the 902-928 MHz band “to enable a high-quality, terrestrial complement” to GPS for positioning, navigation and timing services (see 2404160043). Comments are due Sept. 5, replies Sept. 20, in docket 24-240. NextNav asked that the commission reconfigure the lower 900 MHz band by creating a 5-MHz uplink in the 902-907 MHz band paired with a 10-MHz downlink in the 918-928 MHz band, shifting remaining non-multilateration location and monitoring service (M-LMS) licensees to the 907-918 MHz part of the band, the notice said: “NextNav proposes a spectrum ‘swap’ to trade in its current M-LMS holdings for a single, nationwide 15-megahertz flexible use license pursuant to the new band plan.” The agency said some 1,500 active non-M-LMS licenses are in the band. The FCC seeks comment “on all aspects" of the NextNav petition, “including its associated costs and benefits,” the notice said. “We seek to develop a robust record and welcome comment on additional related issues that commenters may identify.” The notice is “an important next step in delivering an innovative spectrum solution in the Lower 900 MHz band,” NextNav CEO Mariam Sorond said. “Providing a complement and backup to GPS is critical for safeguarding things we need daily -- from location mapping and tracking services to serving as an important tool for locating emergency callers to addressing critical infrastructure and national security needs.”
The FCC’s Communications Equity and Diversity Council (CEDC) will hold its second meeting under its current charter Aug. 13, according to a public notice Tuesday. The agenda for the meeting will include “introducing CEDC working group chairs, discussing working group plans going forward, and receiving information from the FCC’s Office of Communications Business Opportunities and Wireline Competition Bureau,” the PN said.
The FCC defended the Wireline Bureau's decision denying LTD Broadband's long-form application for the Rural Digital Opportunity Fund. LTD, which was the largest winning bidder, sought a reversal of the decision, claiming the FCC improperly denied its entire application. In a Monday reply brief to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit (docket 24-1017), the commission said it "repeatedly stated that the bureau would perform an in-depth review of long-form applications" to consider the technical and financial information of winning bidders (see 2405090056).
The FCC giving the green light to partial deployment of AST SpaceMobile's direct-to-device satellite constellation is "a significant step to targeting 100% nationwide coverage from space of the continental United States on premium cellular spectrum,” President Scott Wisniewski said Monday as the company announced the approval. Under the FCC Space Bureau authorization order in Monday's Daily Digest, AST may operate feeder links and telemetry, tracking and command operations in the V, S and UHF bands. The approval defers on additional frequencies, inducing terrestrial bands that it would use to provide supplemental coverage from space (SCS). The agency said the approval lets AST begin deployment, with the goal of testing a system capable of providing SCS service, subject to additional approvals. "While this grant does not authorize any operations or testing for SCS, we believe that the deployment of five satellites under this limited grant ... will enable AST to request authority to further test this still emerging technology," the agency said. The FCC conditioned the approval on AST making "a good faith effort" to reduce optical brightness of its satellites, choose lower orbital elevations when feasible, and provide orbital information to astronomy sites and astronomers. SpaceX had sought conditions on AST satellites that matched those the agency imposed on the second-generation Starlink satellites. The commission agreed, saying that would let it monitor AST operations continuously. But the agency rejected a 100 object-years metric for measuring AST satellite failures, as Amazon's Kuiper was seeking. The approval covers five BlueBird satellites, with the FCC deferring on 243 others. AST said its first five BlueBirds have completed environmental testing and are ready for shipment to Cape Canaveral this week for a seven-day launch window in September.
The FCC initiated the disaster information reporting system (DIRS) for 44 Florida counties in anticipation of Hurricane Debby making landfall, a public notice said Sunday. The alert encompasses much of northern Florida, including Jacksonville, Tallahassee and Tampa. In addition, it activated the mandatory disaster response initiative (MDRI) for facilities-based mobile wireless providers in the affected area, which requires companies to allow reasonable roaming and cooperate in service restoration during disasters. On Monday, the commission expanded the DIRS and MDRI requirements to 27 counties in South Carolina. Monday’s DIRS report shows 1% of cellsites down in the affected counties, and 82,858 cable and wireline subscribers without service. Two TV and one FM stations were reported down; no AM stations were listed as out of service and one FM station redirected. The FCC also issued public notices on priority communications services and emergency contact procedures for licensees that need special temporary authority. The Public Safety Bureau issued a reminder for entities clearing debris and repairing utilities to avoid damaging communications infrastructure. Hurricane Debby became Tropical Storm Debby Sunday. T-Mobile issued a statement that they're working with FEMA and local emergency operations centers to prioritize restoration efforts.
The FCC Wireline Bureau and Office of Economics and Analytics made available the final incarcerated people's communications services database for 2024. Released Monday, the database was used to develop rate caps and other changes adopted in the commission's recent IPCS order implementing the Martha Wright-Reed Just and Reasonable Communications Act of 2022, a public notice said (see 2407180039). The database includes two datasets IPCS providers submitted in response to the 2023 mandatory data collection. The first dataset includes cost and revenue information used to determine the upper and lower bounds of the zones of reasonableness. The other dataset includes geocoding information on facility locations.
Only Telesat and SpaceX have issued quantitative inference analyses of spectrum sharing among earlier and later processing round non-geostationary orbit satellite systems (see 2407220021), SpaceX said Friday. In a docket 21-456 filing recapping a meeting with FCC Space Bureau staff, SpaceX said the protection proposals from other commenters "involve hand-waving arguments to support arbitrarily-selected values." In a recap of meetings with the offices of Commissioners Geoffrey Starks and Nathan Simington and the Space Bureau, Amazon's Kuiper said it urged the FCC to wrap the proceeding and discussed its recommended protection values.
Blue Origin hopes to launch its Moon Lander MK1 Pathfinder for an orbital mission around the moon as soon as Q1 2025, it said in an FCC Space Bureau application posted Friday. The Pathfinder cargo lander will carry sensors and cameras; it will collect data and assist with training for Blue Origin's lunar program, the company said.
The FCC should phase in the regulatory fee hike facing Space Bureau payers or risk causing financial hardship that could stymie the satellite industry's growth, according to Intelsat. Recapping a meeting with the office of Commissioner Anna Gomez, Intelsat said Friday in docket 24-85 that it reiterated its argument for a five-year phase-in (see 2405170032).
The Media Bureau granted permission for Amar Broadcasting to exceed the 25% foreign-ownership benchmark, a declaratory ruling in Friday’s Daily Digest said. Amar is the parent company of KNTS (AM) Seattle owner BAAZ, and the ruling allows Canadian citizen Sukhdev Dhillon to own 100% of Amar. No oppositions were filed in response to the petition, the ruling said.