The FCC warned a New York realty company of the possible forfeiture of up to $2.3 million for allegedly hosting a pirate radio station, said an Enforcement Bureau letter in Thursday’s Daily Digest. The notice to Matovu Realty concerned a building at 3349 Decatur Ave., Bronx, and identified Matovu as the owner. The letter demands proof that unauthorized transmissions found by EB field agents have ceased and requests that the unauthorized broadcasters be identified. Matovu has 10 business days to respond. The company didn't comment.
Representatives of the Bristol Bay Cellular Partnership spoke with FCC Wireless and Wireline bureau staff on the company’s request for waiver and revised performance commitments demonstrating it “has met all applicable Alaska Plan deployment milestones.” The reps “explained that the ongoing withholding of support has forced the Company to put several planned system upgrades, network expansions, and other projects on hold,” said a filing posted Thursday in docket 16-271.
Enhanced alternative connect America cost model (ACAM) carriers must certify and submit their cybersecurity and supply chain risk management plans to the FCC by Feb. 12 (see 2308310047). A Wireline Bureau public notice posted Thursday in docket 10-90 said any carrier that misses the deadline or lacks operational plans during the support term, the bureau will direct the Universal Service Administrative Co. to "withhold 25% of monthly support until the carrier comes into compliance."
The FCC took its first official steps Thursday to wind down the affordable connectivity program. A Wireline Bureau order in docket 21-450 gives providers guidance on notifying enrolled households about the impact of the program ending, advertising and outreach, claims submissions and "participation during a possible partially funded month." The bureau said it will announce ACP's final date about 60 days prior to the end of the program's last fully funded month. "To facilitate the efficient wind-down of the ACP, we strongly encourage providers to submit any remaining outstanding claims for reimbursement or revisions prior to February 1," the order said. The bureau will freeze new enrollments Feb. 8, which it said will help it "more accurately project funding exhaustion by increasing certainty in program commitments." ACP "connected millions upon millions of households to broadband services," FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel said. "[D]isconnecting millions of families from their jobs, schools, markets, and information is not the solution," she added. Commissioner Anna Gomez said she was "dismayed that the commission finds itself with no choice but to initiate the wind down process," but "I remain hopeful that this program will continue to be funded."
One of the more common earth station special temporary authority snafus the FCC Space Bureau encounters in applications is the questionable use of the STA category, Earth Station Licensing Division Chief Franco Hinojosa said at the bureau's earth station licensing open house Wednesday. When an STA application is for a time period of close to 180 days or when it needs extensions, it raises the question whether an STA is the proper route. STAs are by definition supposed to be for a limited duration, he said. Wednesday's event follows a Space Bureau open house held in November as part of the bureau’s transparency initiative (see 2311010033). Bureau Chief Julie Kearney said another open house, covering orbital debris, would be held in late February. Wednesday's open house saw Space Bureau staff discussing issues ranging from whether the international communications filing system allows more than three attachments to an application (it does), to the state of the 2018 freeze on accepting new upper C-band earth station registrations (still in place, for now). Hinojosa said among the errors the bureau sees in STA and modification applications, another that frequently appears is missing or incomplete information. An STA application that refers to information found in past authorizations instead of repeating it slows the process, he said. The bureau processed a record 2,804 satellite and earth station applications in 2023, with increased earth station in motion applications helping drive that volume, Kearney said.
The FCC Public Safety Bureau Tuesday approved a waiver request by Alert SouthBay allowing wireless carriers to participate in a wireless emergency alert test in Los Angeles County's South Bay region. The test was scheduled to start at 11:20 a.m. PSD that day. “We are persuaded it is in the public interest to allow ... Alert SouthBay to test WEA’s performance over the County’s variety of geographic and demographic conditions, especially considering recent land movement and landslides, as well as the prevalent high fire risk,” the bureau said in post in docket 15-91. Alert SouthBay later confirmed the test took place.
Representatives of major trade associations stressed to the FCC that a cyber trust mark program for smart devices (see 2311130034) must remain voluntary. “The Trade Associations highlighted several factors that will be necessary in order to make the FCC’s proposed Labeling Program a success,” the reps told Public Safety Bureau Chief Debra Jordan and others from the bureau, said a filing posted Tuesday in docket 22-239 from by CTA, the Connectivity Standards Alliance, CTIA, the National Electrical Manufacturers Association and USTelecom. The program should “leverage” the work of the National Institute of Standards and Technology and industry standards and “allow for self-attestation,” the groups said. “Preemption and safe harbors are critical to the Labeling Program’s success,” they said: The program “should be launched at the device level but should allow for expansion to the product level in the future.”
Numerous satellite operators welcomed the idea of expanding the range of minor satellite and earth station modifications that can be done without having to first notify the FCC. But support was far more mixed in docket 22-411 filings posted Tuesday when it came to use of deadlines on FCC decisions regarding applications. Commissioners in September by a 4-0 vote adopted a Further NPRM regarding streamlining of satellite and earth station applications (see 2309210055). Reply comments in the docket are due Feb. 6.
The Communications Act is clear, and Dish Network responses to CNZ Communications' must-carry complaint are effectively asking the FCC Media Bureau "to stand on one foot, put on a pair of oversized sunglasses, and spin around five times, to try to find a different meaning," CNZ said Monday in docket 12-1. In its December complaint, CNZ, the licensee of WGBP-TV Opelika, Alabama, urged the agency to compel carriage in the Columbus-Opelika and the Atlanta designated market areas. In its answer last week, Dish said the rules give WGBP the power to elect mandatory carriage in the entire Columbus DMA -- the DMA containing its community of license -- or in the Atlanta DMA plus the county in the Columbus DMA incorporating WGBP's community of license, but that Dish isn't obligated to carry the station through two entire DMAs. Nielsen assigns the station to the Atlanta DMA. Mandatory carriage requirements have never extended to full DMAs, Dish said. In its response Monday, CNZ said the bureau in a must-carry complaint brought against DirecTV made clear that the station could assert mandatory carriage rights in the Atlanta and Columbus markets. It termed meritless Dish's concerns that a requirement for the station to be carried through the Columbus DMA would result in a deluge of similar requests from other stations. The Media Bureau denied the DirecTV must-carry complaint (see 2201050031).
Lynk's Tower 5 and Tower 6 satellites were supposed to launch in November, but damage during transit delayed that launch, the satellite operator told the FCC Space Bureau last week as it requested an extension in the deadline for posting its surety bond. Lynk said the satellites are now set for launch on a March 1 SpaceX mission, with the remaining 5 satellites in the constellation launching by April. In 2022, the International Bureau granted Lynk a 10-satellite license for a direct-to-standard-mobile-phone service (see 2209160067). Lynk said Towers 1, 3 and 4 are in orbit and operational.