The FCC Media Bureau and Office of Managing Director revoked Pedro Arce’s license for WCND(AM) Shelbyville, Kentucky, over $9,261.41 in unpaid regulatory fees, according to an order Friday. WCND had delinquent fees from FY 2013-16 and FY 2022-23. The order also dismissed pending renewal applications for the stations.
Rep. Glenn Ivey, D-Md., on Friday accused FCC Chairman Brendan Carr of abusing his power by pushing Verizon and other companies to eliminate diversity, equity and inclusion programs to win approval of transactions before the commission (see 2505160050). Verizon’s proposed buy of Frontier was held up as Carr sought assurance on DEI (see 2505160024). Ivey spoke during a Multicultural Media, Telecom and Internet Council (MMTC) conference.
FCC Chairman Brendan Carr announces retirements: Tia Cromwell from the Office of Media Relations; Stacy Weiss, Enforcement Bureau; and Ben Bartolome, Office of General Counsel ...
The FCC Wireless Bureau on Thursday reminded operators of autonomous vessels (AVs) to obtain a maritime mobile service identity, a nine-digit number that identifies radio stations in the maritime mobile service. The notice cited the “proliferation in recent years” of AVs. The vessels can make use of automatic identification system technology but to do so need to register for the nine-digit identity number, the bureau said.
Lumos representatives spoke with FCC Wireline Bureau staff about a waiver the company is seeking to avoid a penalty after encountering difficulties attempting to “properly upload and certify performance testing data” for Q1 2023. Lumos sought a waiver in May. “Representatives explained that Lumos has been a ‘model citizen,’ with the lone exception of not certifying performance testing data for the first quarter of 2023,” said a filing posted Thursday in docket 10-90. Lumos partially uploaded data for that quarter “and timely uploaded and certified data” for all other quarters starting in 2021, the filing said.
Both big infrastructure items teed up for votes on Thursday were approved 3-0, without dissent from Democratic Commissioner Anna Gomez. The items were laid out in advance of their circulation (see 2507020036) in a speech by Chairman Brendan Carr on his "Build America Agenda.” More infrastructure items are on their way at the Aug. 6 meeting, Carr noted during a news conference.
An FCC order couched as being about deleting outdated rules but outlining a new agency process that does away with notice-and-comment drew Anna Gomez’s first dissent as a commissioner. The direct final rule (DFR) order was approved at the agency’s open meeting Thursday over her objections, 2-1. The commissioners also approved items on auctioning AWS-3 spectrum, georouting 988 texts, and slamming rules. “The way we do things matters,” Gomez said. “The fact that the process adopted today effectively evades review by an informed public is a feature not a bug.”
The FCC during the past 12 months hasn't updated “the list of communications equipment and services that have been determined to pose an unacceptable risk to the national security” of the U.S., the FCC Public Safety Bureau noted on Wednesday. The notice mentioned an FCC proposal to update the “covered list” of unsecure companies to reflect a January finding by the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Industry and Security on connected vehicles. Many commenters opposed expanding the list to include connected vehicle hardware or software (see 2506300052).
Verizon and UScellular urged the FCC to approve their proposed spectrum deal, as the regional carrier seeks to sell off most of its spectrum holdings. In a filing posted Wednesday in docket 25-192, they jointly responded to opponents of the transaction. Verizon agreed in October to buy UScellular’s 850 MHz, AWS and PCS licenses for $1 billion (see 2410180004), a deal various groups have opposed (see 2507080053).
The pole attachment item on the FCC's agenda Thursday is likely to be rewritten concerning the 60-day advance notice that attachers must provide utilities regarding midsize pole attachment orders, broadband infrastructure officials and experts tell us. In addition, we're told the draft order language about a 30-day timeline for utilities to approve attacher-proposed contractors could be moved to the item's Further NPRM. The pole attachment item -- a key part of FCC Chairman Brendan Carr's Build America Agenda, unveiled in June (see 2507020036) -- has seen heavy lobbying from attacher and electric utility interests (see 2507160024 and 507180026).