After decades of work by federal agencies dealing with Ligado and its predecessors, still nothing has been invested in its proposed terrestrial L-band network, said aviation organizations and allies that opposed the FCC's 2019 Ligado authorization. They sent letters this week to President Donald Trump and congressional leadership. "Move on [and] put the issue to rest" by getting the FCC to grant the pending petitions seeking reconsideration of Ligado's authorization (see 2005210043), they said. Ligado's authorization poses an interference threat to GPS, satellite communications and weather forecasting services, said nearly 100 groups and companies, including AccuWeather, Airlines for America, American Farm Bureau Federation and American Meteorological Society. Congressional recipients included Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and Senate Commerce Committee Chairman Ted Cruz, R-Texas. Ligado didn't comment Thursday.
The FCC Wireline Bureau on Thursday posted new filing deadlines for a Talton petition seeking a waiver of the commission’s rules capping the rates for audio and video for incarcerated people provided to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Comments are now due May 8, replies May 15, in docket 23-62. The bureau suspended earlier deadlines on the petition (see 2504170020) after public interest groups, led by the United Church of Christ Media Justice Ministry, objected to Talton’s request for confidential treatment.
Jeremy Marcus, ex-FCC Enforcement Bureau, joins Lerman Senter ... SurgePays promotes Derron Winfrey to president-sales and operations ... Plume, maker of a SaaS platform for communications service providers, names Daniel Herscovici, ex-Edison Partners, as president and CEO ... EuNetworks Group appoints Marisa Trisolino, formerly CMC Networks, as CEO, while interim CEO Kevin Dean becomes chairman, both effective May 12 ... Thrive appoints Kimberly Saturley, formerly Aqua Security, chief people officer.
The FCC should end its freeze on major changes for low-power TV stations and loosen restrictions on power levels, said the Advanced Television Broadcasting Alliance in a filing Wednesday documenting an ex parte meeting Monday with Erin Boone, acting Media Bureau chief and senior counsel to FCC Chairman Brendan Carr. “The time is ripe to allow LPTV stations to improve the service they provide to local communities,” the filing said. The agency shouldn’t impose additional recordkeeping requirements on LPTV stations proposed in an NPRM last year, the alliance said (see 2406060028). “The ATBA encouraged the FCC to formally terminate this proceeding.” It also expressed support for the NAB’s ATSC 3.0 transition plan and urged the FCC to look into providing displacement protection for LPTV stations that provide “local services.”
The FCC sent letters to Verizon, AT&T, EchoStar, Charter, Comcast, Altice, Cox and Mediacom asking for internal data as the agency finalizes an order on T-Mobile’s proposed buy of wireless assets, including spectrum, from UScellular. The FCC has in the past sought such data to get a broader view of the market as it considers a transaction. The letters, which came from the Wireless Bureau and Office of Economics and Analytics, were posted in Wednesday’s Daily Digest and in docket 24-286.
The U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., ordered the U.S. Agency for Global Media (USAGM) on Tuesday to restore the shuttered Voice of America, Radio Free Asia and Middle Eastern Broadcast Network.
Consumer and public interest groups raised concerns on the Edison Electric Institute's petition asking the FCC to clarify that utilities have “prior express consent” under the Telephone Consumer Protection Act to send “demand response calls and texts” to their customers (see 2503100047). Led by the National Consumer Law Center, the groups met with Consumer and Government Affairs Bureau staff, said a filing Friday in docket 02-278.
The FCC International Bureau on Monday sought comment on various proposals for U.S. positions approved by the commission’s World Radiocommunication Conference Advisory Committee last week (see 2504150032). The bureau also sought comment on an NTIA recommendation on agenda item 1.8, another topic at the meeting, addressing additional spectrum allocations to the radiolocation service. Comments, which are due April 30 in docket 24-30, “will assist the Commission in its upcoming consultations with the U.S. Department of State and NTIA in the development of U.S. positions" for the next WRC in 2027.
The FCC Enforcement Bureau wants letters of intent by May 23 from entities interested in leading the industry consortium for robocall traceback efforts, said a public notice in Friday's Daily Digest. USTelecom's Industry Traceback Group currently holds the position. Comments on submitted letters of intent are due by June 11, replies June 18, in docket 20-22.
A federal appellate court's rejection of a $57 million FCC fine -- calling it unconstitutional -- could force the agency to revisit and overhaul its enforcement processes. The agency clearly has authority to enforce laws requiring telecommunications companies to protect sensitive customer data, but the FCC "must do so consistent with our Constitution’s guarantees of an Article III decisionmaker and a jury trial," a three-judge panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled last week as it vacated the fine against AT&T that stemmed from handling of customer data. T-Mobile and Verizon are challenging similar fines levied in the same April 2024 enforcement action. In siding with AT&T, the court said it was guided by the U.S. Supreme Court's 2024 Jarkesy decision regarding whether federal regulatory agencies can bring in-house proceedings to enforce civil penalties.