FCC veteran Ira Keltz named agency’s acting chief engineer ... Verizon appoints Santiago Tenorio, ex-Vodafone, chief technology officer and senior vice president-strategy and technology enablement, starting Oct. 28 … FCC Enforcement Bureau names Andy Hendrickson, ex-Verizon, CTO.
The FCC Enforcement Bureau’s Miami office sent a warning to two North Miami, Florida, landowners over pirate radio broadcasts from their property, said an agency notice of violation issued to Toussaint Orius and Marie Orius in Thursday’s Daily Digest. EB agents found unauthorized radio broadcasts coming from the Orius’ property in March. The notice said the landowners could face a fine of up to nearly $2.4 million for hosting an unauthorized radio broadcast.
SpaceX and European mobile network operators are at odds over the out-of-band emissions waiver SpaceX is seeking for its supplemental coverage from space service (see 2408130008). In a letter to the FCC Space Bureau this week, Vodafone, Orange, Liberty Global, Telefonica, PPF, Telenor and United Group said they were "gravely concerned" about proposed lower safeguards protecting terrestrial MNOs from interference. They said the current aggregate out-of-band emission limit "represents the bare minimum level of protection that mobile network operators require from spurious emissions" in low- and mid-band spectrum. That current limit, they added, "should be regarded as a 'best case,'" as terrestrial MNOs could experience amplified interference when multiple competing direct-to-device satellite systems operate, or an individual D2D operator expands the number of satellites in orbit, prompting more coincident interference. In docket 23-135, SpaceX said the MNOs, all investors in rival D2D operator AST SpaceMobile, are on a "scorched-Earth campaign to hamstring" competition. They "provide zero technical support for their opposition" and don't address SpaceX and T-Mobile technical assessments showing adjacent-band terrestrial networks would be protected, SpaceX said. Nor do they provide any technical support for their "specious" best-case claims, it added. If the best-case claims are correct, SpaceX said, AST operations would cause far more interference to users than the protection level being demanded of SpaceX.
The FCC Wireless Bureau on Thursday tentatively approved Virginia-based SDF's application to serve as a contraband interdiction system (CIS) operator, helping address contraband phones in correctional facilities. Approval lets SDF “market and sell its CIS as described in its application, and begin phase two testing,” the bureau said. The FCC required two phases of testing in a 2021 order (see 2107130029).
Verizon urged the FCC to move forward on a handset unlocking mandate, the focus of an NPRM commissioners approved 5-0 in July (see 2407180037). Some commenters question whether the FCC has legal authority to impose rules (see 2409240038). A 60-day locking period for postpaid phones “is the minimum necessary to help providers combat handset fraud and theft, but a longer, 180-day locking period for prepaid is necessary to enable wireless providers to continue offering subsidies that make phones affordable for prepaid customers,” Verizon said in a filing this week in docket 24-186. Regardless of the time period commissioners agree to, “a uniform unlocking policy that applies to all providers is paramount; the record is replete with evidence that uniformity will benefit both consumers and competition,” the carrier said. Verizon met with staff from the Wireless Bureau and the Office of Economics and Analytics.
The FCC Wireline Bureau wants comments by Nov. 4, replies by Nov. 18, in docket 23-62 on proposed revisions to its annual reporting and certification requirements for providers of incarcerated people's communications services, per a public notice Thursday.
Cellular service in the areas affected by Hurricane Helene improved Wednesday, according to the FCC’s most recent Disaster Information Reporting service update. It showed 11.3% of the cell sites in all the affected counties down, an improvement from the 21.7% reported out of service in Tuesday’s update. The most affected state in the DIRS coverage area is North Carolina, with 38.3% of cell sites without service in its affected counties. There are 654,220 cable and wireline subscribers without service, as compared to 750,761 in the previous update. The DIRS update shows 6 TV stations out of service and 38 radio stations down across the affected areas. FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel will visit Asheville and Charlotte, North Carolina, Friday "to gain a firsthand account of communications recovery efforts in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene," said a release Thursday. Rosenworcel is scheduled to meet with FCC Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau staff deployed to North Carolina, visit a federal assistance center and an emergency operations center, and go to a local library that serves as a community Wi-Fi hub, the release said.
Globalstar and SpaceX are jousting over SpaceX's request that the FCC reverse its August partial approval of Globalstar's plan to replenish its first-generation HIBLEO-4 non-geostationary orbit satellite system (see 2408190003). A reversal of that order and a loss of the HIBLEO-4 license "would destabilize the Big LEO regulatory environment, undercut investment, disrupt and delay Globalstar’s [mobile satellite service] offerings," the company said in an opposition filing Tuesday. A reversal also would raise questions about the future of Globalstar's MSS business, it said. Globalstar said the FCC Space Bureau order followed "well-established" agency precedent in determining that the Globalstar satellites qualify as replacements. In its application last month for review of the August approval, SpaceX said the Space Bureau actually signed off on an entirely new constellation for Globalstar, letting it cut in line ahead of other operators that applied first to use the same spectrum. The agency should treat Globalstar the same as other operators that have had their applications put on hold pending a rulemaking on sharing the 1.6/2.4 GHz band, it said.
China-based Hikvision USA provided the FCC with additional information about its proposed plan for compliance with agency rules (see 2308070047). Questions were posed during an August meeting with staff from the FCC Public Safety Bureau, Office of Engineering and Office of General Counsel, said a filing this week in docket 21-232. “Hikvision does not market, sell, or distribute component parts to the U.S. market,” the company said: “Nor does it intentionally make available Hikvision-manufactured component parts for inclusion in products marketed, sold, or distributed in the United States.” Hikvision said Hangzhou Hikvision Technology “or one of its subsidiaries or affiliates, such as Ezviz or HikRobot, contracts directly” with original equipment manufacturers. It’s Hikvision’s understanding “that the OEM entity will apply for and obtain the applicable equipment authorization from the Commission,” the filing said.
Cellular service in areas affected by Hurricane Helene worsened Tuesday, according to FCC outage reports, as communications companies and the FCC announced further relief efforts. Tuesday’s Disaster Information Reporting Service update showed 21.7% of cell sites down in the affected areas, an increase from the 9.1% reported Monday. Cable and wireline companies reported 796,999 subscribers without service, an improvement from the 886,139 Monday. The FCC voted Wednesday to temporarily waive some Lifeline program eligibility requirements to allow households receiving federal disaster assistance to also benefit from Lifeline assistance, said a release. "In the aftermath of Hurricane Helene, our thoughts are with the communities that need to rebuild and the residents who have lost loved ones or are enduring the unbearable wait to hear from family members," said Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel in the release. The FCC Public Safety and Wireless Bureaus also announced Wednesday that regulatory filing deadline extensions would apply in the additional Hurricane areas, which include Tennessee, Virginia and parts of South Carolina. The extension -- which moves regulatory deadlines between Sept. 23 and Oct. 28 to Oct. 29 -- already applied to numerous counties in South Carolina, North Carolina, Georgia and Florida. The Wireline Bureau also partially waived telephone number aging rules to make it easier for customers affected by Helene to disconnect or restore their service. The waiver will allow service providers to temporarily disconnect the customers' telephone service to avoid billing issues and then reinstate the same numbers when service is reconnected, according to a public notice. SpaceX’s Starlink said on its website homepage Wednesday that it was making service free for the first month in areas affected by Helene. Spectrum said it committed $250,000 in cash contributions to hurricane relief efforts and opened nearly 90,000 out-of-home WiFi access points across affected states. The access points will be available to all users at no cost through Oct. 7, Spectrum said. The company is also offering $750,000 worth of public service announcements for free to charities assisting with hurricane relief. Sinclair Broadcast launched a fundraising partnership with the Salvation Army at sinclaircares.com and pledged to donate up to $50,000, Sinclair said.