The FCC Media Bureau reaffirmed its dismissal of a petition from Alabama's Athens State University for a construction permit for a new low-power FM station. In a letter Thursday, the bureau said its staff correctly dismissed the application for not meeting co-channel and first-adjacent channel spacing requirements. It also rejected ASU's request for a waiver based on typographical errors in the application. "We agree that providing new locally-originated service is a laudable goal, however, the loss of LPFM service to Athens, unfortunately, was caused by Petitioner’s mistake, not by an erroneous or harsh Bureau approach to its Application," the bureau said.
Railroads face a growing need for spectrum in light of requests from the National Transportation Safety Board and Federal Railroad Administration but have had difficulty identifying additional spectrum to use, the Association of American Railroads said in a meeting with FCC Wireless Bureau Chief Joel Taubenblatt and staff. AAR explained “the railroads’ current use of spectrum in the 160-161 MHz, 219.5-222 MHz, 450 MHz, 900 MHz, and 6 GHz bands,” a filing posted Thursday in docket 24-99 said. The group discussed “how the railroads continue to improve their technology and use their existing spectrum more efficiently.”
Liberty Latin America agreed to pay a $100,000 fine and implement a compliance plan to settle an investigation of FCC rule violations by subsidiaries Liberty Mobile in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The fine was tied to a 2023 data breach, the FCC Enforcement Bureau said Thursday. The affiliates failed to “reasonably protect the confidentiality of customer information,” file in a timely way a report in the FCC’s data breach reporting portal and “abide by the conditions of a Commission order, in connection with a data breach of a third-party vendor,” the bureau said.
The House Appropriations Committee continued debating Thursday afternoon the Financial Services Subcommittee’s FY 2025 funding bill, which increases the FCC’s annual allocation to $416 million and decreases the FTC’s annual funding to $388.7 million (see 2406050067). Communications policy lobbyists said panel Democrats might attempt removing riders from the measure that bar the FCC from using funding for implementing its net neutrality and digital discrimination orders, but they hadn’t sought votes on such amendments at our deadline.
Federal and industry officials raised concerns about the impact of pole attachments and replacements as states prepare for NTIA's broadband, equity, access and deployment (BEAD) program. In addition, make-ready processes and economic incentives can complicate efforts to expand high-speed internet -- and rules aren’t always enough, a panel of state officials said during a Schools, Health & Libraries Broadband (SHLB) Coalition symposium Thursday.
The FCC Media Bureau admonished Legacy Broadcasting's KMLU Columbia, Louisiana, for failing to include nondiscriminatory language in its advertising sales agreements. In a letter to Legacy dated Wednesday, the bureau said there's no evidence the station or the Greenwood, Mississippi, licensee engaged in discriminatory behavior in ad sales, so the lack of nondiscrimination clauses doesn't warrant a fine. However, failure to include such language in future ad agreements could result in fines, it added.
The FCC Public Safety Bureau sought comment on Wednesday on an ATIS petition for reconsideration of the agency’s January outage reporting order (see 2401250064). Comments are due June 24, replies July 5, in docket 24-341. ATIS sought clarification of the decision codifying the FCC practice of waiving network outage reporting system filings that would be due while the disaster information reporting system is activated. ATIS also sought clarification and reconsideration of the order’s requirements on submitting a final DIRS report. ATIS urged “reconsideration of the requirement that final reports include the estimated dates by which all issues will be resolved” given that “it may not be possible for providers to accurately determine such information within the 24-hour window provided.”
Shure executives briefed aides to FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel and Commissioner Brendan Carr about spectrum needs of wireless mic users. The executives recently provided the same update for staff from the Office of Engineering and Technology and Wireless Bureau and the other three commissioners (see 2406050011). “We discussed the increasing demand for wireless microphone audio technologies … for professional users in the American music, theater, sports, broadcasting and film industries, among other sectors that rely on high-quality professional wireless microphone operations,” a filing posted Wednesday in docket 14-166 said: “It is more and more difficult to meet the wireless audio needs of professional productions and events in those industries.”
The FCC Wednesday notified certified spectrum access system administrators in the citizens broadband service band that they are now permitted to implement changes to the existing aggregate interference model used to protect federal operations in the band. Among the changes, SAS administrators may now assume an 80% time division duplex activity factor and 20% network loading factor for each CBRS device in the aggregate interference calculation, said a notice from the Wireless Bureau and Office of Engineering and Technology. Administrators may use median irregular terrain model terrain dependent propagation loss “using reliability and confidence factors of 0.5 -- to calculate the aggregate received power levels” within a protection area. The FCC urged administrators to submit a demonstration of their ability to implement the new testing parameters in docket 15-319. NTIA approved the changes in a letter to the FCC posted Wednesday. “The changes outlined … will expand Internet access to more people across the country,” said NTIA Administrator Alan Davidson: “They could not have been implemented without the collaboration of the Navy and our ongoing coordination with the FCC.” The change will expand use of the band to tens of millions of Americans, said FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel. “The CBRS dynamic spectrum sharing framework is already fertile ground for wireless innovation, and through collaboration with [DOD], NTIA, and stakeholders, we are expanding opportunities for reliable spectrum access while also ensuring that federal incumbents remain protected,” she said. The changes authorize service to approximately 72 million more POPs and expand the total unencumbered CBRS area to roughly 240 million POPs nationwide, the agencies said. CBRS is a prime example of how industry and government can coordinate on spectrum, Ira Keltz, deputy chief of the FCC’s Office of Engineering and Technology said Wednesday at the International Symposium on Advanced Radio Technologies (ISART) conference in Denver. When CBRS started, the initial exclusion zones were “huge” and would have excluded 75% of POPs, he said. NTIA, working with engineers, was able to reduce the size of the zones so that CBRS made more sense, industry was willing to invest, and the Navy felt comfortable that its radars would be protected, Keltz said. “It just really comes down to people being open-minded,” he said. Derek Khlopin, NTIA deputy associate administrator, noted the work to make CBRS work better. “These improvements we’ve made have been phenomenal,” he said, also at the ISART conference. He credited the Navy for its willingness to work with the NTIA and the FCC. “With little ‘greenfield’ spectrum available yet ever-increasing demand for spectrum-driven utilizations, sharing allows more efficient use of limited spectrum resources,” emailed Richard Bernhardt, vice president-spectrum and industry at the Wireless ISP Association: The development “will provide more predictability and allow for approximately 72 million additional people to be covered by CBRS without having to move or change power due to Federal operations.”
The FCC Wireless Bureau on Tuesday approved revised performance plans by Bristol Bay Cellular Partnership (BBCP), TelAlaska Cellular and Windy City Cellular under the Alaska Plan. BBCP’s revised plan commits to providing a minimum of 10/2 Mbps service to 5,454 Alaskans and offering 1,277 customers with 25/15 Mbps 4G LTE, said a bureau public notice. TelAlaska committed to upgrade many of its 2G and 3G areas to 4G, the order added. In Nome, “it commits to upgrade to 4G LTE at a minimum of 10/1 Mbps.” Windy City’s revised plan upgrades customers on Adak Island from 2G to 4G, the bureau said.