The U.S. has made “significant progress” on getting fast Internet service to rural areas, but “the broadband deployment and adoption gaps” remain “significant,” the FCC said in an update on rural broadband released Wednesday. Nearly 19 million rural Americans lack access to fixed broadband of at least 3 Mbps downstream and 768 kbps up, the commission said in its update to the 2009 rural broadband report. That population accounts for nearly three-quarters of the nation’s broadband “gap,” the report said. “Close to three out of ten rural Americans -- 28.2 percent -- lack access to fixed broadband at 3 Mbps/768 kbps or faster, a percentage that is more than nine times as large as the 3.0 percent that lack access in non-rural areas."
Democrats and Republicans voiced deep philosophical disagreements at a hearing Wednesday on FCC reform proposals designed to rein in the agency’s rules and conditions on deals. The House Communications Subcommittee did find agreement on some areas, including removing the prohibition on commissioners meeting privately. Subcommittee Chairman Greg Walden, R-Ore., circulated a discussion draft Friday that’s spurred significant debate (CD June 22 p1).
GENEVA -- Differences have emerged in ITU-R over how to respond to a proposal for a new International Special Committee on Radio Interference (CISPR) database that would be used to set emissions limits on electronic devices, according to letters between the two organizations. Past CISPR work on power line telecommunications (PLT), which a representative recently said resulted in no solution after 10 years of work, does not inspire confidence, said John Shaw, chairman of the reporting group on PLT issues in the ITU-R study group on the broadcasting service.
The FCC has effectively paused its AllVid proceeding, holding off finishing a rulemaking notice proposing to make all multichannel video programming distributors connect to consumer electronics sold at retail, said agency and industry officials watching the work. In what represents another new approach to the proceeding, industry officials said the Media Bureau and office of Chairman Julius Genachowski seem content for now to let CE companies and pay-TV providers work out more deals to integrate programming and Internet connectivity with various devices. That new approach was on display last week at the Cable Show, in public comments from bureau Chief Bill Lake and Genachowski aide Sherrese Smith (CD June 16 p2), said CE and cable officials who heard those remarks.
The FCC should give native tribes priority in allocating and licensing spectrum, create a special “Native Nations Broadband Fund” and take on a “tribal-centric” view of economic development, Native American groups said in comments in docket 11-41. The National Congress of American Indians, Native Telecom Coalition for Broadband, National Tribal Telecommunications Association, American Library Association and Alexicon Telecommunications Consulting endorsed some form of a broadband fund for tribes. “The FCC must take extraordinary measures to provide parity of communications service with non-Native communities,” the Tribal Telecom Association said in a joint filing with the Gila River Telecommunications Association. “Since the passage of the 1996 Telecom Act, only three Native governments have attained full regulatory self-provisioning [eligible telecommunications carrier] status.”
None of the charges lobbed at AT&T by opponents of its buy of T-Mobile are surprising or beyond what the company expected before announcing the deal in March, AT&T General Counsel Wayne Watts said Tuesday. Watts met with reporters the day after the final filing deadline in the AT&T/T-Mobile merger docket. The carrier answered critics more formally June 10 in a filing at the commission (CD June 13 p1).
The FCC issued an interim order that it says will help prevent Lifeline subscribers from receiving multiple subsidies. The order has been ready since last month but was stalled by Commissioners Mignon Clyburn and Michael Copps, who fought over the notice provisions (CD June 14 p2). As expected, the order automatically cancels extra Lifeline subscriptions and divides customers up amongst eligible telecommunications carriers (ETC) in the various states. The new allotment system will take immediate effect in Tennessee and Florida, the two states with the most pronounced Lifeline problems. As staff reviews the process, more states will be subject to the de-enrollment/allotment rules over the next several months, an FCC official said.
Following the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit’s ruling earlier this month (CD June 12 p4) in Cablevision v. FCC upholding much of a 2010 program access order, AT&T and Verizon asked the commission to act quickly on their pending complaints over access to Madison Square Garden Network’s HD feeds. “In light of the court’s ruling in Cablevision, there are only two issues remaining in this proceeding,” counsel for AT&T wrote in a Monday letter. “Whether defendants have rebutted the presumption that their selective withholding of MSG HD and MSG+ HD has the purpose or effect of hindering competition; and … whether a ruling in favor of AT&T would violate the First Amendment in this case.” Those issues have been fully briefed and the commission should act soon to resolve the complaint, it said.
The uses of federal funds by public radio stations vary and not all stations keep proper documentation that itemizes grant funding from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, a Government Accountability Office report said. The report on public radio’s federal funding stemmed from different requests from Texas Republican Reps. Joe Barton and Michael Burgess, Republican Reps. Darrell Issa of California, Cliff Stearns of Florida and Doug Lamborn of Colorado. Barton and Burgess’s letter seeking the information last year (CD Nov 19 p9) said it was out of concern that “the use of appropriated taxpayer dollars for the production of content could inappropriately involve the government in the promulgation of particular viewpoints and the silencing of others, especially since many taxpayers may not share the editorial views of NPR."
NTIA, set to publish the second round of broadband data in August, understands there’s been interest in collecting broadband pricing data, said Anne Neville, program director of State Broadband Data and Development Grant Program. The reality is pricing often changes frequently so there’s no easy apple-to-apple comparison, she told the Broadband Breakfast Club on Tuesday. Combined with the cost of reviewing and publishing data, she said data collecting, maintaining and validating is expensive. NTIA hasn’t received any proposal to collect pricing data, she noted. If any third party has an idea of how to “marry data with pricing,” they can do so, Neville said.