As part of SES' proposed $3.1 billion purchase of Intelsat (see 2404300048), the two are asking the FCC Space Bureau to transfer all of Intelsat's FCC authorizations to SES. In a series of applications posted Friday, the two said the proposed deal would result in "a more dynamic multi-orbit satellite operator with the ability to offer innovative and enhanced services to commercial and U.S. Government customers," and greater competition as New SES "will be better positioned to vigorously compete" with legacy geostationary orbit operators and emerging low earth orbit players.
The one-year window for qualified low-power TV stations to apply for Class A status under the provisions of the Low-Power Protection Act opened Friday, and will stretch until May 30, a Media Bureau public notice said Friday in docket 23-126. The window is open to stations that broadcast a minimum of 18 hours daily, carry three hours per week of local programming, are located in markets of 95,000 households or fewer, and met all those requirements 90 days before the LPPA’s approval on Jan. 5, 2023. Fewer than 30 rural stations are expected to qualify. LPTV broadcaster Radio Communication Corporation is challenging the FCC order implementing the LPPA in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit (see 2405230040).
The FCC should treat public TV stations differently from commercial stations in its locally originated content proceeding (see 2403120071), America’s Public Television Stations and PBS said during a call with an aide to Commissioner Geoffrey Starks Thursday, according to an ex parte filing in docket 24-14. The proposal prioritizing applications from broadcasters that originate local content “should not shift the long-standing understanding of localism as ‘issue-responsive’ programming,” the filing said. The NPRM proposes defining locally originated content as created within or very close to a station’s market, and that would exclude much public TV content, the filing said. The proposed definitions “do not align with the inherently local, community-responsive programming of public television stations, especially the programming of state and regional networks and local stations that engage in station collaborations,” the filing said. “Public television stations, which are locally owned and locally operated, are inherently local.” The FCC’s local content proceeding could have implications for what content is considered local in future proceedings, PBS and APTS said.
The State E-rate Coordinators’ Alliance reported on a series of meetings at the FCC with aides to Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel and others to offer advice on the commission’s proposed $200 million cybersecurity pilot program for schools and libraries (see 2405160076). Commissioners will vote at their open meeting Thursday. “Our underlying premise, based on our day-to-day, year-after-year experiences working with applicants, is that they need to be informed of all the fundamental program requirements before they begin the application process, to flourish and succeed with the new pilot,” the alliance said in a filing posted Friday in docket 23-234. Potential negative effects “can be mitigated by addressing all the program parameters in the final Report and Order, at the beginning of the pilot, rather than relying on supplemental clarifications being issued later,” the group said. Also seeking tweaks were the Schools, Health & Libraries Broadband Coalition, the American Library Association, the Consortium for School Networking and Common Sense. “It is not immediately apparent that there is a need for funding floors or caps since this is a pilot program in which the Commission retains the authority to choose which applicants are going to receive funding,” the groups said. They said it’s also not clear how the FCC will choose which pilots to fund.
Dahua Technology and IPVM remain at odds on Dahua USA’s request for confidentially on its compliance plan with FCC supply chain security rules (see 2310130042). Dahua provided additional information last week, which it said makes IPVM’s objections “now largely moot in light of” the “voluntary disclosures.” Parts of the plan remain redacted. While Dahua released some previously redacted information, questions remain, IPVM said in a filing posted Thursday in docket 21-232. Among the information redacted is a list “of the entities in Dahua USA's new control structure,” IPVM said: “We cannot be certain if this is similar to the corporate ownership Dahua has just disclosed. Dahua provides no further justification for this redaction, meaning it hinges on the same basis of vague commercial confidentiality it has now abandoned for other information.”
Don't expect traditional methods of protecting radio astronomy from spectral interference to work when it comes to supplemental coverage from space (SCS), according to radio astronomy interests. In comments last week (docket 23-65), radio astronomy advocates repeatedly warned that SCS service poses a significant interference risk. Multiple parties said SCS service is too new to justify emergency calling requirements. The FCC's SCS framework order adopted in March (see 2403140050) included a Further NPRM on 911 and radio astronomy issues.
The FCC’s updated data breach notification rule “encapsulates the wrong way for the administrative state to approach rulemaking,” TechFreedom’s 6th U.S. Circuit Appeals Court amicus brief said Thursday in support of the five petitioners seeking to invalidate the rule as contrary to law (see 2402210026).
The FCC should include ship-to-aerostat transmissions in rules for the 70/80/90 GHz bands, Aeronet said in reply comments to a January Further NPRM (see 2401290032). The FNPRM asks about including fixed satellite service (FSS) earth stations in the light-licensing regime for the 70/80 GHz bands and was expanded to also inquire about aerostats -- airborne transmitters operating within a small area, below 1,000 feet of elevation.
An FCC draft NPRM proposing a host of changes to the low-power TV rules is expected to be approved unanimously at the commissioners' open meeting Thursday with few alterations from the draft version, agency and industry officials told us. LPTV broadcasters told us they view many of the proposals as ministerial “housekeeping,” and the LPTV Broadcasters Association and the Advanced Television Broadcasting Alliance want the item to seek comment on easing restrictions on the relocation of LPTV stations. LPTVBA President Frank “SuperFrank” Copsidas said proposals to impose filing requirements on LPTV stations similar to the rules for full-power stations are unfair because LPTV is a secondary service. “If the FCC wants to treat us like full-power stations, give us their protections,” Copsidas said.
The Senate Commerce Committee is eyeing additional changes to the Spectrum and National Security Act (S-4207) in hopes of jump-starting its prospects as a viable vehicle for resurrecting the FCC’s expired affordable connectivity program, lobbyists said in interviews. Committee leaders are hoping further revisions will allow them to raise S-4207 during a potential mid-June meeting, lobbyists told us. Senate Commerce pulled S-4207 from consideration twice last month, including fully postponing a May 16 executive meeting (see 2405160066). The Biden administration and FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel made a final call Friday for Congress to keep ACP running as the program’s time expired.