NTCA, the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners (NARUC) and other commenters told the FCC last week that they dislike a proposal to deregulate telephone access charges more now than they did five years ago, when the agency last sought comment (see 2008050030).
New questions in the FCC Enforcement Bureau’s previously routine equal employment opportunity (EEO) audit letters appear to be aimed at seeking out broadcaster diversity hiring programs and grievances against them.
Testing done in Colombia -- like previous testing conducted in Romania -- confirms that a non-geostationary orbit (NGSO) satellite system can protect geostationary orbit (GSO) system Ku-band downlinks even when using co-frequency beams, according to SpaceX. In a docket 25-157 filing posted Thursday, SpaceX recapped a meeting with the FCC Space Bureau, saying it will submit a full report of the Colombia testing soon. The company said the test results "deliver direct, real-world evidence" supporting the protection criteria that it proposed. SpaceX has petitioned the commission for a revision of U.S. spectrum-sharing methodology between NGSO and GSO fixed satellite service downlinks (see 2408120018).
Sinclair CEO Chris Ripley this week urged FCC Chairman Brendan Carr and acting Media Bureau Chief Erin Boone to set a specific date for an ATSC 1.0 sunset, according to an ex parte filing posted Thursday in docket 16-142. “The best way to spur the availability of more consumer devices is to provide certainty regarding a sunset,” the filing said. Issuing a prompt NPRM on ATSC 3.0 would allow the FCC to sunset 1.0 in the top 55 markets by February 2028, as NAB has proposed, it added. "ATSC 3.0 is a game-changing opportunity for broadcasters to diversify their revenue streams and ensure that they can continue to serve their viewers -- but time is of the essence.”
Comments are due Sept. 22, replies Oct. 21, in docket 17-169 on the FCC’s NPRM seeking input on updates to its slamming and truth-in-billing rules, according to a Federal Register notice released Thursday (see 2507240055). The NPRM was unanimously approved at the July FCC meeting, but Commissioner Anna Gomez said then that any updates should preserve consumer protection measures. Chairman Brendan Carr said at the meeting that while the agency has heard concerns that the rules impose unnecessary burdens on companies, it has received zero complaints about slamming in 2025.
The FCC is seeking nominations by Oct. 20 for six positions on the Universal Service Administrative Co. board, said a Thursday notice from the Wireline Bureau. Those positions, which have three-year terms, are representatives for commercial mobile radio service providers, incumbent local exchange carriers, cable providers, state consumer advocates, and libraries and schools participating in the USF.
The Wireless Infrastructure Association urged the FCC to move forward on a proposal in a January NPRM seeking comment on a voluntary, negotiation-based process to transition 10 MHz in the 900 MHz band to broadband (see 2505190025). The proposal is consistent with FCC Chairman Brendan Carr’s "Build America Agenda,” and the record “shows overwhelming support for the proposal,” said a filing Thursday in docket 24-99. “This proposal is particularly timely as the nation looks at ways to improve the reliability and capacity of utility networks to power revolutions in AI technologies.”
The C-band Relocation Payment Clearinghouse has shut down, the FCC Wireless Bureau said Thursday. The clearinghouse submitted a final written certification of completion on Wednesday, indicating that it had finished its administrative duties, the notice said. The bureau approved the clearinghouse ending operations in June (see 2506040046).
A recent decision by the 6th U.S. Circuit Appeals Court upholding the FCC's 2024 data breach notification rules (see 2508140052) likely has broader implications for the agency, lawyers at Cooley wrote Wednesday. “The decision’s expansive reading of Section 201(b) [of the Communications Act] suggests that the FCC’s power extends beyond the actual provision of service to cover all ‘practices’ in support of providing the service, which could lead to more aggressive regulation in the future,” they wrote.
Members of the North American Spectrum Alliance spoke with FCC staff about the need for the agency to look more closely at upper C-band issues, according to a filing Wednesday in docket 25-59. The FCC is examining an auction of the spectrum, which carriers see as well-suited for full-power licensed use.