President-elect Donald Trump said Sunday night he will name Republican FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr as permanent chairman when he takes office Jan. 20, as expected. Communications sector officials and lobbyists have long pointed to Carr as the prohibitive favorite to take over the gavel if Trump won the election. Carr in part has benefited from strong ties to SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, who will play a role via Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency in recommending a potentially major structural revamp of federal agencies. Musk recently spoke in favor of Carr’s elevation to the chairmanship in conversations with members of Trump’s team, lobbyists told us.
Oppositions to the reconsideration petition that the Texas Coalition of Cities filed in May on the FCC's "all-in" video service pricing order are due Nov. 18, according to a correction in Wednesday's Federal Register. Replies are due Nov. 29. Oppositions and replies should be filed in docket 23-203. The petitioners are seeking clarification that payments used for capital costs of public, educational or governmental facilities that are required by a franchise agreement don't count as franchise fees.
The FCC on Thursday released a small-entities compliance guide on wireless emergency alerts, explaining changes commissioners adopted 13 months ago (see 2310190056). The changes are aimed at “making WEA more accessible and enabling WEA to provide more personalized alerts,” the guide said.
The Association of Public-Safety Communications Officials met with FCC Public Safety Bureau staff to discuss templates for wireless emergency alerts, said a filing Wednesday in docket 15-91. “The Bureau proposed two types of WEA templates for 9-1-1 outages, a static version and a fillable version that can be amended to include certain outage-specific information,” the filing said: “APCO expressed a preference for WEA templates for 9-1-1 outages that can be customized to include critical information such as the location of the outage, an alternative method to reach 9-1-1, and an embedded URL.”
The FCC Wireless Bureau on Thursday granted five more licenses in the 900 MHz broadband segment to PDV Spectrum. All the licenses are in Texas. The FCC approved an order in 2020 reallocating a 6 MHz swath in the band for broadband, while maintaining 4 MHz for narrowband operations (see 2005130057).
FCC and Alaska regulators will review Liberty Broadband's spinoff of GCI announced this week (see 2411130025), Liberty emailed us Wednesday. Charter Communications' purchase of GCI-less Liberty isn't expected to require FCC approval.
During a Thursday Incompas virtual event, communications industry lawyers offered few clues about which lawmakers will fill vacant top GOP slots on the House and Senate Communications subcommittees, but CEO Chip Pickering forecast substantial leadership continuity on both chambers’ Commerce committees. Pickering and lawyers who spoke at the event, meanwhile, saw limited prospects during the lame-duck session that Congress would advance a spectrum legislative package or funding for the FCC’s lapsed affordable connectivity program and Secure and Trusted Communications Networks Reimbursement Program.
The FCC’s draft order on creating a standardized process for authorizing content-originating FM boosters necessary for geotargeted radio ads is expected to be unanimously approved during the commissioners' Nov. 21 open meeting, industry and agency officials told us.
The submarine cable rules rewrite NPRM on the FCC's Nov. 21 meeting agenda (see 2410310048) will likely see resistance from subsea cable operators, who question proposals on shorter license terms, subsea cable experts told us. However, one said a 5-0 approval of the draft NPRM is likely. It's less clear whether the next FCC will make draft rules from the NPRM a priority, the expert added.
Three former Republican FCC commissioners agreed Thursday that the Trump administration will likely focus on making more spectrum available for 5G and 6G, but conceded that the bands targeted by wireless carriers won’t be easy to address. Harold Furchtgott-Roth, director of the Hudson Institute's Center for the Economics of the Internet, joined Cooley’s Robert McDowell and Mike O’Rielly, now a consultant, during a Hudson forum.