The FCC Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau on Monday delayed for a year some of the requirements of the agency's February 2024 Telephone Consumer Protection Act consent order (see 2402160048). Originally set to take effect Friday, the requirements were delayed until April 11, 2026.
The FCC on Monday announced lower prices to check the agency’s reassigned numbers database. The agency said it cut the costs of all existing subscription tiers by 20% and added two new tiers “to better meet industry needs.” The database is “designed to prevent a consumer from getting calls intended for someone who previously held their phone number,” it said: “Subscribers use the database to determine whether a telephone number may have been reassigned so they can avoid calling the wrong consumer.” The changes should “make it easier for callers to check large volumes of numbers before calling them, potentially reducing misdirected calls from reaching consumers.”
Anuvu is seeking a de novo review before the FCC's administrative law judge of a Wireless Bureau decision upholding a rejection of Anuvu's C-band relocation claims for reimbursement. In a docket 21-333 petition posted Monday, Anuvu said last month's bureau order upholding a C-band relocation payment clearinghouse decision that denied part of Anuvu's reimbursement claims doesn't acknowledge or address the substantive legal argument Anuvu raised.
The FCC Wireline Bureau denied petitions for reconsideration of agency rules for the Enhanced Alternative Connect America Cost Model (A-CAM) program. The bureau clarified in response to a petition by Blooston Rural Carriers that the submission of cybersecurity plans is “an iterative process” that provides some flexibility in meeting requirements. The bureau rejected other requested changes.
The FCC on Monday granted a waiver of the one-year downward revision deadline to revise the 2023 FCC Form 499-A filed by CNET System and a waiver of the 45-day revision deadline for the May 2024 499-Q Granade filed. Both small VoIP providers, CNET is located in Wisconsin and Granade in Alabama. The FCC Wireline Bureau and Office of the Managing Director noted that the agency usually doesn’t approve such waivers.
The FCC deactivated the disaster information reporting system and mandatory disaster response initiative for counties in Kentucky, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan and Tennessee affected by severe weather and flooding, according to a public notice Friday. "The Commission appreciates the cooperation of all the communications providers that submitted data to DIRS in the aftermath of the April 2025 Severe Weather."
NAB on Monday sought reconsideration of an FCC order that expanded the parts of the 6 GHz band where new very-low-power devices are permitted to operate without coordination (see 2412110040). The FCC declined to set aside 55 MHz as a “safe haven” for electronic newsgathering operations, as NAB requested (see 2410290052). Commissioners approved the order 5-0 in December.
LAS VEGAS -- Broadcasters are optimistic about ownership deregulation and concerned about tariffs, while NAB is looking to broaden the NAB Show’s appeal, according to speeches and interviews at NAB Show 2025, which kicked off Saturday and runs until Wednesday. The show is set to feature almost no FCC presence compared with previous years, as only Commissioner Anna Gomez planned to attend.
The FCC's 2024 foreign-sponsored content rules are potentially "problematic" in how they put most advertising into the category of "leases," U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit Judge Gregory Katsas said at oral argument Monday. NAB is challenging the rules (docket 24-1296) (see 2501220078). During oral argument, the group repeatedly emphasized that there's a difference between leases and ad time. Meanwhile, Judge Karen Henderson seemed skeptical of NAB arguments that the order caught it unaware.
The FCC posted Monday draft items for the commission’s April 28 open meeting (see 2504040070), including rules for the lower 37 GHz band that would require nonfederal users to obtain a nationwide nonexclusive license before registering sites in the band. The decades-old geostationary orbit (GSO)/non-geostationary orbit (NGSO) spectrum-sharing regime in the 10.7-12.7, 17.3-18.6 and 19.7-20.2 GHz bands is “the single most constraining regulatory requirement on NGSO satellite systems currently deploying at breakneck speed,” the FCC said in a notice proposing to revisit those sharing rules.