The FCC Technology Advisory Council approved reports from its three working groups on Tuesday at the body's final meeting under its former charter. The reports weren't immediately available. It was the first TAC meeting since December (see 2412190065), when former Chairman Dean Brenner announced he was leaving. A replacement hasn't been named since his departure in January. TAC will continue under a new charter.
Most commenters emphasized the importance of flexibility and developing rules that will accommodate change in comments on a next-generation 911 Further NPRM that commissioners approved 4-0 in March (see 2503270042). Initial comments were due Monday in docket 21-479. The FNPRM proposes updates to the agency’s 911 reliability rules, extending those that cover legacy 911 networks to service providers that control or operate critical pathways and components in NG911 networks.
Broadcasters called for the FCC to save their industry by immediately eliminating the national TV ownership cap in comments filed in docket 17-318 by Monday’s deadline. Meanwhile, MVPD groups, labor unions, public interest groups and conservative entities Newsmax and the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) disputed the FCC’s authority to alter the cap and said doing so would hurt localism, retransmission consent rates and journalism.
Ahead of Thursday’s meeting, FCC commissioners approved three of the items that were expected to get votes. Among those approved was a notice of inquiry that considers revising how the FCC examines competition in its Telecom Act Section 706 reports to Congress. Commissioners have also already approved an NPRM launching a comprehensive review of the agency's rules on business data services (BDS) and a notice on modernizing the disaster information reporting system (DIRS) (see 2508040048). The FCC posted a deletion notice and press releases Tuesday.
Emergency Alert System Test Reporting System (ETRS) Form One filings are due Oct. 3, said the FCC Public Safety Bureau in a public notice Monday. The ETRS is open for filings, it said. Form One “includes identifying and background information such as EAS designation, EAS monitoring assignments, facility location, equipment type, contact information, and other relevant data.”
The FCC Wireline Bureau on Monday released a list of U.S. counties where conditional forbearance from the obligation to offer Lifeline-supported voice service applies. Under the commission’s 2016 Lifeline order (see 1807230027), the "forbearance applies only to the Lifeline voice obligation of eligible telecommunications carriers (ETCs) that are designated for purposes of receiving both high-cost and Lifeline support" and not to Lifeline-only ETCs, the bureau said. The 2016 order established the forbearance "in targeted areas where certain competitive conditions are met,” and the FCC “directed the Bureau to release a yearly public notice announcing the counties in which the competitive conditions are met.”
The Rural Wireless Association fired back at Verizon and UScellular arguments that the FCC should approve their proposed spectrum deal (see 2507230030). Replies were due Friday in docket 25-192. Last week, RWA and other groups filed a challenge to an FCC Wireless Bureau order approving T-Mobile’s buy of wireless assets from UScellular, which is exiting the business (see 2507110045).
Operators of tolling systems won't be affected by NextNav's proposal to reconfigure the 902-928 MHz band to allow a “terrestrial complement” to GPS for positioning, navigation and timing services, according to a study that the company filed at the FCC. It supplements a Brattle Group report that NextNav filed previously (see 2507180034).
The already-high USF contribution factor is expected to rise, based on a Friday filing at the FCC by the Universal Service Administrative Co. The factor is projected to increase from 36% in Q3 to 39.3% in Q4. Congressional leaders recently relaunched a bipartisan working group to study a USF legislative revamp (see 2508010051), but experts warned Monday that addressing USF won’t be easy.
Upcoming FCC items on revamping emergency alerting and outage reporting are expected to be approved unanimously at Thursday’s open meeting, while a direct final rule item on eliminating broadcast regulations is likely to draw a dissent from FCC Commissioner Anna Gomez, industry and FCC officials told us.