NTIA proposed modifications to FCC rules that protect the Department of Commerce’s Table Mountain Field Site and Radio Quiet Zone, which is located north of Boulder, Colorado. The site is used to study the characteristics and propagation of electromagnetic radiation and spectrum coexistence in a real-world environment. “For frequencies of 15.7 GHz and above, the field strength limit should increase with frequency,” an undocketed filing posted Friday said. For those same frequencies, the field strength limit “should be defined as a spectrum density, of field strength (power) per megahertz instead of total signal power,” NTIA proposed. NTIA said it was similarly modifying its rules.
Competitive Carriers Association and Nex-Tech Wireless representatives met with an aide to FCC Commissioner Anna Gomez to discuss potential gaps in the agency’s broadband data collection, a filing posted Friday in docket 19-195 said. Nex-Tech discussed issues it saw as it collected data for the broadband maps. “In Kansas, the outdoor stationary 5G 7/1 Mbps mobile broadband layer of the most recent FCC national broadband map shows 63% of the state to be currently covered, whereas in-vehicle mobile coverage at 7/1 Mbps shows only 30% … covered,” the filing said: Even if the reported coverage were accurate, “this methodology would leave 70% of Kansas below even the 7/1 Mbps 5G bar for those using mobile phones while mobile.” The representatives warned about the implications “of overstated maps and a flawed challenge process” for “the success of the 5G Fund.”
The FCC on Friday approved waivers for equipment manufacturers Autotalks, Innowireless and Keysight Technologies, and automaker North American Subaru to launch cellular vehicle-to-everything operations in the upper 30 MHz of the 5.9 GHz band. The notice comes days after Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel circulated an order finalizing rules for C-V2X operations in the band (see 2407170042). The order imposes conditions approved for previous waiver recipients, as modified a year ago (see 2307050048). “All operations authorized pursuant to this waiver are limited to transportation and vehicle safety-related communications,” the order by the Wireless and Public Safety bureaus and Office of Engineering and Technology said.
The House Rules Committee plans a Monday meeting where it will consider whether to allow floor votes on proposed amendments to the Appropriations Committee-cleared FY 2025 FCC-FTC funding bill (HR-8773). These include proposals that would undo a ban on the FCC implementing an equity action plan and increase the FTC’s annual funding (see 2407100060). The underlying bill proposes boosting the FCC’s annual allocation to $416 million but includes riders barring the commission from implementing GOP-opposed net neutrality and digital discrimination orders (see 2406050067). Rep. Paul Gosar, R-Ariz., filed a late amendment barring the FCC from using its funding to administer or implement parts of Communications Act Section 706’s presidential war powers. Those powers let the president close any broadcast station or wireline communication facility for national security or defense reasons when “there exists war or a threat of war” or another national emergency. House Rules set a Monday deadline for lawmakers to file amendments to the Appropriations-approved Labor, Health and Human Services, Education and Related Agencies Subcommittee FY 2025 funding bill (HR-9029), which would eliminate advance CPB funding for FY 2027 (see 2406270059).
The FCC appeared to make only limited changes to an NPRM proposing industry-wide handset unlocking rules that commissioners approved 5-0 Thursday. The agency posted the NPRM Friday. The biggest change came in a paragraph on exceptions to the 60-day locking period that Commissioner Brendan Carr requested, as indicated Thursday (see 2407180037). “Should the rule permit any other exceptions to deter fraud including instances where individuals or groups illegally obtain devices and resell them to the public (i.e. handset trafficking)?” the notice now says: “For example, should lost or stolen phones also fall under an exception to the 60-day unlocking requirement?” The final order also notes concerns that Tango Networks and CS Hawthorn raised (see 2407160048). Only Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel and Commissioners Geoffrey Starks and Anna Gomez issued written statements attached to the NPRM. Comment deadlines will be set in an upcoming Federal Register notice.
The FCC should proceed with caution or reconsider entirely a proposal that imposes on the nine largest ISPs specific reporting requirements on their border gateway protocol (BGP) security practices, ISPs and industry groups said in comments posted through Thursday in docket 24-146 (see 2406060028). The Biden administration "supports properly implemented and narrowly constructed" BGP reporting requirements, NTIA said. "The FCC's action should be appropriately tailored to preserve the highly successful multistakeholder model of internet governance."
The global outage of Microsoft systems caused by a software update from cybersecurity company Crowdstrike grounded airplanes globally and affected some broadcasters and 911 systems but spared others, reports from multiple companies and state agencies said.
FCC staff changes: Wireline Bureau’s Lauren Garry ends her detail to Commissioner Brendan Carr’s office; Nese Guendelsberger, acting legal adviser-wireless to Commissioner Geoffrey Starks, returns to International Bureau; Anna Holland leaves Commissioner Anna Gomez’s office for National Institute on Aging; Flynn Rico-Johnson, ex-office of Rep. Doris Matsui, D-Calif., joins Starks’ office as policy adviser; Brian Phillips, ex-office of Rep. Yvette Clarke, D-N.Y., joins Office of Media Relations as deputy director; Troy Tanner shifts from Space Bureau to acting director-Office of International Affairs (see 2407180021); and retiring are: Carol Edwards, Office of the Managing Director; Paul Murray, Office of Engineering and Technology; Paul D'Ari, Wireless Bureau; and David Sieradzki, Public Safety Bureau.
Kathy Wallman, who served as chief of the FCC Common Carrier Bureau and deputy chief of the agency’s Cable Services Bureau in the 1990s, died of appendiceal cancer July 14. A Great Falls, Virginia, resident, she was 66. Wallman also chaired the FCC’s Public Safety National Coordination Committee. Prior to joining the FCC, Wallman was a partner at Arnold & Porter. After leaving the agency, Wallman worked in the Clinton White House and later founded Wallman Consulting, a strategic consulting firm specializing in technology, media and telecom. She also was a past board member of Public Knowledge and a former senior adviser to the Brattle Group. Survivors include her husband, Steven, and her sister, Margaret. Services will be held 11 a.m. Aug. 10 at St. Francis Episcopal Church in Great Falls. Contributions may be made to CANCollaborate, a nonprofit organization Wallman and her husband founded to develop collaborative projects in cancer research.
FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel announced Thursday that Troy Tanner, deputy chief of the Space Bureau, will serve as acting chief of the FCC Office of International Affairs. The position is considered critical as FCC work heats up in preparation for the next World Radiocommunication Conference. Tanner replaces Ethan Lucarelli, who died suddenly in May (see 2405150037). Lucarelli was the new office's first chief. A 14-year FCC veteran, Tanner previously served as deputy chief of the former International Bureau, and was formerly a lawyer at Bingham McCutchen and Swidler Berlin.