The FCC’s final order addressing rules for the AWS-3 reauction, approved 3-0 by commissioners Thursday adds several sentences on tribal sovereignty to a section denying a tribal priority window for the auction. Commissioner Anna Gomez said Thursday she had asked for the language (see 2507240055). Gomez voted to approve the order with a partial concurrence. The order was posted Friday.
The FCC released on Friday the pole attachment item approved by commissioners 3-0 on Thursday (see 2507240048). The final item includes written statements by FCC Chairman Brendan Carr and Commissioner Olivia Trusty.
Rep. Glenn Ivey, D-Md., on Friday accused FCC Chairman Brendan Carr of abusing his power by pushing Verizon and other companies to eliminate diversity, equity and inclusion programs to win approval of transactions before the commission (see 2505160050). Verizon’s proposed buy of Frontier was held up as Carr sought assurance on DEI (see 2505160024). Ivey spoke during a Multicultural Media, Telecom and Internet Council (MMTC) conference.
Lawmakers and others are accusing the FCC of being involved in corruption and seeking to chill free speech after the agency’s approval of Skydance's $8 billion purchase of Paramount Global and the commission's retention of an open news distortion proceeding against CBS.
FCC Chairman Brendan Carr announces retirements: Tia Cromwell from the Office of Media Relations; Stacy Weiss, Enforcement Bureau; and Ben Bartolome, Office of General Counsel ...
A mobile billboard truck condemning Dish Network as being “woke” was parked near FCC headquarters Thursday morning in the hours before the agency’s open meeting. Conservative group Consumers’ Research was labeled as the billboard’s sponsor. “Woke Alert. Dish Network is Pushing a Woke Agenda while Asking Conservatives for Favors,” the sign read, directing readers to WokeDishNetwork.com. The URL goes to a page on Consumers’ Research’s website, where it condemns Dish for the company’s diversity policies and CEO Charlie Ergen’s donations to Democratic Party campaigns. The FCC is currently investigating Dish’s parent company EchoStar over its use of spectrum and failure to fulfill buildout promises to the agency. In June, President Donald Trump reportedly interceded with FCC Chairman Brendan Carr on Ergen’s behalf (see 2506160039). Asked about the investigation Thursday, Carr said he “is still open-minded on a path forward” but the status quo is “unacceptable.” Dish is “sitting on” a “tremendous amount of spectrum” that isn’t being effectively utilized, Carr said. Consumers’ Research is known for litigating for conservative causes and has repeatedly challenged the legality of the FCC’s USF fund. The organization doesn’t disclose its donors, but DonorsTrust in 2022 named Consumers’ Research as among recipients of its grants totaling $242 million. DonorsTrust is a donor-advised funding provider that supports conservative groups. “We share your commitment to protecting our nation’s constitutional liberties and strengthening civil society through private institutions rather than with government programs,” said its website.
FCC Commissioner Anna Gomez said any approval of Skydance Media’s purchase of Paramount Global should be done at the full commission level. Speaking Thursday with reporters after the agency's July meeting, Gomez said Chairman Brendan Carr “is quite cognizant of my request to do so.” The chairman’s office didn’t comment.
The FCC's 2022 quadrennial review will be "inspired" by the 8th U.S. Court of Appeals decision on the 2018 QR (see 2507230063), said FCC Chairman Brendan Carr in a news conference Thursday. Carr pointed to the court's analysis of statutory language as informing the FCC's review. The 8th Circuit ruled that the language requiring FCC quadrennial reviews allows the agency only to loosen rules that are no longer in the public interest, not expand existing rules. The decision's elimination of the top-four prohibition means the agency's QR inquiry can be narrower, he said. The agency "obviously has to move forward with the quad," Carr said.
The FCC’s efforts on the White House’s AI Action plan will involve a “team” principally run out of the Office of General Counsel, said Chairman Brendan Carr in a news conference Thursday. The agency will look at its authority to preempt state laws and proceed with “an open mind,” he added. The agency’s role will be “looking at ways that we can streamline or accelerate or potentially address barriers that may be in the way of the buildout of AI infrastructure.” Commissioner Anna Gomez said during her news conference Thursday that the Communications Act doesn't give the FCC authority over AI, and that the administration's actions against subsidizing the buildout of high-capacity fiber infrastructure will undermine the proliferation of AI. "What this administration is doing with the BEAD program is antithetical to the goals of this administration on AI," she said.
The FCC Wireless Bureau on Thursday reminded operators of autonomous vessels (AVs) to obtain a maritime mobile service identity, a nine-digit number that identifies radio stations in the maritime mobile service. The notice cited the “proliferation in recent years” of AVs. The vessels can make use of automatic identification system technology but to do so need to register for the nine-digit identity number, the bureau said.