The FCC should “promptly” release an NPRM indicating its preliminary conclusions about an ATSC 3.0 transition date, said Pearl TV Executive Director Anne Schelle during a meeting last week with an aide to Commissioner Olivia Trusty. “Each quarter that passes without a definitive signal and an NPRM” from the FCC “increases the risk of extending the timeline” for the transition “by another year, as development and manufacturing processes are tied to seasonal and retail schedules,” said a presentation included with the ex parte filing in docket 16-142. Without an NPRM pointing to a date, “manufacturers are likely to adopt a wait-and-see approach,” Pearl TV said, adding that TVs have an 18-month development cycle. “All parts of the ecosystem -- from [consumer electronics] manufacturers to developers of converter boxes to retailers and smaller market broadcasters -- need the certainty of a set transition date and volume of devices to focus attention on the last stage of the transition to ATSC 3.0,” the filing said.
The FCC Media Bureau is seeking comment on a petition for declaratory ruling on whether a homeowners association's (HOA) rules against rooftop antennas violate FCC regulations, said a public notice Friday. The matter concerns a dispute between Wintergarden, Florida, resident Brian Smith and the Orangetree of Lake County HOA. According to filings from Smith, the HOA ordered him to remove his rooftop TV antenna and replace it with one installed in his attic. Smith said the HOA’s policy violates the FCC’s rule for over-the-air reception devices, which “prohibits governmental and nongovernmental restrictions that impair the ability of antenna users to install, maintain, or use” such devices, the notice said. Comments are due Aug. 11, replies Aug. 26.
The FCC Wireline Bureau last week approved T-Mobile’s buy of a stake in fiber-based provider Metronet as part of a joint venture with investment firm KKR. The proposed deal was announced a year ago (see 2407240020). The approval came after T-Mobile agreed to eliminate diversity, equity and inclusion programs that the Trump administration targeted (see 2507090034).
T-Mobile asked the FCC to block the access of outside counsel for Verizon to confidential information in the docket on T-Mobile’s proposed buy of wireless assets from UScellular, which FCC approved Friday (see 2507110045). Wiley’s Joshua Turner and Sara Baxenberg filed last week seeking access to the information. “Verizon has not filed an application, petition to deny, or material comments in this proceeding and the time for doing so has long ago expired,” T-Mobile said in a filing posted Friday in docket 24-286. “Given that over 9 months have passed since the filing of the applications and nearly half a year has passed since the deadline for filing petitions and/or comments, there is no basis to believe that affording Verizon’s counsel access to T-Mobile’s [confidential information] at this late hour would serve any permitted purpose.”
The FCC Wireline Bureau sought comment by Aug. 25 on a multi-day May outage that prevented customers from making and receiving calls and sending text messages over Cellcom’s network. The outage apparently affected calls and texts to 911 and was caused by a cyber incident, the bureau said Friday. It asked for information about the Wisconsin-based carrier's handling of the outage, its impact and how problems were communicated to customers. Comments should be filed in docket 25-218.
CTIA officials met with an aide to FCC Chairman Brendan Carr urging the agency to take the next steps toward an auction of upper C-band spectrum. Carr has promised to move quickly on spectrum and put a notice of inquiry on the upper C band on the agenda for his first meeting as chairman in February (see 2502050057). CTIA noted that the FCC once again has auction authority following the enactment of the reconciliation package (see 2507070045).
The FCC seemingly has moved away from shortened license terms in its pending submarine cable rules rewrite, we're told. The Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs is reviewing the FCC's proposed rewrite, according to the OIRA website. All agency regulations now go through OIRA review as of this spring (see 2505090004). The commissioners unanimously adopted a subset cable NPRM in November (see 2411210006).
The FCC Wireline Bureau approved two companies' applications using the commission’s streamlined procedures for interconnected VoIP numbering authorization, said a Friday notice. The companies were Ahoi and Cornfield Voice.
Senate Communications Subcommittee ranking member Ben Ray Lujan, D-N.M., and Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., are urging Republican FCC Commissioner Olivia Trusty to “insist that the FCC conduct” its review of Skydance’s proposed $8 billion acquisition of Paramount Global “with the utmost transparency, including holding a full Commission vote on any order to approve the merger.” Some observers believe Paramount recently agreed to a $16 million settlement of President Donald Trump's lawsuit against CBS, which challenged its editing of a 60 Minutes interview last October with former Vice President Kamala Harris during the election, to ease the path to FCC approval of the deal. Paramount has refuted those claims (see 2507020053).
Since its 2024 net neutrality rules have never gone into effect, the FCC Wireline Bureau said Friday it's restoring sections of its rules to the language they would use absent the net neutrality order. Chairman Brendan Carr said the move was part of his "Delete" agenda and called it "the latest step the FCC is taking to follow the Trump Administration’s effort to usher in prosperity through deregulation." The agency said the moves axed 41 rules or "utility-style burdens."