Lumen Technologies asked the FCC for authority to halt offering low-bandwidth interstate private line services and to grandfather current customers getting those services. That would mean existing customers can’t order new services or change or move the service they’re getting, and “only disconnects will be accepted,” said an undocketed filing Friday. Lumen said it notified existing customers of the service change in a letter sent Tuesday, which told them it would take effect June 1. The letter was attached to the filing.
The FCC has expanded the scope of its disaster reporting efforts related to severe weather in Kentucky to include portions of Illinois, Indiana, Michigan and Tennessee, said a public notice Thursday. A status report Friday showed 1.5% of cellsites in the affected area were down, and 9,166 cable and wireless subscribers were without service. One FM station was reported down.
The National Treasury Employees Union is seeking a preliminary injunction to block the White House’s order ending collective bargaining at numerous federal agencies, including the FCC. If the order proceeds, NTEU will “imminently lose two-thirds of the employees that it represents and more than half its revenue stream,” the union said in a motion filed Friday in the U.S. District Court for the D.C. Circuit. NTEU said some federal agencies have already halted payroll deductions for union dues requested by employees. The executive order goes against Congress’ intent when it authorized widespread collective bargaining for federal employees and is intended to make federal employees easier to fire, NTEU said.
T-Mobile is urging the FCC to hold off on instituting a text-to-988 georouting requirement, saying it could disrupt collaborations between wireless providers and the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline administrator. That view was expressed in docket 18-336 comments posted Friday, as the FCC is seeking input on 988 text georouting privacy issues (see 2503030002). The 988 call georouting order, which FCC commissioners approved in October, included an NPRM about text georouting (see 2410170026).
5G broadcast supporters say HC2’s petition to allow low-power TV stations to transmit in that standard and reach mobile devices could represent a lifeline for an LPTV industry in distress, while some critics say it appears to be aimed at allowing low-power TV owners to get out of the broadcast business.
DOD has floated a compromise to the wireless industry that vacates military-controlled bands to 420 MHz available for FCC auction while maintaining its grip on the 3.1-3.45 GHz band, the main battleground in Capitol Hill’s protracted talks on a compromise airwaves legislative package. DOD’s proposal, first reported by Punchbowl News, circulated as the Senate prepared to move on an amended version of the House-passed budget resolution (H. Con. Res. 14), which will provide a blueprint for a coming reconciliation package that Republicans hope to use to move spectrum legislation (see 2501290057).
FCC commissioners will consider a long-anticipated order on sharing in the 37 GHz band at their meeting April 28, Chairman Brendan Carr announced Friday. In addition, the commission will vote on satellite spectrum sharing and an item designed to crack down further on robocalls. Foreign ownership rules round out the agenda.
A Project Rise Partners purchase of Paramount Global would mean fair and balanced news coverage, representatives told FCC acting Media Bureau Chief Erin Boone and other staffers, according to a docket 24-275 filing posted Thursday. It recapped a meeting at which PRP -- chaired by Daphna Edwards Ziman, head of independent network Cinemoi, and Moses Gross, managing trustee of Malka Investment Trust -- reiterated its arguments that Tencent's investment in Skydance Media raises national security concerns and that Skydance Media buying Paramount could mean higher consumer prices (see 2503060035). PRP told the FCC it "will seek a return to the vision and practice of CBS’s -- the Tiffany Network’s -- formative titans, Bill Paley and Walter Cronkite, free from bias, dedicated to excellence and presenting the news in the way that it is." It said it would return "to the principles underlying the dormant Fairness Doctrine [and] provide an organizational structure that allows and considers public input to capture all viewpoints and prevent news coverage distortion."
Counsel for Assist Wireless, enTouch Wireless, Easy Wireless and Access Wireless spoke with aides to FCC Chairman Brendan Carr to ask that the agency grant applications for review that they filed on upward revisions for reimbursement of services provided in the last month of the Lifeline COVID-19 waiver period. The Wireline Bureau rejected their appeals of the Universal Service Administrative Co.’s denials of the upward revisions to their Lifeline reimbursement claims, said a filing posted Thursday in docket 11-42. The bureau “wrongly found that the revisions would violate the FCC’s rules by providing reimbursements for Lifeline subscribers who were not eligible for reimbursement based on when the Bureau’s final waiver of the Lifeline usage rule ended.”
NextNav envisions itself providing backup to GPS for positioning, navigation and timing (PNT) as part of a “system of systems” that includes space- and terrestrial-based solutions, said Renee Gregory, its vice president-regulatory affairs, during an FCBA webinar Wednesday (see 2504020062).