With Congress fighting over whether DOD spectrum will be reallocated for commercial use (see 2502270064), experts agreed Wednesday that putting a value on federal spectrum remains difficult.
Permitting reform has bipartisan support, which bodes well for substantial action soon, speakers said Wednesday at ACA Connects' annual Washington summit. Yet while there's support, "nobody can quite figure out what [reform] looks like,” said Senate Commerce member John Curtis, R-Utah. Besides broadband, other sectors, such as energy, also have permitting woes, he added. Speakers said they believe BEAD, with some rules changes, will move forward. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said the agency is launching a review of BEAD rules and dropping its fiber focus (see 2503050067).
The FCC will focus on making GPS and 911 calls more reliable at its March 27 open meeting, Chairman Brendan Carr announced Wednesday. The meeting will be the second with Carr at the helm. Draft meeting items are expected to be posted Thursday.
The satellite industry hopes for a better reception from President Donald Trump's administration than it got under former President Joe Biden concerning satellite broadband as a part of the BEAD program (see 2412130011), Boston Consulting Group’s Mike French said Wednesday. His comments came as Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick promised a “rigorous review” of the BEAD program (see 2503050067).
UL Solutions, which the FCC picked in December to serve as lead administrator in the agency’s voluntary cyber trust mark program (see 2412040038), asked for an additional 60 days to complete its initial work. UL's deadline was Monday. “The stakeholder process is well underway,” said a filing posted Tuesday in docket 23-239. “As Lead, we have selected stakeholders to participate in three committees overseeing the workstreams needed to develop and provide the recommendations” required in an order the commissioners approved a year ago (see 2403140034). The committees oversee technical requirements, labeling and market surveillance/renewal. The technical requirements committee faces the heaviest workload, and its initial recommendations are only about one-third complete, the filing said. The committee “will require additional work ... to reach a document that provides a complete and thorough set of technical requirements for an initial class of IOT products and reflects the views, experience, and expertise of the stakeholders who have joined the process.”
NTCA told the FCC that initial comments agree on the need for “a flexible approach to implementation” of the Alaska Connect Fund (ACF), which “accommodates the individualized circumstances faced by operators in a state that the Commission itself has long recognized as presenting unique challenges” for ISPs. Commissioners approved the ACF in November (see 2411050002), along with a Further NPRM on mobile and fixed wireless issues. “The record also supports deferring consideration of several questions raised by the FNPRM until related mapping and other issues are resolved, and avoiding as well Tribal consent rules that may disturb existing, successful engagement practices,” NTCA said in a filing posted Tuesday in docket 23-328.
The FCC Wireline Bureau on Tuesday approved the proposed transfer of New York-based local exchange carrier Crown Point Telco and its subsidiary Bridge Point to Atlas Connectivity. The bureau noted that it sought comment (see 2501290045) but received no comments or petitions in opposition, said a notice in docket 24-354.
Conexon Connect said it was incorrect when it told the FCC that it had met its three-year 40% rural development opportunity fund (RDOF) buildout milestone in Kentucky. In a docket 19-126 filing posted Tuesday, Conexon said it based its claim (see 2501160056) on the best data available at the time. Further analysis determined that the number of locations it serves in Kentucky is "slightly below" the required 40% milestone. But the company "still intends to fully satisfy its RDOF obligations in each of the ten states in which it receives RDOF support."
Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett are likely the key votes as the U.S. Supreme Court considers Humphrey’s Executor, the 1935 decision that allows Congress to limit a president’s ability to remove senior officials, TechFreedom Internet Policy Counsel Corbin Barthold wrote Tuesday in The Bulwark. “For as long as modern conservative legal thought has existed, there has been a campaign to overturn Humphrey’s Executor,” Barthold wrote. “The decision, which sustained a provision that insulated the five leaders of the [FTC] from being removed without cause, became the foundation for so-called independent agencies,” but it’s not “a strong decision,” he said. President Franklin Roosevelt saw it as “an effort to rebuke him” by a then-conservative SCOTUS, and “modern legal scholars tend to agree.”
Some BEAD critics claim deployment is moving too slowly due to bureaucracy and inflation, but there are also "entrenched and deliberate obstacles" from incumbent broadband providers, COS Systems Vice President-North America Sales Adam Puckett wrote Tuesday. He said that while FCC broadband maps are a big improvement over Form 477 data, they still undercount broadband serviceable locations. Moreover, state preemption laws that restrict or ban municipal broadband -- often the result of lobbying efforts by incumbent ISPs -- are "a potential legal and political minefield for the BEAD program." BEAD rollout also faces capacity challenges at state broadband offices, he said. As such, he called for the FCC to prioritize fixing broadband maps and states to give municipalities additional leeway in providing broadband.