Spectrum availability and how wireless technology can help bridge...
Spectrum availability and how wireless technology can help bridge digital divide will dominate wireless policy arena this year, CTIA Pres. Thomas Wheeler said at press lunch Tues. He said CTIA was “very hopeful” FCC would address industry concerns on…
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spectrum cap. CTIA has been urging agency to lift 45 MHz cap for all but rural markets, where ceiling is 55 MHz. Wheeler pointed out that in past FCC orders that dealt with cap, newly named Chmn. Powell had questioned why existing ceiling should remain intact. Lifting it would provide “interim relief” while 3rd-generation policy debates continued on whether and how to free additional spectrum for advanced mobile services, he said. Lifting cap “will buy you the 18 months that you need to get to the tough decisions,” he said, referring to 3G. Wheeler stressed prominent role Japan and European countries have taken in wireless Internet, in part by govt. policies that have made spectrum available and issued licenses. “God bless the Clinton Administration for starting the spectrum policy review process,” Wheeler said of 3G. “But they couldn’t bring it to fruition. And it now falls to the Bush Administration to deal with the really hard parts and make decisions.” Wheeler praised NTIA proposal last week on reimbursement for federal agencies that must relocate from existing spectrum (CD Jan 18 p2). NTIA outlined changes on how private sector could reimburse agencies, including possible relocations connected to 3G decisions involving military spectrum. “It might just be the underlying key point so far to be raised in breaking whatever gridlock there might be in creating access to spectrum,” Wheeler said. As for Verizon Wireless’s request to FCC last week that agency delay 700 MHz auction beyond March 6, he said he still was making calls to members on group’s position. (Comments are due Jan. 24). “Their concern is not an illegitimate concern,” Wheeler said of request to push back bidding for at least 2 months but preferably until Sept. 6. “You have to be in a position where you can work out bidding alliances, structures and trading spectrum and all these kinds of things to get you set for the next auction. But you are prohibited, because there’s an ongoing auction, from doing those very things.” In other policy areas, Wheeler said he hoped agency would address outstanding issues such as calling-party-pays and reciprocal compensation and privacy, including CTIA’s Nov. petition that proposed privacy principles covering mobile location-based services. He said he was hopeful FCC would move on privacy issues, although he said there was intra-agency debate on whether it belonged in Common Carrier or Wireless bureaus.