Verizon Wireless urged FCC to defer granting licenses won at C- a...
Verizon Wireless urged FCC to defer granting licenses won at C- and F-block PCS auction in Jan. until U.S. Appeals Court, D.C., rules on NextWave’s appeal. Verizon Wireless won $8.8 billion in licenses of $17 billion raised by auction,…
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in which most formerly belonged to NextWave but were cancelled for missed payment. Earlier this month, NextWave asked agency to delay spectrum awards until D.C. Circuit issued opinion (CD March 13 p4). Verizon Wireless told FCC in its comments that nothing in NextWave request “requires the Commission to issue a stay.” But awaiting D.C. Circuit’s ruling on NextWave “before granting the applications, and allowing winning bidders up to 30 days after the public notice announcing license grants to submit their final payments, would serve the interests of interested parties and would not undermine the Commission’s goals for the re-auction,” Verizon said. It argued that agency had leeway to allow auction winners more than 10 days to pay balance of winning bids. “The presumptive period of 10 days is an unrealistically short window for bidders to amass and arrange for the transmission of billions of dollars to the Commission,” company wrote. Thirty days would provide more “reasonable time to plan,” company said. Verizon asked FCC to deny NextWave petition, which seeks deferral of auction or conditional approval. In other comments, Alaska Native Wireless (ANW), designated entity with financial backing of AT&T Wireless, challenged standing of TPS Utilicom. TPS had petitioned to deny ANW license applications, saying carrier had failed to comply with FCC rules on entrepreneur status and very small bidder status and that its application lacked “requisite candor.” ANW told FCC that TPS wasn’t party in interest on its applications because it was “eligible to bid on none of the 44 licenses for which Alaska Native Wireless has applied.” TPS didn’t present “specific allegations” needed to raise question of fact that would warrant delaying grant of applications, ANW said. It also disputed TPS contentions that AT&T Wireless had de jure and de facto control of designated entity.