Communications Daily is a Warren News publication.

Panelists at Congressional Internet Caucus lunch Thurs. didn’t ru...

Panelists at Congressional Internet Caucus lunch Thurs. didn’t rule out need for congressional intervention of some type on pending Internet-capable 3rd generation wireless allocation decisions involving Dept. of Defense, NTIA and FCC. At lunch on Capitol Hill sponsored by…

Sign up for a free preview to unlock the rest of this article

Communications Daily is required reading for senior executives at top telecom corporations, law firms, lobbying organizations, associations and government agencies (including the FCC). Join them today!

advisory committee to caucus, several panelists suggested Congress could have role to play, specifically on mandatory auction date for certain bands now under consideration for 3G allocation. FCC is overseeing decisions on 2.5 GHz spectrum now occupied by Multipoint Distribution Service (MDS) and Instructional TV Fixed Service licensees and NTIA has purview over 1.7 GHz band occupied by govt. users, mostly military systems. Under Executive Memorandum signed by President Clinton last Oct., FCC would have to make spectrum allocation decision in July to meet congressional deadline of Sept. 30, 2002, for depositing proceeds in U.S. Treasury from auction of certain bands. “I hope that Congress recognizes that we may have to slow down just a little to speed up and get the right solution,” said Steven Berry, CTIA senior vp-govt. affairs. Issue of making sure there’s enough time for decisions is particularly important given bifurcation of 3G decision-making authority between NTIA and FCC in that area. “That’s where Congress has a role,” Berry said. FCC Wireless Bureau Chief Thomas Sugrue described potential for reaching solution on vacating incumbents from one of existing bands under consideration, although he said logistics for how some of that would happen were less clear-cut. “We would not resist and would in fact welcome some help from our friends in Congress to help make this happen,” Sugrue said. Panel was moderated by Washington attorney Gerry Waldron, with other speakers including NTIA’s Joseph Gattuso, Motorola Vp-Telecom Strategy & Regulation Richard Barth, Pegasus Communications Vp Cheryl Crate and consultant Leslie Harris for WEBNow, coalition representing ITFS licensees. Several panelists cited extent to which reimbursement, which is required for moving federal licensees from incumbent spectrum, is likely to make relocation decisions somewhat more tenable. “This is an area where the spectrum is potentially so valuable to 3G services, there should be enough money I think to make some of this work out,” Sugrue said. “The money makes things not a zero-sum game anymore. Otherwise, we're taking from DoD and giving it here, or we're taking from MMDS and giving it there and they move and someone else wins and that’s a hard way to get anybody to agree.” NTIA’s Gattuso said the NTIA report released Fri. on possibilities for 3G spectrum sharing and segmentation in 1.7 GHz left open options. “We have seen a lot of interest by the Secretary of Commerce and the Administration in general to look at this issue at the highest levels of government and to work with industry to look at our options,” he said. Harris stressed that ITFS licensees were in thick of deployment plans for rolling out wireless broadband services, including those covering “congressional” priorities of distance learning and service to typically underserved inner city and rural areas. “There is more at stake here than can you move incumbents,” Harris said. “There’s a real opportunity here -- DoD needs advanced, digital highly encrypted telecommunications capabilities for the 21st century,” Berry said, reiterating CTIA’s view that DoD spectrum would be best for 3G. “Right now they're in analog systems,” he said of Defense communications. He cited ITFS estimates for relocating incumbents of up to $30 billion, with DoD estimates closer to $4 billion. “Quite frankly I was surprised by the dollar number that DoD gave to NTIA."