New Wave and Reach Broadband each requested a...
New Wave and Reach Broadband each requested a further six-month waiver of the Common Alerting Protocol (CAP) compliance deadline. New Wave requested a waiver for 21 of its cable systems, it said in its petition posted Tuesday in docket 04-296…
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!
(http://bit.ly/1sV4Kry). The company is working on “bringing its systems into compliance by interconnecting systems which lack broadband access to CAP-compliant headends, by purchasing equipment, and through system shutdowns,” it said. Requiring New Wave to buy and install CAP-compliant equipment in systems that it plans to interconnect to CAP-compliant headends “would be economically wasteful,” it said. Reach requests a waiver for six systems due to its lack of physical access to broadband Internet service necessary for the systems to receive CAP-formatted emergency alert messages, it said in its petition (http://bit.ly/1sV5Vaq). Reach also requested a financial hardship waiver for 15 systems, it said.