Industry continued to urge the FCC to help facilitate the transition to fully IP-networks and Stir/Shaken caller ID authentication. In reply comments posted Tuesday in docket 17-97 (see 2212130065), some disagreed whether the transition should be mandated and how to treat existing non-IP networks.
FCC rural healthcare program participants and industry sought several changes to a draft order and NPRM proposing to modify the program’s funding mechanism. Most urged the FCC to maintain the current support methodology until a new one is established. Commissioners will consider the item Thursday.
Industry groups asked the FCC to either clarify or reconsider parts of rules for the commission's consumer broadband labels. Some in comments posted Wednesday in docket 22-2 expressed concerns about the types of services and details required in the labels. Commissioners adopted the new labels in November, largely mirroring those established in 2016 (see 2211180077).
Broadband mapping experts raised questions about crowdsourcing and availability data challenges to the FCC's new broadband maps during a Broadband Breakfast webinar Wednesday. Some expressed concerns about how the challenge process will affect the maps that NTIA will ultimately use for the broadband, equity, access and deployment program as the agency urged entities to file challenges by Jan. 13.
Video relay service providers and accessibility advocacy organizations welcomed the FCC's NPRM proposing to increase the number of minutes a communications assistant may handle remotely and reevaluating CAs' experience requirements, in comments posted Tuesday in docket 03-123 (see 2206300058). Some repeated their requests for the FCC to consider functional equivalence and sought to have the monthly cap on minutes eliminated.
In a busy end-of-year meeting, the FCC tackled digital discrimination, IP captioned telephone services rates and the space application review process, all with unanimous votes by commissioners. Commissioners also approved a record-setting fine for alleged robocalls, at Wednesday's meeting.
Consumer advocacy organizations and telecom relay services providers asked the FCC to make several changes to a draft NPRM on IP captioned telephone services (see 2211300072). Commissioners will consider the item Wednesday, which would seek comment on a proposal to establish a three-year compensation plan for IP CTS that would compensate providers based on the model used to provide the service. Some sought additional questions on how the proposed ratemaking would affect functional equivalence and the overall marketplace.
Consumer advocacy organizations and industry lobbied the FCC to make some changes to a draft NPRM aimed at combating digital discrimination, before the agency's Wednesday meeting. Commissioners will consider the item as required by the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. The item stems from a notice of inquiry the FCC adopted earlier this year. It received mixed comments from advocates and industry on the extent of digital discrimination and possible solutions (see 2205170071).
Broadband experts and industry officials encouraged property owners and providers Wednesday to develop partnerships to meet the connectivity needs for residents in multidwelling units. Panelists during a Broadband Breakfast webinar cited challenges of deploying broadband in MDUs, including retrofitting older buildings, and encouraged stakeholders to consider various technological solutions.
Industry urged the FCC to facilitate the transition to IP networks for caller ID authentication. Many said there's no need to establish rules allowing for caller ID authentication on non-IP networks and cited TDM tandem switches as one of the main obstacles to fully implementing Stir/Shaken technology. Comments were posted Tuesday in docket 17-97 (see 2210270046).