Several industry groups backed a petition from NTCA seeking reconsideration of certain parts of the FCC's order establishing the enhanced alternative Connect America cost model (ACAM) program. Comments were posted Wednesday in docket 10-90 (see 2309180060). The ACAM Broadband Coalition said the modification would align the program's deployment milestones with those in NTIA's broadband, equity, access and deployment program. The South Dakota Telecom Association backed NTCA's request to reconsider how broadband data collection and broadband availability maps are verified, saying its members "have and will continue to spend significant time and resources" on the broadband data collection (BDC) challenge process. Said CTIA: Clarify that enhanced ACAM carriers have "a reasonable amount of time to update their cybersecurity risk management plans" after the National Institute of Standards and Technology updates its cybersecurity framework. The Wireless ISP Association opposed NTCA's petition, saying it "fails to identify any material error, omission or reason warranting reconsideration." The FCC "has well established procedures to determine the accuracy of the presence of would-be unsubsidized competition and the expertise and experience to review, consider, verify, audit and enforce BDC submissions," WISPA said.
Providers of incarcerated people's communications services (IPCS) "have provided sufficient grounds" to justify a partial waiver of the FCC's Jan. 1 deadline to deploy certain forms of advanced telecom relay services, said Pay Tel in a letter posted Monday in docket 23-62 (see 2311300040). The IPCS provider said the industry varies "broadly in size, type of carceral facility served, and available development resources," and most forms of Telecommunications Relay Service "require significant modification for use in carceral settings."
The FCC Wireline Bureau on Monday denied a request to extend the comment and reply comment deadlines for the FCC's net neutrality rulemaking. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, National Association of Manufacturers and Information Technology Industry Council sought an extension (see 2312050073). The groups had "ample notice and time to consider and prepare support for their positions on the issues raised in the NPRM prior to the commission’s official announcement of proposed action," said the bureau order in docket 23-320, noting the FCC informed the U.S. Appeals Court for the D.C. Circuit in April 2021 that it intended to revisit its net neutrality proceeding.
A coalition of consumer advocacy organizations opposed a petition from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, National Association of Manufacturers and Information Technology Industry Council to extend the comment deadline for the FCC's NPRM proposing to reestablish net neutrality rules (see 2312050073). Public Knowledge, the American Library Association, Benton Institute for Broadband & Society, Center for Rural Strategies, Common Cause, Communications Workers of America, Demand Progress Education Fund, Electronic Frontier Foundation, Electronic Privacy Information Center, Fight for the Future, Future of Music Coalition, New America’s Open Technology Institute and United Church of Jesus Christ Media Justice Ministry signed the opposition letter. It was posted Friday in docket 23-320. The groups said many of the reasons cited in the petition for a delay "demonstrate why a delay should not be granted," adding that an extension is "especially untoward in light of the circumstances of this proceeding."
CaptionMate urged the FCC to extend "until at least June 30" current rates for IP captioned telephone service (CTS), meeting separately with aides to Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel and Commissioner Anna Gomez (see 2304040039). The IP CTS provider said in an ex parte filing posted Thursday in docket 03-123 that the data in the record is "already stale" and "may not accurately reflect the costs of offering functionally equivalent" IP CTS. It also warned that "adopting an average of historical and projected costs plus a 10% operating margin would be devastating for the industry."
The FCC Wireline Bureau extended until Dec. 31, 2024, its waiver of letter of credit (LOC) rules for Connect America Fund Phase II recipients (see 2212120059). The bureau declined to extend the waiver to recipients that "do not meet their 60% deployment obligation" or miss a reporting deadline. "Extending the waiver of LOC requirements to recipients that have met their deployment and reporting obligations would allow recipients to better allocate resources to operate successfully and continue to fulfill their obligations," the bureau said in an order Wednesday in docket 10-90.
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, National Association of Manufacturers and Information Technology Industry Council asked the FCC to extend until Jan. 17 the deadline for comments on the agency's NPRM proposing to reestablish net neutrality rules. Comments are currently due by Dec. 14 (see 2311030065). The groups said in a joint letter posted Monday in docket 23-320 that additional time was needed to provide "robust information" about the "rapidly changing marketplace" given the "extensive scope of topics and rationales contemplated by the NPRM."
The FCC fined Etheric Communications and LTD Broadband for defaulting on their Rural Digital Opportunity Fund Phase I auction bids in a notice of apparent liability released Tuesday. The agency fined Etheric $732,000 and LTD $21.7 million. The FCC also denied LTD's application for review of Friday's Wireline Bureau order denying its long-form application (see 2311160039).
A coalition of consumer advocacy organizations opposed petitions for partial waivers of FCC rules requiring correctional facilities to deploy certain forms of advanced telecom relay services (TRS) by Jan. 1. Requests to extend the deadline "substantially harm incarcerated people with disabilities" and advanced forms of TRS are available, Helping Educate to Advance the Rights of the Deaf, National Association of the Deaf, TDIForAccess, Communication Service for the Deaf and United Church of Christ Media Justice Ministry said in a filing Thursday in docket 23-62. The groups opposed individual petitions filed by Securus, Pay Tel Communications, ViaPath and NCIC Inmate Communications (see 2311220052). PayTel urged the FCC to grant its petition, saying providers of incarcerated people's communications services should "be given sufficient time to develop integrated TRS solutions that are reliable, effective, and cost effective." Deploying advanced forms of TRS in correctional facilities "cannot be accomplished if the required third party services are not available for that particular facility," ViaPath said. The current compliance deadline "did not fully take into account the multi-step processes needed for essentially developing a product from scratch through testing and deployment," said Securus.
The FCC granted petitions on review from Bloomingdale Telephone and State Telephone regarding incorrect USF high-cost program annual filings, according to an order released Tuesday in docket 10-90. The FCC also granted a similar petition filed jointly by Bloomingdale and ComSouth. The companies failed to timely file their annual reports in 2019 through the High-Cost Universal Broadband portal, the order said. State also made an incorrect filing in 2018. The order directed the Universal Service Administrative Co. to restore support levels consistent with each petition addressed.