President Joe Biden signed the Inflation Reduction Act budget reconciliation package (HR-5376) Tuesday. The measure includes a carve-out in the 15% minimum corporate tax language that allows companies to deduct from "taxable income” the value of spectrum licenses bought after Dec. 31, 2007, “and before" Tuesday (see 2208080062).
Acconeer CEO Lars Lindell and others from the company urged the FCC to consider different rules for pulse radars and frequency-modulated continuous wave (FMCW) radar, in a meeting with an aide to FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel. The FCC is considering revised rules for short-range radars in the 60 GHz band, the topic of an NPRM last summer (see 2107130066). Pulse radar “does not have abrupt edges as short pulses are spread over a wide bandwidth to achieve the needed resolution,” said a filing posted Friday in docket 21-48. “Pulse radar uses very short pulses -- measured in nanoseconds rather than milliseconds -- which in itself is a co-existence mechanism,” the company said: “Absent the adoption of FCC rules aligned with the European rules, a wholesale rule for both 60 GHz pulse radar and FMCW radar may not result in equal treatment of both technologies.”
Encina Communications representatives spoke with FCC Wireless Bureau staff on the company’s proposal to use Part 101 frequency coordination procedures as an alternative to automated frequency coordination in the 6 GHz band, said a filing posted Monday in docket 18-295. Encina said approval would mean the immediate “safe deployment” of Wi-Fi 6E hot spots.
Longtime regulatory lawyer and founder of Harris Wiltshire Scott Harris joined NTIA Monday as senior spectrum advisor, the agency confirmed. Harris was also the first chief of the FCC International Bureau and chaired the FCC’s World Radiocommunication Conference Advisory Committee before the 2015 conference. He was seen at one time as a front-runner to head the agency (see 2105120065). “We are thrilled for this opportunity for Scott and for our national spectrum policy,” said John Nakahata, Harris Wiltshire chairman: “He is an imaginative leader, with deep experience in spectrum use and sharing, and the skills needed to bring all stakeholders together.”
FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel welcomed the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit’s decision upholding the agency’s 2020 5.9 GHz order (see 2208120035). “In the more than two decades since the FCC allocated the 5.9 GHz band to support automobile safety, autonomous and connected vehicles have largely moved beyond dedicated, short-range communications technologies to newer, market-driven alternatives,” Rosenworcel said Friday: The decision "recognizes that by allowing this spectrum to evolve we can advance newer safety technologies and grow our wireless economy.” Michael Calabrese, director of the Wireless Future Program at New America, noted the court reached a similar decision on the 6 GHz band. “Unsurprisingly, the D.C. Circuit reinforced its similar decision last December that the FCC has wide discretion to authorize unlicensed sharing of underutilized spectrum or even, in this case, to reallocate a portion of a lightly-used band to provide more bandwidth for next generation Wi-Fi,” Calabrese emailed: “Since Chairwoman Rosenworcel was a driving force behind the FCC’s unanimous 5-0 votes to authorize unlicensed use of both the 5.9 and 6 GHz bands, consumer advocates expect she will now move quickly to complete both proceedings and maintain the U.S. position as the global leader in Wi-Fi technologies.”
FCC information collection requirements for TV white space database rules, approved by commissioners 5-0 in 2019 (see 1903200059), are effective Friday, said a notice for that day’s Federal Register.
The Rural Wireless Association asked the FCC to request equipment manufacturers share their signal-to-interference-and-noise ratio (SINR) information with smaller carriers, allowing them to comply with the agency’s broadband data collection requirements. Some equipment makers have to disclose the SINR information but say it’s “highly confidential, even after executing Nondisclosure Agreements with the carriers and/or their engineering consultants,” RWA said, in a filing posted Thursday in docket 19-195: “At the same time, these equipment manufacturers have apparently disclosed this SINR information to the larger carriers.” RWA also noted some of its members have Huawei and ZTE gear in their networks and are unable to get the information from the two Chinese companies, which are exiting the U.S. market. RWA members also have concerns with the broadband service location fabric data, the group said. “According to filers, there [are] a lot of missing locations due to outdated and inaccurate addresses.”
The FCC Wireless Bureau approved Amtrak’s application to offer positive train control on a line from Poughkeepsie to Schenectady, New York, using automated maritime telecommunications system spectrum, subject to protection for broadcasters. Amtrak has operated the 13 base stations since 2018 under a grant of special temporary authority and now has permanent authority, the bureau said Thursday.
Comments are due Sept. 12, replies Oct. 11, on waiver requests by the Transportation departments in Florida and Georgia and the Maryland State Highway Administration to operate roadside units using cellular vehicle-to-everything technology in the upper 30 MHz of the 5.9 GHz band, said a notice for Friday’s Federal Register. An earlier waiver request by C-V2X proponents got general support when the commission took comments this summer (see 2207290032). The University of Michigan and the Hawaii Department of Transportation also asked for waivers, both posted Thursday in docket 19-138.
Nex-Tech Wireless told the FCC it will soon be able to offer real-time text (RTT) to its customers. The provider “expects to complete implementation of RTT to 911 within the next 30-60 days based upon the latest information provided to Nex-Tech Wireless by its RTT vendor,” said a filing posted Wednesday in docket 16-145. The company is one of a group of smaller carriers that struggled to implement RTT (see 2012220031).