The FCC Wireless Bureau and Office of Engineering and Technology certified Sony Thursday for a five-year term as a spectrum access system administrator in the citizens broadband radio service band in American Samoa. Sony was previously approved to operate in the contiguous U.S., Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto Rico and Guam, the FCC said. The FCC also approved new environmental sensing capability sensor deployment and coverage plans for Guam, submitted by Federated Wireless.
CBRS
The Citizens Broadband Radio Service (CBRS) is designated unlicensed spectrum in the 3.5 GHz band created by the FCC as part of an effort to allow for shared federal and non-federal use of the band.
The FCC granted 2,431additional priority access licenses in the citizens broadband radio service band, the first awarded since December. The grants follow adoption of “consent decrees and subsequent amendments made by the Applicants consistent with those consent decrees” addressing concerns raised by the commission (see 2207150034), said a Tuesday order by the Wireless Bureau. The licenses were awarded to Cable One, NorthWestern, SAL Spectrum, Shenandoah and UScellular.
Commenters raised concerns on a proposal by the University of Utah for an FCC waiver of citizens broadband radio service rules for its POWDER (Platform for Open Wireless Data-driven Experimental Research) platform, used for wireless research. Comments were due Monday in docket 22-257. The university asked for a waiver to use software-defined radio equipment to interact with the spectrum access system operator “within the POWDER Platform Innovation Zone” and for other exceptions to rules for the band. The university said it uses the platform as a “living laboratory that allows research in a real-world, spectrum realistic environment.”
The NFL asked the FCC to approve its proposed waiver extension of rules for the citizens broadband radio service allowing the league to continue operating a coach-to-coach communications systems in the event of a localized internet outage in stadiums during games. The league noted only NCTA filed comments and supported the extension (see 2207120055). “Before seeking an extension … the NFL engineering team conducted extensive due diligence to see if an alternative approach was available, but after considering many options and consulting with both vendors and staff, the League concluded that a waiver was necessary for these very limited circumstances since a technology ‘work around’ was not available,” said a filing posted Monday in docket 21-111.
Shenandoah, UScellular and NorthWestern agreed to abide by a consent decree with the FCC, ending investigations into whether the carriers violated the four priority access license per market requirement of the agency’s citizens broadband radio service rules. Shenandoah agreed to implement a compliance plan and either amend its long-form application “to remove all licenses that, if granted, would cause it to exceed the four-PAL aggregation limit in an identified market” or amend the form “to remove enough PALs in each identified market to avoid exceeding the four-PAL aggregation limit,” said a Friday notice: “Frequencies that would have been authorized for use with a PAL had Shenandoah or other similarly situated applicants not amended an application pursuant to the Consent Decree may be authorized for use by another eligible licensee with another PAL at a later date and, in the interim, remain immediately available for use pursuant to the applicable General Authorized Access (GAA) rules.” The notice was by the Office of Economics and Analytics and Wireless Bureau. The USCellular and NorthWestern agreements were similar.
The FCC Wireless Bureau and Office of Engineering and Technology approved Amdocs, Federated Wireless, Google, Key Bridge and Sony as spectrum access system (SAS) administrators to support spectrum manager leasing for priority access licenses in the citizens broadband radio service band, in a Tuesday order. All have been approved as SAS administrators but needed separate clearance to support PAL leasing, the order said.
NCTA supported an NFL request for a waiver of rules for the citizens broadband radio service allowing the league to continue operating a coach-to-coach communications systems in the event of a localized internet outage in stadiums during games. Any relief granted “should continue to be narrowly tailored to the NFL’s specific and unique circumstances to avoid creating a de facto exemption from the Spectrum Access System connectivity requirement” for CBRS operations “at special events, including sporting events,” said a filing by the group posted Tuesday in docket 22-111. Comments on the request were due Monday (see 2206300037).
The FCC Wireless Bureau sought comment Thursday on a request by the University of Utah for citizens broadband radio service rules for its POWDER (Platform for Open Wireless Data-driven Experimental Research) platform, established to “enable innovation and research associated with wireless systems and spectrum use.” Comments are due July 18, replies July 25, in docket 22-257. The university asked for a waiver to use software-defined radio equipment to interact with the spectrum access system operator “within the POWDER Platform Innovation Zone” and for other exceptions to rules for the band. The platform is used for research by the university, in partnership with Salt Lake City and the Utah Education and Telehealth Network.
Major industry players expected to play in the 2.5 GHz auction, which starts July 29, were on the list of bidders with complete applications to participate in the FCC’s next big 5G spectrum sale, the FCC said Thursday. AT&T, Dish Network, bidding as Carbonate Wireless, T-Mobile and UScellular are among the 39 with complete applications. Verizon put in an application, deemed incomplete, joining 53 bidders on that list. There appears to be more interest in this auction than in the 3.45 GHz sale, which had 42 applications, while the C-band auction had 74 applications filed. Smaller players are among the qualified bidders, with 17 seeking rural provider bidding credits and nine small business credits. Questions continue over the extent to which small players will jump in or T-Mobile will dominate the auction (see 2204140062). T-Mobile has a dominant position in the band since its buy of Sprint, and is using 2.5 GHz for its 5G rollout. “At first glance, the list of bidders for 2.5 GHz auction (whether qualified or not) does not reveal too many surprises,” emailed Sasha Javid, BitPath chief operating officer. “Submitting an application does not mean that Verizon or AT&T are necessarily interested in bidding for this spectrum,” he said: “It is a low-cost way to muddy the waters for bidders that are truly interested in acquiring the spectrum. If there is one initial takeaway, it is that this auction did not get as many prospective bidders as the [citizens broadband radio service] auction, which also featured smaller county-sized licenses.” The 2020 CBRS auction attracted 271 qualified bidders (see 2007200049). Those with complete short-form applications must submit upfront payments June 23, to be deemed qualified bidders. Others must resubmit their applications, and make an upfront payment, by the same date.
The FCC’s newly reconstituted Technology Advisory Council met for the second time Thursday, dedicated to exploring 6G, as directed by FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel. She and TAC members said 5G is still in early stages, but it’s not too early to focus on the next generation of wireless. TAC heard updates from its working groups on the work they have done so far during a virtual meeting.