The FCC Enforcement Bureau issued an initial determination order against Veriwave Telco Monday for failing to comply with the commission's call blocking rules for providers suspected of carrying illegal traffic. The bureau ordered the company to respond to its order within 14 days, otherwise other providers must block Veriwave's voice traffic. An investigation found suspected illegal traffic originated at Veriwave earlier this year. "Providers must do their part to prevent these junk calls from getting to consumers," Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel said in a news release. If they don't, "they will face significant consequences," she added.
SpaceX's proposed reconsideration of the aggregate out-of-band power flux density (PFD) limits that the FCC adopted in March's supplemental coverage from space (SCS) order (see 2405300044) is seeing some pushback from wireless carriers and EchoStar. SpaceX has pushed for band-specific out-of-band PFD limits, and replies to its petition were posted Monday in docket 23-65. EchoStar said the proceeding's record supports the FCC's aggregate out-of-band emissions limit protecting neighboring licensees. The aggregate interference limit is "reasonable and realistic" as a route to preventing harmful interference, it said. AT&T said the commission should stick with its "balanced, simple, and certain approach" to protecting terrestrial wireless services, "particularly given that SCS technology is still being developed and tested." It said if an SCS applicant can't comply with the PFD limits, it can seek a waiver of the rule and show its proposed deployment won't cause harmful interference. Keeping the uniform out-of-band PFD limit is important, given the nascent development of SCS services, Verizon said in its opposition. T-Mobile, partnering with SpaceX on SCS service, backed SpaceX's recon petition. It said the FCC didn't seek comment on the limit ultimately adopted, and that limit significantly constrains the ability of satellite operators to provide SCS in some frequency bands. "Basic engineering principles require band-specific out-of-band PFD levels," T-Mobile said.
The most important thing the FCC can do to improve the lives of the deaf and hard of hearing is “make sure our country has world-leading wired and wireless networks, and that everyone, everywhere is connected,” Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel said in remarks at the National Association of the Deaf Conference in Chicago July 3. “Beyond that, we need to mobilize the expertise of people with disabilities to develop and deploy new technologies,” she said, pointing to the agency’s Disability Advisory Committee and Disability Rights Office as examples. She touted the FCC’s recent initiatives to improve accessibility for emergency alerting and the upcoming meeting item on caption display setting accessibility (see 2406270068). Rosenworcel also discussed recent advances in mass market products that increase accessibility, such as a virtual reality headset that uses AI to generate real-time captions. These services are available not "because of some specialty assistive device designed and marketed exclusively to people who are deaf or blind,” she said, but because of applications that “run on devices that were made for everyone.” Rosenworcel said making new technology “built for all” is good for business. “We can make the digital future work for all of us -- the deaf and hard-of-hearing included.” The agency released her speech Monday.
Paramount Global's pending deal with studio Skydance Media shouldn't face notable objections from the FCC or DOJ, we are told. The $8 billion agreement sees Skydance founder-CEO David Ellison and his family, along with private equity firm RedBird Capital, buying National Amusements Inc., which has a controlling stake in Paramount. The Skydance investor group would then combine Skydance with Paramount. The transaction includes a $1.5 billion infusion into Paramount to reduce debt and for strategic initiatives. Paramount said it expects to close the deal by Sept. 30, 2025.
The FCC received unanimous support from commenters that have filed so far for an NTIA proposal that calls for using geofencing to allow higher equivalent isotropically radiated power limits for cellular vehicle-to-everything on-board units in the 5.9 GHz band (see 2406100032). Comments were posted on Friday and Monday (docket 19-138).
The U.S. Supreme Court’s June decision in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo that overruled the Chevron doctrine (see 2407010036) will likely heavily influence discussion during a House Communications Subcommittee hearing Tuesday on the commission’s FY 2025 funding request, congressional aides and lobbyists told us. Chevron gave the FCC and other federal agencies deference in interpreting federal laws. Republican FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr is urging the commission ahead of the House hearing to drop a planned July 18 vote on a draft order and Further NPRM letting schools and libraries use E-rate support for off-premises Wi-Fi hot spots in response to the ruling. The hearing will begin at 10 a.m. in 2123 Rayburn.
The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) explicitly requires that the FCC "regulate to achieve equal access to broadband" and "authorizes [the] FCC's disparate-impact rules," a consumer advocacy groups said in a joint filing Friday at the 8th U.S. Circuit Appeals Court (see 2401300089). In addition, the groups argued that the major questions doctrine didn't apply in this case.
SpaceX and Omnispace clashed on whether the FCC should stick with a deadline for oppositions and replies to a SpaceX petition seeking reconsideration of the aggregate out-of-band power flux density (PFD) limits that the FCC adopted in March's supplemental coverage from space order (see 2405300044). Oppositions were due Friday. Omnispace asked that the FCC extend the deadline for oppositions and replies, due July 15, each for a week. The proceeding “involves complex issues and detailed technical calculations, including the possibility of ‘significant [radio frequency] problems,’” Omnispace said in a filing last week in docket 23-65: “Complex questions of interference deserve careful consideration by all parties, and additional filing time would allow parties to submit more robust and detailed submissions.” SpaceX noted Friday that the commission accepted the petition for filing three weeks ago and established a pleading cycle two weeks back. But Omnispace “waited until just three days before the filing date to belatedly seek a one-week extension based solely on the fact that July 4 is a holiday,” SpaceX said.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency endorsed NAB's proposal for a software-based replacement for emergency alert system equipment, NAB and several broadcasters said in an ex parte meeting last week with Public Safety Bureau staff, according to a filing in docket 15-94. The filing said the replacement would make it easier to improve EAS systems with increased accessibility or multiple languages. NAB proposed the software replacement for physical EAS boxes in December 2022 (see 2306020064). The proposal would be voluntary and able to operate if internet or cloud connectivity is interrupted, the filing said. NAB and the broadcasters -- including iHeartMedia, New York Public Radio and Cox media representatives -- also told the agency they agreed with FEMA objections to an agency proposal to facilitate multilingual EAS alerts with prerecorded templates (see 2404100083). “The costs of the FCC’s approach will outweigh any minor, speculative benefits,” the filing said.
Radio Communications Corporation’s appeal of the FCC’s implementation of the 2023 Low Power Protection Act should be rejected because “Congress meant what it said” when it authored the statute, the FCC told the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit in a final brief Friday. The text of the LPPA is “unambiguous,” the agency argued. The FCC “correctly interpreted the statutory requirement that an eligible station ‘operate in a Designated Market Area with not more than 95,000 television households’ to mean that an eligible station must be located within a Designated Market Area that has no more than 95,000 television households,” the brief said. That “straightforward conclusion” means RCC is ineligible for a Class A license and resolves the case, the FCC said. The LPPA “does not provide unbounded protection for low power stations. Nor can any unexpressed Congressional purpose override the statute’s plain textual commands.” In addition, the FCC said its use of Nielsen DMAs isn't unconstitutional. “Agencies are free to rely on private entities to provide factual information,” the FCC said. “Doing so here at Congress’s direction violated no constitutional principle.” The court doesn’t need to rule on RCC’s objections to LPPA requirements for local programming or on claims that Class A stations are entitled to mandatory cable carriage because RCC isn’t eligible to be a Class A licensee, the brief said. “Largely ignoring the statute’s plain text,” RCC “fundamentally misreads the Low Power Protection Act,” the brief added.