FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel defended the agency’s order and Further NPRM on robocalls and robotexts. In letters to Sens. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., and Thom Tillis, R-N.C., posted Friday, she wrote that the commission "has now made it unequivocally clear" that sending robocalls or robotexts to consumers will require "prior express written consent ... on a one-to-one basis.” The lawmakers were concerned about the effect of that FCC policy on comparison shopping websites. “Our record indicated that consumers can unexpectedly receive hundreds or more robocalls and robotexts from a single inquiry on comparison shopping websites,” Rosenworcel said: While some of the websites “may have used this loophole to provide consumers with the ability to quickly compare goods and services and discover new sellers, our record demonstrated that consumers are often overwhelmed with robocalls and robotexts they did not agree to receive.”
Electric utilities are urging that the FCC allow networked operations for drones in shared-use parts of the 5030-5091 MHz band, where technically feasible. Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel recently circulated an order on the band (see 2404080065). Electric utilities representatives met with an aide to Commissioner Brendan Carr. Drones allow businesses in the critical infrastructure industry "to more efficiently inspect and repair infrastructure, improve worker safety, and maintain consistent, reliable service for customers,” said a filing posted Friday in docket 22-323. Represented at the meeting were Florida Power & Light, Pacific Gas & Electric, Xcel Energy and the Edison Electric Institute. The utilities offered examples of how they use uncrewed aircraft systems (UAS). “PG&E’s 79,000-square mile service territory includes extremely remote areas such as the Trinity Alps in Northwest California,” the filing said: “To inspect and maintain infrastructure in such difficult-to-reach areas, crews work extended shifts under difficult conditions, such as poor roads, which increases the risk that crews and property will suffer injury. … By allowing utilities to inspect infrastructure remotely, UAS reduces the need for unnecessary truck rolls, thereby improving worker safety.”
Bentina Terry, new president and CEO of Southern Linc, and other company representatives met with FCC Commissioners Brendan Carr, Geoffrey Starks and Anna Gomez “to provide an overview of the company and its policy priorities,” said a filing posted Friday in 21-346 and other dockets. “Southern Linc offers comprehensive geographic coverage, serving the extensive rural territory within its footprint as well as major metropolitan areas and highway corridors,” the company said. Terry explained how the communications needs of utilities are changing. “Historically, utilities mainly needed systems that supported two-way land mobile voice communications for line crews and field workers,” the company said: “With the digitization of the electric grid that is now underway, utilities now need broadband networks capable of handling large amounts of data -- data that is used to monitor and control the electric grid, to facilitate customers' pursuit of greater energy efficiency, and to ensure both the physical security and cybersecurity of the Nation’s critical electric infrastructure.”
FCC commissioners approved a notice of apparent liability of $8 million against K20 Wireless “for apparently willfully and repeatedly violating” affordable connectivity program rules. Also, the carrier will be removed from the program. “From at least June 2022 to May 2023, K20 sought and received ACP Tribal lands support for subscribers who were not eligible for those benefits,” said an order posted Friday. “For approximately 50 percent of these subscribers, the Company, after switching the subscriber’s ACP enrollment to K20, then changed the subscriber’s existing non-Tribal lands home address to a false address on Tribal lands not associated in any way with that subscriber,” the order said: “K20 then sought ACP reimbursement for those subscribers at the rate available for consumers residing on Tribal lands.”
The Coalition for Emergency Response and Critical Infrastructure (CERCI) took aim at what it said is a Public Safety Spectrum Alliance (PSSA) proposal asking the FCC to issue a “nationwide overlay license” in the 4.9 GHz band to a band manager to sign "a sharing agreement to hand over the spectrum to the First Responder Network Authority.” The two groups have a sharply divided vision on the best future for the band (see 2401190067). “PSSA would have the Commission turn the Band Manager role on its head," resulting in "the launch of a new lengthy, resource-intensive rulemaking,” said a filing posted Friday in docket 07-100. “PSSA would nullify the Band Manager’s two roles to coordinate public safety use and enable non-public safety access, instead proposing to make the Band Manager a licensee only to share the 4.9 GHz spectrum” with FirstNet, CERCI said.
The FCC Wireline Bureau approved the National Exchange Carrier Association's proposed average-schedule interstate settlement disbursements formulas for one-year beginning July 2. An order Friday in docket 23-415 noted that the formulas included "three consumer broadband-only loop" factors instead of one in NECA's filing from the previous year.
The FCC Wireline Bureau announced its annual tariff review plans for LECs, effective July 1, in an order Friday in docket 24-41. The bureau also adopted modifications for its rate-of-return tariff review plan and waived rules requiring that carriers file an access charge tariff for a two-year period.
Sometime in October 2025, expect the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency to issue rules requiring that companies report cyber incidents and ransomware payments, Wiley's Sydney White said during the second part of an FCBA CLE on Thursday (see 2405090051). The rules are part of additional authority CISA received under the Cyber Incident Reporting for Critical Infrastructure Act of 2022 (CIRCIA). Numerous cyber incident-reporting requirements exist, so new requirements will add to companies' reporting burden, experts said.
Sinclair CEO Chris Ripley signaled that his company is open to selling “assets” amid rumors that it's eyeing divesting 60 stations. Meanwhile, Nexstar CEO Perry Sook said broadcasters can’t have confidence about transactions in the current regulatory environment. The CEOs spoke during their respective Q1 earnings calls last week. Ripley, Sook and executives from Gray and E.W. Scripps also discussed progress on ATSC 3.0, a backloaded political advertising market, and streaming during earnings calls.
House Republicans pushed back during a Friday Communications Subcommittee field hearing in Bakersfield, California, against calls for Congress to allocate stopgap funding to the FCC’s ailing affordable connectivity program and the rollout of NTIA’s $42.5 billion broadband equity, access and deployment program. ACP supporters believe they made progress last week toward securing a path that keeps the program funded in FY 2024 despite proposals attaching funding to the FAA Reauthorization Act (HR-3935) failing in the Senate (see 2405100046).