Competitive Carriers Association representatives sought additional changes to the FCC’s Secure and Trusted Communications Networks Reimbursement Program (see 2312040015) in a meeting with FCC Wireline Bureau staff. The representatives noted recent changes, “including increased staffing levels, faster invoice processing, facilitating increased efficiency in responses to Reimbursement Program staff, and the use of dedicated review teams,” said a filing posted Friday in docket 18-89. In addition, they asked for “streamlined reporting obligations, faster modification approvals, and more categorical treatment of substantially similar modification applications.” Among those at the meeting were representatives of Summit Ridge Group, Union Wireless, Viaero Wireless and Widelity.
President Joe Biden understands the importance of a “coordinated policy” that maximizes "the benefits the American people get from spectrum,” Austin Bonner, deputy U.S. chief technology officer-policy, said Thursday during the NTIA spectrum policy symposium's final panel. The White House's spectrum strategy reaffirms the FCC's and NTIA's roles, establishes the Interagency Spectrum Advisory Council (ISAC) and creates a White House-led mechanism for dispute resolution, providing “a consistent and clear place to bring challenges,” she said. During the many meetings the administration held before releasing the strategy, a consistent theme was “the need for senior level buy-in,” which led to ISAC's creation, she said. Bonner said the council is planning on meeting regularly. From the beginning of the administration, the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, where she works, the National Economic Council and the National Security Council “strongly agreed that spectrum policy needed to change” and “needed presidential-level direction,” Bonner said. The strategy ensures that, before spectrum studies are conducted, they’re coordinated between NTIA and the agencies. “That’s really critical,” said Matthew Pearl, NSC director and special adviser-emerging technologies. Something that emerged during recent spectrum fights was the importance of assumptions and methodology when bands are studied, Pearl said. The president wants a “science-based, data-based approach” on spectrum issues, he said. NTIA and ISAC will be unable to resolve some issues and that’s when the White House will step in and convene the agencies prior to a decision, he said. Pearl noted that he was previously at the FCC and worked on spectrum issues, including the C-band. The FCC and NTIA “have made significant progress” in working together, adopting and operationalizing a memorandum of understanding on proposed spectrum decisions, he said (see 2208020076). The White House is committed to resolving disputes “as early in the process as we can,” he said, acknowledging difficult spectrum issues will result in disputes. “We’ve turned a corner, but we also have set ourselves a challenging road,” Bonner said.
Senate Appropriations Financial Services Subcommittee Chairman Chris Van Hollen, Md.; Sen. Ed Markey, Mass.; and Rep. Grace Meng, N.Y., led a Friday letter with 64 other congressional Democrats supporting the FCC’s proposal permitting schools and libraries to use E-rate support for off-premises Wi-Fi hot spots and wireless internet services (see 2311090028). CTIA endorsed the NPRM in comments filed with the FCC last week, while other industry groups questioned whether the FCC has authority under the Communications Act to expand the E-rate program as proposed (see 2401300063). “This proposal properly recognizes that learning now extends beyond the physical premises of school buildings,” the Democratic lawmakers wrote in the letter to FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel. “When a sixth grader is completing a homework assignment through an online educational platform or a ninth grader is attending class through a video conferencing application, they are clearly engaged in educational activities.” The Communications Act gives the FCC “flexibility to structure and strengthen the E-Rate program as educational conditions change,” the lawmakers said: “With millions of students at risk of losing internet access at home” should Congress not appropriate additional money for the FCC’s affordable connectivity program before its initial $14.2 billion allocation runs out in April (see 2402010075), “we are glad to see the FCC exercising this authority and modernizing the E-Rate program, and we encourage the Commission to provide schools and libraries with the flexibility to adapt their programs to local conditions while continuing to effectively guard against fraud and waste.” Other Democrats signing the letter included Senate Communications Subcommittee Chairman Ben Ray Lujan of New Mexico and House Communications Subcommittee ranking member Doris Matsui of California. On the other hand, House Commerce Committee Chair Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Wash., and Senate Commerce Committee ranking member Ted Cruz, R-Texas, oppose the E-rate NPRM (see 2309270069). The Schools, Health & Libraries Broadband Coalition praised the Democratic lawmakers for backing the proposal.
David Zumwalt, who became president of the Wireless ISP Association in June 2022, told us during an exclusive Communications Daily Q&A that the NTIA’s broadband, equity, access and deployment program shouldn’t be used to inject artificial competition into markets that WISPA members already serve. WISPA has fought to have BEAD fund projects that rely partly on using unlicensed spectrum (see 2302090063).
Complying with the FCC's "all-in" video pricing proposal might have to overcome conflicting regulatory regimes among the FCC, FTC and various states, DirecTV said. In a docket 23-203 filing Thursday recapping a meeting with FCC Media Bureau Chief Holly Saurer, DirecTV said possible compliance hiccups include one set of rules requiring what another prohibits and different sets of rules requiring different calculations of all-in prices. The FCC commissioners adopted an all-in video pricing NPRM in June (see 2306200042).
A Maryland AM station that airs programming from Russia-sponsored news channel Radio Sputnik is violating FCC political file rules because the channel’s content is effectively paid political advertising, said a complaint Thursday from the Ukrainian Congress Committee of America. The complaint, which calls for a forfeiture of at least $10 million, is the UCCA’s latest salvo against WZHF Capitol Heights and owners Arthur and Yvonne Liu of Way Broadcasting -- the group has filed two petitions against the station’s license that have yet to draw an FCC response (see 2203230054). “There are well established FCC rules that require that Arthur and Yvonne Liu disclose in their political file all incidents of paid discussion of matters of national importance,” said Thursday’s complaint. “This they have not done in willful violation of the Communications Act and the FCC’s rules and policies.” WZHF leases all of its airtime to RM Broadcasting, which has the deal to air Radio Sputnik content. Documentation filed under the Foreign Agents Registration Act shows that Way Broadcasting receives $35,000 a month under that arrangement, and WZHF’s content routinely concerns President Joe Biden, former President Donald Trump, U.S. policy in Ukraine and Israel, and the 2024 Republican presidential primary, UCCA said. “The Enforcement Bureau should order Arthur and Yvonne Liu to provide at least two years of data on what exactly their station is broadcasting,” said the complaint. The Communications Act “requires that each incident of political advertising be disclosed and properly filed in WZHF’s public inspection file.” Way Broadcasting didn’t comment.
Gray Television will sell two TV stations in Wyoming and Nebraska to Marquee Broadcasting in exchange for Marquee’s FCC-issued construction permit to build a station in the Salt Lake City market, said a Gray news release Thursday. “Neither party will pay additional cash or consideration to fulfill the terms of this swap,” the release said. The Gray stations are in the Cheyenne-Scottsbluff and Casper designated market areas, the release said. The transaction is expected to close in Q2 “following receipt of regulatory and other approvals,” the release said.
The FCC Media Bureau received 1,336 low-power FM construction permit applications during the December window, said a public notice in Thursday’s Daily Digest. 700 of those applications have so far been identified as singletons without conflicts with other applications and have been accepted for filing, the PN said. A subsequent PN will identify the mutually exclusive applications, and with its release parties can begin filing amendments and reaching settlement agreements, the PN said.
The Texas Cable Association wants the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to hold the FCC’s Nov. 20 digital discrimination order unlawful and to set it aside, said its petition for review (docket 24-60048), filed Tuesday and posted Thursday. It shares the docket number with the petition that the U.S. Chamber of Commerce also filed Tuesday along with the Texas Association of Business and the Longview, Texas, Chamber of Commerce (see 2401300053).
The FCC Wireless Bureau Thursday granted 16 licenses to winning bidders in the 2022 2.5 GHz auction. Under the 5G Spectrum Authority Licensing Enforcement Act, enacted in December, the FCC can now issue licenses despite the expiration in March of its spectrum auction authority (see 2312200061). The licenses were awarded to Northern Valley Communications in South Dakota, Paladin Wireless in Georgia and SkyPacket Networks in Maryland and West Virginia.