The Rural Wireless Association, Communications Workers of America and public interest groups asked the FCC to consider spectrum sales between UScellular and the three major wireless carriers together, rather than as separate transactions. “These transactions represent a significant restructuring of the mobile wireless market and effectuate the exit of UScellular as a mobile wireless carrier,” said a filing posted Tuesday in docket 25-150. The groups met with staff from across the FCC, along with Public Knowledge, New America’s Open Technology Institute and the Benton Institute for Broadband & Society.
Astra Navigation asked the FCC to consider its technology, which translates magnetic fields into navigational data, as a non-spectrum-reliant alternative to GPS for positioning, navigation and timing. The company offers “an American-made technology that converts the Earth’s magnetic fields into 3D positioning data without reliance on network connectivity or deployment of special infrastructure,” said a filing posted Tuesday in docket 25-110. Company representatives met with staff from across the agency.
WorldNet Telecommunications representatives spoke with FCC Wireline Bureau staff about “the significant issues and barriers it and other broadband providers now face in obtaining access to electrical utility pole attachments in Puerto Rico.” They discussed how pole attachment issues slowed the ability to offer broadband there, said a filing posted Tuesday in docket 17-84.
The Phoenix Center said Tuesday that President Donald Trump's administration is proving to be more focused on regulating industry than he promised during his campaign last year. “A disturbing number” of Trump appointees “are refusing to heed his message, targeting technology firms with aggressive antitrust enforcements, regulations, and even the sorts of jawboning coercion used during the Biden Administration to curtail constitutionally protected private speech,” the center's new report said.
Low-power TV (LPTV) broadcasters said in FCC comments that their industry is dying, and ATSC 3.0 won’t be enough to save it. Those comments, in docket 25-168, were in response to HC2’s petition proposing LPTV stations be allowed to switch to 5G broadcast. NAB disagreed, saying 5G broadcast advocates haven’t done enough to show that it won’t cause unacceptable interference.
A federal appeals court Tuesday upheld the FCC's decision to deny LTD Broadband more than $1.3 billion in rural broadband subsidies, ruling that the agency didn't violate the Administrative Procedure Act when it found the company unqualified.
NASHVILLE -- BEAD deployment activity will necessitate permitting reform at the federal, state and local levels, C Spire Vice President-Government Relations Chris Champion said Tuesday at the Fiber Broadband Association's annual conference and trade show. Agencies are aware “they are about to be bombarded” with applications, he said. Those permitting reforms must be paired with appropriations that allow agencies to staff up to handle applications, he said. Numerous other speakers echoed the call for permitting reform.
Numerous industry and FCC officials told us Tuesday that FCC Commissioner Nathan Simington is expected to leave the agency or announce an imminent departure this week. Simington and his office didn’t respond to requests for comment. Simington’s term expired last year, but he was expected to stay until the end of 2025.
Republican FCC Commissioner Nathan Simington announced Wednesday that he will leave the agency at the end of this week (see 2506030069). Simington thanked his staff and said he felt he was leaving the agency in good hands under Chairman Brendan Carr. Simington was confirmed as a commissioner in the first Trump administration in 2020.
Commissioner Geoffrey Starks is leaving the FCC Friday, the same day as Commissioner Nathan Simington, Starks said in a release a few hours after Simington’s announcement. Starks said in March that he would leave the agency this spring (see 2503180009) and announced at the May 22 FCC meeting that he wouldn't be in office for the June 26 meeting. “Serving as a Commissioner has been the highlight of my career. I am immensely proud of all that we have achieved together,” Starks said in the release. Starks' and Simington's departures will leave the FCC with just two commissioners. The Communications Act requires a quorum of three, but there are federal rules that would allow the FCC to proceed with fewer, attorneys told us.