Leaders of the House and Senate Commerce committees who are spearheading the bipartisan congressional working group on a USF legislative revamp, which relaunched in June (see 2506120091), told us they plan to begin meeting again this month. But they said they feel less pressure to quickly reach an agreement on legislative recommendations since the U.S. Supreme Court's recent ruling in Consumers’ Research v. FCC, which found that USF’s funding mechanism is constitutional (see 2506270054). Sens. Ben Ray Lujan, D-N.M., and John Thune, R-S.D., formed the working group in 2023 as Communications Subcommittee chairman and ranking member, respectively (see 2305110066).
The FCC on Thursday released draft items scheduled for votes at its July 24 open meeting, the second with a Republican majority in this Trump administration. Chairman Brendan Carr sketched out details of the meeting in a wide-ranging speech Wednesday (see 2507020036). The main focus will be cutting regulations and streamlining copper retirements and the pole attachment process. Among other items, the FCC would decline to adopt a tribal priority window prior to the AWS-3 reauction. Another draft order requires text providers to support a text-to-988 georouting requirement.
Momentus is hoping for a February launch of its Vigoride-7 in-space transportation craft. In an FCC Space Bureau application posted Tuesday, the company said the vehicle -- which would spend 1.5 years in low earth orbit, deploying customers' payloads -- would operate in the S and X bands and host a customer payload operating in the 2.4 GHz band. It said future Vigoride iterations would also perform on-orbit services such as rendezvous, proximity operations and debris removal.
The 2 GHz and 1.6/2.4 GHz mobile satellite service (MSS) bands are prime for sharing with new entrant satellite systems, SpaceX told FCC Space Bureau staff, including Chief Jay Schwarz. In a docket 25-173 filing posted Wednesday recapping the meeting, SpaceX said the agency should make clear that EchoStar's market access in the 2 GHz band has expired and that the band is open for competitive entry. Granting Globalstar's application for 1.6/2.4 GHz access for its French-licensed C-3 system without processing other pending applications "would effectively cede control" of harmonized midband MSS frequencies to a foreign administration, it said. SpaceX also discussed satellite-related proposals in the FCC's "Delete" proceeding, including the addition of categories of satellite modifications that don't require prior approval. In a docket 25-133 filing, SpaceX said it also proposed adopting "self-coordinated 'light licensing'” instead of site-by-site earth station licensing in millimeter-wave bands and presuming that granting a satellite or earth station application would serve the public interest as long as it operates within existing rules.
Proponents of the 5G broadcast standard for low-power TV haven’t adequately shown that the new standard won’t cause interference to other services, said Sinclair Broadcast and NAB in reply comments filed in docket 25-168 in response to a petition from HC2 (see 2506030060). The petitioner “has not submitted a detailed engineering analysis or a technical study demonstrating that LPTV stations can operate using 5G Broadcast without interfering with existing television services,” said Sinclair.
Lawyers at Cooley warned that the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent 6-3 decision in McLaughlin Chiropractic Associates v. McKesson, a much-watched case about the Telephone Consumer Protection Act, will mean increased uncertainty for both sides in future TCPA cases (see 2506200053). SCOTUS ruled that, despite the Hobbs Act, lower courts have authority to examine agencies' decisions, including those of the FCC. The case provides “expanded opportunity to challenge FCC rulings," said Cooley's Tuesday blog post.
Gogo Business Aviation updated the FCC on delays it continues to face in removing unsecure gear from its network under the commission’s Secure and Trusted Communications Networks Reimbursement Program (see 2412130019). The update was heavily redacted. “Gogo’s requirements for replacing its network are not available off-the-shelf commercially,” said a filing Wednesday in docket 18-89. The company's vendor is still delivering equipment, it said. “Gogo expects deliveries to continue through December 2025. … Due to the nature of deploying networks and Gogo’s limited spectrum holdings, the vendor must deliver nearly all ordered equipment items and components in their entirety to allow Gogo to fully deploy the network before the ‘flash’ cutover.”
Alaska’s GCI Communications updated the FCC on its performance plan for mobile services under the agency's Alaska Plan order. The update reflects “new terrestrial middle mile facilities [that] became commercially available in an area previously served only by performance-limiting satellite middle mile” in Akutan, Deering, King Cove and Kivalina, said a filing posted Wednesday (docket 16-271). GCI will upgrade service in those communities to LTE over fiber middle mile, the filing said.
CTIA asked the FCC on Wednesday to extend a temporary waiver allowing use of the interim volume control testing method for hearing-aid compatibility (HAC) compliance (see 2410150024). Without further action, the waiver would expire Sept. 29. “CTIA seeks an interim waiver to extend current HAC compliance practices to allow stakeholders to finalize and gain approval of the new volume control test methodology as a consensus standard before requesting that the Commission allow its use going forward,” said a filing in docket 23-388. During this extension, “handsets will continue to be certified using the current interim standard for testing volume control for HAC purposes,” CTIA said.
Incompas and some of its members met with FCC Wireline Bureau staff on infrastructure issues, said a filing posted Wednesday in docket 17-84. Among the companies represented were Crown Castle, C-Spire, Arcadian Infracom, PBI Fiber and Zayo. Incompas members “discussed the substantial investments in infrastructure and technologies they have made to deliver competitive communications services to customers in urban, suburban, and rural communities across the country,” the filing said. “Members also described current state and local permitting and franchising requirements, including the timelines and costs impacting broadband deployment. We also provided examples of variances in these requirements between jurisdictions.”