Arguments that employment and labor concerns aren't germane to Skydance Media's pending acquisition of Paramount Global and shouldn't be considered by the FCC aren't correct, according to Fuse Media and Teamsters Local 399. In a docket 24-275 filing posted Tuesday to recap a meeting with FCC Media Bureau and Office of General Counsel staffers, Fuse and the union said the transaction directly ties to likely job cuts at New Paramount, including at stations owned and operated by CBS. Station staffing can affect a licensee's ability to uphold the localism part of the public interest standard, they said. Fuse and the union suggested a station-level staffing requirement that would keep full-time employment stable for eight years. It also would bar New Paramount from consolidating operations across stations or outsourcing work previously done by full-time staffers.
A spike in unlawful robocalls since January might be due to the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals striking down part of the FCC's 2023 robocall and robotext order (see 2501240067), Telephone Consumer Protection Act lawyer Eric Troutman of Troutman Amin wrote Tuesday. Illegal robocalls are at their highest level to start the year since 2019, after a significant decline in 2024, Troutman said. "Just a massive (and sudden) turn around," he said. "The bad actors out there are plainly winning," meaning "heavy-handed (and misguided) action from Congress or the regulators" is coming. The increase in unlawful robocalls eliminates any hope of tort reform to rein in "the insane number of frivolous TCPA suits against small businesses."
EchoStar, parent of Dish Wireless, filed at the FCC on Tuesday a list of cellsites where it offers 5G. EchoStar redacted the entire list and asked for confidential treatment. The report demonstrates that EchoStar has satisfied a commitment to the FCC to deploy at least 24,000 5G sites by June 14, said the filing in docket 22-212.
Comments are due June 6, replies July 7, on a Further NPRM on wireless location accuracy, said a notice for Wednesday’s Federal Register. The FNPRM, which commissioners approved 4-0 in March (see 2503270042), focuses on the importance of dispatchable location, an FCC priority for the last 10 years.
Projected USF demand for Q3 is $2.114 billion, which is $72.4 million less than Q2, a 3.3% drop, said a recent filing by the Universal Service Administrative Co. “The decrease in overall USF demand is caused by decreases in demand for three of the constituent funds of the USF, offset by an increase in the Rural Health Fund,” USAC said.
Mountain Communications will pay a $12,000 civil penalty after reaching a settlement with the FCC Enforcement Bureau over unauthorized transfers of control, said a consent decree released Tuesday. Mountain self-reported four prior transactions that resulted in a minority owner, Larry Sisler, acquiring 100% ownership in the company. Mountain didn’t get FCC approval for the transfers, the consent decree said. Along with the monetary penalty, Mountain has agreed to create a compliance plan and file compliance reports with the FCC for three years.
Senate Commerce Committee ranking member Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., pressed Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Tuesday “to guard the critical spectrum resources currently assigned to” DOD, which has proposed reallocating some military-controlled bands (see 2504040068). Cantwell said any DOD reallocation in response to congressional Republicans’ push for a spectrum pipeline as part of a coming budget reconciliation package would put “short-term corporate gain ahead of our nation’s long-term security.”
Money, not technology, is the biggest hurdle to satellite providing "fiber in the sky"-like connectivity, said Michael Abad-Santos, Rivada Space Networks' deputy chief commercial officer, at International Telecoms Week on Tuesday. Satellite executives also discussed spectrum needs for satellite-delivered terrestrial connectivity. George Giagtzoglou, Omnispace's vice president-strategy and marketing, said reusing terrestrial spectrum will suffice in some areas. In others, there's already dense use of terrestrial spectrum and likely none to spare for a mobile network operator (MNO) to hand off to a satellite service, he said.
The U.S. has a variety of paths to reach 600 MHz of high-power spectrum for carriers' use, the often-discussed goal of Congress, FCC Chairman Brendan Carr told reporters Tuesday following remarks at CTIA’s 5G Summit. The challenges that China presents also dominated discussions.
Supporters of the FCC's July 2024 order allowing schools and libraries to use E-rate support for off-premises Wi-Fi hot spots and wireless internet services told us they will continue campaigning after the Senate cleared an initial procedural hurdle in considering a Congressional Review Act resolution of disapproval (S.J.Res. 7) to undo the rule. The Senate approved a motion Tuesday to proceed to the CRA measure on a 53-47 party-line vote, confounding some E-rate supporters’ expectations that a handful of Republicans would cross party lines to oppose it (see 2505060032).