Social contracts with cable operators could offer "a measured approach" toward easing TV ownership restrictions, according to altafiber and Hawaiian Telecom. In docket 25-133 Friday, they laid out the basics of such social contracts, which involve cable operators getting flexibility in setting rates for regulated product tiers and services, and, in exchange, the cablers agreeing to benefits, including negotiated rates, limited future regulated rate increases and free services to schools and libraries. Earlier in June, altafiber and Hawaiian Telecom pushed in meetings with FCC staff for social contracts for broadcasters in the event of changes to the broadcast-ownership cap, with the contracts including such agreements as reductions in retransmission consent rates that broadcasters charge MVPDs.
A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit unanimously denied a Radio Communications Corp. petition for review of the FCC’s implementation of the 2023 Low Power Protection Act (LPPA), which allowed low-power TV stations fulfilling certain criteria to upgrade to Class A status (see 2411180040). “We are unpersuaded by RCC’s arguments. The FCC’s Order adheres to the best reading of the statute,” said Judge Harry Edwards in the opinion Friday.
Urban rate surveys are due Aug. 15, said the FCC Office of Economics and Analytics and Wireline Bureau in a public notice Friday (docket 10-90). Providers required to complete the online survey, which identifies rates for fixed voice and broadband residential services in urban areas, will be contacted on or around July 7, it said.
The FCC shouldn't accept or receive comments on AST SpaceMobile's plans to use the 700 and 800 MHz bands for supplemental coverage from space services until AST makes public its interference analysis on those bands, T-Mobile said. In a posting Friday (docket 25-201), T-Mobile said AST should also first provide more information about the spectrum it will use and the geographic area that its proposed SCS operations cover, including coverage maps for each block of spectrum it leases.
The proposed restoration of the FCC's spectrum authority coming out of the Senate Commerce Committee (see 2506250054) isn't ideal, "but half a loaf and all that," consultant Richard Bennett wrote last week. A better pipeline would have made the whole 3 GHz band available for civilian use, but the 800 MHz of federal and nonfederal spectrum it makes available "will probably hold us over for 5-7 years, at which time we can begin to create a pathway for the next generation of mobile broadband." Unaddressed is a clawback of the overallocation of the upper 6 GHz and lower 7 GHz bands, Bennett said. "This would be a good candidate for reassignment, obviously, but nothing good happens in DC without a fight."
The FCC Office of Engineering and Technology approved commercial operations for Axon Networks' 6 GHz automated frequency coordination system. The approval lets Axon's AFC system manage access to spectrum in the 5.925-6.425 GHz and 6.525-6.875 GHz portions of the 6 GHz band for standard power access points and fixed client devices, OET said Friday (docket 21-352). Separately, OET approved a modification of Comsearch's 6 GHz AFC system.
FCC Chairman Brendan Carr is circulating an order that would deny a set of 2024 applications for review regarding upward revisions for reimbursement of services provided in the last month of the Lifeline COVID-19 waiver period. While the FCC provided a limited waiver during the pandemic of the non-usage rule -- which bars Lifeline providers from being subsidized for services that subscribers aren't using -- not extending the waiver after the relevant time period ended ultimately saves taxpayers millions, Carr said Friday. "While the Commission offered flexibility during the pendency of the COVID-19 pandemic, that does not mean we should allow providers to game the system for extra reimbursement, at the American public’s expense, after the need for this leniency had clearly -- and officially -- ended," he said. Assist Wireless, enTouch Wireless, Easy Wireless and iAccess Wireless in 2024 filed a set of applications for review of a Wireline Bureau order denying the companies an upward revision of their April 2021 Lifeline reimbursement claims. The circulating order would affirm the bureau's decision that the COVID-19 relief waiver for non-usage ended that month, and the companies aren't entitled to an additional month, the FCC said.
Senate GOP aides said Friday afternoon that chamber leaders aimed to hold an initial vote Saturday on a motion to proceed to the chamber’s combined budget reconciliation package, which includes the Commerce Committee’s revised proposal for an 800 MHz spectrum pipeline and restoration of the FCC’s lapsed auction authority through Sept. 30, 2034 (see 2506060029). Senate Commerce Chairman Ted Cruz, R-Texas, secured backing last week for the spectrum proposal from a pair of Armed Services Republicans after he strengthened the original proposal’s carve-outs excluding the 3.1-3.45 GHz and 7.4-8.4 GHz bands from potential FCC auction or other reallocation (see 2506250054).
EchoStar is making previously delayed interest payments to holders of company notes. In an SEC filing Friday, EchoStar said it notified the trustees of secured notes that it would make scheduled interest payments, originally due May 30 and June 2, including interest on the defaulted payments. Earlier, EchoStar cited uncertainty around its spectrum licenses due to FCC issues as its reason for not making the scheduled payments (see 2505300001).
The elimination of federal funding for PBS stations would be a blow to the ATSC 3.0 transition, said commercial and noncommercial broadcasters and advocates for public TV stations and 3.0. The transition would survive the loss of PBS station participation, but removing it from the equation would affect the reach of 3.0 datacasting, emergency communications and the broadcast positioning system (BPS), commercial broadcasters told us.