Leaders of the 5G for 12 GHz Coalition hope for FCC action by year-end on rules to allow fixed-wireless use of the lower 12 GHz band. Comments were due Wednesday on a Further NPRM, which commissioners approved 4-0 in May, examining fixed-wireless and unlicensed use of 12.2-12.7 GHz spectrum (see 2305180052). That FNPRM was part of a complicated series of items addressing the 12 and 13 GHz bands.
Incompas and Morgan Lewis, on behalf of its clients, asked the FCC for a 30-day extension of the deadlines to file comments and replies on an NPRM on Section 214 international authorizations, approved by commissioners in April (see 2304200039). The extension would mean comments are due Sept. 30, replies Nov. 1. The NPRM “seeks comment on a host of legal and policy questions to which we are working diligently with our respective members and clients to develop input,” said a filing posted Monday in docket 23-119: “The questions posed … involve complex economic, operational, and policy issues and will require us to closely consult with our respective members and clients. Our members and clients also must coordinate internally among business units and, in many cases, with their corporate owners in the U.S. and globally to determine the potential impact of the rules proposed in the NPRM and to develop their input.”
AUSTIN – NARUC's Telecom Committee supported permanent annual funding for the affordable connectivity program (ACP) in a nearly unanimous vote at the association’s conference Tuesday. Congress will fear ending ACP if enough people sign up, Multicultural Media, Telecom and Internet Council CEO Robert Branson told state commissioners on a diversity panel Monday. Panelists said it’s important for digital equity efforts to keep the program that’s meant to help low-income communities afford broadband.
Incompas held Wednesday's webinar on international Section 214 licenses (see 2307120069).
Companies holding international Communications Act Section 214 authorizations should be preparing for the FCC’s one-time data collection authorized in April (see 2304270039) and brace for tighter foreign-ownership disclosure rules and additional filing requirements to come out of that order’s accompanying NPRM, said Morgan Lewis attorneys Patricia Cave and Ulises Pin in an Incompas webinar Wednesday. Once the data collection order takes effect, companies need to “start reacting relatively quickly because there's going to be a short window in order to react” -- probably 30 days -- and the penalty for failure to do so could be “significant,” said Pin.
Support continued in comments from industry groups on the use of third-party caller ID authentication and other efforts to address Stir/Shaken implementation (see 2306060073). Some urged the FCC to clarify which levels of attestation should be allowed for authenticating calls. Reply comments were posted through Thursday in docket 17-97.
Incompas' Broadland released a "broadband ready city checklist" Thursday that offers best practices for cities preparing to administer NTIA's broadband, equity, access and deployment program. The checklist recommends a focus on "objectively reasonable costs," streamlining the review process for zoning or permitting applications, establishing transparent procedures, encouraging innovation, and "smart street restoration obligations." Preparing for infrastructure projects is "critical" and the checklist is "designed to promote public and private sector partnerships," said Incompas CEO Chip Pickering, who co-chairs Broadland. It "helps ensure that broadband money goes to broadband projects,” said Broadland co-chair Mignon Clyburn, former FCC commissioner.
Industry, state officials and advocacy organizations welcomed FCC proposals aimed at closing a loophole in robocall rules and addressing Stir/Shaken caller ID authentication, in comments posted Tuesday in docket 17-97 (see 2303160061). Most commenters agreed the commission should allow use of third-party authentication solutions without minimal restrictions.
The Senate Commerce Committee’s plan for moving on President Joe Biden’s trio of FCC nominees remains fluid amid uncertainty about whether there will be bipartisan appetite to move Anna Gomez, the White House’s new nominee for the vacant fifth commission seat, together with sitting Commissioners Brendan Carr and Geoffrey Starks (see 2305220065). Gomez told members of the U.S. delegation to the upcoming Nov. 20-Dec. 15 World Radiocommunication Conference last week she plans to stay in her existing State Department appointment to lead the group (see 2301260072) until the Senate confirms her as a commissioner.
The FCC released the second iteration of its new broadband availability maps Tuesday, showing more than 8.3 million homes and businesses lack access to high-speed broadband. It also shows a net increase of more than 1 million new serviceable locations from the initial map. It's "the most accurate depiction of broadband availability in the FCC’s history," NTIA said in a blog. The agency will rely on the maps for its broadband, equity, access and deployment program allocations.