Spectrum Comments Pour into FCCNovember 17, 2009
WASHINGTON: A proposal to create a national wireless
broadband network is generating tens of thousands of comments at the Federal
Communications Commission. Commenters range from lobbies, think tanks, schools,
phone companies, citizens, and the likes of the Waukesha County Department of
Emergency Preparedness.
Each has an agenda. Waukesha County emergency responders want communications
licensed in the 700 MHz block of spectrum. A previous effort by the FCC to
auction a slice of 700 MHz as a public-private partnership for emergency
communications failed to attract sufficient bids.
Lawrence Touitou of Burlingame, Calif., urged the FCC to enforce network
neutrality.
The National Association of Broadcasters in Washington, D.C. urged the
commission to keeps its mitts off of television spectrum. The NAB was joined in
its comments by the Association for Maximum Service TV:
“MSTV and NAB herein reject the notion put forth by a select few commenters
affiliated with the
commercial wireless industry--namely, that to achieve a world-class broadband
ecosystem, one
must curtail or even eliminate consumers’ access to a free and robust
over-the-air digital television service.”
The wireless industry is hotly pursuing the notion that using airwaves for
broadband is a far better use of spectrum than TV. The Wireless Association
(CTIA), along with the Consumer Electronics Association, asked the FCC this
week to “investigate potential reallocation of broadcast spectrum.”
“To our knowledge,” they wrote, “the commission has never conducted a detailed
evaluation of advanced television services, nor has it made an assessment of
alternative uses and the ability of the commission to reduce the amount of
spectrum assigned to broadcast television licensees.
“This spectrum is uniquely suited for mobile broadband applications, devices
and services--it has highly favorable propagation characteristics and is
directly adjacent to the 700 and 800 MHz spectrum utilized by the commercial
wireless industry. We therefore urge the commission to take immediate action to
initiate the Congressionally mandated evaluation of broadcast television
spectrum usage.”
The Congressional mandate refers to the Communications Act, which directs the
FCC to conduct an evaluation within 10 years of issuing licenses for advanced
TV services, otherwise known as digital TV.
Several broadcast groups weighed in, echoing the
NAB and MSTV comments and further saying such a reallocation would be anticompetitive.
“Consumers value video programming more highly than any other content, and a reallocation
of broadcast spectrum could conveniently eliminate the wireless industry’s most
serious competitive threat--mobile DTV.,” 16 TV station groups said in a joint
reply comment. “Indeed, a spectrum reallocation from television to wireless broadband
would amount to the commission picking industry winners and losers.”
A filing from PBS Counsel Matthew DelNero reminded the commission how much
money had just been spent on realizing digital television--several billions,
including federal, state, local and donated dollars.
The pitch of the battle is beginning to draw in
lawmakers. Rep. John Dingell (D-Mich.) penned a letter to FCC Chairman Julius
Genachowski, prodding the regulator to protect broadcasting. The letter,
initially obtained and reported by John Eggerton of Broadcasting & Cable, conveyed Dingell’s concern about
reallocating spectrum.
“Particularly as commercial and non-commercial broadcasters surrendered nearly
one-third of their spectrum to the federal government in order to facilitate
the recent transition from analog to digital signal transmission, I believe
that a further loss of spectrum by broadcasters may have an adverse effect upon
consumers by limiting their choice in available broadcast television,” Dingell
wrote. “This in mind, it is my belief that the commission can accomplish its
statutorily mandated duty to complete a national broadband plan and promote the
expansion of broadband infrastructure in the near-term, while at the same time
preserve to the greatest extent possible for consumers the availability of
free, over-the-air local broadcasting.”
The FCC must present a nationwide broadband plan to Congress by February.
(Image by Eric Harmatz
)
Additional
resources:
The FCC radio frequency allocation
chart.
The commission’s “Online Table of
Frequency Allocations.”
Bazelon’s paper, “The Need
for Additional Spectrum for Wireless Broadband: The Economic Benefits and Costs
of Reallocation.”
More on the spectrum war:
November
11, 2009: “Satellite Firms Shop
Spectrum to FCC”
Two satellite companies have approached the FCC with a plan for freeing up
spectrum for national wireless broadband.
October 27, 2009: “Yo! NAB Raps CEA-funded
Spectrum Study”
The National Association of Broadcasters today dismissed a recent
study funded by the Consumer Electronics Association estimating the
market-value of broadcast television spectrum.
October 26, 2009: “Broadcast Frequencies
Deemed Easiest to Reallocate”
The latest salvo in the intensifying battle over spectrum is a research
paper that asserts broadband is a more cost-effective use than broadcasting.
October 26, 2009: “Broadcasters Want Facts
About Spectrum Demands”
The folks representing broadcasting in Washington would like a little more
information about the FCC’s developing spectrum plan.
October 22, 2009: “Virginia Town
Exemplifies White Space Usage”
The community of Claudville, Va., is quintessentially “unserved,” an
archetype for using TV spectrum for wireless broadband.
October 13, 2009: “The Winds of Spectrum
War”
The impetus of the digital TV transition was to free up spectrum for
wireless carriers, but what seemed sufficient when the effort began is no
longer the case.
October 12, 2009: “FCC Grants Microsoft
White Space Licenses”
Microsoft now has an experimental license to use TV channels around
Redmond, Wash., for testing unlicensed devices.
September 28, 2009: “Broadband Spectrum
Feedback Sought”
“We seek additional comment on the fundamental question of whether current
spectrum allocations, including but not limited to the prime bands below 3.7
GHz, are adequate to support near- and longer-term demands of wireless
broadband.”
Sept. 17, 2009: “Legislators Press for
Spectrum Inventory”
Legislators and regulators alike agreed that an inventory was in order.
July 13, 2009: “Boucher Proffers House
Spectrum Bill”
Lawmakers in the House of Representatives have rolled out a bill that would
initiate a radio spectrum inventory.
April 10, 2009: “National Broadband Plan
Includes Wireless and TV White Spaces”
“Given the importance to wireless broadband services of backhaul to the
PSTN and the Internet, how can this spectrum be maximized to provide
point-to-point backhaul in rural areas?
February 6, 2009: “Boeing Receives
Experimental License in TV Broadcast Spectrum”
The WE2XVQ experimental license issued to the Boeing Company allows
operation in.... broadcast TV VHF channels 11, 12 and 13 and all UHF TV
channels except 37.
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