GCI Communications filed a redacted letter at the FCC on its pursuit of a plan to pay for 5G deployment in Alaska (see 2407230013). GCI and the Brattle Group are developing a model that estimates the incremental cost of providing mobile broadband service to Alaska residents. “The results of the updated model continue to confirm that deploying 5G to all Broadband Serviceable Locations in Alaska at 35/3 Mbps (average) and 7/1 Mbps (edge) by the end of the Alaska Connect Fund term would require substantially more universal service support,” said a filing posted Wednesday in docket 23-238.
American Tower was among the least-shorted companies on the S&P 500 last month, Seeking Alpha reported Wednesday. American Tower had a reported short interest of 0.77% as a percentage of stock float, the report said. Motorola Solutions also made the least-shorted list (0.82%). The least-shorted stock was engineering firm Amentum Holdings (0.24%), Seeking Alpha said.
Garmin International provided additional information to the FCC on its request for a waiver of rules for handheld general mobile radio service (GMRS) devices limiting them to one transmission every 30 seconds (see 2310060031). Garmin responded to a North Shore Emergency Association filing, which found an earlier filing on a September meeting of Garmin with FCC staff was inadequate (see 2407260036). “Garmin reiterated [during the meeting] that the data transmissions of its proposed GMRS device will have a reduced duty cycle and less practical effect on users of GMRS devices compared to the digital data transmissions currently permitted under the Commission’s GMRS rules, including by limiting data transmissions to interstitial channels,” said the latest Garmin filing, posted Tuesday in docket 24-7. “Specifically, Garmin is seeking to provide very short (50 milliseconds) digital data transmissions, such as GPS location data, once every five (5) seconds, provided that in non-emergency situations the channel being used has not been utilized for voice communications in the prior 30 seconds,” Garmin said.
Consultant Whitey Bluestein argued in favor of the FCC adopting uniform handset unlocking standards. Current nonmandatory standards “were adopted 11 years ago" with “little or no consumer input,” said a filing Tuesday in docket 24-186: “Since then, industry structure, technology, networks, spectrum, devices, services, usage and regulations -- virtually everything comprising the mobile ecosystem -- have changed dramatically.” Among the changes, Bluestein cited smartphones are now “increasingly powerful” and their cost “has nearly doubled, averaging $823 in 2023, and expected to increase.” FCC commissioners approved an NPRM 5-0 in July proposing that all wireless providers unlock handsets 60 days after they’re activated, unless a carrier determines the handset “was purchased through fraud” (see 2407180037).
Groups representing the deaf and hard of hearing opposed a CTIA request that the FCC indefinitely extend its September 2023 temporary waiver allowing use of the interim volume control testing method for hearing-aid compatibility (HAC) compliance. CTIA made the proposal as part of its FCC outreach on the draft GAC order, set for a commissioner vote Thursday (see 2409260047). The FCC’s waiver standard “dictates that the Commission should not act now to preemptively extend -- without imposing any time limits -- the September 2023 waiver allowing use of the interim HAC volume control testing method,” said a filing posted Tuesday in docket 23-388. The groups also raised concerns about the CTIA’s comments on labeling (see 2410090051). The FCC should “take into account that consumers with hearing loss must receive all the information they need to make an informed decision about any handset before purchase,” the filing said. Groups signing the filing were the Rehabilitation Engineering Research Center on Technology for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing, the Hearing Loss Association of America, Deaf Equality, TDIforAccess and Communication Service for the Deaf.
Commnet Wireless and NTUA Wireless asked for additional six-month extensions of pending deadlines to remove Huawei and ZTE components from their networks under the FCC’s rip-and-replace program. The carriers, which serve the Navajo Nation, requested the extension in a series of FCC filings, posted Tuesday in docket 18-89. Commnet said in one of the filings it faces a Jan. 27 completion date. “Commnet is unable to meet this deadline due to factors beyond its control, and we thus assert that the grant of a six-month extension as contemplated by the Commission’s rules is warranted and would serve the public interest,” the filing said: “Commnet continues to work diligently to complete its plan to remove, replace and securely dispose of equipment, however, even after receiving our previous extension, we also continue to face challenges with repeated delays caused primarily from zoning and permitting restrictions that have severely delayed our overall progress.”
NTIA supports the FCC’s proposal for expansion of nonfederal use of the 13 GHz band, provided there are protections for in-band and adjacent federal operations, said a filing last week in docket 22-352. NTIA responded on behalf of NASA and the National Science Foundation. To ensure “in-band compatibility” with NASA’s Deep Space Network receiving ground station at Goldstone, California, and NSF-operated radioastronomy (RA) observatories, “NTIA and the Commission should develop a coordination process that would protect these important scientific endeavors while still permitting more intensive use of the band,” NTIA said. “Because the RA observatories are located in remote areas, successful coordination should be possible,” NTIA said. The FCC launched a notice of inquiry on the future of the 13 GHz band two years ago (see 2210270046).
CTIA representatives spoke with aides to FCC Commissioner Anna Gomez about changes the group is seeking to the commission’s draft hearing-aid compatibility order (see 2410090051). The order is set for a commission vote Thursday (see 2409260047). “CTIA reiterated that its members have long been aligned with the goal of achieving 100 percent HAC and are working hard to introduce new and better wireless devices and services for all consumers, including those that use hearing devices,” said a filing posted Friday in docket 23-388.
The FCC continues getting advice supporting and opposing a proposal that would give the FirstNet Authority control of the 4.9 GHz band (see 2408160027). The Harvard Fire-Emergency Medical Services Department endorsed the proposal in a filing posted Friday in docket 07-100. “This action is essential to enhance public safety communications and ensure reliable, mission-critical support for first responders” and the FirstNet Authority “has proven it can effectively manage and deploy the public safety spectrum,” the department said. The Virginia Sheriffs' Association said the spectrum belongs “in the hands of sheriffs and other local entities who know best how to use it.”
Dell’Oro Group predicted total radio access network revenue will trend downward until 2029, as the RAN market undergoes “a second consecutive year of steep declines.” While “the pace of decline is expected to moderate after 2024, downward pressure is likely to persist until 6G becomes a reality,” Dell’Oro warned last week: “The overpromising of 5G and its inability to significantly alter the flat revenue trend among operators are fueling increased skepticism regarding the need for substantial investments in new technologies.” Some skepticism is “warranted,” said Stefan Pongratz, vice president-RAN and telecom capital expenditures research at Dell’Oro. Operators invested more than $2 trillion in wireless networks “between 2010 and 2023 to build out 4G and 5G, yet revenues remain flat,” he said.