Southern Ohio Communications Services (SOCS) asked the FCC for a six-month extension of an Oct. 6 deadline to remove Huawei and ZTE components from its network under the FCC’s rip-and-replace program. SOCS “has worked diligently” to complete the removal, replacement and disposal of “covered” equipment in its network, said a filing last week in docket 18-89. However, some of its ZTE gear “has not yet been disposed of,” the ISP said: Most is in storage waiting for disposal and the only remaining component still attached to the network is a single ZTE router, SOCS said: “SOCS has purchased the replacement equipment for this item and is now waiting for the vendor to install it.”
Consumers' Research objected again to the FCC's proposed quarterly USF contribution factor for Q4 2024. The group said in comments posted Friday in docket 96-45 that the FCC should reject the proposed 35.8% contribution factor and let Congress "fund universal service via a standard tax appropriation." The group challenged the USF contribution mechanism in the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which granted a stay of its ruling in favor of Consumers' Research pending the FCC's petition for a writ of certiorari before the U.S. Supreme Court last month (see 2408270030).
The FCC reminded ISPs Tuesday that all providers must comply with the commission's consumer broadband labels by Oct. 10. The commission gave smaller providers until then to come into compliance. Most providers were required to comply by April 10 (see 2310100058).
The FCC’s three-year, $200 million cybersecurity pilot program for schools and libraries will likely be highly competitive, with lots of interest nationally, Julia Legg, account manager at E-Rate Central, predicted on Wednesday during a Schools, Health & Libraries Broadband Coalition webinar. SHLB received dozens of questions about program details during the webinar. The FCC wants to fund as many eligible schools, libraries and consortiums as possible, including “those that include tribal entities, and a mix of large and small, urban and rural” programs, Legg said. All the details haven’t been published on reporting requirements, but a baseline report will be required in year one, with annual reports due within 60 days of the end of the year, she said. Applicants disagreeing with a decision have 30 days to appeal, half the time normally available for E-rate appeals, she said. Allison Baker, associate chief of the FCC Wireline Bureau, said the agency will accept applications from entities not participating in the E-rate program, but they must be eligible for it. Sue McNeil, chief of the Consumer & Governmental Affairs Bureau’s Office of Intergovernmental Affairs, warned potential applicants that failure to file a complete Part 2 application could mean being removed from the pilot and potentially being referred to the Enforcement Bureau: “Nobody wants that.” Some 30 questions raised in the webinar that weren't answered will be addressed during an Oct. 2 SHLB workshop, said John Windhausen, SHLB executive director. The FCC approved the pilot program 3-2 in June with Commissioners Brendan Carr and Nathan Simington dissenting (see 2406060043). The initial window to apply for the program opens Sept. 17 and closes Nov. 1 (see 2409040036).
The FCC Precision Ag Task Force will meet virtually Oct. 15 at 3 p.m. EDT, said a notice in Wednesday's Federal Register. The group will hear updates from working group leadership and edit its draft executive summary of the group's report to the FCC.
NTIA wants comments by Oct. 15 on its Local Estimates of Internet Adoption (LEIA) project (docket NTIA-2024-0003), a new joint effort with the U.S. Census Bureau, said a notice for Thursday's Federal Register. The agencies will use Project LEIA to "develop model-based estimates of internet adoption for smaller populations than would typically be possible using survey data alone," it said. The project aims to fill a "key gap in our knowledge of digital equity challenges," said Rafi Goldberg, NTIA senior adviser-digital equity, in a blog Monday. The agencies released their first "set of experimental, single-year estimates of household wired internet adoption for every county" in the U.S., Goldberg said. The new model is based on 2022 American Community Service data "in combination with several variables related to subscribership levels," he said. Project LEIA was developed to "obtain feedback from stakeholders and enhance future estimates," said a Census Bureau news release. It used "small area estimation methods" and "restricted data" to produce a feasibility report, user guide and data files.
AT&T reopened discussions Sunday on the final offer the carrier submitted to the Communications Workers of America last week “as we continue the constructive negotiations we’ve engaged in since day one,” an AT&T spokesperson emailed in response to the latest complaint from the union (see 2409090040). CWA workers in the Southeast went on strike last month (see 2409050049). “We continue to aim for an agreement that will provide competitive market-based pay that exceeds projected inflation, provides benefits that improve employees’ total well-being, and sustains a competitive position in the broadband industry where we can grow and win against our mostly non-union competitors,” the spokesperson said: AT&T remains “hopeful” CWA “will engage with us in the same spirit and work towards an agreement to get our employees back to work.”
Comments are due Oct. 10, replies Oct. 25, on an FCC NPRM and notice of inquiry aimed at reducing unwanted AI robocalls. Commissioners approved the measures 5-0 in August (see 240807003). “Complaints regarding unwanted and illegal robocalls and robotexts are consistently the top category of consumer complaints that the Commission receives,” said a notice for Tuesday’s Federal Register: “As a result, it is critical that the Commission stay abreast of new technologies that may impact the privacy protections afforded to consumers under” the Telephone Consumer Protection Act. The notice also seeks comments Nov. 12 as part of the initial Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 analysis.
AT&T, which is already dealing with a strike by Communications Workers of America members in the Southeast, now faces a CWA walk out in the West (see 2409050049). “Our members had a chance to review and vote on the AT&T West tentative agreement, and the majority determined that it did not meet their needs,” CWA District 9 Vice President Frank Arce said Friday: “We will use all the tools at our disposal to win a fair contract, including a strike if it becomes necessary.” The AT&T West agreement covers some 8,000 workers in California and Nevada whose contract expired April 6, a CWA spokesperson emailed Monday.
Direct Action for Rights and Equality (DARE) asked the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to hold parts of the FCC's order on incarcerated people's communications services unlawful and remand the issue to the commission in a petition filed last week (docket 24-1814). The group filed a protective petition to "safeguard its rights in pursuing litigation" because only part of the order was published in the Federal Register. The published portion of the order addressed petitions for reconsideration, clarification and a waiver (see 2408230012). DARE noted it was "aggrieved by the order itself" and "does not claim to be separately aggrieved by the limited portion of the order" that was published.