Ohio’s Public Utility Commission rejected telecom union demands to rescind an order approving Frontier’s proposed acquisition of Verizon landlines and convene a new set of hearings on the matter. Ruling Tuesday, the commission said it found no merit in arguments for a rehearing advanced by the Communications Workers of America and the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers. The unions claimed the commission wrongly and unlawfully approved the proposed transactions.
Motorola asked the FCC to impose only minimal conditions on waivers granted to local governments and public safety agencies seeking to make early use of 700 MHz spectrum. TIA said the FCC should assure any systems built using a waiver are interoperable. The Public Safety Bureau last month requested comment on the report of the National Public Safety Telecommunications Council’s Broadband Task Force (BBTF), as well as the response of the Public Safety Spectrum Trust to the report. The bureau also asked for comments on the role of the report in moving toward a national interoperable public safety broadband network in the 700 MHz band.
A court decision that the FCC lacked authority to regulate Comcast network management could fuel arguments for a legislative approach to Universal Service Fund reform, said Hill and industry officials. The ruling may not spur the Hill to action on USF this year, given an uninterested Senate and tight legislative schedule (CD April 7 p4), they said. The National Broadband Plan outlined a way for the FCC to revamp USF on its own, but House Communications Subcommittee Chairman Rick Boucher, D-Va., has voiced skepticism the agency can do a USF overhaul without Congress.
The Comcast decision on net neutrality resonates in Europe, several sources said Wednesday. The ruling (CD April 7 p1) is a “nice reminder” that there’s a limit to what regulators can do, even in Europe, said Hogan & Hartson (Paris) telecom attorney Winston Maxwell. It could spark confusion over the connection between broadband and net neutrality regulation, said Innocenzo Genna, a Brussels telecom consultant. The issue of net neutrality is proving so important that French telecom regulator ARCEP plans a day-long conference on it this month. Among key topics is how to define it.
FCC staffers are thought to be reviewing two batches of program access complaints against cable operators in light of how a January order on the subject that became effective Friday affects the cases, industry and commission officials said. The Media Bureau seems to be taking the lead in reviewing complaints by AT&T (CD April 7 p12) and Verizon against Cablevision for withholding HD versions of two regional sports networks, they said. It’s also believed to be involved in reviewing an AT&T challenge to the bureau’s 2009 dismissal of the telco’s complaint against Cox Communications for withholding access to a channel featuring San Diego Padres baseball games.
The FCC is circulating a proposed order in response to a remand by the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, an FCC official said. In 2001 and 2005, the court called the commission’s current non-rural high cost support mechanism unlawful, and reversed and remanded the rules. The commissioners will vote on the order by April 16, the official said. The FCC agreed to the deadline after Qwest and three state regulators filed a mandamus petition last year, the FCC official said.
The FCC announced Wednesday the launch of a small business broadband adoption public-private partnership, linking Score, the Small Business Administration’s volunteer arm and “private partners” including AT&T, Google, Microsoft, Cisco, Best Buy, Constant Contact, HP, Intuit, Skype, and Time Warner Cable.
Company and government officials sought government policies that would let more consumers manage energy consumption using Web-enabled devices, they said at a briefing hosted by Google and the Climate Group Tuesday. Meanwhile, positive signs were seen on Capitol Hill on efforts that could meet the Obama administration’s goal of a comprehensive energy plan, said Carol Browner, assistant to the president for energy and climate change.
The November elections and other factors probably will slow Hill action on recommendations in the National Broadband Plan, said industry observers. The plan asks Congress for help in a number of key areas. Public safety and Universal Service Fund legislation may have the best chance for near-term action, but neither is a sure bet, they said. It seems particularly tough to move much on the broadband plan this year in the Senate, which right now “can’t agree that the sky is blue,” said a telecom industry lobbyist.
Potential rule changes in the wireless communications service band meant to open up new spectrum for broadband services still have several flaws, say Sirius XM and the WCS Coalition, reacting to a rulemaking notice issued Friday. Further disagreement over the rules was expected by the FCC Office of Engineering, International Bureau, and Wireless Bureau, which acknowledge in the public notice “the draft rules do not adopt any party’s proposal in full” but say the rules “take a fair and balanced approach” to facilitating broadband use in the largely unused spectrum.