News Corp. Chmn. Rupert Murdoch is trying to restore relations with Chinese officials by organizing media summit meeting in Shanghai later this year. He wants summit to coincide with gathering of regional leaders for Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation forum. Murdoch’s goal is to offer his Star TV system throughout country.
Ariz. Attorney Gen. Janet Napolitano ruled expansion of Ariz. Corporation Commission to 5 members from 3, which voters approved in Nov., won’t be effective until 2 additional commission members are selected by voters in 2002 general election. She said plain language of ballot question and fact that legislature didn’t budget for additional members in 2001-02 fiscal cycle clearly showed it didn’t intend that ballot proposition create vacancies that required interim gubernatorial appointments. On related question, Napolitano said current commissioners could be elected to one additional 4-year term when their present terms expired. She said past commissioners, who previously were barred by law from seeking commission seat ever again, could run for 2nd term on agency starting with 2002 elections. With legal questions settled, agency Comrs. Marc Spitzer and Jim Irvin agreed Tues. that Comr. William Mundell was commission’s new chmn. Chmn. serves indefinite term and always casts final vote.
FCC, NTIA and Industry Canada reached agreement on spectrum- sharing requirements along U.S.-Canada border for U.S. Local Multipoint Distribution Service (LMDS) and Canadian Local Multipoint Communications Service (LMCS). Interim arrangement also covers certain services in 27 GHz, 29 GHz and 31 GHz. FCC said arrangement defined coordination requirements to help prevent cross-border interference. It said pact would help promote services such as high-speed Internet access and high-speed data. Arrangement calls for licensees of systems in 27 GHz to coordinate services on either side of border, with carriers encouraged to develop their own sharing agreements. If licensees work out their own sharing arrangement, FCC said that agreement will be followed rather than coordination process outlined in U.S.-Canada agreement. Without such sharing arrangements, coordination will be based on different power flux density (pfd) levels calculated at service area boundaries. In 29 and 31 GHz bands, coordination isn’t required if station generates pfd signal less than or equal to -105 dBW/m2 in any 1 MHz band at border. Above that level, coordination is necessary before deployment. In U.S., 27.35-27.5 GHz is occupied by federal govt. fixed and mobile systems and intersatellite service. That means NTIA and Industry Canada will represent licensees in arranging for coordination in that band segment, FCC said. “This arrangement gives licensees the flexibility to develop their own border-sharing agreements and will encourage expanded development of the 27, 29 and 31 GHz bands,” FCC International Bureau Chief Donald Abelson said. Arrangement includes list of service areas that may need to coordinate with each other. In Canada, 27 GHz band is designated for LMCS, but nation hasn’t yet designated radio service for 29 and 31 GHz. In U.S., 29 GHz is allocated for LMDS and in Canada for fixed and mobile service. Arrangement doesn’t apply to mobile services in those bands, although footnote to arrangement said it might be amended if Canada designated 29 and 31 GHz for fixed service. FCC said arrangement was part of its effort to negotiate agreements with Canada and Mexico to promote efficient spectrum use in border regions -- www.fcc.gov/ib/pnd/agree.
New cable industry study found that 79% of digital cable and 55% of analog cable subscribers were “very or somewhat receptive” to interactive TV (ITV) features. CTAM study, conducted through online interviews with 525 cable customers in 6 major markets, showed video-on-demand (VoD), personal video recorders (PVRs) and local news and information to be most attractive of core interactive features. Customers expressed most willingness to buy VoD services, with 71% of digital cable and 67% of analog cable subscribers saying they would do so. Study also found that cable customers most receptive to ITV features already were tinkering with more rudimentary forms of interactivity, colocating PCs in same room as TV sets and using both devices simultaneously. Most receptive consumers also tended to be 18-34 years old, pay-cable subscribers, frequent pay-per-view users and videotape renters, high-speed data subscribers and owners of big-screen TVs and DVD players.
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center gave Swales Aerospace 5- year contract worth potential $350 million to provide engineering service for Goddard’s Applied Engineering, Technology, Suborbital and Special Orbital Projects Directorates, including studying, designing, developing, testing, verifying and operating spacecraft and ground system hardware and software. Swales also will coordinate work of Orbital Sciences, Jackson & Tull, Hammers and Curtis Management in deal that consolidates services of 2 prior engineering service contracts.
Salt Lake Organizing Committee will be broadcast frequency coordinator for 2002 Olympic Games and Paralympic Games in Salt Lake City, FCC said in notice Wed. Group will coordinate frequency use in 150 km radius from city during games, FCC said.
Promotions at Time Warner: John Fogarty to vp, Gary Matz to vp, Trish McCausland to senior counsel… Sallie Fraenkel advanced to senior vp-mktg. & operations, program enterprises and distribution, Showtime… Jonathan Shair, ex-Bravo/Independent Film Channel, appointed vp-program scheduling and planning, Starz Encore Group… Richard Sulpizio, Qualcomm pres.-COO, elected to board… Ralph Haiek promoted to COO, Claxson Interactive Group… Michael Kennedy advanced to corporate vp and dir.-global govt. relations, Motorola… Berry Smith, senior vp, Schurz Communications, retires Jan. 31… Clifford Rees promoted to pres.- N. America, World Access… Changes at Broadbeam: Sri Sridharan, ex-ServiceNet, named pres.-COO; William Lenahan, CEO, KMC Telecom, joins board… Hewlett Packard Chmn. Carly Fiorina appointed to Cisco Systems board… Geoffrey Crowley promoted to regional vp-sales for the north, Net2000 Communications… Michael Kuehn, ex-Desert Island Resource Group, named vp-quality assurance & process development, Pathnet… Gordon McKenna, chmn., American Teleservices Assn., resigns.
U.S. Appeals Court, D.C., remanded low-power FM (LPFM) rules to FCC to give Commission time to implement latest legislation, responding to NAB petition (CD Dec 28 p4). Court said parties should report to court within 21 days after FCC action, to allow court to decide whether more action was needed. Court also said FCC must implement character qualification provisions of Radio Bcstg. Preservation Act.
Paxson announced series of TV station transactions, including: (1) It agreed to sell KBPX (Ch. 13) Flagstaff and WPXS (Ch. 13) Mt. Vernon, Ill., to Equity Bcstg., terms not disclosed. Stations will remain Pax affiliates. It said sales were move toward complying with FCC ownership cap. Deals mean Paxson stations will reach 33.1% of U.S. households, it said. (2) Pax TV signed joint sales agreements with Scripps-owned NBC stations in Kansas City (KSHB-TV, Ch. 13), Palm Beach (WPTV, Ch. 5), Tulsa (KJRH, Ch. 2). NBC stations will provide sales and marketing infrastructure for Pax stations. (3) Paxson signed joint sales agreement with Dispatch Bcst. station WTHR-TV (Ch. 13) Indianapolis (NBC). WTHR-TV will provide sales and marketing for WIPX-TV (Ch. 63) Bloomington, Ind.
U.S. Appeals Court, D.C., ruling Tues. that rejected SBC’s advanced services subsidiary (CD Jan 10 p1) appeared to have raised more questions than it answered. Observers questioned Wed. whether decision might pressure Congress to revise Telecom Act to account for advanced services, how ruling would affect similar arrangement at Verizon and how it might play out under new Republican FCC. Court overturned trade-off FCC made with SBC: FCC allowed SBC to provide advanced services free of interconnection requirements if company formed separate affiliate to provide those services. In response to appeal filed by Assn. of Communications Enterprises (ASCENT), court ruled FCC didn’t have authority to forgo interconnection requirements of Sec. 251(c) just because SBC was providing advanced, rather than basic, services and using separate subsidiary. ASCENT represents competitive carriers, particularly those that resale ILEC service.