Auction of Lower 700 MHz Band Licenses Scheduled for July 20, 2005; Notice and Filing Requirements, Minimum Opening Bids, Upfront Payments and Other Auction Procedures, 25045-25059 [05-9537]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 91 / Thursday, May 12, 2005 / Notices
Please contact steven.naugle@ferc.gov
or (202) 502–6182 with any questions,
or for additional information.
Magalie R. Salas,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E5–2313 Filed 5–11–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6717–01–P
www.capitolconnection.org and click on
‘‘FERC.’’
For additional information, please
contact Sarah McKinley at 202–502–
8004, sarah.mckinley@ferc.gov.
example DA 05–737 for a copy of this
Public Notice. This document is also
available on the Internet at the
Commission’s Web site: https://
wireless.fcc.gov/auctions/60/.
Magalie R. Salas,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E5–2323 Filed 5–11–05; 8:45 am]
I. General Information
BILLING CODE 6717–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
[Docket No. AD05–3–000]
[Report No. AUC–05–60–B; DA 05–737]
Promoting Regional Transmission
Planning and Expansion to Facilitate
Fuel Diversity Including Expanded
Uses of Coal-Fired Resources; Second
Supplemental Notice of Technical
Conference
Auction of Lower 700 MHz Band
Licenses Scheduled for July 20, 2005;
Notice and Filing Requirements,
Minimum Opening Bids, Upfront
Payments and Other Auction
Procedures
May 5, 2005.
As announced in a Notice of
Technical Conference issued on
February 16, 2005 and a Supplemental
Notice issued March 21, 2005, a
technical conference will be held on
Friday, May 13, 2005, to identify
regional solutions to promoting regional
transmission planning, expansion and
enhancement to facilitate fuel diversity
including increased integration of coalfired resources to the transmission grid.
The conference will be held at the
Charleston Marriott Town Center, 200
Lee Street East, Charleston, West
Virginia 25301. The conference is
scheduled to begin at 8:30 a.m. (e.s.t.)
and end at approximately 4:30 p.m. The
Commissioners will attend and
participate.
An agenda for this meeting is
included as Attachment A. Although
registration is not a strict requirement,
in-person attendees are asked to register
for the conference on-line by close of
business on May 10, 2005 at https://
www.ferc.gov/whats-new/registration/
coal-05-13-form.asp.
Transcripts of the conference will be
immediately available from Ace
Reporting Company (202–347–3700 or
1–800–266–6646) for a fee. They will be
available for the public on the
Commission’s eLibrary system and on
the calendar page posting for this event
seven calendar days after FERC receives
the transcript. Additionally, Capitol
Connection offers the opportunity for
remote listening of the conference via
Real Audio or a Phone Bridge
Connection for a fee. Persons interested
in making arrangements should contact
David Reininger or Julia Morelli at
Capitol Connection (703–933–3100) as
soon as possible or visit the Capitol
Connection Web site at https://
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Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This document announces the
procedures and minimum opening bids
for the upcoming auction of five
licenses in the Lower 700 MHz Band.
This document is intended to
familiarize prospective bidders with the
procedures and minimum opening bids
for this auction.
DATES: Auction No. 60 is scheduled for
July 20, 2005.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Auctions and Spectrum Access Division,
WTB: For legal questions: Howard
Davenport at (202) 418–0660, for general
auction questions: Ray Knowles or Lisa
Stover at (717) 338–2888. Media
Contact: Lauren Patrich at (202) 418–
7944.
This is a
summary of the Auction No. 60
Procedures Public Notice released on
March 22, 2005. The complete text of
the Auction No. 60 Procedures Public
Notice, including attachments, is
available for public inspection and
copying during regular business hours
at the FCC Reference Information
Center, Portals II, 445 12th Street, SW.,
Room CY–A257, Washington, DC 20554.
The Auction No. 60 Procedures Public
Notice may also be purchased from the
Commission’s duplicating contractor,
Best Copy and Printing, Inc. (‘‘BCPI’’),
Portals II, 445 12th Street, SW., Room
CY–B402, Washington, DC 20554,
telephone (202) 488–5300, facsimile
(202) 488–5563, or you may contact
BCPI at their Web site: https://
www.BCPIWEB.com. When ordering a
document from BCPI, please provide the
appropriate FCC document number for
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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A. Introduction
1. The Auction No. 60 Procedures
Public Notice announces the procedures
and minimum opening bid amounts for
the upcoming auction of licenses in the
Lower 700 MHz band C block (710–716/
740–746 MHz) scheduled for July 20,
2005 (Auction No. 60). On January 26,
2005, in accordance with Section
309(j)(4) of the Communications Act of
1934, as amended, the Wireless
Telecommunications Bureau (‘‘Bureau’’)
released a public notice seeking
comment on reserve prices or minimum
opening bid amounts and the
procedures to be used in Auction No.
60. The Bureau received no comments
in response to the Auction No. 60
Comment Public Notice, 70 FR 6436,
(February 7, 2005).
i. Background of Proceeding
2. On January 18, 2002, the
Commission released the Lower 700
MHz Report and Order, 67 FR 45380
(July 9, 2002) which adopted allocation
and service rules for the Lower 700 MHz
Band. Specifically, the Commission
reallocated the entire 48 megahertz of
spectrum in the Lower 700 MHz band
to fixed and mobile services and
retained the existing broadcast
allocation for both new broadcast
services and incumbent broadcast
services during their transition to digital
television (‘‘DTV’’). The Commission
established technical criteria designed
to protect incumbent television
operations in the band during the DTV
transition period, allowed low power
television (‘‘LPTV’’) and TV translator
stations to retain secondary status and
operate in the band after the transition,
and set forth a mechanism by which
pending broadcast applications may be
amended to provide analog or digital
service in the core television spectrum
or to provide digital service on TV
Channels 52–58.
3. In its service rules, the Commission
divided the Lower 700 MHz band into
three 12-megahertz blocks, with each
block consisting of a pair of 6-megahertz
segments, and two 6-megahertz blocks
of contiguous, unpaired spectrum. The
Commission decided to divide the five
blocks in the Lower 700 MHz band plan
as follows: for the two 6-megahertz
blocks of contiguous unpaired
spectrum, as well as two of the three 12megahertz blocks of paired spectrum,
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the Commission determined to assign
licenses in six Economic Area
Groupings (‘‘EAGs’’); for the remaining
12 megahertz block of paired spectrum,
the Commission determined to assign
licenses in 734 Metropolitan Statistical
Areas (‘‘MSAs’’) and Rural Service
Areas (‘‘RSAs’’). All operations in the
Lower 700 MHz band are generally
regulated under the framework of Part
27’s technical, licensing, and operating
rules. To permit both wireless services
and certain new broadcast operations in
the Lower 700 MHz band, however, the
Commission has amended the
maximum power limits in Part 27 to
permit 50 kW effective radiated power
(‘‘ERP’’) transmissions in the Lower 700
MHz band, subject to certain conditions.
Finally, the Commission established
competitive bidding procedures and
voluntary band-clearing mechanisms for
the Lower 700 MHz band. On June 14,
2002, the Commission affirmed its
decisions in the Lower 700 MHz Report
and Order.
4. With respect to the MSA and RSA
licenses, the Bureau notes that MSAs
and RSAs are collectively known as
Cellular Market Areas (CMAs). CMAs
were created from the Metropolitan
Statistical Areas (‘‘MSAs’’) defined by
the Office of Management and Budget
(CMA001–CMA305), the Gulf of Mexico
(CMA306), and Rural Service Areas
(‘‘RSAs’’) established by the FCC
(CMA307–CMA734). These RSAs
include parts of Puerto Rico not already
in an MSA (CMA723–CMA729), U.S.
Virgin Islands (CMA730–CMA731),
Guam (CMA732), American Samoa
(CMA733), and Northern Mariana
Islands (CMA734). The CMA
designation, rather than MSA/RSA, is
used in the FCC Integrated Spectrum
Auction System and in the Universal
Licensing System.
ii. Licenses To Be Auctioned
5. Auction No. 60 will offer five CMA
licenses in the Lower 700 MHz band C
block (710–716/740–746 MHz). These
licenses remained unsold in Auction
No. 49, which closed on June 13, 2003.
The C block is a 12-megahertz block
consisting of a pair of 6-megahertz
segments.
AUCTION NO. 60.—LOWER 700 MHZ BAND LICENSES TO BE AUCTIONED
Market number
CMA169
CMA202
CMA723
CMA727
CMA729
............
............
............
............
............
Market name
Mayaguez, PR ........................................................
Arecibo, PR ............................................................
Puerto Rico 1—Rincon ..........................................
Puerto Rico 5—Ceiba ............................................
Puerto Rico 7—Culebra .........................................
B. Rules and Disclaimers
i. Relevant Authority
6. Prospective applicants must
familiarize themselves thoroughly with
the Commission’s rules, particularly
those relating to the Lower 700 MHz
band contained in Title 47, part 27, of
the Code of Federal Regulations, and
those relating to application and auction
procedures, contained in Title 47, part
1, of the Code of Federal Regulations.
Prospective applicants must also be
thoroughly familiar with the
procedures, terms and conditions
(collectively, ‘‘terms’’) contained in this
Public Notice; the Auction No. 60
Comment Public Notice; and the
Commission’s decisions in proceedings
regarding competitive bidding
procedures.
7. The terms contained in the
Commission’s rules, relevant orders,
and public notices are not negotiable.
The Commission may amend or
supplement the information contained
in our public notices at any time, and
will issue public notices to convey any
new or supplemental information to
applicants. It is the responsibility of all
applicants to remain current with all
Commission rules and with all public
notices pertaining to this auction.
Copies of most Commission documents,
including public notices, can be
retrieved from the FCC Auctions
Internet site at https://wireless.fcc.gov/
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WZ–CMA169–C
WZ–CMA202–C
WZ–CMA723–C
WZ–CMA727–C
WZ–CMA729–C
.............
.............
.............
.............
.............
auctions. Additionally, documents are
available for public inspection and
copying during regular business hours
at the FCC’s Reference Information
Center. Documents may also be
purchased from the Commission’s
duplicating contractor, Best Copy and
Printing Inc.
ii. Prohibition of Collusion
8. To ensure the competitiveness of
the auction process, § 1.2105(c) of the
Commission’s rules prohibits applicants
for any of the same geographic license
areas from communicating with each
other during the auction about bids,
bidding strategies, or settlements unless
such applicants have identified each
other on their FCC Form 175
applications as parties with whom they
have entered into agreements under
§ 1.2105(a)(2)(viii). Thus, applicants for
any of the same geographic license areas
must affirmatively avoid all discussions
with each other that affect, or in their
reasonable assessment have the
potential to affect, bidding or bidding
strategy. This prohibition begins at the
short-form application filing deadline
and ends at the down payment deadline
after the auction. This prohibition
applies to all applicants regardless of
whether such applicants become
qualified bidders or actually bid. For
purposes of this prohibition,
§ 1.2105(c)(7)(i) defines applicant as
including all controlling interests in the
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Block
C
C
C
C
C
............
............
............
............
............
Frequencies
(MHz)
710–716,
710–716,
710–716,
710–716,
710–716,
740–746
740–746
740–746
740–746
740–746
Bandwidth
(MHz)
12
12
12
12
12
entity submitting an application to
participate in the auction, as well as all
holders of partnership and other
ownership interests and any stock
interest amounting to 10 percent or
more of the entity, or outstanding stock,
or outstanding voting stock of the entity
submitting a short-form application, and
all officers and directors of that entity.
9. Applicants for licenses in any of
the same geographic license areas are
encouraged not to use the same
individual as an authorized bidder. A
violation of the anti-collusion rule could
occur if an individual acts as the
authorized bidder for two or more
competing applicants, and conveys
information concerning the substance of
bids or bidding strategies between the
applicants he or she is authorized to
represent in the auction. A violation
could similarly occur if the authorized
bidders are different individuals
employed by the same organization
(e.g., law firm or consulting firm). In
such a case, at a minimum, applicants
should certify on their applications that
precautionary steps have been taken to
prevent communication between
authorized bidders and that applicants
and their bidding agents will comply
with the anti-collusion rule. However,
the Bureau cautions that merely filing a
certifying statement as part of an
application will not outweigh specific
evidence that collusive behavior has
occurred, nor will it preclude the
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initiation of an investigation when
warranted.
10. The Commission’s anti-collusion
rule allows applicants to form certain
agreements during the auction, provided
the applicants have not applied for
licenses covering any of the same
geographic areas. In addition, applicants
that apply to bid for all markets will be
precluded from communicating with all
other applicants until after the down
payment deadline. However, all
applicants may enter into bidding
agreements before filing their FCC Form
175, as long as they disclose the
existence of the agreement(s) in their
Form 175. If parties agree in principle
on all material terms prior to the shortform filing deadline, those parties must
be identified on the short-form
application pursuant to § 1.2105(c),
even if the agreement has not been
reduced to writing. If the parties have
not agreed in principle by the filing
deadline, an applicant would not
include the names of those parties on its
application, and may not continue
negotiations. By signing their FCC Form
175 short-form applications, applicants
are certifying their compliance with
§ 1.2105(c).
11. Section 1.65 of the Commission’s
rules requires an applicant to maintain
the accuracy and completeness of
information furnished in its pending
application and to notify the
Commission within 30 days of any
substantial change that may be of
decisional significance to that
application. Thus, § 1.65 requires
auction applicants that engage in
communications of bids or bidding
strategies that result in a bidding
agreement, arrangement or
understanding not already identified on
their short-form applications to
promptly disclose any such agreement,
arrangement or understanding to the
Commission by amending their pending
applications. In addition, § 1.2105(c) (6)
requires all auction applicants to report
prohibited discussions or disclosures
regarding bids or bidding strategy to the
Commission in writing immediately but
in no case later than five business days
after the communication occurs, even if
the communication does not result in an
agreement or understanding regarding
bids or bidding strategy that must be
reported under § 1.65.
12. Applicants that are winning
bidders will be required to disclose in
their long-form applications the specific
terms, conditions, and parties involved
in all bidding consortia, joint ventures,
partnerships, and other arrangements
entered into relating to the competitive
bidding process. Any applicant found to
have violated the anti-collusion rule
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may be subject to sanctions, including
forfeiture of its upfront payment, down
payment or full bid amount, and may be
prohibited from participating in future
auctions. In addition, applicants are
reminded that they are subject to the
antitrust laws, which are designed to
prevent anticompetitive behavior in the
marketplace. If an applicant is found to
have violated the antitrust laws in
connection with its participation in the
competitive bidding process, it may be
subject to forfeiture of its upfront
payment, down payment, or full bid
amount and may be prohibited from
participating in future auctions.
13. A summary listing of documents
issued by the Commission and the
Bureau addressing the application of the
anti-collusion rule these documents are
available on the Commission’s anticollusion web page.
iii. Interference Protection of Television
Services
14. Among other licensing and
technical rules, new Lower 700 MHz
band licensees must comply with the
interference protection requirements set
forth in § 27.60 of the Commission’s
rules. Generally, § 27.60 establishes
standards for protection of co- and
adjacent-channel analog TV and DTV
facilities. Thus, for example, a new
licensee seeking to operate on the C
block (710–716/740–746 MHz) portion
of the Lower 700 MHz band must
provide co-channel protection to nearby
TV and DTV operations on Channels 54
and 59 and provide adjacent-channel
protection to stations on Channels 53,
55, 58, and 60. New Lower 700 MHz
band licensees should also be aware that
incumbent broadcasters may be
permitted to make certain changes to
their authorized facilities. Such
modified facilities may be entitled to
interference protection from new Lower
700 MHz band licensees. In addition,
Appendix D of the Lower 700 MHz
Report and Order describes additional
adjacent-channel interference
considerations that are designed to
mitigate the possibility of base-to-base
interference that may arise at base
receive stations that are in close
proximity to high power transmitters
operating on adjacent channels.
Moreover, licensees intending to operate
a facility at a power level of greater than
1 kilowatt must provide advance notice
to the Commission and to licensees
authorized in their area of operation.
New Lower 700 MHz licensees also will
have to comply with any additional
technical requirements or interference
protection requirements that may be
adopted as a result of any future
rulemaking proceedings.
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15. Potential bidders should recognize
that the interference protection
requirements for the Lower 700 MHz
band are more stringent in certain
respects relative to the interference
standards that apply to the Upper 700
MHz band. These interference
obligations will remain in force until the
end of the DTV transition period at
which time analog TV and DTV
broadcasters will be required to vacate
both the Upper and Lower 700 MHz
bands.
16. Potential bidders should be aware
that a greater number of broadcast
incumbents exist in the Lower 700 MHz
band relative to the Upper 700 MHz
band. The Commission has also
observed that, although there is
approximately the same number of
analog incumbents in both the Upper
and Lower 700 MHz bands, the Lower
700 MHz band consists of less spectrum
and, therefore, incumbent licensees are
more densely situated across the band.
Further, there is a significantly greater
number of DTV assignments on the
eight television channels in the Lower
700 MHz band, including licenses,
construction permits, pending
applications, and pending allotment
petitions, than exist in the Upper 700
MHz band. The Commission may also
permit certain Channel 60–69
broadcasters to relocate temporarily into
Channels 52–58 pursuant to a voluntary
clearing arrangement.
17. Negotiations with Incumbent
Broadcast Licensees: The Commission
has established a policy of facilitating
voluntary clearing of the 700 MHz
bands to allow for the introduction of
new wireless services and to promote
the transition of incumbent analog
television licensees to DTV service.
Generally speaking, this policy provides
that the Commission will consider
specific regulatory requests needed to
implement voluntary agreements
between incumbent broadcasters and
new licensees to clear the Lower 700
MHz band early, if consistent with the
public interest. The fundamentals of the
Commission’s voluntary clearing policy
for the 700 MHz bands were established
in a series of decisions beginning with
the adoption of the Upper 700 MHz First
Report and Order in January 2000.
However, in light of certain differences
between the Upper and Lower 700 MHz
bands, the Commission decided not to
extend certain aspects of its voluntary
clearing policy to the Lower 700 MHz
band, including the presumptions that
were established in the Upper 700 MHz
band for analyzing voluntary bandclearing proposals and the extended
DTV construction period that was
provided to certain single-channel
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broadcasters in connection with the
arrangements for early clearing of the
Upper 700 MHz band. In considering
such regulatory requests, the
Commission will consider whether
grant of the request would result in
public interest benefits, such as making
new or expanded public safety or other
wireless services available to consumers
or deploying wireless service to rural or
other underserved communities. The
Commission intends to weigh these
benefits against any likely public
interest costs, such as the loss of any of
the four stations in the designated
market area with the largest audience
share, the loss of the sole service
licensed to the local community, the
loss of a community’s sole service on a
channel reserved for noncommercial
educational broadcast service, or a
negative effect on the pace of the DTV
transition in the market.
18. Subsequent to the adoption by the
Commission of its voluntary clearing
policy, the Auction Reform Act of 2002
was enacted. One provision of this
legislation restricts the Commission’s
authority to waive certain broadcast
interference standards and the
minimum spacing requirements for
certain proposals to relocate Channel
52–69 analog operations to a Channel 2–
51 DTV allotment, if such waiver ‘‘will
result in any degradation in or loss of
service, or an increased level of
interference to any television household
except as the Commission’s rules would
otherwise expressly permit, exclusive of
any waivers previously granted.’’
19. Finally, the Commission notes
that an existing or future wireless
licensee in the 700 MHz bands may
notify in writing a digital low power TV
or TV translator operating on the same
channel or first adjacent channel of its
intention to initiate or change wireless
operations and the likelihood of
interference from the low power TV or
translator station within its licensed
geographic service area. Upon receipt of
such notice, the digital LPTV or TV
translator licensee must cease operation
within 120 days unless it obtains the
agreement of the wireless licensee to
continue operations.
iv. Due Diligence
20. Applicants are reminded that
there are a number of incumbent
broadcast television licensees already
licensed and operating in the 710–716/
740–746 MHz bands that will be subject
to the upcoming auction. As discussed
above in greater detail, the Commission
made clear that geographic area
licensees operating on the spectrum
associated with Channels 52, 53, 54, 55,
56, 57, 58, 59, and 60 must comply with
the co-channel and the adjacent channel
provision of § 27.60 of the Commission’s
rules. These limitations may restrict the
ability of such geographic licensees to
use certain portions of the
electromagnetic spectrum or provide
service to certain regions in their
geographic license areas.
21. To aid applicants, this Public
Notice lists incumbent licensees
operating in these bands. The
Commission makes no representations
or guarantees that the matters listed are
the only pending matters that could
affect spectrum availability in these
services. Applicants should not rely
solely on this list, but should carefully
review the Commission’s databases and
records before formulating bidding
strategies.
INCUMBENT CDBS RECORD LISTING FOR DTV CHANNELS 53–55 AND 58–60 AS OF 3/10/05
Channel
State
City
Call sign
53 ..........
PR .......
ARECIBO .............
WCCV–
TV.
3001
54 ..........
PR .......
YAUCO .................
W54AQ
42151
54 ..........
PR .......
ARECIBO .............
WCCV–
TV.
3001
55 ..........
PR .......
SAN JUAN ............
53859
58 ..........
PR .......
CAGUAS ..............
WIPR–
TV.
WUJA ....
58 ..........
PR .......
MAYAGUEZ .........
W34CI ...
71730
59 ..........
PR .......
BAYAMON ............
WDWL ...
4110
60 ..........
PR .......
SABANA GRANDE
W60AA ..
71726
60 ..........
PR .......
ARECIBO .............
WMEI ....
26676
60 ..........
PR .......
ARECIBO .............
WMEI ....
26676
22. Licensing records for the Media
Bureau are contained in the Media
Bureau’s Consolidated Data Base System
(CDBS) and may be researched on the
Internet at https://www.fcc.gov/mb/.
Potential bidders may query the
database online and download a copy of
their search results if desired. Detailed
instructions on using Search for Station
Information, Search for Ownership
Report Information and Search for
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Facility ID
8156
Name
ARN
Status
ASOCIACION
EVANGELISTICA CRISTO
VIENE INC..
ASOCIACION
EVANGELISTICA CRISTO
VIENE INC..
ASOCIACION
EVANGELISTICA CRISTO
VIENE INC..
PUERTO RICO PUBLIC
BROADCASTING CORP..
CAGUAS EDUCATIONAL TV,
INC..
WESTERN BROADCASTING
CORP. OF PUERTO RICO.
BAYAMON CHRISTIAN NETWORK.
WESTERN BROADCASTING
CORP. OF PUERTO RICO.
HECTOR NEGRONI
CARTAGENA.
HECTOR NEGRONI
CARTAGENA.
19991101AGR
CP ..................
DT
198904171Q ..
LIC .................
TX
19950719KH ..
LIC .................
TV
20000426ABF
CP ..................
DT
19851107KE ..
LIC .................
TV
JG0601UA .....
CP ..................
TX
20000419ABS
CP ..................
DT
1432 ...............
LIC .................
TX
19960415KE ..
CP MOD ........
TV
20001220ABS
APP ................
TV
Application Information and
downloading query results are available
online by selecting the CDBS Public
Access (main) button at the bottom of
the Electronic Filing and Public Access
list section. The database searches
return either station or application data.
The application search provides an
application link that displays the
complete electronically filed application
in application format. An AL/TC search
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Service
under the application search link
permits searching for Assignment of
License/Transfer of Control groups
using the AL/TC group lead application.
23. Potential bidders should direct
questions regarding the search
capabilities of CDBS to the Media
Bureau help line at (202) 418–2662, or
via e-mail at mbinfo@fcc.gov.
Applicants are solely responsible for
identifying associated risks and for
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investigating and evaluating the degree
to which such matters may affect their
ability to bid on, otherwise acquire, or
make use of licenses available in
Auction No. 60.
24. Applicants should also be aware
that certain pending and future
applications (including those for
modification), petitions for rulemaking,
requests for special temporary authority
(‘‘STA’’), waiver requests, petitions to
deny, petitions for reconsideration, and
applications for review may be pending
before the Commission and relate to
particular applicants or incumbent
licensees. In addition, pending and
future judicial proceedings may relate to
particular applicants or incumbent
licensees, or the licenses available in
Auction No. 60. Applicants are
responsible for assessing the likelihood
of the various possible outcomes, and
considering their potential impact on
spectrum licenses available in this
auction.
25. Applicant should perform due
diligence to identify and consider all
proceedings that may affect the
spectrum licenses being auctioned. The
Commission notes note that resolution
of such matters could have an impact on
the availability of spectrum for Auction
No. 60. In addition, although the
Commission may continue to act on
various pending applications, informal
objections petitions, and other requests
for Commission relief, some of these
matters may not be resolved by the time
of the auction.
26. As a convenience to potential
applicants, the Bureau will issue shortly
a due diligence announcement listing
proceedings that may affect future
operations in these bands. The
Commission makes no representations
or guarantees that the matters listed in
this due diligence announcement are
the only pending matters that could
affect spectrum availability in these
services.
v. Bidder Alerts
27. The FCC makes no representations
or warranties about the use of this
spectrum for particular services.
Applicants should be aware that an FCC
auction represents an opportunity to
become an FCC licensee in this service,
subject to certain conditions and
regulations. An FCC auction does not
constitute an endorsement by the FCC of
any particular services, technologies or
products, nor does an FCC license
constitute a guarantee of business
success. Applicants and interested
parties should perform their own due
diligence before proceeding, as they
would with any new business venture.
28. As is the case with many business
investment opportunities, some
unscrupulous entrepreneurs may
attempt to use Auction No. 60 to
deceive and defraud unsuspecting
investors. Information about deceptive
telemarketing investment schemes is
available from the FTC at (202) 326–
2222 and from the SEC at (202) 942–
7040. Complaints about specific
deceptive telemarketing investment
schemes should be directed to the FTC,
the SEC, or the National Fraud
Information Center at (800) 876–7060.
Consumers who have concerns about
specific proposals regarding Auction
No. 60 may also call the FCC Consumer
Center at (888) CALL–FCC ((888) 225–
5322).
vi. National Environmental Policy Act
Requirements
29. Licensees must comply with the
Commission’s rules regarding the
National Environmental Policy Act
(‘‘NEPA’’). The construction of a
wireless antenna facility is a Federal
action and the licensee must comply
with the Commission’s NEPA rules for
each such facility. The Commission’s
NEPA rules require, among other things,
that the licensee consult with expert
agencies having NEPA responsibilities,
including the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, the State Historic Preservation
Office, the Army Corps of Engineers and
the Federal Emergency Management
Agency (through the local authority
with jurisdiction over floodplains).
C. Auction Specifics
i. Auction Date
30. The auction will begin on
Wednesday, July 20, 2005, as
announced in the Auction No. 60
Comment Public Notice, 70 FR 6436
(February 7, 2005). The initial schedule
for bidding will be announced by public
notice at least one week before the start
of the auction. Unless otherwise
announced, bidding on all licenses will
be conducted on each business day, and
will continue until bidding has stopped
on all licenses.
ii. Auction Title
31. Auction No. 60—Lower 700 MHz
Band C block.
iii. Bidding Methodology
32. The bidding methodology for
Auction No. 60 will be simultaneous
multiple round bidding. The
Commission will conduct this auction
over the Internet using the FCC’s
Integrated Spectrum Auction system
(‘‘ISAS’’ or ‘‘FCC Auction System’’), and
telephonic bidding will be available as
well. Qualified bidders are permitted to
bid telephonically or electronically.
iv. Pre-Auction Dates and Deadlines
ISAS Orientation Sessions ..............................................................................................................................
Auction Seminar .............................................................................................................................................
Short-Form Application (FCC Form 175) Filing Window Opens ................................................................
Short-Form Application (FCC Form 175) Filing Window Deadline ............................................................
Upfront Payments (via wire transfer) .............................................................................................................
Mock Auction ..................................................................................................................................................
Auction Begins ................................................................................................................................................
v. Requirements for Participation
33. Those wishing to participate in
the auction must:
• Submit a short-form application
(FCC Form 175) electronically by 6 p.m.
Eastern Time (ET), June 3, 2005.
• Submit a sufficient upfront
payment and an FCC Remittance Advice
GENERAL AUCTION INFORMATION:
General Auction Questions ......................................................
Seminar Registration
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March 31, 2005 and April 21,
2005.
May 24, 2005.
May 24, 2005; 12 p.m. ET.
June 3, 2005; 6 p.m. ET.
June 30, 2005; 6 p.m. ET.
July 18, 2005.
July 20, 2005.
Form (FCC Form 159) by 6 p.m. ET,
June 30, 2005.
• Comply with all provisions
outlined in this public notice.
vi. General Contact Information
FCC Auctions Hotline, (888) 225–5322, Press Option #2, or direct
(717) 338–2888, Hours of service: 8 a.m.–5:30 p.m. ET, Monday
through Friday.
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AUCTION LEGAL INFORMATION: Auction Rules, Policies, Regulations.
LICENSING INFORMATION:
Rules, Policies, Regulations ......................................................
Licensing Issues
Due Diligence
Incumbency Issues
TECHNICAL SUPPORT:
Electronic Filing ........................................................................
FCC Auction System
PAYMENT INFORMATION:
Wire Transfers ...........................................................................
Refunds
TELEPHONIC BIDDING ..........................................................................
FCC COPY CONTRACTOR: Additional Copies of Commission Documents.
PRESS INFORMATION—FCC FORMS ..................................................
FCC INTERNET SITES ............................................................................
II. Short-Form (FCC Form 175) Filing
Requirements
34. A party’s application to
participate in an FCC auction, referred
to as a short-form application or FCC
Form 175, provides information used in
determining whether the applicant is
legally, technically, and financially
qualified to participate in Commission
auctions for licenses or permits. In
addition, for Auction No. 60, if an
applicant claims eligibility for a bidding
credit, the information provided will be
used in determining whether the
applicant is eligible for the claimed
bidding credit. Applicants to participate
in Auction No. 60 must file FCC Form
175 electronically by 6 p.m. ET on June
3, 2005. Applicants bear full
responsibility for submission of timely
and complete FCC Form 175
applications. All applicants must certify
on their FCC Form 175 applications
under penalty of perjury that they are
legally, technically, financially and
otherwise qualified to hold a license.
Applicants should read the instructions
carefully and should consult the rules to
ensure that, in addition to the materials
described below; all the information
that is required under the Commission’s
rules is included with their FCC Form
175 applications.
35. An entity may not submit more
than one short-form application in a
single auction. In the event that a party
submits multiple FCC Form 175s, such
additional applications will be
dismissed.
36. Applicants should further note
that submission of an FCC Form 175
application constitutes a representation
by the certifying official that he or she
is an authorized representative of the
applicant, has read the form’s
instructions and certifications, and that
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Auctions and Spectrum Access Division, (202) 418–0660.
Mobility Division, (202) 418–0620.
FCC Auctions Technical Support Hotline, (877) 480–3201, option
nine or (202) 414–1250, (202) 414–1255 (TTY), Hours of service: 8
a.m.–6 p.m. ET, Monday through Friday.
FCC Auctions Accounting Branch, (202) 418–0578, (202) 418–2843
(Fax).
Will be furnished only to qualified bidders.
Best Copy and Printing, Inc., 445 12th Street, SW., Room CY–B402,
Washington, DC 20554, (800) 378–3160, https://www.bcpiweb.com.
Lauren Patrich (202) 418–7944, (800) 418–3676 (outside Washington, DC), (202) 418–3676 (in the Washington area) https://
www.fcc.gov/formpage.html.
https://www.fcc.gov.
https://wireless.fcc.gov/auctions.
https://wireless.fcc.gov/uls.
the contents of the application and any
attachments are true and correct.
Submission of a false certification to the
Commission may result in penalties,
including monetary forfeitures, license
forfeitures, ineligibility to participate in
future auctions, and/or criminal
prosecution.
A. Preferences for Small Businesses and
Others
i. Size Standards for Bidding Credits
37. In the Lower 700 MHz Report and
Order, the Commission determined that
three levels of bidding credits were
appropriate for the CMA licenses in the
C block. A bidding credit represents the
amount by which a bidder’s winning
bids are discounted. The size of the
bidding credit depends on the average
of the aggregated annual gross revenues
for each of the preceding three years of
the bidder, its affiliates, its controlling
interests, and the affiliates of its
controlling interests.
38. For Auction No. 60, bidding
credits will be available to small
businesses, very small businesses, and
entrepreneurs, or consortia thereof, as
defined in § 27.702, for the Lower 700
MHz band licenses:
• A bidder with attributed average
annual gross revenues that do not
exceed $3 million for the preceding
three years (‘‘entrepreneur’’) will receive
a 35 percent discount on its winning
bids.
• A bidder with attributed average
annual gross revenues that exceed $3
million and do not exceed $15 million
for the preceding three years (‘‘very
small business’’) will receive a 25
percent discount on its winning bids.
• A bidder with attributed average
annual gross revenues that exceed $15
million and do not exceed $40 million
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for the preceding three years (‘‘small
business’’) will receive a 15 percent
discount on its winning bids;
Bidding credits are not cumulative; a
qualifying applicant receives the 35
percent, 25 percent, or 15 percent
bidding credit on its winning bid, but
only one credit per license.
39. Applicants should note that they
will be required to provide information
regarding revenues attributable to the
applicant and related parties on their
FCC Form 175 short-form applications
to establish that they satisfy the
eligibility requirements to qualify as a
small business, very small business, or
entrepreneur (or consortia of a small
business, very small business, or
entrepreneur) for this auction.
ii. Tribal Lands Bidding Credit
40. The Commission notes that there
are no federally recognized tribal lands
within the geographic area covered by
the licenses offered in this auction.
Thus, tribal lands bidding credits will
not be available to winning bidders in
Auction No. 60.
iii. Installment Payments
41. Installment payment plans will
not be available in Auction No. 60.
B. License Selection
42. In Auction No. 60, applicants
must select the licenses on which they
want to bid from the ‘‘Eligible Licenses’’
list. The applicant may select all the
licenses in the list (by using the SELECT
ALL option) or select and add
individual licenses from the list. Be
advised that there is no opportunity to
change license selection after the shortform filing deadline. It is critically
important that you confirm your license
selection because the FCC Auction
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System will not accept bids on licenses
that an applicant has not selected on its
FCC Form 175.
C. Consortia and Joint Bidding
Arrangements
43. Applicants will be required to
indicate on their applications whether
they have entered into any explicit or
implicit agreements, arrangements or
understandings of any kind with any
parties, other than those identified,
regarding the amount of their bids,
bidding strategies, or the particular
licenses on which they will or will not
bid. Applicants will also be required to
identify on their short-form applications
any parties with whom they have
entered into any consortium
arrangements, joint ventures,
partnerships or other agreements or
understandings that relate in any way to
the licenses being auctioned, including
any agreements relating to post-auction
market structure. If an applicant has had
discussions, but has not reached a joint
bidding agreement by the short-form
deadline, it would not include the
names of parties to the discussions on
its applications and may not continue
such discussions with applicants for
any of the same geographic license areas
after the deadline.
44. A party holding a non-controlling,
attributable interest in one applicant
will be permitted to acquire an
ownership interest in, form a
consortium with, or enter into a joint
bidding arrangement with other
applicants for licenses in the same
geographic license area provided that (i)
the attributable interest holder certifies
that it has not and will not
communicate with any party concerning
the bids or bidding strategies of more
than one of the applicants in which it
holds an attributable interest, or with
which it has formed a consortium or
entered into a joint bidding
arrangement; and (ii) the arrangements
do not result in a change in control of
any of the applicants. While the anticollusion rules do not prohibit nonauction related business negotiations
among auction applicants, applicants
are reminded that certain discussions or
exchanges could touch upon
impermissible subject matters because
they may convey pricing information
and bidding strategies.
D. Ownership Disclosure Requirements
45. All applicants must comply with
the uniform Part 1 ownership disclosure
standards and provide information
required by §§ 1.2105 and 1.2112 of the
Commission’s rules. Specifically, in
completing FCC Form 175, applicants
will be required to fully disclose
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information on the real party or partiesin-interest and ownership structure of
the bidding entity. The ownership
disclosure standards for the short form
are set forth in § 1.2112 of the
Commission’s rules. To simplify filling
out Form 175, an applicant’s most
current ownership information on file
with the Commission, if in an electronic
format compatible with Form 175, such
as information submitted in an on-line
Form 602, will automatically be entered
into Form 175. Applicants are
responsible for information submitted in
Form 175 being complete and accurate.
Accordingly, applicants should
carefully review any information
automatically entered to confirm that it
is complete and accurate as of the
deadline for filing Form 175. Applicants
can update any information that needs
to be changed directly in the Form 175.
E. Bidding Credit Revenue Disclosures
46. Entities applying to bid as small
businesses, very small businesses, or
entrepreneurs (or consortia of small
businesses, very small businesses, or
entrepreneurs) will be required to
disclose on their FCC Form 175 shortform applications the gross revenues for
the preceding three years of each of the
following: (1) The applicant, (2) its
affiliates, (3) its controlling interests,
and (4) the affiliates of its controlling
interests. Certification that the average
annual gross revenues for the preceding
three years do not exceed the applicable
limit is not sufficient. In order to comply
with disclosure requirements for bidding
credit eligibility, an applicant must
provide separately for itself, its
affiliates, its controlling interests, and
the affiliates of its controlling interests,
the gross revenues for each of the
preceding three years. If the applicant is
applying as a consortium of small
businesses, very small businesses, or
entrepreneurs, this information must be
provided for each consortium member.
47. Controlling interest standard. The
Commission uses a ‘‘controlling
interest’’ standard for attributing to
auction applicants the gross revenues of
their investors and affiliates in
determining small business eligibility
for future auctions. The Commission has
modified its rules governing the
attribution of gross revenues for
purposes of determining small business
eligibility. These changes included
exempting the gross revenues of the
affiliates of a rural telephone
cooperative’s officers and directors from
attribution to the applicant if certain
specified conditions are met. The
Commission also clarified that in
calculating an applicant’s gross
revenues under the controlling interest
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25051
standard, the personal net worth,
including personal income, of its
officers and directors will not be
attributed to the applicant.
48. Control. The term ‘‘control’’
includes both de facto and de jure
control of the applicant. Typically,
ownership of at least 50.1 percent of an
entity’s voting stock evidences de jure
control. De facto control is determined
on a case-by-case basis. The following
are some common indicia of de facto
control:
• The entity constitutes or appoints
more than 50 percent of the board of
directors or management committee;
• The entity has authority to appoint,
promote, demote, and fire senior
executives that control the day-to-day
activities of the licensee; or
• The entity plays an integral role in
management decisions.
49. A consortium of small businesses,
very small businesses, or entrepreneurs
is a ‘‘conglomerate organization formed
as a joint venture between or among
mutually independent business firms,’’
each of which individually must satisfy
one of the definitions of small business,
very small business, or entrepreneur in
§§ 1.2110(f), 27.702. Thus, each
consortium member must disclose its
gross revenues along with those of its
affiliates, its controlling interests, and
the affiliates of its controlling interests.
F. Provisions Regarding Former and
Current Defaulters
50. Each applicant must indicate on
its FCC Form 175 application under
penalty of perjury whether or not the
applicant, its affiliates, its controlling
interests, and the affiliates of its
controlling interests, as defined by
§ 1.2110, have ever been in default on
any Commission licenses or have ever
been delinquent on any non-tax debt
owed to any Federal agency. In
addition, each applicant must certify on
its FCC Form 175 application under
penalty of perjury that the applicant, its
affiliates, its controlling interests, and
the affiliates of its controlling interests,
as defined by § 1.2110, is not in default
on any payment for Commission
licenses (including down payments) and
that it is not delinquent on any non-tax
debt owed to any Federal agency.
Prospective applicants are reminded
that submission of a false certification to
the Commission is a serious matter that
may result in severe penalties, including
monetary forfeitures, license
revocations, exclusion from
participation in future auctions, and/or
criminal prosecution.
51. Former defaulters—i.e.,
applicants, including their attributable
interest holders, that in the past have
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defaulted on any Commission licenses
or been delinquent on any non-tax debt
owed to any Federal agency, but that
have since remedied all such defaults
and cured all of their outstanding nontax delinquencies—are eligible to bid in
Auction No. 60, provided that they are
otherwise qualified. However, as
discussed infra in § III.E.3, former
defaulters are required to pay upfront
payments that are fifty percent more
than the normal upfront payment
amounts.
52. Current defaulters—i.e.,
applicants, including their attributable
interest holders, that are in default on
any payment for Commission licenses
(including down payments) or are
delinquent on any non-tax debt owed to
any Federal agency—are not eligible to
bid in Auction No. 60.
53. Applicants are encouraged to
review the Bureau’s previous guidance
on default and delinquency disclosure
requirements in the context of our shortform application process. Applicants are
reminded that the Commission’s Red
Light Display System, which provides
information regarding debts owed to the
Commission, may not be determinative
of an applicant’s ability to comply with
the default and delinquency disclosure
requirements.
G. Other Information
54. Applicants owned by minorities
or women, as defined in § 1.2110(c)(2),
may identify themselves in filling out
their FCC Form 175 short-form
application regarding this status. This
applicant status information is collected
for statistical purposes only and assists
the Commission in monitoring the
participation of ‘‘designated entities’’ in
its auctions.
H. Minor Modifications to Short-Form
Applications (FCC Form 175)
55. After the short-form filing
deadline (6 p.m. ET June 3, 2005),
applicants may make only minor
changes to their applications.
Applicants will not be permitted to
make major modifications to their
applications (e.g., change their license
selections, change the certifying official,
change control of the applicant, or
change bidding credit eligibility).
Permissible minor changes include, for
example, deletion and addition of
authorized bidders (to a maximum of
three) and addresses and phone
numbers of the applicants and their
contact persons. Applicants must press
the SUBMIT button in the FCC Auction
System for the changes to be submitted
and considered by the Commission.
After the revised application has been
submitted, a confirmation page will be
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displayed that states the submission
time and date, along with a unique file
number. In addition, applicants should
submit a letter, briefly summarizing the
changes, by electronic mail to the
attention of Margaret Wiener, Chief,
Auctions and Spectrum Access
Division, at the following address:
auction60@fcc.gov. The electronic mail
summarizing the changes must include
a subject or caption referring to Auction
No. 60 and the name of the applicant.
The Bureau requests that parties format
any attachments to electronic mail as
Adobe Acrobat (pdf) or Microsoft
Word documents.
I. Maintaining Current Information in
Short-Form Applications (FCC Form
175)
56. Section 1.65 of the Commission’s
rules requires an applicant to maintain
the accuracy and completeness of
information furnished in its pending
application and to notify the
Commission within 30 days of any
substantial change that may be of
decisional significance to that
application. Amendments reporting
substantial changes of possible
decisional significance in information
contained in FCC Form 175 applications
will not be accepted and may in some
instances result in the dismissal of the
FCC Form 175 application.
III. Pre-Auction Procedures
A. ISAS Demonstrations
57. In connection with its
announcement of the release of ISAS,
the new auction application filing and
bidding system, the Bureau is planning
to conduct several ISAS orientation
sessions in which the software will be
demonstrated to the public. These
sessions were held on March 31 and
April 21, 2005, and are also available
via webcast.
B. Auction Seminar—May 24, 2005
58. On Tuesday, May 24, 2005, the
FCC will sponsor a seminar for parties
interested in participating in Auction
No. 60 at the Federal Communications
Commission, located at 445 12th Street,
SW., Washington, DC. The seminar will
provide attendees with information
about pre-auction procedures,
completing FCC Form 175, auction
conduct, the FCC Auction System,
auction rules, and the Lower 700 MHz
band service rules. The seminar will
also provide an opportunity for
prospective bidders to ask questions of
FCC staff.
59. To register, complete the
registration form and submit it by
Friday, May 20, 2005. Registrations are
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accepted on a first-come, first-served
basis. The seminar is free of charge.
C. Short-Form Application (FCC Form
175)—Due June 3, 2005
In order to be eligible to bid in this
auction, applicants must first submit an
FCC Form 175 application. This
application must be submitted
electronically and received at the
Commission no later than 6 p.m. ET on
June 3, 2005. Late applications will not
be accepted. There is no application fee
required when filing an FCC Form 175.
However, to be eligible to bid, an
applicant must submit an upfront
payment.
60. Applications may generally be
filed at any time beginning at noon ET
on May 24, 2005, until 6 p.m. ET on
June 3, 2005. Applicants are strongly
encouraged to file early and are
responsible for allowing adequate time
for filing their applications. Applicants
may update or amend their electronic
applications multiple times until the
filing deadline on June 3, 2005.
61. Applicants must always press the
SUBMIT button on the Certify & Submit
screen of the electronic form to
successfully submit their FCC Form
175s or modifications. Any form that is
not submitted will not be reviewed by
the FCC. Technical support is available
at (877) 480–3201 option nine; (202)
414–1250; or (202) 414–1255 (text
telephone (TTY)); hours of service are
Monday through Friday, from 8 a.m. to
6 p.m. ET. In order to provide better
service to the public, all calls to the
hotline are recorded.
D. Application Processing and Minor
Corrections
62. After the deadline for filing the
FCC Form 175 applications has passed,
the FCC will process all timely
submitted applications to determine
which are acceptable for filing, and
subsequently will issue a public notice
identifying: (1) Those applications
accepted for filing; (2) those
applications rejected; and (3) those
applications which have minor defects
that may be corrected, and the deadline
for resubmitting such corrected
applications.
63. As described more fully in the
Commission’s rules, after the June 3,
2005, short-form filing deadline,
applicants may make only minor
corrections to their FCC Form 175
applications. Applicants will not be
permitted to make major modifications
to their applications (e.g., change their
license selections, change the certifying
official, change control of the applicant,
or change bidding credit eligibility).
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E. Upfront Payments—Due June 30,
2005
64. In order to be eligible to bid in the
auction, applicants must submit an
upfront payment accompanied by an
FCC Remittance Advice Form (FCC
Form 159). After completing the FCC
Form 175, filers will have access to an
electronic version of the FCC Form 159
that can be printed and faxed to Mellon
Bank in Pittsburgh, PA. All upfront
payments must be received at Mellon
Bank by 6 p.m. ET on June 30, 2005.
i. Making Auction Payments by Wire
Transfer
65. Wire transfer payments must be
received by 6 p.m. ET on June 30, 2005.
To avoid untimely payments, applicants
should discuss arrangements (including
bank closing schedules) with their
banker several days before they plan to
make the wire transfer, and allow
sufficient time for the transfer to be
initiated and completed before the
deadline.
66. Applicants must fax a completed
FCC Form 159 (Revised 2/03) to Mellon
Bank at (412) 209–6045 at least one hour
before placing the order for the wire
transfer (but on the same business day).
On the cover sheet of the fax, write
‘‘Wire Transfer—Auction Payment for
Auction Event No. 60.’’ In order to meet
the Commission’s upfront payment
deadline, an applicant’s payment must
be credited to the Commission’s account
by the deadline. Applicants are
responsible for obtaining confirmation
from their financial institution that
Mellon Bank has timely received their
upfront payment and deposited it in the
proper account.
ii. FCC Form 159
67. A completed FCC Remittance
Advice Form (FCC Form 159, Revised 2/
03) must be faxed to Mellon Bank to
accompany each upfront payment.
Proper completion of FCC Form 159
(Revised 2/03) is critical to ensuring
correct crediting of upfront payments.
An electronic pre-filled version of the
FCC Form 159 is available after
submitting the FCC Form 175. Payors
using a pre-filled FCC Form 159 are
responsible for ensuring that all of the
information on the form, including
payment amounts, is accurate. The FCC
Form 159 can be completed
electronically, but must be filed with
Mellon Bank via facsimile.
iii. Amount of Upfront Payment
68. In the Part 1 Order, 62 FR 13540,
(March 21, 1997), the Commission
delegated to the Bureau the authority
and discretion to determine appropriate
upfront payment(s) for each auction. In
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addition, in the Part 1 Fifth Report and
Order, 65 FR 52323, (August 29, 2000),
the Commission ordered that ‘‘former
defaulters,’’ i.e., applicants that have
ever been in default on any Commission
license or have ever been delinquent on
any non-tax debt owed to any Federal
agency, be required to pay upfront
payments 50 percent greater than non’’former defaulters.’’ For purposes of
this calculation, the ‘‘applicant’’
includes the applicant itself, its
affiliates, its controlling interests, and
affiliates of its controlling interests, as
defined by § 1.2110 of the Commission’s
rules.
69. In the Auction No. 60 Comment
Public Notice, the Commission
proposed that the amount of the upfront
payment would determine a bidder’s
initial bidding eligibility, the maximum
number of bidding units on which a
bidder may place bids. In order to bid
on a license, otherwise qualified bidders
that applied for that license on Form
175 must have a current eligibility level
that meets or exceeds the number of
bidding units assigned to that license.
At a minimum, therefore, an applicant’s
total upfront payment must be enough
to establish eligibility to bid on at least
one of the licenses applied for on Form
175, or else the applicant will not be
eligible to participate in the auction. An
applicant does not have to make an
upfront payment to cover all licenses for
which the applicant has applied on
Form 175, but rather to cover the
maximum number of bidding units that
are associated with licenses on which
the bidder wishes to place bids and hold
provisionally winning bids at any given
time.
70. In the Auction No. 60 Comment
Public Notice, the Bureau proposed
upfront payments on a license-bylicense basis using a formula based on
bandwidth and the license area
population:
$0.005 * MHz * License Area
Population with a minimum of
$1,000 per license.
The specific upfront payments and
bidding units for each license are set
forth in Attachment A of this Public
Notice.
71. In calculating its upfront payment
amount, an applicant should determine
the maximum number of bidding units
on which it may wish to be active on
(bid on or hold provisionally winning
bids on) in any single round, and submit
an upfront payment amount covering
that number of bidding units. In order
to make this calculation, an applicant
should add together the upfront
payments for all licenses on which it
seeks to bid in any given round.
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Applicants should check their
calculations carefully, as there is no
provision for increasing a bidder’s
eligibility after the upfront payment
deadline.
72. Former defaulters should calculate
their upfront payment for all licenses by
multiplying the number of bidding units
on which they wish to be active by 1.5.
In order to calculate the number of
bidding units to assign to former
defaulters, the Commission will divide
the upfront payment received by 1.5 and
round the result up to the nearest
bidding unit. If a former defaulter fails
to submit a sufficient upfront payment
to establish eligibility to bid on at least
one of the licenses applied for on its
Form 175, the applicant will not be
eligible to participate in the auction.
iv. Applicant’s Wire Transfer
Information for Purposes of Refunds of
Upfront Payments
73. The Commission will use wire
transfers for all Auction No. 60 refunds.
To ensure that refunds of upfront
payments are processed in an
expeditious manner, the Commission is
requesting that all pertinent information
as listed below be supplied to the FCC.
Applicants can provide the information
electronically during the initial shortform filing window after the form has
been submitted. Wire Transfer
Instructions can also be manually faxed
to the FCC, Financial Operations Center,
Auctions Accounting Group, ATTN:
Gail Glasser, at (202) 418–2843. All
refunds will be returned to the payer of
record as identified on the FCC Form
159 unless the payer submits written
authorization instructing otherwise. For
additional information, please call Gail
Glasser at (202) 418–0578.
F. Auction Registration
74. Approximately ten days before the
auction, the FCC will issue a public
notice announcing all qualified bidders
for the auction. Qualified bidders are
those applicants whose FCC Form 175
applications have been accepted for
filing and have timely submitted
upfront payments sufficient to make
them eligible to bid on at least one of
the licenses for which they applied.
75. All qualified bidders are
automatically registered for the auction.
Registration materials will be
distributed prior to the auction by
overnight mail. The mailing will be sent
only to the contact person at the contact
address listed in the FCC Form 175.
76. Qualified bidders that do not
receive this registration mailing will not
be able to submit bids. Therefore, any
qualified bidder that has not received
this mailing by noon on Thursday, July
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14, 2005, should contact the Auctions
Hotline at (717) 338–2888. Receipt of
this registration mailing is critical to
participating in the auction, and each
applicant is responsible for ensuring it
has received all of the registration
material.
77. Qualified bidders should note that
lost SecurID cards can be replaced only
by appearing in person at the FCC
headquarters, located at 445 12th St.,
SW., Washington, DC 20554. Only an
authorized representative or certifying
official, as designated on an applicant’s
FCC Form 175, may appear in person
with two forms of identification (one of
which must be a photo identification) in
order to receive replacements. Qualified
bidders requiring replacements must
call technical support prior to arriving
at the FCC.
G. Remote Electronic Bidding
78. The Commission will conduct this
auction over the Internet, and
telephonic bidding will be available as
well. Qualified bidders are permitted to
bid telephonically or electronically.
Each applicant should indicate its
bidding preference—electronic or
telephonic—on the FCC Form 175. In
either case, each authorized bidder must
have its own SecurID card, which the
FCC will provide at no charge. Each
applicant with one authorized bidder
will be issued two SecurID cards, while
applicants with two or three authorized
bidders will be issued three cards. For
security purposes, the SecurID cards,
the telephonic bidding phone number,
and the Integrated Spectrum Auctions
System (ISAS) Bidder’s Guide are only
mailed to the contact person at the
contact address listed on the FCC Form
175. Please note that each SecurID card
is tailored to a specific auction;
therefore, SecurID cards issued for other
auctions or obtained from a source other
than the FCC will not work for Auction
No. 60.
79. Please note that the SecurID cards
can be recycled and the Commission
encourage bidders to return the cards to
the FCC. The Commission will provide
pre-addressed envelopes that bidders
may use to return the cards once the
auction is over.
H. Mock Auction
80. All qualified bidders will be
eligible to participate in a mock auction
on Monday, July 18, 2005. The mock
auction will enable applicants to
become familiar with the FCC Auction
System prior to the auction.
Participation by all bidders is strongly
recommended. Details will be
announced by public notice.
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IV. Auction Event
81. The first round of bidding for
Auction No. 60 will begin on
Wednesday, July 20, 2005. The initial
bidding schedule will be announced in
a public notice listing the qualified
bidders, which is released
approximately 10 days before the start
of the auction.
A. Auction Structure
i. Simultaneous Multiple Round
Auction
82. In a simultaneous multiple round
auction, all licenses are available during
the entire auction, and bids are accepted
on any license until the auction
concludes. The Commission concludes
that it is operationally feasible and
appropriate to auction the Lower 700
MHz band licenses through a
simultaneous multiple round auction.
Unless otherwise announced, bids will
be accepted on all licenses in each
round of the auction. This approach
allows bidders to take advantage of
synergies that exist among licenses and
is administratively efficient.
ii. Eligibility and Activity Rules
83. The amount of the upfront
payment submitted by a bidder
determines initial bidding eligibility,
the maximum number of bidding units
on which a bidder may place bids. Note
again that each license is assigned a
specific number of bidding units equal
to the upfront payment on a bidding
unit per dollar basis. Bidding units for
a given license do not change as prices
rise during the auction. A bidder’s
upfront payment is not attributed to
specific licenses. Rather, a bidder may
place bids on any combination of
licenses as long as the total number of
bidding units associated with those
licenses does not exceed its current
eligibility. Eligibility cannot be
increased during the auction; it can only
remain the same or decrease. Thus, in
calculating its upfront payment amount,
an applicant must determine the
maximum number of bidding units it
may wish to bid on (or hold
provisionally winning bids on) in any
single round, and submit an upfront
payment amount covering that total
number of bidding units. The total
upfront payment does not affect the
total dollar amount a bidder may bid on
any given license.
84. In order to ensure that the auction
closes within a reasonable period of
time, an activity rule requires bidders to
bid actively throughout the auction,
rather than wait until late in the auction
before participating. Bidders are
required to be active on a specific
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percentage of their current bidding
eligibility during each round of the
auction.
85. A bidder’s activity level in a
round is the sum of the bidding units
associated with licenses on which the
bidder is active. A bidder is considered
active on a license in the current round
if it is either the provisionally winning
bidder at the end of the previous
bidding round and does not withdraw
the provisionally winning bid in the
current round, or if it submits a bid in
the current round (see ‘‘Minimum
Acceptable Bid Amounts and Bid
Increment Amounts’’ in Section IV.B.3).
The minimum required activity is
expressed as a percentage of the bidder’s
current eligibility, and increases by
stage as the auction progresses. Because
these procedures have proven
successful in maintaining the pace of
previous auctions (as set forth under
‘‘Auction Stages’’ in Section IV.A.3 and
‘‘Stage Transitions’’ in Section IV.A.4),
the Commission adopts them for
Auction No. 60.
iii. Auction Stages
86. In the Auction No. 60 Comment
Public Notice, the Commission
proposed to conduct the auction in two
stages and employ an activity rule. The
Commission further proposed that, in
each round of Stage One, a bidder
desiring to maintain its current bidding
eligibility would be required to be active
on licenses representing at least 80
percent of its current bidding eligibility.
Finally, the Commission proposed that
in each round of Stage Two, a bidder
desiring to maintain its current bidding
eligibility would be required to be active
on at least 95 percent of its current
bidding eligibility. The Commission
received no comments on this proposal.
87. The Commission adopts its
proposals for the activity rules and
stages. The Bureau reserves the
discretion to further alter the activity
percentages before and/or during the
auction.
88. Stage One: During the first stage
of the auction, a bidder desiring to
maintain its current bidding eligibility
will be required to be active on licenses
representing at least 80 percent of its
current bidding eligibility in each
bidding round. Failure to maintain the
required activity level will result in a
reduction in the bidder’s bidding
eligibility in the next round of bidding
(unless an activity rule waiver is used).
During Stage One, reduced eligibility for
the next round will be calculated by
multiplying the bidder’s current round
activity (the sum of bidding units of the
bidder’s provisionally winning bids and
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bids during the current round) by fivefourths (5/4).
89. Stage Two: During the second
stage of the auction, a bidder desiring to
maintain its current bidding eligibility
is required to be active on 95 percent of
its current bidding eligibility. Failure to
maintain the required activity level will
result in a reduction in the bidder’s
bidding eligibility in the next round of
bidding (unless an activity rule waiver
is used). During Stage Two, reduced
eligibility for the next round will be
calculated by multiplying the bidder’s
current round activity (the sum of
bidding units of the bidder’s
provisionally winning bids and bids
during the current round) by twentynineteenths (20/19).
Caution: Since activity requirements increase
in Stage Two, bidders must carefully check
their activity during the bidding period of the
first round following a stage transition to
ensure that they are meeting the increased
activity requirement. This is especially
critical for bidders that have provisionally
winning bids and do not plan to submit new
bids. In past auctions, some bidders have
inadvertently lost bidding eligibility or used
an activity rule waiver because they did not
re-verify their activity status at stage
transitions. Bidders may check their activity
against the required activity level by either
logging in to the FCC Auction System or by
accessing the ‘‘Bidder Summaries’’ on the
public results page.
iv. Stage Transitions
90. The auction will start in Stage One
and will generally advance to the next
stage (i.e., from Stage One to Stage Two)
when, in each of three consecutive
rounds of bidding, the provisionally
winning bids have been placed on 20
percent or less of the licenses being
auctioned (as measured in bidding
units). In addition, the Bureau will
retain the discretion to regulate the pace
of the auction by announcement. This
determination will be based on a variety
of measures of bidder activity,
including, but not limited to, the
auction activity level, the percentages of
licenses (as measured in bidding units)
on which there are new bids, the
number of new bids, and the percentage
increase in revenue.
v. Activity Rule Waivers and Reducing
Eligibility
91. Based upon its experience in
previous auctions, the Commission
adopts our proposal that each bidder be
provided three activity rule waivers.
Bidders may use an activity rule waiver
in any round during the course of the
auction. Use of an activity rule waiver
preserves the bidder’s current bidding
eligibility despite the bidder’s activity
in the current round being below the
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required minimum activity level. An
activity rule waiver applies to an entire
round of bidding and not to a particular
license. Activity rule waivers can be
either applied proactively by the bidder
(known as a ‘‘proactive waiver’’) or
applied automatically by the FCC
Auction System (known as an
‘‘automatic waiver’’) and are principally
a mechanism for auction participants to
avoid the loss of bidding eligibility in
the event that exigent circumstances
prevent them from placing a bid in a
particular round. The Commission is
satisfied that our practice of providing
three waivers over the course of the
auction provides a sufficient number of
waivers and flexibility to the bidders,
while safeguarding the integrity of the
auction.
92. The FCC Auction System assumes
that bidders with insufficient activity
would prefer to apply an activity rule
waiver (if available) rather than lose
bidding eligibility. Therefore, the
system will automatically apply a
waiver at the end of any round where
a bidder’s activity level is below the
minimum required unless: (1) There are
no activity rule waivers available; or (2)
the bidder overrides the automatic
application of a waiver by reducing
eligibility, thereby meeting the
minimum requirements. If a bidder has
no waivers remaining and does not
satisfy the required activity level, the
eligibility will be permanently reduced,
possibly eliminating the bidder from
further bidding in the auction.
93. A bidder with insufficient activity
that wants to reduce its bidding
eligibility rather than use an activity
rule waiver must affirmatively override
the automatic waiver mechanism during
the bidding round by using the ‘‘reduce
eligibility’’ function in the FCC Auction
System. In this case, the bidder’s
eligibility is permanently reduced to
bring the bidder into compliance with
the activity rules as described in
‘‘Auction Stages’’ (see Section IV.A.3).
Once eligibility has been reduced, a
bidder will not be permitted to regain its
lost bidding eligibility.
94. Finally, a bidder may apply an
activity rule waiver proactively as a
means to keep the auction open without
placing a bid. If a bidder proactively
applies an activity waiver (using the
‘‘apply waiver’’ function in the FCC
Auction System) during a bidding round
in which no bids or withdrawals are
submitted, the auction will remain open
and the bidder’s eligibility will be
preserved. However, an automatic
waiver applied by the FCC Auction
System in a round in which there are no
new bids or withdrawals will not keep
the auction open. Note: Applying a
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waiver is irreversible; once a proactive
waiver is submitted that waiver cannot
be unsubmitted, even if the round has
not yet closed.
vi. Auction Stopping Rules
95. For Auction No. 60, the Bureau
proposed to employ a simultaneous
stopping rule approach. The Bureau also
sought comment on a modified version
of the simultaneous stopping rule. The
modified version of the stopping rule
would close the auction for all licenses
after the first round in which no bidder
applies a waiver, places a withdrawal,
or submits any new bids on any license
on which it is not the provisionally
winning bidder. Thus, absent any other
bidding activity, a bidder placing a new
bid on a license for which it is the
provisionally winning bidder would not
keep the auction open under this
modified stopping rule.
96. The Bureau further proposed
retaining the discretion to keep the
auction open even if no new bids or
proactive waivers are submitted and no
previous provisionally winning bids are
withdrawn in a round. In this event, the
effect will be the same as if a bidder had
applied a waiver. Thus, the activity rule
will apply as usual, and a bidder with
insufficient activity will either use an
activity rule waiver (if it has any left) or
lose bidding eligibility.
97. In addition, the Bureau proposed
that it reserves the right to declare that
the auction will end after a specified
number of additional rounds (‘‘special
stopping rule’’). If the Bureau invokes
this special stopping rule, it will accept
bids in the specified final round(s) and
the auction will close.
98. The Bureau proposed to exercise
these options only in circumstances
such as where the auction is proceeding
very slowly, where there is minimal
overall bidding activity or where it
appears likely that the auction will not
close within a reasonable period of time.
Before exercising these options, the
Bureau is likely to attempt to increase
the pace of the auction by, for example,
increasing the number of bidding
rounds per day, and/or increasing the
amount of the minimum bid increments
for the limited number of licenses where
there is still a high level of bidding
activity.
99. The Bureau adopts the above
proposals. Auction No. 60 will begin
under the simultaneous stopping rule
approach, and the Bureau will retain the
discretion to invoke the other versions
of the stopping rule. The Bureau
believes that these stopping rules are
most appropriate for Auction No. 60,
because its experience in prior auctions
demonstrates that the auction stopping
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rules balance the interests of
administrative efficiency and maximum
bidder participation.
vii. Auction Delay, Suspension, or
Cancellation
100. The Bureau adopts its proposed
auction cancellation rules. By public
notice or by announcement during the
auction, the Bureau may delay, suspend,
or cancel the auction in the event of
natural disaster, technical obstacle,
evidence of an auction security breach,
unlawful bidding activity,
administrative or weather necessity, or
for any other reason that affects the fair
and competitive conduct of competitive
bidding. In such cases, the Bureau, in its
sole discretion, may elect to resume the
auction starting from the beginning of
the current round, resume the auction
starting from some previous round, or
cancel the auction in its entirety.
Network interruption may cause the
Bureau to delay or suspend the auction.
The Bureau emphasizes that exercise of
this authority is solely within the
discretion of the Bureau, and its use is
not intended to be a substitute for
situations in which bidders may wish to
apply their activity rule waivers.
B. Bidding Procedures
i. Round Structure
101. The initial schedule of bidding
rounds will be announced in the public
notice listing the qualified bidders,
which is released approximately 10
days before the start of the auction. Each
bidding round is followed by the release
of round results. Multiple bidding
rounds may be conducted in a given
day. Details regarding round results
formats and locations will also be
included in the qualified bidders public
notice.
102. The FCC has discretion to change
the bidding schedule in order to foster
an auction pace that reasonably
balances speed with the bidders’ need to
study round results and adjust their
bidding strategies. The Bureau may
increase or decrease the amount of time
for the bidding rounds and review
periods, or the number of rounds per
day, depending upon the bidding
activity level and other factors.
ii. Reserve Price or Minimum Opening
Bid
103. Section 309(j) of the
Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, calls upon the Commission to
prescribe methods by which a
reasonable reserve price will be required
or a minimum opening bid established
when applications for FCC licenses are
subject to auction (i.e., because they are
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mutually exclusive), unless the
Commission determines that a reserve
price or minimum opening bid is not in
the public interest. Consistent with this
mandate, the Commission directed the
Bureau to seek comment on the use of
a minimum opening bid and/or reserve
price prior to the start of each auction.
Among other factors, the Bureau must
consider the amount of spectrum being
auctioned, levels of incumbency, the
availability of technology to provide
service, the size of the geographic
service areas, the extent of interference
with other spectrum bands, and any
other relevant factors that could have an
impact on the spectrum being
auctioned. The Commission concluded
that the Bureau should have the
discretion to employ either or both of
these mechanisms for future auctions.
104. In the Auction No. 60 Comment
Public Notice, the Bureau proposed to
establish minimum opening bids for
Auction No. 60 and to retain discretion
to lower the minimum opening bids.
Specifically, for Auction No. 60, the
Bureau proposed the following licenseby-license basis using a formula based
on bandwidth and license area
population:
$0.0075 * MHz * License Area
Population with a minimum of
$1,000 per license.
105. In the alternative, the Bureau
sought comment on whether, consistent
with the § 309(j), the public interest
would be served by having no minimum
opening bid or reserve price.
106. The Bureau adopts its proposal.
The minimum opening bid amounts the
Commission adopts for Auction No. 60
are reducible at the discretion of the
Bureau. The Commission emphasize,
however, that such discretion will be
exercised, if at all, sparingly and early
in the auction, i.e., before bidders lose
all waivers and begin to lose substantial
eligibility. During the course of the
auction, the Bureau will not entertain
requests to reduce the minimum
opening bid amount on specific
licenses.
107. The specific minimum opening
bid amounts for each license available
in Auction No. 60 are set forth in
Attachment A of the Auction No. 60
Procedures Public Notice.
iii. Minimum Acceptable Bid Amounts
and Bid Increment Amounts
108. In the Auction No. 60 Comment
Public Notice, the Bureau proposed to
use a minimum acceptable bid
increment of 10 percent. This means
that the minimum acceptable bid
amount for a license will be
approximately 10 percent greater than
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the provisionally winning bid amount
for the license. The minimum
acceptable bid amount will be
calculated by multiplying the
provisionally winning bid amount times
one plus the minimum acceptable bid
percentage—e.g., if the minimum
acceptable bid percentage is 10 percent,
the minimum acceptable bid amount
calculation is (provisionally winning
bid amount) * (1 + 0.10), rounded or
(provisionally winning bid amount) *
(1.10), rounded. The Bureau will round
the result using our standard rounding
procedures. The Bureau further
proposed to retain the discretion to
change the minimum acceptable bid
amounts and bid increments amounts if
it determines that circumstances so
dictate. The Bureau received no
comment on this issue. The auction will
begin with a minimum acceptable bid
percentage of 10%.
109. In each round, each eligible
bidder will be able to place a bid on a
particular license for which it applied in
any of nine different amounts. The FCC
Auction System will list the nine
acceptable bid amounts for each license.
Until a bid has been placed on a license,
the minimum acceptable bid amount for
that license will be equal to its
minimum opening bid amount.
110. The nine acceptable bid amounts
for each license consist of the minimum
acceptable bid amount and eight other
bid amounts based on the bid increment
percentage. The first additional
acceptable bid amount, above the
minimum acceptable bid amount,
equals the minimum acceptable bid
amount times one plus the bid
increment percentage, rounded—e.g., if
the bid increment percentage is 10
percent, then the next bid amount will
equal (minimum acceptable bid amount)
* 1.10, rounded, the second additional
acceptable bid amount equals the
minimum acceptable bid amount times
one plus two times the bid increment
percentage, rounded, or (minimum
acceptable bid amount) * 1.20, rounded;
the third additional acceptable bid
amount equals the minimum acceptable
bid amount times one plus three times
the bid increment percentage, rounded,
or (minimum acceptable bid amount) *
1.30, rounded, etc. The Bureau will
begin the auction with a bid increment
percentage of 10%. Note that the bid
increment percentage need not be the
same as the minimum acceptable bid
percentage.
111. In the case of a license for which
the provisionally winning bid amount
has been withdrawn, the minimum
acceptable bid amount will equal the
amount of the second highest bid
amount received for the license. The
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additional bid amounts above the
minimum acceptable bid amount are
calculated using the bid increment
percentage as described in the previous
paragraph.
112. The Bureau retains the discretion
to change the minimum acceptable bid
amounts, the minimum acceptable bid
percentage, and the bid increment
percentage if it determines that
circumstances so dictate. The Bureau
will do so by announcement in the FCC
Auction System. The Bureau may also
use its discretion to adjust the minimum
bid increment amount without prior
notice if circumstances warrant.
iv. Provisionally Winning Bids
113. At the end of each bidding
round, a provisionally winning bid
amount will be determined based on the
highest bid amount received for each
license. A high bid from a previous
round is referred to as a ‘‘provisionally
winning bid.’’ A ‘‘provisionally winning
bid’’ will remain the provisionally
winning bid until there is a higher bid
on the same license at the close of a
subsequent round. Bidders are
reminded that provisionally winning
bids are counted as activity for purposes
of the activity rule.
114. In the Auction No. 60 Comment
Public Notice, the Bureau proposed to
use a random number generator to select
a provisionally winning bid in the event
of identical high bid amounts being
submitted on a license in a given round
(i.e., tied bids). No comments were
received on this proposal. Therefore, the
Bureau adopts its proposal. A Sybase
SQL pseudo-random number generator
based on the L’Ecuyer algorithms will
be used to assign a random number to
each bid. The tied bid having the
highest random number will become the
provisionally winning bid. Eligible
bidders, including the provisionally
winning bidder, will be able to submit
a higher bid in a subsequent round. If
no bidder submits a higher bid in
subsequent rounds, the provisionally
winning bid from the previous round
will win the license, unless that
provisionally winning bid was
withdrawn. If any bids are received on
the license in a subsequent round, the
provisionally winning bid will once
again be determined based on the
highest bid amount received for the
license.
v. Bidding
115. During a round, a bidder may
submit bids for as many licenses as it
wishes (subject to its eligibility),
withdraw provisionally winning bids
from previous bidding rounds, remove
bids placed in the same bidding round,
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or permanently reduce eligibility.
Bidders also have the option of making
multiple submissions and withdrawals
in each round. If a bidder submits
multiple bids for a single license in the
same round, the system takes the last
bid entered as that bidder’s bid for the
round. Bidders should note that the
bidding units associated with licenses
for which the bidder has removed or
withdrawn its bid do not count towards
the bidder’s activity at the close of the
round.
116. Please note that all bidding will
take place remotely either through the
FCC Auction System or by telephonic
bidding. (Telephonic bid assistants are
required to use a script when entering
bids placed by telephone. Telephonic
bidders are therefore reminded to allow
sufficient time to bid by placing their
calls well in advance of the close of a
round. Normally, five to ten minutes are
necessary to complete a telephonic bid
submission). There will be no on-site
bidding during Auction No. 60.
117. A bidder’s ability to bid on
specific licenses in the first round of the
auction is determined by two factors: (1)
The licenses applied for on FCC Form
175 and (2) the upfront payment amount
deposited. The bid submission screens
will allow bidders to submit bids on
only those licenses for which the bidder
applied on its FCC Form 175.
118. In order to access the bidding
function of the FCC Auction System,
bidders must be logged in during the
bidding round using the password
generated by the SecurID card and a
personal identification number (PIN)
created by the bidder. Bidders are
strongly encouraged to print a ‘‘round
summary’’ for each round after they
have completed all of their activity for
that round.
119. In each round, eligible bidders
will be able to place bids on a given
license in any of nine different amounts.
For each license, the FCC Auction
System interface will list the nine
acceptable bid amounts in a drop-down
box. Bidders may use the drop-down
box to select from among the nine bid
amounts. The FCC Auction System also
includes an ‘‘upload’’ function that
allows bidders to upload text files
containing bid information.
120. Until a bid has been placed on
a license, the minimum acceptable bid
amount for that license will be equal to
its minimum opening bid amount. Once
there is a provisionally winning bid on
a license, the FCC Auction System will
calculate a minimum acceptable bid
amount for that license for the following
round, as described in Section IV.B.3.
121. Finally, bidders are cautioned to
select their bid amounts carefully
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25057
because, as explained in the following
section, bidders that withdraw a
provisionally winning bid from a
previous round, even if the bid was
mistakenly or erroneously made, are
subject to bid withdrawal payments.
vi. Bid Removal and Bid Withdrawal
122. In the Auction No. 60 Comment
Public Notice, the Commission
proposed bid removal and bid
withdrawal procedures. With respect to
bid withdrawals, the Commission
proposed limiting each bidder to
withdrawals in no more than one round
during the course of the auction. The
round in which withdrawals are used
would be at the bidder’s discretion. The
Commission received no comments on
this issue.
123. Procedures. Before the close of a
bidding round, a bidder has the option
of removing any bids placed in that
round. By using the ‘‘remove bids’’
function in the FCC Auction System, a
bidder may effectively ‘‘unsubmit’’ any
bid placed within that round. A bidder
removing a bid placed in the same
round is not subject to withdrawal
payments. Removing a bid will affect a
bidder’s activity for the round in which
it is removed, i.e., a bid that is removed
does not count toward bidding activity.
These procedures will enhance bidder
flexibility during the auction, and
therefore the Commission adopts them
for Auction No. 60.
124. Once a round closes, a bidder
may no longer remove a bid. However,
in later rounds, a bidder may withdraw
provisionally winning bids from
previous rounds using the ‘‘withdraw
bids’’ function in the FCC Auction
System (assuming that the bidder has
not reached its withdrawal limit). A
provisionally winning bidder that
withdraws its provisionally winning bid
from a previous round during the
auction is subject to the bid withdrawal
payments specified in 47 CFR 1.2104(g).
Note: Once a withdrawal is submitted
during a round, that withdrawal cannot
be unsubmitted.
125. In previous auctions, the Bureau
has detected bidder conduct that,
arguably, may have constituted strategic
bidding through the use of bid
withdrawals. While the Commission
continues to recognize the important
role that bid withdrawals play in an
auction, i.e., reducing risk associated
with efforts to secure various licenses in
combination, the Commission conclude
that, for Auction No. 60, adoption of a
limit on the use of withdrawals to one
round per bidder is appropriate. By
doing so the Commission believes the
Commission strikes a reasonable
compromise that will allow bidders to
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use withdrawals. Our decision on this
issue is based upon our experience in
prior auctions, particularly the PCS D, E
and F block and 800 MHz SMR
auctions, and is in no way a reflection
of our view regarding the likelihood of
any speculation or ‘‘gaming’’ in this
auction.
126. The Bureau will therefore limit
the number of rounds in which bidders
may place withdrawals to one round.
The round will be at the bidder’s
discretion and there will be no limit on
the number of bids that may be
withdrawn in the round. Withdrawals
during the auction will be subject to the
bid withdrawal payments specified in
47 CFR 1.2104(g). Bidders should note
that abuse of the Commission’s bid
withdrawal procedures could result in
the denial of the ability to bid on a
market.
127. If a provisionally winning bid is
withdrawn, the minimum acceptable
bid amount will equal the amount of the
second highest bid received for the
license, which may be less than, or in
the case of tied bids, equal to, the
amount of the withdrawn bid. To set the
additional bid amounts, the second
highest bid amount also will be used in
place of the provisionally winning bid
in the formula used to calculate bid
increment amounts. The Commission
will serve as a ‘‘place holder’’
provisionally winning bidder on the
license until a new bid is submitted on
that license.
128. Calculation. Generally, the
Commission imposes payments on
bidders that withdraw high bids during
the course of an auction. If a bidder
withdraws its bid and there is no higher
bid in the same or subsequent
auction(s), the bidder that withdrew its
bid is responsible for the difference
between its withdrawn bid and the
provisionally winning bid in the same
or subsequent auction(s). In the case of
multiple bid withdrawals on a single
license, within the same or subsequent
auctions(s), the payment for each bid
withdrawal will be calculated based on
the sequence of bid withdrawals and the
amounts withdrawn. No withdrawal
payment will be assessed for a
withdrawn bid if either the subsequent
winning bid or any of the intervening
subsequent withdrawn bids, in either
the same or subsequent auctions(s),
equals or exceeds that withdrawn bid.
Thus, a bidder that withdraws a bid will
not be responsible for any withdrawal
payments if there is a subsequent higher
bid in the same or subsequent
auction(s). This policy allows bidders
most efficiently to allocate their
resources as well as to evaluate their
bidding strategies and business plans
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19:04 May 11, 2005
Jkt 205001
during an auction while, at the same
time, maintaining the integrity of the
auction process. The Bureau retains the
discretion to scrutinize multiple bid
withdrawals on a single license for
evidence of anti-competitive strategic
behavior and take appropriate action
when deemed necessary.
129. Section 1.2104(g)(1) of the rules
sets forth the payment obligations of a
bidder that withdraws a high bid on a
license during the course of an auction,
and provides for the assessment of
interim bid withdrawal payments. As
amended, § 1.2104(g)(1) provides that in
instances in which bids have been
withdrawn on a license that is not won
in the same auction, the Commission
will assess an interim withdrawal
payment equal to 3 percent of the
amount of the withdrawn bids. The 3
percent interim payment will be applied
toward any final bid withdrawal
payment that will be assessed after
subsequent auction of the license.
Assessing an interim bid withdrawal
payment ensures that the Commission
receives a minimal withdrawal payment
pending assessment of any final
withdrawal payment. Section 1.2104(g)
provides specific examples showing
application of the bid withdrawal
payment rule.
vii. Round Results
130. Bids placed during a round will
not be made public until the conclusion
of that bidding period. After a round
closes, the Bureau will compile reports
of all bids placed, bids withdrawn,
current provisionally winning bids, new
minimum acceptable bid amounts, and
bidder eligibility status (bidding
eligibility and activity rule waivers),
and post the reports for public access.
Reports reflecting bidders’ identities for
Auction No. 60 will be available before
and during the auction. Thus, bidders
will know in advance of this auction the
identities of the bidders against which
they are bidding.
viii. Auction Announcements
131. The FCC will use auction
announcements to announce items such
as schedule changes and stage
transitions. All FCC auction
announcements will be available by
clicking a link in the FCC Auction
System.
ix. Maintaining the Accuracy of FCC
Form 175 Information
132. As noted in Section II.H., after
the short-form filing deadline,
applicants may make only minor
changes to their FCC Form 175
applications, for example, deletion and
addition of authorized bidders (to a
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Sfmt 4703
maximum of three). Applicants must
press the SUBMIT button in the FCC
Auction System for the changes to be
submitted and considered by the
Commission. In addition, applicants
should submit a letter, briefly
summarizing the changes, by electronic
mail to the attention of Margaret
Wiener, Chief, Auctions and Spectrum
Access Division, at the following
address: auction60@fcc.gov. The
electronic mail summarizing the
changes must include a subject or
caption referring to Auction No. 60 and
the name of the applicant. The Bureau
requests that parties format any
attachments to electronic mail as
Adobe Acrobat (pdf) or Microsoft
Word documents.
V. Post-Auction Procedures
A. Down Payments and Withdrawn Bid
Payments
133. After bidding has ended, the
Commission will issue a public notice
declaring the auction closed and
identifying winning bidders, down
payments, final payments, and any
withdrawn bid payments due.
134. Within ten business days after
release of the auction closing notice,
each winning bidder must submit
sufficient funds (in addition to its
upfront payment) to bring its total
amount of money on deposit with the
Commission for Auction No. 60 to 20
percent of the net amount of its winning
bids (gross bids less any applicable
small business, very small business, or
entrepreneur bidding credits). In
addition, by the same deadline, all
bidders must pay any bid withdrawal
payments due under 47 CFR 1.2104(g),
as discussed in ‘‘Bid Removal and Bid
Withdrawal,’’ Section IV.B.6. (Upfront
payments are applied first to satisfy any
withdrawn bid liability, before being
applied toward down payments.)
B. Final Payments
135. Each winning bidder will be
required to submit the balance of the net
amount of its winning bids within 10
business days after the deadline for
submitting down payments.
C. Long-Form Application (FCC Form
601)
136. Within ten business days after
release of the auction closing notice,
winning bidders must electronically
submit a properly completed long-form
application (FCC Form 601) for each
license won through Auction No. 60.
Winning bidders that are small
businesses, very small businesses, or
entrepreneurs must demonstrate their
eligibility for small business, very small
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 91 / Thursday, May 12, 2005 / Notices
business, or entrepreneur bidding
credits. See 47 CFR 1.2112(b). Further
filing instructions will be provided to
auction winners at the close of the
auction.
D. Ownership Disclosure Information
Report (FCC Form 602)
137. At the time it submits its longform application (FCC Form 601), each
winning bidder also must comply with
the ownership reporting requirements as
set forth in 47 CFR 1.913, 1.919, and
1.2112. An ownership disclosure record
was automatically created in the
Universal Licensing System (ULS) for
any applicant that submitted an FCC
Form 175. However, winning bidders
will be required to review and confirm
that it is complete and accurate as of the
date of filing Form 601. Further
instructions will be provided to auction
winning bidders at the close of the
auction.
E. Default and Disqualification
138. Any high bidder that defaults or
is disqualified after the close of the
auction (i.e., fails to remit the required
down payment within the prescribed
period of time, fails to submit a timely
long-form application, fails to make full
payment, or is otherwise disqualified)
will be subject to the payments
described in 47 CFR 1.2104(g)(2). In
such event the Commission may reauction the license or offer it to the next
highest bidder (in descending order) at
its final bid. In addition, if a default or
disqualification involves gross
misconduct, misrepresentation, or bad
faith by an applicant, the Commission
may declare the applicant and its
principals ineligible to bid in future
auctions, and may take any other action
that it deems necessary, including
institution of proceedings to revoke any
existing licenses held by the applicant.
F. Refund of Remaining Upfront
Payment Balance
139. All applicants that submit
upfront payments but are not winning
bidders for a license in Auction No. 60
may be entitled to a refund of their
remaining upfront payment balance
after the conclusion of the auction. No
refund will be made unless there are
excess funds on deposit from the
applicant after any applicable bid
withdrawal payments have been paid.
All refunds will be returned to the payer
of record, as identified on the FCC Form
159, unless the payer submits written
authorization instructing otherwise.
140. Bidders that drop out of the
auction completely may be eligible for
a refund of their upfront payments
before the close of the auction. Qualified
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19:04 May 11, 2005
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bidders that have exhausted all of their
activity rule waivers, have no remaining
bidding eligibility, and have not
withdrawn a provisionally winning bid
during the auction must submit a
written refund request. If you have
completed the refund instructions
electronically, then only a written
request for the refund is necessary. If
not, the request must also include wire
transfer instructions, Taxpayer
Identification Number (TIN) and FCC
Registration Number (FRN). Send
refund requests to: Federal
Communications Commission,
Financial Operations Center, Auctions
Accounting Group, Attn: Gail Glasser,
445 12th Street, SW., Room 1–C864,
Washington, DC 20554.
141. Bidders are encouraged to file
their refund information electronically
using the Refund Information icon in
the FCC Form 175, but bidders can also
fax their information to the Auctions
Accounting Group at (202) 418–2843.
Once the information has been
approved, a refund will be sent to the
party identified in the refund
information.
Note: Refund processing generally takes up
to two weeks to complete. Bidders with
questions about refunds should contact Gail
Glasser at (202) 418–0578.
Federal Communications Commission.
Gary D. Michaels,
Deputy Chief, Auctions and Spectrum Access
Division, WTB.
[FR Doc. 05–9537 Filed 5–11–05; 8:45 am]
25059
Discussion Agenda
Memorandum re: The FDIC Insurance
Funds: Outlook and Premium Rate
Recommendations for the Second
Semiannual Assessment Period of
2005.
Memorandum and resolution re: Interim
Final Rule on Deposit Insurance
Coverage of the Accounts of Qualified
Tuition Programs Under Section 529
of the Internal Revenue Code.
Memorandum and resolution re: Interim
Final Rule—Part 334 Medical Privacy
Regulations under the Fair and
Accurate Credit Transactions Act of
2003.
The meeting will be held in the Board
Room on the sixth floor of the FDIC
Building located at 550—17th Street,
NW., Washington DC.
The FDIC will provide attendees with
auxiliary aids (e.g., sign language
interpretation) required for this meeting.
Those attendees needing such assistance
should call (202) 416–2089 (Voice); or
(202) 416–2007 (TTY), to make
necessary arrangements.
Requests for further information
concerning the meeting may be directed
to Mr. Robert E. Feldman, Executive
Secretary of the Corporation, at (202)
898–7043.
Dated: May 9, 2005.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Robert E. Feldman,
Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 05–9595 Filed 5–10–05; 12:52 pm]
BILLING CODE 6714–01–M
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION
Sunshine Act Meeting
Pursuant to the provisions of the
‘‘Government in the Sunshine Act’’ (5
U.S.C. 552b), notice is hereby given that
the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation’s Board of Directors will
meet in open session at 10 a.m. on
Monday, May 16, 2005, to consider the
following matters:
Summary Agenda
No substantive discussion of the
following items is anticipated. These
matters will be resolved with a single
vote unless a member of the Board of
Directors requests that an item be
moved to the discussion agenda.
Disposition of minutes of previous
Board of Directors’ meetings.
Summary reports, status reports, and
reports of actions taken pursuant to
authority delegated by the Board of
Directors.
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FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION
Sunshine Act Meeting
Pursuant to the provisions of the
‘‘Government in the Sunshine Act’’ (5
U.S.C. 552b), notice is hereby given that
at 10:30 a.m. on Monday, May 16, 2005,
the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation’s Board of Directors will
meet in closed session, pursuant to
section 552b(c)(2), (c)(4), (c)(6), (c)(8),
(c)(9)(A)(ii), (c)(9)(B), and (c)(10) of Title
5, United States Code, to consider
matters relating to the Corporation’s
corporate, supervisory and personnel
activities.
The meeting will be held in the Board
Room on the sixth floor of the FDIC
Building located at 550—17th Street,
NW., Washington, DC.
Requests for further information
concerning the meeting may be directed
to Mr. Robert E. Feldman, Executive
Secretary of the Corporation, at (202)
898–7043.
Dated: May 9, 2005.
E:\FR\FM\12MYN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 91 (Thursday, May 12, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 25045-25059]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-9537]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
[Report No. AUC-05-60-B; DA 05-737]
Auction of Lower 700 MHz Band Licenses Scheduled for July 20,
2005; Notice and Filing Requirements, Minimum Opening Bids, Upfront
Payments and Other Auction Procedures
AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document announces the procedures and minimum opening
bids for the upcoming auction of five licenses in the Lower 700 MHz
Band. This document is intended to familiarize prospective bidders with
the procedures and minimum opening bids for this auction.
DATES: Auction No. 60 is scheduled for July 20, 2005.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Auctions and Spectrum Access Division,
WTB: For legal questions: Howard Davenport at (202) 418-0660, for
general auction questions: Ray Knowles or Lisa Stover at (717) 338-
2888. Media Contact: Lauren Patrich at (202) 418-7944.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Auction No. 60
Procedures Public Notice released on March 22, 2005. The complete text
of the Auction No. 60 Procedures Public Notice, including attachments,
is available for public inspection and copying during regular business
hours at the FCC Reference Information Center, Portals II, 445 12th
Street, SW., Room CY-A257, Washington, DC 20554. The Auction No. 60
Procedures Public Notice may also be purchased from the Commission's
duplicating contractor, Best Copy and Printing, Inc. (``BCPI''),
Portals II, 445 12th Street, SW., Room CY-B402, Washington, DC 20554,
telephone (202) 488-5300, facsimile (202) 488-5563, or you may contact
BCPI at their Web site: https://www.BCPIWEB.com. When ordering a
document from BCPI, please provide the appropriate FCC document number
for example DA 05-737 for a copy of this Public Notice. This document
is also available on the Internet at the Commission's Web site: https://
wireless.fcc.gov/auctions/60/.
I. General Information
A. Introduction
1. The Auction No. 60 Procedures Public Notice announces the
procedures and minimum opening bid amounts for the upcoming auction of
licenses in the Lower 700 MHz band C block (710-716/740-746 MHz)
scheduled for July 20, 2005 (Auction No. 60). On January 26, 2005, in
accordance with Section 309(j)(4) of the Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, the Wireless Telecommunications Bureau (``Bureau'') released a
public notice seeking comment on reserve prices or minimum opening bid
amounts and the procedures to be used in Auction No. 60. The Bureau
received no comments in response to the Auction No. 60 Comment Public
Notice, 70 FR 6436, (February 7, 2005).
i. Background of Proceeding
2. On January 18, 2002, the Commission released the Lower 700 MHz
Report and Order, 67 FR 45380 (July 9, 2002) which adopted allocation
and service rules for the Lower 700 MHz Band. Specifically, the
Commission reallocated the entire 48 megahertz of spectrum in the Lower
700 MHz band to fixed and mobile services and retained the existing
broadcast allocation for both new broadcast services and incumbent
broadcast services during their transition to digital television
(``DTV''). The Commission established technical criteria designed to
protect incumbent television operations in the band during the DTV
transition period, allowed low power television (``LPTV'') and TV
translator stations to retain secondary status and operate in the band
after the transition, and set forth a mechanism by which pending
broadcast applications may be amended to provide analog or digital
service in the core television spectrum or to provide digital service
on TV Channels 52-58.
3. In its service rules, the Commission divided the Lower 700 MHz
band into three 12-megahertz blocks, with each block consisting of a
pair of 6-megahertz segments, and two 6-megahertz blocks of contiguous,
unpaired spectrum. The Commission decided to divide the five blocks in
the Lower 700 MHz band plan as follows: for the two 6-megahertz blocks
of contiguous unpaired spectrum, as well as two of the three 12-
megahertz blocks of paired spectrum,
[[Page 25046]]
the Commission determined to assign licenses in six Economic Area
Groupings (``EAGs''); for the remaining 12 megahertz block of paired
spectrum, the Commission determined to assign licenses in 734
Metropolitan Statistical Areas (``MSAs'') and Rural Service Areas
(``RSAs''). All operations in the Lower 700 MHz band are generally
regulated under the framework of Part 27's technical, licensing, and
operating rules. To permit both wireless services and certain new
broadcast operations in the Lower 700 MHz band, however, the Commission
has amended the maximum power limits in Part 27 to permit 50 kW
effective radiated power (``ERP'') transmissions in the Lower 700 MHz
band, subject to certain conditions. Finally, the Commission
established competitive bidding procedures and voluntary band-clearing
mechanisms for the Lower 700 MHz band. On June 14, 2002, the Commission
affirmed its decisions in the Lower 700 MHz Report and Order.
4. With respect to the MSA and RSA licenses, the Bureau notes that
MSAs and RSAs are collectively known as Cellular Market Areas (CMAs).
CMAs were created from the Metropolitan Statistical Areas (``MSAs'')
defined by the Office of Management and Budget (CMA001-CMA305), the
Gulf of Mexico (CMA306), and Rural Service Areas (``RSAs'') established
by the FCC (CMA307-CMA734). These RSAs include parts of Puerto Rico not
already in an MSA (CMA723-CMA729), U.S. Virgin Islands (CMA730-CMA731),
Guam (CMA732), American Samoa (CMA733), and Northern Mariana Islands
(CMA734). The CMA designation, rather than MSA/RSA, is used in the FCC
Integrated Spectrum Auction System and in the Universal Licensing
System.
ii. Licenses To Be Auctioned
5. Auction No. 60 will offer five CMA licenses in the Lower 700 MHz
band C block (710-716/740-746 MHz). These licenses remained unsold in
Auction No. 49, which closed on June 13, 2003. The C block is a 12-
megahertz block consisting of a pair of 6-megahertz segments.
Auction No. 60.--Lower 700 MHz Band Licenses To Be Auctioned
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bandwidth
Market number Market name License number Block Frequencies (MHz) (MHz)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CMA169................................ Mayaguez, PR.................. WZ-CMA169-C.............. C.................... 710-716, 740-746 12
CMA202................................ Arecibo, PR................... WZ-CMA202-C.............. C.................... 710-716, 740-746 12
CMA723................................ Puerto Rico 1--Rincon......... WZ-CMA723-C.............. C.................... 710-716, 740-746 12
CMA727................................ Puerto Rico 5--Ceiba.......... WZ-CMA727-C.............. C.................... 710-716, 740-746 12
CMA729................................ Puerto Rico 7--Culebra........ WZ-CMA729-C.............. C.................... 710-716, 740-746 12
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Rules and Disclaimers
i. Relevant Authority
6. Prospective applicants must familiarize themselves thoroughly
with the Commission's rules, particularly those relating to the Lower
700 MHz band contained in Title 47, part 27, of the Code of Federal
Regulations, and those relating to application and auction procedures,
contained in Title 47, part 1, of the Code of Federal Regulations.
Prospective applicants must also be thoroughly familiar with the
procedures, terms and conditions (collectively, ``terms'') contained in
this Public Notice; the Auction No. 60 Comment Public Notice; and the
Commission's decisions in proceedings regarding competitive bidding
procedures.
7. The terms contained in the Commission's rules, relevant orders,
and public notices are not negotiable. The Commission may amend or
supplement the information contained in our public notices at any time,
and will issue public notices to convey any new or supplemental
information to applicants. It is the responsibility of all applicants
to remain current with all Commission rules and with all public notices
pertaining to this auction. Copies of most Commission documents,
including public notices, can be retrieved from the FCC Auctions
Internet site at https://wireless.fcc.gov/auctions. Additionally,
documents are available for public inspection and copying during
regular business hours at the FCC's Reference Information Center.
Documents may also be purchased from the Commission's duplicating
contractor, Best Copy and Printing Inc.
ii. Prohibition of Collusion
8. To ensure the competitiveness of the auction process, Sec.
1.2105(c) of the Commission's rules prohibits applicants for any of the
same geographic license areas from communicating with each other during
the auction about bids, bidding strategies, or settlements unless such
applicants have identified each other on their FCC Form 175
applications as parties with whom they have entered into agreements
under Sec. 1.2105(a)(2)(viii). Thus, applicants for any of the same
geographic license areas must affirmatively avoid all discussions with
each other that affect, or in their reasonable assessment have the
potential to affect, bidding or bidding strategy. This prohibition
begins at the short-form application filing deadline and ends at the
down payment deadline after the auction. This prohibition applies to
all applicants regardless of whether such applicants become qualified
bidders or actually bid. For purposes of this prohibition, Sec.
1.2105(c)(7)(i) defines applicant as including all controlling
interests in the entity submitting an application to participate in the
auction, as well as all holders of partnership and other ownership
interests and any stock interest amounting to 10 percent or more of the
entity, or outstanding stock, or outstanding voting stock of the entity
submitting a short-form application, and all officers and directors of
that entity.
9. Applicants for licenses in any of the same geographic license
areas are encouraged not to use the same individual as an authorized
bidder. A violation of the anti-collusion rule could occur if an
individual acts as the authorized bidder for two or more competing
applicants, and conveys information concerning the substance of bids or
bidding strategies between the applicants he or she is authorized to
represent in the auction. A violation could similarly occur if the
authorized bidders are different individuals employed by the same
organization (e.g., law firm or consulting firm). In such a case, at a
minimum, applicants should certify on their applications that
precautionary steps have been taken to prevent communication between
authorized bidders and that applicants and their bidding agents will
comply with the anti-collusion rule. However, the Bureau cautions that
merely filing a certifying statement as part of an application will not
outweigh specific evidence that collusive behavior has occurred, nor
will it preclude the
[[Page 25047]]
initiation of an investigation when warranted.
10. The Commission's anti-collusion rule allows applicants to form
certain agreements during the auction, provided the applicants have not
applied for licenses covering any of the same geographic areas. In
addition, applicants that apply to bid for all markets will be
precluded from communicating with all other applicants until after the
down payment deadline. However, all applicants may enter into bidding
agreements before filing their FCC Form 175, as long as they disclose
the existence of the agreement(s) in their Form 175. If parties agree
in principle on all material terms prior to the short-form filing
deadline, those parties must be identified on the short-form
application pursuant to Sec. 1.2105(c), even if the agreement has not
been reduced to writing. If the parties have not agreed in principle by
the filing deadline, an applicant would not include the names of those
parties on its application, and may not continue negotiations. By
signing their FCC Form 175 short-form applications, applicants are
certifying their compliance with Sec. 1.2105(c).
11. Section 1.65 of the Commission's rules requires an applicant to
maintain the accuracy and completeness of information furnished in its
pending application and to notify the Commission within 30 days of any
substantial change that may be of decisional significance to that
application. Thus, Sec. 1.65 requires auction applicants that engage
in communications of bids or bidding strategies that result in a
bidding agreement, arrangement or understanding not already identified
on their short-form applications to promptly disclose any such
agreement, arrangement or understanding to the Commission by amending
their pending applications. In addition, Sec. 1.2105(c) (6) requires
all auction applicants to report prohibited discussions or disclosures
regarding bids or bidding strategy to the Commission in writing
immediately but in no case later than five business days after the
communication occurs, even if the communication does not result in an
agreement or understanding regarding bids or bidding strategy that must
be reported under Sec. 1.65.
12. Applicants that are winning bidders will be required to
disclose in their long-form applications the specific terms,
conditions, and parties involved in all bidding consortia, joint
ventures, partnerships, and other arrangements entered into relating to
the competitive bidding process. Any applicant found to have violated
the anti-collusion rule may be subject to sanctions, including
forfeiture of its upfront payment, down payment or full bid amount, and
may be prohibited from participating in future auctions. In addition,
applicants are reminded that they are subject to the antitrust laws,
which are designed to prevent anticompetitive behavior in the
marketplace. If an applicant is found to have violated the antitrust
laws in connection with its participation in the competitive bidding
process, it may be subject to forfeiture of its upfront payment, down
payment, or full bid amount and may be prohibited from participating in
future auctions.
13. A summary listing of documents issued by the Commission and the
Bureau addressing the application of the anti-collusion rule these
documents are available on the Commission's anti-collusion web page.
iii. Interference Protection of Television Services
14. Among other licensing and technical rules, new Lower 700 MHz
band licensees must comply with the interference protection
requirements set forth in Sec. 27.60 of the Commission's rules.
Generally, Sec. 27.60 establishes standards for protection of co- and
adjacent-channel analog TV and DTV facilities. Thus, for example, a new
licensee seeking to operate on the C block (710-716/740-746 MHz)
portion of the Lower 700 MHz band must provide co-channel protection to
nearby TV and DTV operations on Channels 54 and 59 and provide
adjacent-channel protection to stations on Channels 53, 55, 58, and 60.
New Lower 700 MHz band licensees should also be aware that incumbent
broadcasters may be permitted to make certain changes to their
authorized facilities. Such modified facilities may be entitled to
interference protection from new Lower 700 MHz band licensees. In
addition, Appendix D of the Lower 700 MHz Report and Order describes
additional adjacent-channel interference considerations that are
designed to mitigate the possibility of base-to-base interference that
may arise at base receive stations that are in close proximity to high
power transmitters operating on adjacent channels. Moreover, licensees
intending to operate a facility at a power level of greater than 1
kilowatt must provide advance notice to the Commission and to licensees
authorized in their area of operation. New Lower 700 MHz licensees also
will have to comply with any additional technical requirements or
interference protection requirements that may be adopted as a result of
any future rulemaking proceedings.
15. Potential bidders should recognize that the interference
protection requirements for the Lower 700 MHz band are more stringent
in certain respects relative to the interference standards that apply
to the Upper 700 MHz band. These interference obligations will remain
in force until the end of the DTV transition period at which time
analog TV and DTV broadcasters will be required to vacate both the
Upper and Lower 700 MHz bands.
16. Potential bidders should be aware that a greater number of
broadcast incumbents exist in the Lower 700 MHz band relative to the
Upper 700 MHz band. The Commission has also observed that, although
there is approximately the same number of analog incumbents in both the
Upper and Lower 700 MHz bands, the Lower 700 MHz band consists of less
spectrum and, therefore, incumbent licensees are more densely situated
across the band. Further, there is a significantly greater number of
DTV assignments on the eight television channels in the Lower 700 MHz
band, including licenses, construction permits, pending applications,
and pending allotment petitions, than exist in the Upper 700 MHz band.
The Commission may also permit certain Channel 60-69 broadcasters to
relocate temporarily into Channels 52-58 pursuant to a voluntary
clearing arrangement.
17. Negotiations with Incumbent Broadcast Licensees: The Commission
has established a policy of facilitating voluntary clearing of the 700
MHz bands to allow for the introduction of new wireless services and to
promote the transition of incumbent analog television licensees to DTV
service. Generally speaking, this policy provides that the Commission
will consider specific regulatory requests needed to implement
voluntary agreements between incumbent broadcasters and new licensees
to clear the Lower 700 MHz band early, if consistent with the public
interest. The fundamentals of the Commission's voluntary clearing
policy for the 700 MHz bands were established in a series of decisions
beginning with the adoption of the Upper 700 MHz First Report and Order
in January 2000. However, in light of certain differences between the
Upper and Lower 700 MHz bands, the Commission decided not to extend
certain aspects of its voluntary clearing policy to the Lower 700 MHz
band, including the presumptions that were established in the Upper 700
MHz band for analyzing voluntary band-clearing proposals and the
extended DTV construction period that was provided to certain single-
channel
[[Page 25048]]
broadcasters in connection with the arrangements for early clearing of
the Upper 700 MHz band. In considering such regulatory requests, the
Commission will consider whether grant of the request would result in
public interest benefits, such as making new or expanded public safety
or other wireless services available to consumers or deploying wireless
service to rural or other underserved communities. The Commission
intends to weigh these benefits against any likely public interest
costs, such as the loss of any of the four stations in the designated
market area with the largest audience share, the loss of the sole
service licensed to the local community, the loss of a community's sole
service on a channel reserved for noncommercial educational broadcast
service, or a negative effect on the pace of the DTV transition in the
market.
18. Subsequent to the adoption by the Commission of its voluntary
clearing policy, the Auction Reform Act of 2002 was enacted. One
provision of this legislation restricts the Commission's authority to
waive certain broadcast interference standards and the minimum spacing
requirements for certain proposals to relocate Channel 52-69 analog
operations to a Channel 2-51 DTV allotment, if such waiver ``will
result in any degradation in or loss of service, or an increased level
of interference to any television household except as the Commission's
rules would otherwise expressly permit, exclusive of any waivers
previously granted.''
19. Finally, the Commission notes that an existing or future
wireless licensee in the 700 MHz bands may notify in writing a digital
low power TV or TV translator operating on the same channel or first
adjacent channel of its intention to initiate or change wireless
operations and the likelihood of interference from the low power TV or
translator station within its licensed geographic service area. Upon
receipt of such notice, the digital LPTV or TV translator licensee must
cease operation within 120 days unless it obtains the agreement of the
wireless licensee to continue operations.
iv. Due Diligence
20. Applicants are reminded that there are a number of incumbent
broadcast television licensees already licensed and operating in the
710-716/740-746 MHz bands that will be subject to the upcoming auction.
As discussed above in greater detail, the Commission made clear that
geographic area licensees operating on the spectrum associated with
Channels 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, and 60 must comply with the
co-channel and the adjacent channel provision of Sec. 27.60 of the
Commission's rules. These limitations may restrict the ability of such
geographic licensees to use certain portions of the electromagnetic
spectrum or provide service to certain regions in their geographic
license areas.
21. To aid applicants, this Public Notice lists incumbent licensees
operating in these bands. The Commission makes no representations or
guarantees that the matters listed are the only pending matters that
could affect spectrum availability in these services. Applicants should
not rely solely on this list, but should carefully review the
Commission's databases and records before formulating bidding
strategies.
Incumbent CDBS Record Listing for DTV Channels 53-55 and 58-60 as of 3/10/05
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Facility
Channel State City Call sign ID Name ARN Status Service
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
53............................... PR............. ARECIBO............. WCCV-TV............. 3001 ASOCIACION 19991101AGR............ CP.................... DT
EVANGELISTICA CRISTO
VIENE INC..
54............................... PR............. YAUCO............... W54AQ............... 42151 ASOCIACION 198904171Q............. LIC................... TX
EVANGELISTICA CRISTO
VIENE INC..
54............................... PR............. ARECIBO............. WCCV-TV............. 3001 ASOCIACION 19950719KH............. LIC................... TV
EVANGELISTICA CRISTO
VIENE INC..
55............................... PR............. SAN JUAN............ WIPR-TV............. 53859 PUERTO RICO PUBLIC 20000426ABF............ CP.................... DT
BROADCASTING CORP..
58............................... PR............. CAGUAS.............. WUJA................ 8156 CAGUAS EDUCATIONAL 19851107KE............. LIC................... TV
TV, INC..
58............................... PR............. MAYAGUEZ............ W34CI............... 71730 WESTERN BROADCASTING JG0601UA............... CP.................... TX
CORP. OF PUERTO RICO.
59............................... PR............. BAYAMON............. WDWL................ 4110 BAYAMON CHRISTIAN 20000419ABS............ CP.................... DT
NETWORK.
60............................... PR............. SABANA GRANDE....... W60AA............... 71726 WESTERN BROADCASTING 1432................... LIC................... TX
CORP. OF PUERTO RICO.
60............................... PR............. ARECIBO............. WMEI................ 26676 HECTOR NEGRONI 19960415KE............. CP MOD................ TV
CARTAGENA.
60............................... PR............. ARECIBO............. WMEI................ 26676 HECTOR NEGRONI 20001220ABS............ APP................... TV
CARTAGENA.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
22. Licensing records for the Media Bureau are contained in the
Media Bureau's Consolidated Data Base System (CDBS) and may be
researched on the Internet at https://www.fcc.gov/mb/. Potential bidders
may query the database online and download a copy of their search
results if desired. Detailed instructions on using Search for Station
Information, Search for Ownership Report Information and Search for
Application Information and downloading query results are available
online by selecting the CDBS Public Access (main) button at the bottom
of the Electronic Filing and Public Access list section. The database
searches return either station or application data. The application
search provides an application link that displays the complete
electronically filed application in application format. An AL/TC search
under the application search link permits searching for Assignment of
License/Transfer of Control groups using the AL/TC group lead
application.
23. Potential bidders should direct questions regarding the search
capabilities of CDBS to the Media Bureau help line at (202) 418-2662,
or via e-mail at mbinfo@fcc.gov. Applicants are solely responsible for
identifying associated risks and for
[[Page 25049]]
investigating and evaluating the degree to which such matters may
affect their ability to bid on, otherwise acquire, or make use of
licenses available in Auction No. 60.
24. Applicants should also be aware that certain pending and future
applications (including those for modification), petitions for
rulemaking, requests for special temporary authority (``STA''), waiver
requests, petitions to deny, petitions for reconsideration, and
applications for review may be pending before the Commission and relate
to particular applicants or incumbent licensees. In addition, pending
and future judicial proceedings may relate to particular applicants or
incumbent licensees, or the licenses available in Auction No. 60.
Applicants are responsible for assessing the likelihood of the various
possible outcomes, and considering their potential impact on spectrum
licenses available in this auction.
25. Applicant should perform due diligence to identify and consider
all proceedings that may affect the spectrum licenses being auctioned.
The Commission notes note that resolution of such matters could have an
impact on the availability of spectrum for Auction No. 60. In addition,
although the Commission may continue to act on various pending
applications, informal objections petitions, and other requests for
Commission relief, some of these matters may not be resolved by the
time of the auction.
26. As a convenience to potential applicants, the Bureau will issue
shortly a due diligence announcement listing proceedings that may
affect future operations in these bands. The Commission makes no
representations or guarantees that the matters listed in this due
diligence announcement are the only pending matters that could affect
spectrum availability in these services.
v. Bidder Alerts
27. The FCC makes no representations or warranties about the use of
this spectrum for particular services. Applicants should be aware that
an FCC auction represents an opportunity to become an FCC licensee in
this service, subject to certain conditions and regulations. An FCC
auction does not constitute an endorsement by the FCC of any particular
services, technologies or products, nor does an FCC license constitute
a guarantee of business success. Applicants and interested parties
should perform their own due diligence before proceeding, as they would
with any new business venture.
28. As is the case with many business investment opportunities,
some unscrupulous entrepreneurs may attempt to use Auction No. 60 to
deceive and defraud unsuspecting investors. Information about deceptive
telemarketing investment schemes is available from the FTC at (202)
326-2222 and from the SEC at (202) 942-7040. Complaints about specific
deceptive telemarketing investment schemes should be directed to the
FTC, the SEC, or the National Fraud Information Center at (800) 876-
7060. Consumers who have concerns about specific proposals regarding
Auction No. 60 may also call the FCC Consumer Center at (888) CALL-FCC
((888) 225-5322).
vi. National Environmental Policy Act Requirements
29. Licensees must comply with the Commission's rules regarding the
National Environmental Policy Act (``NEPA''). The construction of a
wireless antenna facility is a Federal action and the licensee must
comply with the Commission's NEPA rules for each such facility. The
Commission's NEPA rules require, among other things, that the licensee
consult with expert agencies having NEPA responsibilities, including
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the State Historic Preservation
Office, the Army Corps of Engineers and the Federal Emergency
Management Agency (through the local authority with jurisdiction over
floodplains).
C. Auction Specifics
i. Auction Date
30. The auction will begin on Wednesday, July 20, 2005, as
announced in the Auction No. 60 Comment Public Notice, 70 FR 6436
(February 7, 2005). The initial schedule for bidding will be announced
by public notice at least one week before the start of the auction.
Unless otherwise announced, bidding on all licenses will be conducted
on each business day, and will continue until bidding has stopped on
all licenses.
ii. Auction Title
31. Auction No. 60--Lower 700 MHz Band C block.
iii. Bidding Methodology
32. The bidding methodology for Auction No. 60 will be simultaneous
multiple round bidding. The Commission will conduct this auction over
the Internet using the FCC's Integrated Spectrum Auction system
(``ISAS'' or ``FCC Auction System''), and telephonic bidding will be
available as well. Qualified bidders are permitted to bid
telephonically or electronically.
iv. Pre-Auction Dates and Deadlines
ISAS Orientation Sessions............................ March 31, 2005 and April 21, 2005.
Auction Seminar...................................... May 24, 2005.
Short-Form Application (FCC Form 175) Filing Window May 24, 2005; 12 p.m. ET.
Opens.
Short-Form Application (FCC Form 175) Filing Window June 3, 2005; 6 p.m. ET.
Deadline.
Upfront Payments (via wire transfer)................. June 30, 2005; 6 p.m. ET.
Mock Auction......................................... July 18, 2005.
Auction Begins....................................... July 20, 2005.
v. Requirements for Participation
33. Those wishing to participate in the auction must:
Submit a short-form application (FCC Form 175)
electronically by 6 p.m. Eastern Time (ET), June 3, 2005.
Submit a sufficient upfront payment and an FCC Remittance
Advice Form (FCC Form 159) by 6 p.m. ET, June 30, 2005.
Comply with all provisions outlined in this public notice.
vi. General Contact Information
GENERAL AUCTION INFORMATION:
General Auction Questions.......... FCC Auctions Hotline, (888) 225-
Seminar Registration............... 5322, Press Option 2,
or direct (717) 338-2888,
Hours of service: 8 a.m.-5:30
p.m. ET, Monday through
Friday.
[[Page 25050]]
AUCTION LEGAL INFORMATION: Auction Auctions and Spectrum Access
Rules, Policies, Regulations. Division, (202) 418-0660.
LICENSING INFORMATION:
Rules, Policies, Regulations....... Mobility Division, (202) 418-
Licensing Issues................... 0620.
Due Diligence......................
Incumbency Issues..................
TECHNICAL SUPPORT:
Electronic Filing.................. FCC Auctions Technical Support
FCC Auction System................. Hotline, (877) 480-3201,
option nine or (202) 414-1250,
(202) 414-1255 (TTY), Hours of
service: 8 a.m.-6 p.m. ET,
Monday through Friday.
PAYMENT INFORMATION:
Wire Transfers..................... FCC Auctions Accounting Branch,
Refunds............................ (202) 418-0578, (202) 418-2843
(Fax).
TELEPHONIC BIDDING..................... Will be furnished only to
qualified bidders.
FCC COPY CONTRACTOR: Additional Copies Best Copy and Printing, Inc.,
of Commission Documents. 445 12th Street, SW., Room CY-
B402, Washington, DC 20554,
(800) 378-3160, https://
www.bcpiweb.com.
PRESS INFORMATION--FCC FORMS........... Lauren Patrich (202) 418-7944,
(800) 418-3676 (outside
Washington, DC), (202) 418-
3676 (in the Washington area)
https://www.fcc.gov/
formpage.html.
FCC INTERNET SITES..................... https://www.fcc.gov.
https://wireless.fcc.gov/
auctions.
https://wireless.fcc.gov/uls.
II. Short-Form (FCC Form 175) Filing Requirements
34. A party's application to participate in an FCC auction,
referred to as a short-form application or FCC Form 175, provides
information used in determining whether the applicant is legally,
technically, and financially qualified to participate in Commission
auctions for licenses or permits. In addition, for Auction No. 60, if
an applicant claims eligibility for a bidding credit, the information
provided will be used in determining whether the applicant is eligible
for the claimed bidding credit. Applicants to participate in Auction
No. 60 must file FCC Form 175 electronically by 6 p.m. ET on June 3,
2005. Applicants bear full responsibility for submission of timely and
complete FCC Form 175 applications. All applicants must certify on
their FCC Form 175 applications under penalty of perjury that they are
legally, technically, financially and otherwise qualified to hold a
license. Applicants should read the instructions carefully and should
consult the rules to ensure that, in addition to the materials
described below; all the information that is required under the
Commission's rules is included with their FCC Form 175 applications.
35. An entity may not submit more than one short-form application
in a single auction. In the event that a party submits multiple FCC
Form 175s, such additional applications will be dismissed.
36. Applicants should further note that submission of an FCC Form
175 application constitutes a representation by the certifying official
that he or she is an authorized representative of the applicant, has
read the form's instructions and certifications, and that the contents
of the application and any attachments are true and correct. Submission
of a false certification to the Commission may result in penalties,
including monetary forfeitures, license forfeitures, ineligibility to
participate in future auctions, and/or criminal prosecution.
A. Preferences for Small Businesses and Others
i. Size Standards for Bidding Credits
37. In the Lower 700 MHz Report and Order, the Commission
determined that three levels of bidding credits were appropriate for
the CMA licenses in the C block. A bidding credit represents the amount
by which a bidder's winning bids are discounted. The size of the
bidding credit depends on the average of the aggregated annual gross
revenues for each of the preceding three years of the bidder, its
affiliates, its controlling interests, and the affiliates of its
controlling interests.
38. For Auction No. 60, bidding credits will be available to small
businesses, very small businesses, and entrepreneurs, or consortia
thereof, as defined in Sec. 27.702, for the Lower 700 MHz band
licenses:
A bidder with attributed average annual gross revenues
that do not exceed $3 million for the preceding three years
(``entrepreneur'') will receive a 35 percent discount on its winning
bids.
A bidder with attributed average annual gross revenues
that exceed $3 million and do not exceed $15 million for the preceding
three years (``very small business'') will receive a 25 percent
discount on its winning bids.
A bidder with attributed average annual gross revenues
that exceed $15 million and do not exceed $40 million for the preceding
three years (``small business'') will receive a 15 percent discount on
its winning bids;
Bidding credits are not cumulative; a qualifying applicant receives
the 35 percent, 25 percent, or 15 percent bidding credit on its winning
bid, but only one credit per license.
39. Applicants should note that they will be required to provide
information regarding revenues attributable to the applicant and
related parties on their FCC Form 175 short-form applications to
establish that they satisfy the eligibility requirements to qualify as
a small business, very small business, or entrepreneur (or consortia of
a small business, very small business, or entrepreneur) for this
auction.
ii. Tribal Lands Bidding Credit
40. The Commission notes that there are no federally recognized
tribal lands within the geographic area covered by the licenses offered
in this auction. Thus, tribal lands bidding credits will not be
available to winning bidders in Auction No. 60.
iii. Installment Payments
41. Installment payment plans will not be available in Auction No.
60.
B. License Selection
42. In Auction No. 60, applicants must select the licenses on which
they want to bid from the ``Eligible Licenses'' list. The applicant may
select all the licenses in the list (by using the SELECT ALL option) or
select and add individual licenses from the list. Be advised that there
is no opportunity to change license selection after the short-form
filing deadline. It is critically important that you confirm your
license selection because the FCC Auction
[[Page 25051]]
System will not accept bids on licenses that an applicant has not
selected on its FCC Form 175.
C. Consortia and Joint Bidding Arrangements
43. Applicants will be required to indicate on their applications
whether they have entered into any explicit or implicit agreements,
arrangements or understandings of any kind with any parties, other than
those identified, regarding the amount of their bids, bidding
strategies, or the particular licenses on which they will or will not
bid. Applicants will also be required to identify on their short-form
applications any parties with whom they have entered into any
consortium arrangements, joint ventures, partnerships or other
agreements or understandings that relate in any way to the licenses
being auctioned, including any agreements relating to post-auction
market structure. If an applicant has had discussions, but has not
reached a joint bidding agreement by the short-form deadline, it would
not include the names of parties to the discussions on its applications
and may not continue such discussions with applicants for any of the
same geographic license areas after the deadline.
44. A party holding a non-controlling, attributable interest in one
applicant will be permitted to acquire an ownership interest in, form a
consortium with, or enter into a joint bidding arrangement with other
applicants for licenses in the same geographic license area provided
that (i) the attributable interest holder certifies that it has not and
will not communicate with any party concerning the bids or bidding
strategies of more than one of the applicants in which it holds an
attributable interest, or with which it has formed a consortium or
entered into a joint bidding arrangement; and (ii) the arrangements do
not result in a change in control of any of the applicants. While the
anti-collusion rules do not prohibit non-auction related business
negotiations among auction applicants, applicants are reminded that
certain discussions or exchanges could touch upon impermissible subject
matters because they may convey pricing information and bidding
strategies.
D. Ownership Disclosure Requirements
45. All applicants must comply with the uniform Part 1 ownership
disclosure standards and provide information required by Sec. Sec.
1.2105 and 1.2112 of the Commission's rules. Specifically, in
completing FCC Form 175, applicants will be required to fully disclose
information on the real party or parties-in-interest and ownership
structure of the bidding entity. The ownership disclosure standards for
the short form are set forth in Sec. 1.2112 of the Commission's rules.
To simplify filling out Form 175, an applicant's most current ownership
information on file with the Commission, if in an electronic format
compatible with Form 175, such as information submitted in an on-line
Form 602, will automatically be entered into Form 175. Applicants are
responsible for information submitted in Form 175 being complete and
accurate. Accordingly, applicants should carefully review any
information automatically entered to confirm that it is complete and
accurate as of the deadline for filing Form 175. Applicants can update
any information that needs to be changed directly in the Form 175.
E. Bidding Credit Revenue Disclosures
46. Entities applying to bid as small businesses, very small
businesses, or entrepreneurs (or consortia of small businesses, very
small businesses, or entrepreneurs) will be required to disclose on
their FCC Form 175 short-form applications the gross revenues for the
preceding three years of each of the following: (1) The applicant, (2)
its affiliates, (3) its controlling interests, and (4) the affiliates
of its controlling interests. Certification that the average annual
gross revenues for the preceding three years do not exceed the
applicable limit is not sufficient. In order to comply with disclosure
requirements for bidding credit eligibility, an applicant must provide
separately for itself, its affiliates, its controlling interests, and
the affiliates of its controlling interests, the gross revenues for
each of the preceding three years. If the applicant is applying as a
consortium of small businesses, very small businesses, or
entrepreneurs, this information must be provided for each consortium
member.
47. Controlling interest standard. The Commission uses a
``controlling interest'' standard for attributing to auction applicants
the gross revenues of their investors and affiliates in determining
small business eligibility for future auctions. The Commission has
modified its rules governing the attribution of gross revenues for
purposes of determining small business eligibility. These changes
included exempting the gross revenues of the affiliates of a rural
telephone cooperative's officers and directors from attribution to the
applicant if certain specified conditions are met. The Commission also
clarified that in calculating an applicant's gross revenues under the
controlling interest standard, the personal net worth, including
personal income, of its officers and directors will not be attributed
to the applicant.
48. Control. The term ``control'' includes both de facto and de
jure control of the applicant. Typically, ownership of at least 50.1
percent of an entity's voting stock evidences de jure control. De facto
control is determined on a case-by-case basis. The following are some
common indicia of de facto control:
The entity constitutes or appoints more than 50 percent of
the board of directors or management committee;
The entity has authority to appoint, promote, demote, and
fire senior executives that control the day-to-day activities of the
licensee; or
The entity plays an integral role in management decisions.
49. A consortium of small businesses, very small businesses, or
entrepreneurs is a ``conglomerate organization formed as a joint
venture between or among mutually independent business firms,'' each of
which individually must satisfy one of the definitions of small
business, very small business, or entrepreneur in Sec. Sec. 1.2110(f),
27.702. Thus, each consortium member must disclose its gross revenues
along with those of its affiliates, its controlling interests, and the
affiliates of its controlling interests.
F. Provisions Regarding Former and Current Defaulters
50. Each applicant must indicate on its FCC Form 175 application
under penalty of perjury whether or not the applicant, its affiliates,
its controlling interests, and the affiliates of its controlling
interests, as defined by Sec. 1.2110, have ever been in default on any
Commission licenses or have ever been delinquent on any non-tax debt
owed to any Federal agency. In addition, each applicant must certify on
its FCC Form 175 application under penalty of perjury that the
applicant, its affiliates, its controlling interests, and the
affiliates of its controlling interests, as defined by Sec. 1.2110, is
not in default on any payment for Commission licenses (including down
payments) and that it is not delinquent on any non-tax debt owed to any
Federal agency. Prospective applicants are reminded that submission of
a false certification to the Commission is a serious matter that may
result in severe penalties, including monetary forfeitures, license
revocations, exclusion from participation in future auctions, and/or
criminal prosecution.
51. Former defaulters--i.e., applicants, including their
attributable interest holders, that in the past have
[[Page 25052]]
defaulted on any Commission licenses or been delinquent on any non-tax
debt owed to any Federal agency, but that have since remedied all such
defaults and cured all of their outstanding non-tax delinquencies--are
eligible to bid in Auction No. 60, provided that they are otherwise
qualified. However, as discussed infra in Sec. III.E.3, former
defaulters are required to pay upfront payments that are fifty percent
more than the normal upfront payment amounts.
52. Current defaulters--i.e., applicants, including their
attributable interest holders, that are in default on any payment for
Commission licenses (including down payments) or are delinquent on any
non-tax debt owed to any Federal agency--are not eligible to bid in
Auction No. 60.
53. Applicants are encouraged to review the Bureau's previous
guidance on default and delinquency disclosure requirements in the
context of our short-form application process. Applicants are reminded
that the Commission's Red Light Display System, which provides
information regarding debts owed to the Commission, may not be
determinative of an applicant's ability to comply with the default and
delinquency disclosure requirements.
G. Other Information
54. Applicants owned by minorities or women, as defined in Sec.
1.2110(c)(2), may identify themselves in filling out their FCC Form 175
short-form application regarding this status. This applicant status
information is collected for statistical purposes only and assists the
Commission in monitoring the participation of ``designated entities''
in its auctions.
H. Minor Modifications to Short-Form Applications (FCC Form 175)
55. After the short-form filing deadline (6 p.m. ET June 3, 2005),
applicants may make only minor changes to their applications.
Applicants will not be permitted to make major modifications to their
applications (e.g., change their license selections, change the
certifying official, change control of the applicant, or change bidding
credit eligibility). Permissible minor changes include, for example,
deletion and addition of authorized bidders (to a maximum of three) and
addresses and phone numbers of the applicants and their contact
persons. Applicants must press the SUBMIT button in the FCC Auction
System for the changes to be submitted and considered by the
Commission. After the revised application has been submitted, a
confirmation page will be displayed that states the submission time and
date, along with a unique file number. In addition, applicants should
submit a letter, briefly summarizing the changes, by electronic mail to
the attention of Margaret Wiener, Chief, Auctions and Spectrum Access
Division, at the following address: auction60@fcc.gov. The electronic
mail summarizing the changes must include a subject or caption
referring to Auction No. 60 and the name of the applicant. The Bureau
requests that parties format any attachments to electronic mail as
Adobe[reg] Acrobat[reg] (pdf) or Microsoft[reg] Word documents.
I. Maintaining Current Information in Short-Form Applications (FCC Form
175)
56. Section 1.65 of the Commission's rules requires an applicant to
maintain the accuracy and completeness of information furnished in its
pending application and to notify the Commission within 30 days of any
substantial change that may be of decisional significance to that
application. Amendments reporting substantial changes of possible
decisional significance in information contained in FCC Form 175
applications will not be accepted and may in some instances result in
the dismissal of the FCC Form 175 application.
III. Pre-Auction Procedures
A. ISAS Demonstrations
57. In connection with its announcement of the release of ISAS, the
new auction application filing and bidding system, the Bureau is
planning to conduct several ISAS orientation sessions in which the
software will be demonstrated to the public. These sessions were held
on March 31 and April 21, 2005, and are also available via webcast.
B. Auction Seminar--May 24, 2005
58. On Tuesday, May 24, 2005, the FCC will sponsor a seminar for
parties interested in participating in Auction No. 60 at the Federal
Communications Commission, located at 445 12th Street, SW., Washington,
DC. The seminar will provide attendees with information about pre-
auction procedures, completing FCC Form 175, auction conduct, the FCC
Auction System, auction rules, and the Lower 700 MHz band service
rules. The seminar will also provide an opportunity for prospective
bidders to ask questions of FCC staff.
59. To register, complete the registration form and submit it by
Friday, May 20, 2005. Registrations are accepted on a first-come,
first-served basis. The seminar is free of charge.
C. Short-Form Application (FCC Form 175)--Due June 3, 2005
In order to be eligible to bid in this auction, applicants must
first submit an FCC Form 175 application. This application must be
submitted electronically and received at the Commission no later than 6
p.m. ET on June 3, 2005. Late applications will not be accepted. There
is no application fee required when filing an FCC Form 175. However, to
be eligible to bid, an applicant must submit an upfront payment.
60. Applications may generally be filed at any time beginning at
noon ET on May 24, 2005, until 6 p.m. ET on June 3, 2005. Applicants
are strongly encouraged to file early and are responsible for allowing
adequate time for filing their applications. Applicants may update or
amend their electronic applications multiple times until the filing
deadline on June 3, 2005.
61. Applicants must always press the SUBMIT button on the Certify &
Submit screen of the electronic form to successfully submit their FCC
Form 175s or modifications. Any form that is not submitted will not be
reviewed by the FCC. Technical support is available at (877) 480-3201
option nine; (202) 414-1250; or (202) 414-1255 (text telephone (TTY));
hours of service are Monday through Friday, from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. ET.
In order to provide better service to the public, all calls to the
hotline are recorded.
D. Application Processing and Minor Corrections
62. After the deadline for filing the FCC Form 175 applications has
passed, the FCC will process all timely submitted applications to
determine which are acceptable for filing, and subsequently will issue
a public notice identifying: (1) Those applications accepted for
filing; (2) those applications rejected; and (3) those applications
which have minor defects that may be corrected, and the deadline for
resubmitting such corrected applications.
63. As described more fully in the Commission's rules, after the
June 3, 2005, short-form filing deadline, applicants may make only
minor corrections to their FCC Form 175 applications. Applicants will
not be permitted to make major modifications to their applications
(e.g., change their license selections, change the certifying official,
change control of the applicant, or change bidding credit eligibility).
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E. Upfront Payments--Due June 30, 2005
64. In order to be eligible to bid in the auction, applicants must
submit an upfront payment accompanied by an FCC Remittance Advice Form
(FCC Form 159). After completing the FCC Form 175, filers will have
access to an electronic version of the FCC Form 159 that can be printed
and faxed to Mellon Bank in Pittsburgh, PA. All upfront payments must
be received at Mellon Bank by 6 p.m. ET on June 30, 2005.
i. Making Auction Payments by Wire Transfer
65. Wire transfer payments must be received by 6 p.m. ET on June
30, 2005. To avoid untimely payments, applicants should discuss
arrangements (including bank closing schedules) with their banker
several days before they plan to make the wire transfer, and allow
sufficient time for the transfer to be initiated and completed before
the deadline.
66. Applicants must fax a completed FCC Form 159 (Revised 2/03) to
Mellon Bank at (412) 209-6045 at least one hour before placing the
order for the wire transfer (but on the same business day). On the
cover sheet of the fax, write ``Wire Transfer--Auction Payment for
Auction Event No. 60.'' In order to meet the Commission's upfront
payment deadline, an applicant's payment must be credited to the
Commission's account by the deadline. Applicants are responsible for
obtaining confirmation from their financial institution that Mellon
Bank has timely received their upfront payment and deposited it in the
proper account.
ii. FCC Form 159
67. A completed FCC Remittance Advice Form (FCC Form 159, Revised
2/03) must be faxed to Mellon Bank to accompany each upfront payment.
Proper completion of FCC Form 159 (Revised 2/03) is critical to
ensuring correct crediting of upfront payments. An electronic pre-
filled version of the FCC Form 159 is available after submitting the
FCC Form 175. Payors using a pre-filled FCC Form 159 are responsible
for ensuring that all of the information on the form, including payment
amounts, is accurate. The FCC Form 159 can be completed electronically,
but must be filed with Mellon Bank via facsimile.
iii. Amount of Upfront Payment
68. In the Part 1 Order, 62 FR 13540, (March 21, 1997), the
Commission delegated to the Bureau the authority and discretion to
determine appropriate upfront payment(s) for each auction. In addition,
in the Part 1 Fifth Report and Order, 65 FR 52323, (August 29, 2000),
the Commission ordered that ``former defaulters,'' i.e., applicants
that have ever been in default on any Commission license or have ever
been delinquent on any non-tax debt owed to any Federal agency, be
required to pay upfront payments 50 percent greater than non-''former
defaulters.'' For purposes of this calculation, the ``applicant''
includes the applicant itself, its affiliates, its controlling
interests, and affiliates of its controlling interests, as defined by
Sec. 1.2110 of the Commission's rules.
69. In the Auction No. 60 Comment Public Notice, the Commission
proposed that the amount of the upfront payment would determine a
bidder's initial bidding eligibility, the maximum number of bidding
units on which a bidder may place bids. In order to bid on a license,
otherwise qualified bidders that applied for that license on Form 175
must have a current eligibility level that meets or exceeds the number
of bidding units assigned to that license. At a minimum, therefore, an
applicant's total upfront payment must be enough to establish
eligibility to bid on at least one of the licenses applied for on Form
175, or else the applicant will not be eligible to participate in the
auction. An applicant does not have to make an upfront payment to cover
all licenses for which the applicant has applied on Form 175, but
rather to cover the maximum number of bidding units that are associated
with licenses on which the bidder wishes to place bids and hold
provisionally winning bids at any given time.
70. In the Auction No. 60 Comment Public Notice, the Bureau
proposed upfront payments on a license-by-license basis using a formula
based on bandwidth and the license area population:
$0.005 * MHz * License Area Population with a minimum of $1,000 per
license.
The specific upfront payments and bidding units for each license
are set forth in Attachment A of this Public Notice.
71. In calculating its upfront payment amount, an applicant should
determine the maximum number of bidding units on which it may wish to
be active on (bid on or hold provisionally winning bids on) in any
single round, and submit an upfront payment amount covering that number
of bidding units. In order to make this calculation, an applicant
should add together the upfront payments for all licenses on which it
seeks to bid in any given round. Applicants should check their
calculations carefully, as there is no provision for increasing a
bidder's eligibility after the upfront payment deadline.
72. Former defaulters should calculate their upfront payment for
all licenses by multiplying the number of bidding units on which they
wish to be active by 1.5. In order to calculate the number of bidding
units to assign to former defaulters, the Commission will divide the
upfront payment received by 1.5 and round the result up to the nearest
bidding unit. If a former defaulter fails to submit a sufficient
upfront payment to establish eligibility to bid on at least one of the
licenses applied for on its Form 175, the applicant will not be
eligible to participate in the auction.
iv. Applicant's Wire Transfer Information for Purposes of Refunds of
Upfront Payments
73. The Commission will use wire transfers for all Auction No. 60
refunds. To ensure that refunds of upfront payments are processed in an
expeditious manner, the Commission is requesting that all pertinent
information as listed below be supplied to the FCC. Applicants can
provide the information electronically during the initial short-form
filing window after the form has been submitted. Wire Transfer
Instructions can also be manually faxed to the FCC, Financial
Operations Center, Auctions Accounting Group, ATTN: Gail Glasser, at
(202) 418-2843. All refunds will be returned to the payer of record as
identified on the FCC Form 159 unless the payer submits written
authorization instructing otherwise. For additional information, please
call Gail Glasser at (202) 418-0578.
F. Auction Registration
74. Approximately ten days before the auction, the FCC will issue a
public notice announcing all qualified bidders for the auction.
Qualified bidders are those applicants whose FCC Form 175 applications
have been accepted for filing and have timely submitted upfront
payments sufficient to make them eligible to bid on at least one of the
licenses for which they applied.
75. All qualified bidders are automatically registered for the
auction. Registration materials will be distributed prior to the
auction by overnight mail. The mailing will be sent only to the contact
person at the contact address listed in the FCC Form 175.
76. Qualified bidders that do not receive this registration mailing
will not be able to submit bids. Therefore, any qualified bidder that
has not received this mailing by noon on Thursday, July
[[Page 25054]]
14, 2005, should contact the Auctions Hotline at (717) 338-2888.
Receipt of this registration mailing is critical to participating in
the auction, and each applicant is responsible for ensuring it has
received all of the registration material.
77. Qualified bidders should note that lost SecurID cards can be
replaced only by appearing in person at the FCC headquarters, located
at 445 12th St., SW., Washington, DC 20554. Only an authorized
representative or certifying official, as designated on an applicant's
FCC Form 175, may appear in person with two forms of identification
(one of which must be a photo identification) in order to receive
replacements. Qualified bidders requiring replacements must call
technical support prior to arriving at the FCC.
G. Remote Electronic Bidding
78. The Commission will conduct this auction over t