Auction of 1.4 GHz Band Licenses Scheduled for February 7, 2007; Notice and Filing Requirements, Minimum Opening Bids, Upfront Payments and Other Procedures for Auction No. 69, 67582-67599 [E6-19744]
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 225 / Wednesday, November 22, 2006 / Notices
information collected; and (d) ways to
minimize the burden of the collection of
information on the respondents,
including the use of automated
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology.
DATES: Written Paperwork Reduction
Act (PRA) comments should be
submitted on or before January 22, 2007.
If you anticipate that you will be
submitting comments, but find it
difficult to do so within the period of
time allowed by this notice, you should
advise the contact listed below as soon
as possible.
ADDRESSES: You may submit your all
Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
comments by e-mail or U.S. postal mail.
To submit your comments by e-mail
send them to PRA@fcc.gov. To submit
your comments by U.S. mail, mark them
to the attention of Cathy Williams,
Federal Communications Commission,
Room 1–C823, 445 12th Street, SW.,
Washington, DC 20554.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
additional information about the
information collection(s) send an e-mail
to PRA@fcc.gov or contact Cathy
Williams at (202) 418–2918.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
OMB Control Number: 3060–0029.
Title: Application for TV Broadcast
Station License; Application for
Construction Permit for Reserved
Channel Noncommercial Educational
(NCE) Broadcast Station; Application for
Authority to Construct or Make Changes
in an FM Translator or FM Booster
Station.
Form Number: FCC Forms 302–TV,
340 and 349.
Type of Review: Revision of a
currently approved collection.
Respondents: Business or other forprofit entities; Not-for-profit entities and
institutions; State, local or tribal
government.
Number of Respondents: 2,785.
Estimated Time per Response: 0.50–4
hours.
Frequency of Response: On occasion
reporting requirement; Recordkeeping
requirement; Third party disclosure
requirement.
Total Annual Burden: 8,370 hours.
Total Annual Cost: $19,253,725.
Nature of Response: Required to
obtain or retain benefits.
Privacy Impact Assessment: No
impact(s).
Needs and Uses: On November 3,
2006, the Commission adopted the
Report and Order (‘‘R&O’’), Revision of
Procedures Governing Amendments to
FM Table of Allotments and Changes of
Community of License in the Radio
Broadcast Services, MB Docket 05–210,
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FCC 06–163. In this R&O, the
Commission extended to
noncommercial educational FM
licensees and permittees the same
ability to request changes of community
of license by first come-first served
minor modification application as was
being granted to other commercial fullservice AM standard band and FM
licensees and permittees. Previously,
because a change in an NCE station’s
community of license was considered a
major modification in the station’s
facilities, an NCE applicant had to await
the opening of an announced
Noncommercial Educational (NCE) new
and major change application filing
window. Filing on a first-come firstserved basis will significantly reduce
the risk of application mutual
exclusivity. The application of this new
procedure to NCE stations was not
proposed in the Notice of Proposed Rule
Making in this proceeding, but the
Commission found it to be a logical
outgrowth of a proposal in that
proceeding based on comments
received, and accordingly adopted the
change in the R&O. Thus, the
Commission proposes to revise FCC
Form 340 to accommodate NCE
applicants who seek to change their
NCE station’s community of license by
minor modification application.
Specifically, the Commission revises
the FCC Form 340 to reflect the
requirement that NCE applicants
employing this procedure must include
an exhibit demonstrating that the
proposed community of license change
comports with the fair, efficient and
equitable distribution of radio service
policies under Section 307(b) of the
Communications Act of 1934, as
amended. NCE applicants proposing a
change in community of license must
provide Section 307(b) information
demonstrating the merits of locating the
station in the new community, as
opposed to the current community of
license. This form, FCC Form 340, is the
only form being revised by the FCC’s
action in this information collection.
FCC Forms 302–TV and 349 remain
unchanged.
FCC Form 302–TV is used by
licensees and permittees of TV
broadcast stations to obtain a new or
modified station license and/or to notify
the Commission of certain changes in
the licensed facilities of these stations.
FCC 340 is used to apply for authority
to construct a new noncommercial
educational FM or TV station or to make
changes in the existing facilities of such
a station. The FCC 340 is to be used if
the broadcast station will operate on a
channel that is reserved exclusively for
noncommercial educational use and on
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non-reserved channels if the applicant
proposes to build and operate a NCE
station.
FCC Form 349 is used to apply for
authority to construct a new FM
translator or FM booster broadcast
station, or to make changes in the
existing facilities of such stations. This
form also includes the third party
disclosure requirement of 47 CFR
73.3580 (3060–0031). Section 73.3580
requires local public notice in a
newspaper of general circulation of all
application filings for new or major
change in facilities. This notice must be
completed within 30 days of the
tendering of the application. This notice
must be published at least twice a week
for two consecutive weeks in a threeweek period. A copy of this notice must
be placed in the public inspection file
along with the application.
There is no need for confidentiality
with this collection of information.
Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene H. Dortch,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E6–19468 Filed 11–21–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–10–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
[AU Docket No. 06–104; Report No. AUC–
06–69–B (Auction No. 69); DA 06–2014]
Auction of 1.4 GHz Band Licenses
Scheduled for February 7, 2007; Notice
and Filing Requirements, Minimum
Opening Bids, Upfront Payments and
Other Procedures for Auction No. 69
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This document announces the
procedures and minimum opening bids
for the upcoming auction of licenses in
the paired 1392–1395 MHz and 1432–
1435 MHz bands, and in the unpaired
1390–1392 MHz band. This document is
intended to familiarize prospective
bidders with the procedures and
minimum opening bids for this auction.
DATES: Bidding for Auction No. 69 is
scheduled to begin on February 7, 2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Wireless Telecommunications Bureau,
Auctions Spectrum and Access Division:
For legal questions: Howard Davenport
at (202) 418–0660. For general auction
questions: Roy Knowles or Barbara
Sibert at (717) 338–2868.
Mobility Division: For questions: Erin
McGrath or Michael Connelly (legal) or
Keith Harper (technical) and Bettye
Woodward (licensing) at (202) 418–
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0620. To request materials in accessible
formats (Braille, large print, electronic
files, audio format) for people with
disabilities, send e-mail to
fcc504@fcc.gov or call the Consumer
and Governmental Affairs Bureau at
(202) 418–0530 or (202) 418–0432
(TTY).
This is a
summary of the Auction No. 69
Procedures Public Notice released on
November 2, 2006. The complete text of
the Auction No. 69 Procedures Public
Notice, including attachments, as well
as related Commission documents, are
available for public inspection and
copying from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Eastern
Time (ET) Monday through Thursday or
from 8 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. on Friday at
the FCC Reference Information Center,
Portals II, 445 12th Street, SW., Room
CY–A257, Washington, DC 20554. The
Auction No. 69 Procedures Public
Notice and related Commission
documents 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 Web site:
https://www.BCPIWEB.com. When
ordering documents from BCPI please
provide the appropriate FCC document
number, for example, DA 06–2014 for
the Auction No. 69 Procedures Public
Notice. The Auction No. 69 Procedures
Public Notice and related documents are
also available on the Internet at the
Commission’s Web site: https://
wireless.fcc.gov/auctions/69/.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. General Information
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A. Introduction
1. The Federal Communications
Commission (Commission) announces
the procedures and minimum opening
bid amounts for the upcoming auction
of 1.4 GHz band licenses in the paired
1392–1395 MHz and 1432–1435 MHz
bands, and in the unpaired 1390–1392
MHz band scheduled to begin on
February 7, 2007 (Auction No. 69). On
August 28, 2006, 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. 69
for this spectrum reallocated for nongovernment use to provide fixed and
mobile services, except for aeronautical
mobile services. The Bureau received
two comments and no reply comments
in response to the Auction No. 69
Comment Public Notice 71 FR 51817,
August 31, 2006.
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2. In the Auction No. 69 Comment
Public Notice, the Bureau proposed to
include all 64 1.4 GHz band licenses in
a single auction using the Commission’s
standard simultaneous multiple-round
(SMR) auction format. The Bureau
sought comment on the feasibility and
desirability of allocating the 1.4 GHz
band licenses using the Commission’s
package bidding format. Based on the
record and the particular circumstances
of the auction of 1.4 GHz band licenses,
the Bureau will include all 64 1.4 GHz
licenses in a single auction using the
Commission’s standard SMR format, as
proposed. Package bidding will not be
used in Auction No. 69.
3. The Bureau also sought comment in
the Auction No. 69 Comment Public
Notice on whether to implement
procedures that would withhold certain
information on bidder interests, and
bidder identities that typically has been
revealed prior to and during past
Commission auctions. In particular, the
Bureau asked commenters to indicate
what factors weigh for or against
limiting disclosure of bidder interests
and identities, and whether the
Commission should condition the use of
any disclosure limits on a measure of
competition in the auction.
4. For Auction No. 69, the Bureau will
determine the information procedures
based primarily on the eligibility ratio,
a measure of likely competition in the
auction. The eligibility ratio is defined
as the total number of bidding units of
eligibility purchased by bidders through
their upfront payments, divided by the
total number of bidding units for the
licenses in the auction. Specifically, if
the eligibility ratio equals or exceeds
three, the Bureau will use the
information procedures typically used
in past FCC auctions, since with
sufficient likely competition, the anticompetitive behavior that limited
information procedures aim to deter is
unlikely to be successful. If the
eligibility ratio is less than three, in
general the Bureau will withhold certain
information on bidder interests and
bidder identities. However, if the
eligibility ratio is less than three, the
Commission reserves the discretion to
use information procedures typically
used in past FCC auctions if
circumstances indicate that limited
information procedures would not be an
effective tool for deterring anticompetitive behavior.
5. In the event that the conditions
described above result in the use of
procedures under which certain
information is withheld, the Bureau will
release: (1) Each bidder’s eligibility and
upfront payment made prior to the start
of the auction; and (2) the amounts of
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all gross bids for each license (including
the losing bids) after each round, but not
the identities of the bidders placing the
bids. The Bureau believes this provides
bidders with information regarding
license valuations without
compromising the goal of reducing the
potential for anti-competitive outcomes.
6. Pursuant to these procedures,
information on the license selections of
auction applicants will be withheld, at
least until the upfront payment deadline
has passed and the Commission
determines the information procedures
that will be used for the auction.
Therefore, to enable applicants to
comply with the Commission’s anticollusion rules, once the Bureau has
conducted its initial review of
applications to participate in Auction
No. 69, each applicant with a short-form
application to participate in the pending
auction will receive a letter that lists the
applicants in Auction No. 69 that have
applied for licenses in any of the same
geographic areas as the applicant. The
list will identify the applicants by name
but will not provide the license
selections of the applicants.
7. Spectrum Relocation Fund. The
upper half of paired frequencies for 1.4
GHz band licenses, i.e., 1432–1435
MHz, is spectrum covered by a
Congressional mandate that requires
that auction proceeds fund the
estimated relocation costs of incumbent
federal entities and restricts the
conclusion of an auction of affected
spectrum, based on 110 percent of the
estimated relocation costs. On December
27, 2005, pursuant to the Commercial
Spectrum Enhancement Act (CSEA), 71
FR 26245, May 4, 2006, the National
Telecommunications and Information
Administration (NTIA) notified the
Commission that there are no costs
associated with relocating federal
operations from the 1432–1435 MHz
band. Thus, the CSEA revenue
requirement will not affect the
Commission’s ability to conclude
Auction No. 69.
i. Background of Proceeding
8. In its Report and Order, 67 FR
41847, June 20, 2002, the Commission
adopted service rules to govern the
licensing of the paired 1392–1395 MHz
and 1432–1435 MHz bands, and the
unpaired 1390–1392 MHz band. The
Commission provided for the
assignment of the 1390–1392 MHz band
by Major Economic Areas, and the
1392–1395 MHz and 1432–1435 MHz
bands by Economic Area Groups
(EAGs). Further, the Commission
allowed open eligibility for initial
licenses assigned by geographic area
licensing, and adopted technical
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standards that were consistent with the
part 27 rules and provide licensees
flexibility. The Commission set a tenyear license term from the date of grant.
Licensees must demonstrate that they
are providing substantial service when
they file their renewal application. The
Commission allowed licensees to
partition and/or disaggregate their
licenses and applied the general
competitive bidding rules set forth in 47
CFR part 1, Subpart Q.
ii. Licenses to be Auctioned
9. Auction No. 69 will offer 64
licenses: 12 Economic Area Grouping
(EAG) licenses and 52 Major Economic
Area (MEA) licenses. A complete list of
the 1.4 GHz band licenses available in
Auction No. 69 is included in
Attachment A of the Auction No. 69
Procedures Public Notice.
B. Rules and Disclaimers
i. Relevant Authority
10. Prospective applicants must
familiarize themselves thoroughly with
the Commission’s general competitive
bidding rules set forth in 47 CFR part 1,
including recent amendments and
clarifications; rules relating to the 1.4
GHz band contained in Title 47 CFR
part 27; and rules relating to
applications, practice and procedure
contained in Title 47 CFR part 1.
Prospective applicants must also be
thoroughly familiar with the
procedures, terms and conditions
contained in the Auction No. 69
Procedures Public Notice and the
Commission’s decisions in proceedings
regarding competitive bidding
procedures, application requirements,
and obligations of Commission
licensees.
11. The procedures, terms and
conditions contained in the
Commission’s rules, relevant orders,
and public notices are not negotiable.
The Commission may amend or
supplement the information contained
in its 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.
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ii. Prohibition of Collusion; Compliance
with Antitrust Laws
12. To ensure the competitiveness of
the auction process, 47 CFR 1.2105(c)
prohibits applicants competing for
licenses in any of the same geographic
license areas from communicating with
each other about bids, bidding
strategies, or settlements unless such
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applicants have identified each other on
their short-form applications (FCC
Forms 175) as parties with whom they
have entered into agreements pursuant
to § 1.2105(a)(2)(viii). In Auction No. 69,
the rule would apply to any applicants
bidding for the same EAG or MEA. The
rule would also apply to applicants
bidding for licenses in overlapping
EAGs and MEAs, such as a situation
when one applicant applies for an EAG
and a second applicant applies for a
MEA covering any area within that
EAG. The rule would preclude
applicants that apply to bid for all
markets from communicating with all
other applicants. Thus, applicants that
have applied for the same markets
(unless they 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)) must affirmatively
avoid all communications with or
disclosures to each other that affect or
have the potential to affect bids or
bidding strategy, which may include
communications regarding the postauction market structure. 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.
13. For purposes of this prohibition,
§ 1.2105(c)(7)(i) defines applicant as
including all officers and directors of
the entity submitting a short-form
application to participate in the auction,
all controlling interests of that entity, 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.
14. Applicants for licenses for any of
the same geographic license areas must
not communicate directly or indirectly
about bids or bidding strategy.
Accordingly, such applicants 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 such
applicants. Also, if the authorized
bidders are different individuals
employed by the same organization a
violation similarly could occur. In such
a case, at a minimum, applicants should
certify on their applications that
precautionary steps have been taken to
prevent communication between
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authorized bidders and that applicants
and their bidding agents will comply
with the anti-collusion rule. A violation
of the anti-collusion rule could occur in
other contexts, such as an individual
serving as an officer for two or more
applicants. Moreover, the Commission
has found a violation of the anticollusion rule where a bidder used the
Commission’s bidding system to
disclose its bidding strategy in a manner
that explicitly invited other auction
participants to cooperate and
collaborate in specific markets, and has
placed auction participants on notice
that the use of its bidding system to
disclose market information to
competitors will not be tolerated and
will subject bidders to sanctions.
Bidders are cautioned that the
Commission remains vigilant about
prohibited communications taking place
in other situations. The Commission has
warned that prohibited communications
concerning bids and bidding strategies
may include communications regarding
capital calls or requests for additional
funds in support of bids or bidding
strategies to the extent such
communications convey information
concerning the bids and bidding
strategies directly or indirectly.
Applicants are hereby placed on notice
that public disclosure of information
relating to bidder interests and bidder
identities that typically has been
revealed prior to and during past
Commission auctions, but is
confidential in this auction at the time
of disclosure, may violate the anticollusion rule. Thus, communication by
an applicant to another applicant for
one or more of the same licenses of the
applicant’s license selections on its
short-form application, or of the fact
that the applicant does nor does not
hold provisionally winning bids on
particular licenses, may well violate the
anti-collusion rule. Bidders should use
caution in their dealings with other
individuals, such as members of the
press, financial analysts, or others who
might become a conduit for the
communication of prohibited bidding
information. For example, where
limited information disclosure
procedures are in place, as in this
auction, an applicant’s statement to the
press that it has lost bidding eligibility
and stopped bidding in the auction
could give rise to a finding of an anticollusion violation.
15. The Commission’s rules do not
prohibit applicants from entering into
otherwise lawful bidding agreements
before filing their short-form
applications, as long as they disclose the
existence of the agreement(s) in their
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short-form application. If parties agree
in principle on all material terms prior
to the short-form filing deadline, each
party to the agreement must identify the
other party or parties to the agreement
on its short-form application under
§ 1.2105(c), even if the agreement has
not been reduced to writing. If the
parties have not agreed in principle by
the short-form filing deadline, they
should not include the names of parties
to discussions on their applications, and
they may not continue negotiations,
discussions or communications with
any other applicants after the short-form
filing deadline.
16. By electronically submitting its
short-form application, each applicant
certifies its compliance with § 1.2105(c).
However, the Bureau caution 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 initiation of an
investigation when warranted. Any
applicant found to have violated the
anti-collusion rule may be subject to
sanctions.
17. Applicants are also reminded that,
regardless of compliance with the
Commission’s rules, they remain subject
to the antitrust laws. Compliance with
the disclosure requirements of the
Commission’s anti-collusion rule will
not insulate a party from enforcement of
the antitrust laws. To the extent the
Commission becomes aware of specific
allegations that may give rise to
violations of the federal antitrust laws
the Commission may refer such
allegations to the United States
Department of Justice for investigation.
If an applicant is found to have violated
the antitrust laws or the Commission’s
rules 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, among other sanctions.
18. As required by 47 CFR 1.65, an
applicant must maintain the accuracy
and completeness of information
furnished in its pending application and
must notify the Commission within 30
days of any substantial change that may
be of decisional significance to that
application. Thus, § 1.65 requires an
auction applicant to notify the
Commission of any substantial change
to the information or certifications
included in its pending short-form
application. Applicants are therefore
required by § 1.65 to report to the
Commission any communications they
have made to or received from another
applicant after the short-form filing
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deadline that affect or have the potential
to affect bids or bidding strategy unless
such communications are made to or
received from parties to agreements
identified under § 1.2105(a)(2)(viii). In
addition, § 1.2105(c)(6) provides that
any applicant that makes or receives a
communication prohibited by
§ 1.2105(c) must report such
communication to the Commission in
writing immediately, and in no case
later than five business days after the
communication occurs.
19. As required by 47 CFR 1.2107(d),
applicants that are winning bidders will
be required to disclose in their longform applications the specific terms,
conditions, and parties involved in any
bidding consortia, joint ventures,
partnerships, agreements and other
arrangements entered into relating to the
competitive bidding process.
iii. Protection of Incumbent Government
and Non-Government Operations
20. Potential applicants are advised
that there are several government
operations that will continue to operate
in these bands.
21. The 1390–1392 MHz Band. Radio
astronomy observations may be assigned
in the 1350–1400 MHz band on an
unprotected basis at the 16 radio
astronomy observatories identified at 47
CFR 2.106 note US311. In the 1390–
1400 MHz band, government operations
authorized as of March 22, 1995, at the
17 sites identified at 47 CFR 2.106 note
US351 will continue to operate on a
fully protected basis until January 1,
2009. All other government operations,
except for medical telemetry (1395–
1400 MHz), will operate on a noninterference basis to authorized nonGovernment operations and shall not
hinder implementation of any nonGovernment operations.
22. The 1392–1395 MHz and 1432–
1435 MHz Bands. Radio astronomy
observations may be assigned in the
1350–1400 MHz band on an
unprotected basis at the 16 radio
astronomy observatories identified at 47
CFR 2.106 note US311. In the 1390–
1400 MHz band, government operations
authorized as of March 22, 1995, at the
17 sites identified at 47 CFR 2.106 note
US351 will continue to operate on a
fully protected basis until January 1,
2009. All other government operations,
except for medical telemetry (1395–
1400 MHz), will operate on a noninterference basis to authorized nonGovernment operations and shall not
hinder implementation of any nonGovernment operations. In the 1432–
1435 MHz band, government stations in
the fixed and mobile services may
operate indefinitely on a primary basis
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at the 23 sites identified at 47 CFR 2.106
note US361. All other Government
stations in the fixed and mobile services
shall operate on a primary basis until reaccommodated in accordance with the
National Defense Authorization Act of
1999.
a. International Coordination.
23. Operations in the paired 1392–
1395 MHz and 1432–1435 MHz bands
and in the unpaired 1390–1392 MHz
band must not cause harmful
interference across the borders with
Mexico and Canada. Until such time as
agreements between the United States,
Mexico and Canada become effective,
the same technical restrictions at the
border that are adopted for operation
between geographic service areas will
apply, to the extent they are not in
violation of current bilateral agreements
and arrangements. When interim
arrangements or agreements between the
United States, Mexico and Canada are
final and become effective, licensees in
the paired 1392–1395 MHz and 1432–
1435 MHz bands and in the unpaired
1390–1392 MHz band must comply
with these agreements. In addition, if
these agreements are modified in the
future, licensees in the paired 1392–
1395 MHz and 1432–1435 MHz bands
and in the unpaired 1390–1392 MHz
band must comply with these
modifications. Current agreements and
coordination arrangements between the
United States and Canada or Mexico
may be found on the Commission’s Web
site under https://www.fcc.gov/ib/sand/
agree/welcome.html.
b. Quiet Zones.
24. As specified at 47 CFR 1.924, 1.4
GHz Band licensees must protect the
radio quiet zones set forth in the
Commission’s rules. Licensees are
cautioned that they must receive the
appropriate approvals directly from the
relevant quiet zone entity prior to
operating within the areas described in
the Commission’s rules.
iv. Due Diligence
25. The Bureau cautions potential
applicants formulating their bidding
strategies to investigate and consider the
extent to which 1.4 GHz band
frequencies are occupied. Applicants
and their investors should also
understand that Commission rules and
requirements place limitations on the
ability of 1.4 GHz band licensees to use
this spectrum. Government and nongovernment incumbent operations in
the 1.4 GHz band must be protected.
These limitations may restrict the ability
of 1.4 GHz band geographic area
licensees to use certain portions of the
electromagnetic spectrum or provide
service to certain areas in their
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geographic license areas. Bidders should
become familiar with the status of these
operations, applicable Commission
rules, orders and any pending
proceedings related to the service, in
order to make reasoned, appropriate
decisions about their participation in
Auction No. 69 and their bidding
strategy.
26. 1.4 GHz band licensees must
comply with the pertinent rule sections
set forth in 47 CFR part 27. Potential
bidders should be aware that as part of
the 2007 World Radio Communications
Conference, WRC–07, NTIA has
proposed more stringent out-of-band
emission limits than presently specified
in 47 CFR 27.53(i) in the bands 1350–
1400 MHz and 1427–1452 MHz. The
potential for stricter emission limits
could impact the operations in these
bands.
27. Potential bidders are reminded
that they are solely responsible for
investigating and evaluating all
technical and marketplace factors that
may have a bearing on the value of the
1.4 GHz band licenses in this auction.
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 the 1.4 GHz
band subject to certain conditions and
regulations. An FCC auction does not
constitute an endorsement by the FCC of
any particular service, technology, or
product, nor does an FCC license
constitute a guarantee of business
success. Applicants should perform
their individual due diligence before
proceeding as they would with any new
business venture.
28. Potential bidders are strongly
encouraged to conduct their own
research prior to the beginning of
bidding in Auction No. 69 in order to
determine the existence of any pending
administrative or judicial proceedings
that might affect their decision
regarding participation in the auction.
Participants in Auction No. 69 are
strongly encouraged to continue such
research throughout the auction. In
addition, potential bidders should
perform technical analyses sufficient to
assure themselves that, should they
prevail in competitive bidding for a
specific license, they will be able to
build and operate facilities that will
fully comply with the Commission’s
technical and legal requirements.
29. Applicants should also be aware
that certain pending and future
proceedings, including applications
(including those for modification),
petitions for rulemaking, requests for
special temporary authority, waiver
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requests, petitions to deny, petitions for
reconsideration, informal oppositions,
and applications for review, before the
Commission may relate to particular
applicants or incumbent licensees or the
licenses available in Auction No. 69. In
addition, pending and future judicial
proceedings may relate to particular
applicants or incumbent licensees, or
the licenses available in Auction No. 69.
Prospective bidders are responsible for
assessing the likelihood of the various
possible outcomes, and considering
their potential impact on spectrum
licenses available in this auction.
30. Applicants should perform due
diligence to identify and consider all
proceedings that may affect the
spectrum licenses being auctioned and
that could have an impact on the
availability of spectrum for Auction No.
69. 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
beginning of bidding in the auction.
31. Applicants are solely responsible
for identifying associated risks and for
investigating and evaluating the degrees
to which such matters may affect their
ability to bid on, otherwise acquire, or
make use of licenses available in
Auction No. 69. Potential applicants are
strongly encouraged to physically
inspect any prospective sites located in,
or near, the service area for which they
plan to bid, and also to familiarize
themselves with environmental review
obligations.
32. Applicants may obtain
information about non-Federal
Government incumbent licenses that
may have an effect on availability of
licenses in Auction No. 69 through the
Bureau’s licensing databases at https://
wireless.fcc.gov/uls.
33. The Commission makes no
representations or guarantees regarding
the accuracy or completeness of
information in its databases or any third
party databases. To the extent the
Commission’s databases may not
include all information deemed
necessary or desirable by an applicant,
applicants may obtain or verify such
information from independent sources
or assume the risk of any
incompleteness or inaccuracy in said
databases. Furthermore, the
Commission makes no representations
or guarantees regarding the accuracy or
completeness of information that has
been provided by incumbent licensees
and incorporated into its databases.
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v. Use of Integrated Spectrum Auction
System
34. The Commission will make
available a browser-based bidding
system to allow bidders to participate in
Auction No. 69 over the Internet using
the Commission’s Integrated Spectrum
Auction System (ISAS or FCC Auction
System). The Commission makes no
warranty whatsoever with respect to the
FCC Auction System. In no event shall
the Commission, or any of its officers,
employees or agents, be liable for any
damages whatsoever (including, but not
limited to, loss of business profits,
business interruption, loss of business
information, or any other loss) arising
out of or relating to the existence,
furnishing, functioning or use of the
FCC Auction System that is accessible
to qualified bidders in connection with
this auction. Moreover, no obligation or
liability will arise out of the
Commission’s technical, programming
or other advice or service provided in
connection with the FCC Auction
System.
vi. Bidder Alerts
35. As is the case with many business
investment opportunities, some
unscrupulous entrepreneurs may
attempt to use Auction No. 69 to
deceive and defraud unsuspecting
investors. Information about deceptive
telemarketing investment schemes is
available from the Commission as well
as the Federal Trade Commission (FTC)
and the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC). Complaints about
specific deceptive telemarketing
investment schemes should be directed
to the FTC, the SEC, or the National
Fraud Information Center.
vii. Environmental Review
Requirements
36. Licensees must comply with the
Commission’s rules regarding
implementation of the National
Environmental Policy Act and other
federal environmental statutes. The
construction of a wireless antenna
facility is a federal action and the
licensee must comply with the
Commission’s environmental rules for
each such facility. The Commission’s
environmental rules require, among
other things, that the licensee consult
with expert agencies having
environmental 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). In
assessing the effect of facilities
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construction on historic properties, the
licensee must follow the provisions of
the Nationwide Programmatic
Agreement Regarding the Section 106
National Historic Preservation Act
Review Process, 47 CFR part 1,
Appendix C. The licensee must prepare
environmental assessments for facilities
that may have a significant impact in or
on wilderness areas, wildlife preserves,
threatened or endangered species or
designated critical habitats, historical or
archaeological sites, Indian religious
sites, floodplains, and surface features.
The licensee also must prepare
environmental assessments for facilities
that include high intensity white lights
in residential neighborhoods or
excessive radio frequency emission.
C. Auction Specifics
i. Auction Date
37. Bidding in Auction No. 69 will
begin on Wednesday, February 7, 2007.
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 until bidding has
stopped on all licenses.
ii. Auction Title
38. Auction No. 69—1.4 GHz band
iii. Bidding Methodology
39. As discussed in more detail
below, the bidding methodology for
Auction No. 69 will be simultaneous
multiple round bidding. The
Commission will conduct this auction
over the Internet using the FCC Auction
System, and telephonic bidding will be
available as well. Qualified bidders are
permitted to bid electronically via the
Internet or by telephone. All telephone
calls are recorded.
iv. Pre-Auction Dates and Deadlines
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40. Dates and Deadlines.
Auction Seminar November 29, 2006
Short-Form Application (FCC Form 175)
Filing Window Opens—November 29,
2006; 12 noon ET.
Short-Form Application (FCC Form 175)
Filing Window Deadline—December
11, 2006; 6 p.m. ET.
Upfront Payments (via wire transfer)—
January 12, 2007; 6 p.m. ET.
Mock Auction—February 5, 2007.
Auction Begins—February 7, 2007.
v. Requirements for Participation
41. Those wishing to participate in
the auction must: (1) Submit a shortform application (FCC Form 175)
electronically prior to 6 p.m. Eastern
Time (ET), December 11, 2006,
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Jkt 211001
following the electronic filing
procedures set forth in Attachment C to
the Auction No. 69 Procedures Public
Notice; (2) submit a sufficient upfront
payment and an FCC Remittance Advice
Form (FCC Form 159) by 6 p.m. ET,
January 12, 2007; and (3) comply with
all provisions outlined in the Auction
No. 69 Procedures Public Notice and
applicable Commission rules.
II. Short-Form Application (FCC Form
175) Requirements
42. An application to participate in an
FCC auction provides information used
in determining whether the applicant is
legally, technically, and financially
qualified to participate in Commission
auctions for licenses or permits. The
short-form application is the first part of
the Commission’s two-phased auction
application process. In the first phase of
this process, parties desiring to
participate in the auction file
streamlined, short-form applications in
which they certify under penalty of
perjury as to their qualifications.
Eligibility to participate in bidding is
based on the applicants’ short-form
applications and certifications as well as
their upfront payments. In the second
phase of the process, winning bidders
file a more comprehensive long-form
application.
43. Entities seeking licenses available
in Auction No. 69 must file a short-form
application electronically via the FCC
Auction System prior to 6 p.m. ET on
December 11, 2006, following the
procedures prescribed in Attachment C
of the Auction No. 69 Procedures Public
Notice. If an applicant claims eligibility
for a bidding credit, the information
provided in its FCC Form 175 will be
used in determining whether the
applicant is eligible for the claimed
bidding credit. Applicants bear full
responsibility for submitting accurate,
complete and timely short-form
applications. All applicants must certify
on their short-form applications under
penalty of perjury that they are legally,
technically, financially and otherwise
qualified to hold a license. Applicants
should read the instructions set forth in
Attachment C carefully and should
consult the Commission’s 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 short-form
applications.
44. An entity may not submit more
than one short-form application for a
single auction. In the event that a party
submits multiple short-form
applications, only one application will
be accepted for filing.
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45. Applicants also should note that
submission of a short-form application
constitutes a representation by the
certifying official that he or she is an
authorized representative of the
applicant, that he or she has read the
form’s instructions and certifications,
and that the contents of the application,
its certifications, and any attachments
are true and correct. Applicants are not
permitted to make major modifications
to their applications; such
impermissible changes include a change
of the certifying official to the
application. 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
46. A bidding credit represents the
amount by which a bidder’s winning
bid will be discounted. For Auction No.
69, bidding credits will be available to
small businesses and very small
businesses, and consortia thereof, as
follows: (1) 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 bid;
and (2) a bidder with attributed average
annual gross revenues that do not
exceed $15 million for the preceding
three years (very small business) will
receive a 25 percent discount on its
winning bid. Bidding credits are not
cumulative; a qualifying applicant
receives either the 15 percent or 25
percent bidding credit on its winning
bid, but not both.
47. Every applicant that claims
eligibility for a bidding credit as either
a small business or a very small
business, or a consortium of small
businesses or very small businesses,
will be required to provide information
regarding revenues attributable to the
applicant, its affiliates, its controlling
interests, and the affiliates of its
controlling interests on its FCC Form
175 short-form application to establish
that it satisfies the applicable eligibility
requirement. Applicants claiming
eligibility as a designated entity in
Auction No. 69 should review carefully
the CSEA/Part 1 Designated Entity
FNPRM, 71 FR 6992, February 10, 2006,
and the Designated Entity Second
Report and Order, 71 FR 26245, May 4,
2006. In that connection, the
Commission adopted rules governing
eligibility for designated entity benefits
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in the Designated Entity Second Report
and Order. The Commission’s new rules
regarding applicants seeking eligibility
for designated entity benefits requires
the disclosure of a list of all parties with
which the applicant has entered into
arrangements for the lease or resale
(including wholesale agreements) of any
of the capacity of any of the applicant’s
spectrum; and a list, separately and in
the aggregate, of the gross revenues of
entities with which the applicant has an
attributable material relationship, as
defined in 47 CFR 1.2110(b)(3)(iv)(B).
Certain otherwise attributable material
relationships may not be attributable
pursuant to the provisions of 47 CFR
1.2110(b)(3)(iv)(C)(2).
ii. Tribal Lands Bidding Credit
48. To encourage the growth of
wireless services in federally recognized
tribal lands, the Commission has
implemented a tribal lands bidding
credit.
iii. Installment Payments
49. Installment payment plans will
not be available in Auction No. 69.
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B. License Selection
50. In Auction No. 69, applicants
must select the licenses on which they
want to bid from the eligible licenses
list. In Auction No. 69, the FCC Form
175 will include a filtering mechanism
that allows an applicant to filter the
available licenses. The applicant will
make selections for one or more of the
filter criteria and the system will
produce a list of licenses satisfying the
specified criteria. The applicant may
select all the licenses in the customized
list or select individual licenses from
the list. Applicants also will be able to
select licenses from one customized list
and then create additional customized
lists to select additional licenses. There
will be no opportunity to change license
selection after the short-form filing
deadline. It is critically important that
an applicant confirm its license
selections before submitting its shortform application because the FCC
Auction System will not accept bids on
licenses that an applicant has not
selected on its FCC Form 175.
C. Disclosure of Bidding Arrangements
51. Applicants will be required to
identify in their short-form applications
all parties with whom they have entered
into any agreements, arrangements, or
understandings of any kind relating to
the licenses being auctioned, including
any agreements relating to post-auction
market structure. Applicants also will
be required to certify under penalty of
perjury in their short-form applications
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that they have not entered and will not
enter into any explicit or implicit
agreements, arrangements or
understandings of any kind with any
parties, other than those identified in
the application, regarding the amount of
their bids, bidding strategies, or the
particular licenses on which they will or
will not bid. If an applicant has had
discussions, but has not reached a joint
bidding agreement by the short-form
application filing deadline, it would not
include the names of parties to the
discussions on its application and may
not continue such discussions with any
applicants after the deadline.
52. After the filing of short-form
applications, the Commission’s rules do
not prohibit a party holding a noncontrolling, attributable interest in one
applicant from acquiring an ownership
interest in or entering into a joint
bidding arrangement with other
applicants 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 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. Further,
compliance with the disclosure
requirements of the Commission’s anticollusion rule will not insulate a party
from enforcement of the antitrust laws.
D. Ownership Disclosure Requirements
53. All applicants must comply with
the uniform part 1 ownership disclosure
standards and provide information
required by 47 CFR 1.2105 and 1.2112.
Specifically, in completing the shortform application, applicants will be
required to fully disclose information on
the real party or parties-in-interest and
ownership structure of the applicant.
The ownership disclosure standards for
the short form are prescribed in
§§ 1.2105 and 1.2112. Each applicant is
responsible for information submitted in
its short-form application being
complete and accurate.
54. An applicant’s most current
ownership information on file with the
Commission, if in an electronic format
compatible with the short-form
application (FCC Form 175) (such as
information submitted in an on-line
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FCC Form 602 or in an FCC Form 175
filed for a previous auction using ISAS)
will automatically be entered into the
applicant’s short-form application.
Applicants are responsible for ensuring
that the information submitted in their
FCC Form 175 for Auction No. 69 is
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 the shortform application. Applicants can update
any information that was entered
automatically and needs to be changed
directly in the short-form application.
E. Bidding Credit Revenue Disclosures
55. To determine which applicants
qualify for bidding credits as small
businesses or very small businesses, the
Commission considers the gross
revenues of the applicant, its affiliates,
its controlling interests, and the
affiliates of its controlling interests.
Therefore, entities applying to bid as
small businesses or very small
businesses (or consortia of small
businesses or very small businesses)
will be required to disclose on their FCC
Form 175 short-form applications the
gross revenues of each of the following
for the preceding three years: (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 of such entities and
individuals for the preceding three years
do not exceed the applicable limit is not
sufficient. In order to comply with the
Commission’s 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 or very
small businesses, this information must
be provided for each consortium
member.
56. Controlling interests of an
applicant include individuals and
entities with either de facto or 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: (1) The entity constitutes or
appoints more than 50 percent of the
board of directors or management
committee; (2) the entity has authority
to appoint, promote, demote, and fire
senior executives that control the dayto-day activities of the licensee; and (3)
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the entity plays an integral role in
management decisions.
57. Officers and directors of an
applicant are also considered to have
controlling interest in the applicant. The
Commission does not impose specific
equity requirements on controlling
interest holders. Once the principals or
entities with a controlling interest are
determined, only the revenues of those
principals or entities, the affiliates of
those principals or entities, and the
applicant and its affiliates will be
counted in determining small business
eligibility.
58. In recent years the Commission
has made modifications to its rules
governing the attribution of gross
revenues for purposes of determining
small business eligibility. These changes
include 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 has also clarified that, in
calculating an applicant’s gross
revenues under the controlling interest
standard, it will not attribute the
personal net worth, including personal
income, of its officers and directors to
the applicant. However, to the extent
that the officers and directors of the
applicant are controlling interest
holders of other entities, the gross
revenues of those entities will be
attributed to the applicant.
59. A consortium of small businesses
or very small businesses is a
conglomerate organization composed of
two or more entities, each of which
individually satisfies the definition of a
small business or very small business as
those terms are defined in the servicespecific rules. Thus, each member of a
consortium of small or very small
businesses that applies to participate in
Auction No. 69 must individually meet
the definition of small business or very
small business adopted by the
Commission for the 1.4 GHz band. Each
consortium member must disclose its
gross revenues along with those of its
affiliates, its controlling interests, and
the affiliates of its controlling interests.
Although the gross revenues of the
consortium members will not be
aggregated for purposes of determining
the consortium’s eligibility as a small
business or very small business, this
information must be provided to ensure
that each individual consortium
member qualifies for any bidding credit
awarded to the consortium.
Significantly, the CSEA/Part 1 Report
and Order modified the procedure by
which a consortium that is a winning
bidder will apply for a license.
Applicants applying as consortia should
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review that order, as well as 47 CFR
1.2107(g) and 1.2110(b)(3), for this
license application procedure.
F. Provisions Regarding Former and
Current Defaulters
60. Each applicant must state under
penalty of perjury on its short-form
application whether or not the
applicant, its affiliates, its controlling
interests, and the affiliates of its
controlling interests, as defined by 47
CFR 1.2110, have ever been in default
on any Commission license or have ever
been delinquent on any non-tax debt
owed to any Federal agency. In
addition, each applicant must certify
under penalty of perjury on its shortform application that as of the shortform filing deadline, the applicant, its
affiliates, its controlling interests, and
the affiliates of its controlling interests,
as defined by § 1.2110, are not in default
on any payment for a Commission
license (including downpayments) and
that they are not delinquent on any nontax 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.
61. Former defaulters—i.e.,
applicants, including any of their
affiliates, any of their controlling
interests, or any of the affiliates of its
controlling interests, that in the past
have defaulted on any Commission
license or been delinquent on any nontax 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. 69,
provided that they are otherwise
qualified. However, former defaulters
are required to pay upfront payments
that are fifty percent more than the
normal upfront payment amounts.
62. Current defaulters—i.e.,
applicants, including any of their
affiliates, any of their controlling
interests, or any of the affiliates of their
controlling interests, that are in default
on any payment for any Commission
license (including downpayments) or
are delinquent on any non-tax debt
owed to any Federal agency as of the
filing deadline for applications to
participate in this auction—are not
eligible to bid in Auction No. 69.
63. Applicants are encouraged to
review the Bureau’s previous guidance
on default and delinquency disclosure
requirements in the context of the shortform application process. For example,
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it has been determined that to the extent
that Commission rules permit late
payment of regulatory or application
fees accompanied by late fees, such
debts will become delinquent for
purposes of 47 CFR 1.2105(a) and
1.2106(a) only after the expiration of a
final payment deadline. Therefore, with
respect to regulatory or application fees,
the provisions of §§ 1.2105(a) and
1.2106(a) regarding default and
delinquency in connection with
competitive bidding are limited to
circumstances in which the relevant
party has not complied with a final
Commission payment deadline.
However, even where Commission rules
expressly permit late payment subject to
payment of an additional late fee, and
do not impose a final payment deadline,
the Commission may in some cases
issue a demand for payment by a date
certain. Failure to comply with the
terms of a particular demand letter in
the time period provided may render
the subject debt delinquent,
notwithstanding rules generally
permitting late payments.
64. The Commission considers
outstanding debts owed to the United
States Government, in any amount, to be
a serious matter. The Commission
adopted rules, including a provision
referred to as the red light rule, that
implement the Commission’s
obligations under the Debt Collection
Improvement Act of 1996, which
governs the collection of claims owed to
the United States. Under the red light
rule, the Commission will not process
applications and other requests for
benefits filed by parties that have
outstanding debts owed to the
Commission. In the same rulemaking
order, the Commission explicitly
declared, however, that the
Commission’s competitive bidding rules
are not affected by the red light rule. As
a consequence, the Commission’s
adoption of the red light rule does not
alter the applicability of any of the
Commission’s competitive bidding
rules, including the provisions and
certifications of §§ 1.2105 and 1.2106,
with regard to current and former
defaults or delinquencies. Applicants
are reminded, however, that the
Commission’s Red Light Display
System, which provides information
regarding debts owed to the
Commission, may not be determinative
of an auction applicant’s ability to
comply with the default and
delinquency disclosure requirements of
§ 1.2105. Thus, while the red light rule
ultimately may prevent the processing
of long-form applications by auction
winners, an auction applicant’s red light
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status is not necessarily determinative
of its eligibility to participate in this
auction or of its upfront payment
obligation.
65. Prospective applicants in Auction
No. 69 should note that any long-form
applications filed after the close of
competitive bidding will be reviewed
for compliance with the Commission’s
red light rule, and such review may
result in the dismissal of a winning
bidder’s long-form application.
Applicants that have their long-form
applications dismissed will be deemed
to have defaulted and will be subject to
default payments under 47 CFR
1.2104(g) and 1.2109(c).
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G. Other Information
66. Applicants owned by member of
minority groups and/or women, as
defined in § 1.2110(c)(3), may identify
themselves in filling out their shortform applications regarding this status.
This applicant status information is
collected for statistical purposes only
and assists the Commission in
monitoring the participation in its
auctions of designated entities, which
include rural telephone companies.
H. Minor Modifications to Short-Form
Applications (FCC Form 175)
67. As of the deadline for filing shortform applications (FCC Forms 175) at
6:00 p.m. ET on December 11, 2006,
applicants are permitted to make only
minor changes to their applications.
Applicants are not permitted to make
major modifications to their
applications (e.g., change their license
selections, change control of the
applicant, change the certifying official,
or claim eligibility for a higher bidding
credit). Permissible minor changes
include deletion and addition of
authorized bidders and revision of
addresses and telephone numbers of the
applicants and their contact persons.
68. Any application amendment and
related statements of fact must be
certified by: (1) The applicant, if the
applicant is an individual, (2) one of the
partners if the applicant is a
partnership, (3) an officer, director, or
duly authorized employee, if the
applicant is a corporation, (4) by a
member who is an officer, if the
applicant is an unincorporated
association, (5) the trustee if the
applicant is an amateur radio service
club, or (6) a duly elected or appointed
official who is authorized to make such
certifications under the laws of the
applicable jurisdiction, if the applicant
is a governmental entity.
69. An applicant must make
permissible minor changes to its shortform application as such changes are
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defined by 47 CFR 1.2105(b),
electronically, using the FCC Auction
System. Applicants must click on the
Submit button in the FCC Auction
System for the changes to be submitted
and considered by the Commission.
Note: After the filing window has
closed, the auction system will not
permit applicants to make certain
changes, such as legal classification, and
bidding credit.
70. In addition, an applicant should
submit a letter briefly summarizing the
changes and subsequently update their
short-form applications in ISAS as soon
as possible. Any letter describing
changes to an applicant’s short-form
application should be submitted by
electronic mail to the following address:
auction69@fcc.gov. The electronic mail
summarizing the changes must include
a subject or caption referring to Auction
No. 69 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.
71. Applicants must not submit
application-specific material through
the Commission’s Electronic Comment
Filing System (ECFS), which was used
for submitting comments regarding
Auction No. 69 procedures.
I. Maintaining Current Information in
Short-Form Applications (FCC Form
175)
72. 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. Changes that cause a loss of
or reduction in eligibility for a bidding
credit must be reported immediately. If
an amendment reporting substantial
changes is a major amendment, as
defined by 47 CFR 1.2105, the
amendment will not be accepted and
may result in the dismissal of the shortform application.
73. After the short-form filing
deadline, applicants may make only
minor changes to their FCC Form 175
applications. Applicants must click on
the SUBMIT button in the FCC Auction
System for the changes to be submitted
and considered by the Commission. In
addition, applicants must submit a
letter, briefly summarizing the changes,
by electronic mail at the following
address: auction69@fcc.gov. The
electronic mail summarizing the
changes must include a subject or
caption referring to Auction No. 69 and
the name of the applicant. The Bureau
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requests that parties format any
attachments to electronic mail as
Adobe Acrobat (pdf) or Microsoft
Word documents.
74. Applicants must not submit
application-specific material through
the Commission’s Electronic Comment
Filing System (ECFS) into the record of
the proceeding concerning Auction No.
69 procedures.
III. Pre-Auction Procedures
A. Auction Seminar—November 29,
2006
75. On Wednesday, November 29,
2006, the FCC will sponsor a free
seminar for parties interested in
participating in Auction No. 69 at the
FCC headquarters, 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 1.4 GHz
band rules. The seminar will also
provide an opportunity for prospective
bidders to ask questions of FCC staff
concerning the auction, auction
procedures, filing requirements and
other matters related to this auction.
76. To register, please provide the
information listed on Attachment B of
the Auction No. 69 Procedures Public
Notice by Monday, November 27, 2006.
Registrations are accepted on a firstcome, first-served basis.
77. For individuals who are unable to
attend, an Audio/Video webcast of this
seminar will be available from the FCC’s
Auction No. 69 Web page at https://
wireless.fcc.gov/auctions/69/.
B. Short-Form Application (FCC Form
175)—Due Prior to 6 p.m. ET on
December 11, 2006
78. In order to be eligible to bid in this
auction, applicants must first submit an
FCC Form 175 application electronically
via the FCC Auction System. This
application must be received at the
Commission prior to 6 p.m. ET on
December 11, 2006. 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.
79. Applications may generally be
filed at any time beginning at noon ET
on November 29, 2006, and the filing
window will close at 6 p.m. ET on
December 11, 2006. Applicants are
strongly encouraged to file early and are
responsible for allowing adequate time
for filing their applications. Applicants
may update or amend their applications
multiple times until the filing deadline
on December 11, 2006.
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80. Applicants must always click on
the SUBMIT button on the Certify &
Submit screen of the electronic form to
successfully submit their FCC Form
175’s or modifications. Any form that is
not submitted will not be reviewed by
the FCC. Information about accessing,
completing, and viewing the FCC Form
175 is included in Attachment C of the
Auction No. 69 Procedures Public
Notice. FCC Auctions Technical
Support is available.
C. Application Processing and Minor
Corrections
81. 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 corrected applications.
82. After the short-form filing
deadline on December 11, 2006,
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 control of the
applicant, change certifying official, or
claim eligibility for a higher bidding
credit).
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D. Upfront Payments—Due January 12,
2007
83. 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 sent by facsimile
to Mellon Bank in Pittsburgh, PA. All
upfront payments must be received in
the proper account at Mellon Bank by 6
p.m. ET on January 12, 2007.
i. Making Auction Payments by Wire
Transfer
84. Wire transfer payments must be
received by 6 p.m. ET on January 12,
2007. 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.
85. At least one hour before placing
the order for the wire transfer (but on
the same business day), applicants must
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send by facsimile a completed FCC
Form 159 (Revised 2/03) to Mellon Bank
at (412) 209–6045. On the facsimile
cover sheet, the applicant must write
Wire Transfer—Auction Payment for
Auction No. 69. In order to meet the
Commission’s upfront payment
deadline, an applicant’s payment must
be credited to the Commission’s account
before 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.
86. Please note that: (1) All payments
must be made in U.S. dollars; (2) all
payments must be made by wire
transfer; (3) upfront payments for
Auction No. 69 go to a lockbox number
different from the lockboxes used in
previous FCC auctions, and different
from the lockbox number to be used for
post-auction payments; and (4) failure to
deliver the upfront payment by the
January 12, 2007 deadline, will result in
dismissal of the application and
disqualification from participation in
the auction.
ii. FCC Form 159
87. A completed FCC Remittance
Advice Form (FCC Form 159, Revised 2/
03) must be sent by facsimile 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. Detailed instructions for
completion of FCC Form 159 are
included in Attachment D of the
Auction No. 69 Procedures Public
Notice. The FCC Form 159 can be
completed electronically, but must be
filed with Mellon Bank via facsimile.
iii. Upfront Payments and Bidding
Eligibility
88. In the Auction No. 69 Comment
Public Notice, the Bureau 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 selected 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 selected on its 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
the applicant selected on its Form 175,
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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. Provisionally winning bids are
bids that would become final winning
bids if the auction were to close after the
given round.
89. In the Auction No. 69 Comment
Public Notice, the Bureau proposed to
calculate upfront payments for Auction
No. 69 on a license-by-license basis
using the following formula:
$0.005 * MHz * License Area
Population with a minimum of $1,000
per license. The Bureau set forth the
specific upfront payments and bidding
units for each license in Attachment A
of the Auction No. 69 Comment Public
Notice and sought comment on this
proposal. The Bureau received no
comments in response to the proposed
upfront payments. The specific upfront
payments and bidding units for each
license are set forth in Attachment A of
the Auction No. 69 Procedures Public
Notice.
90. Applicants must make upfront
payments sufficient to obtain bidding
eligibility on the licenses on which they
will bid. In calculating its upfront
payment amount, an applicant should
determine the maximum number of
bidding units on which it may wish to
be active (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 be active 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. In some cases, a qualified
bidder’s maximum eligibility may be
less than the amount of its upfront
payment because the qualified bidder,
pursuant to 47 CFR 1.2106(a), has either
previously been in default on a
Commission license or delinquent on a
non-tax debt owed to a Federal agency,
or has submitted an upfront payment
that exceeds the total amount of bidding
units associated with the licenses the
applicant selected on its FCC Form 175
application.
91. In the Part 1 Fifth Report and
Order, 65 FR 52323, August 29, 2000,
the Commission ordered that applicants
that are former defaulters 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,
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and affiliates of its controlling interests,
as defined by 47 CFR 1.2110.
Accordingly, 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.
92.
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iii. Applicant’s Wire Transfer
Information for Purposes of Refunds of
Upfront Payments
93. To ensure that refunds of upfront
payments are processed in an
expeditious manner, the Commission is
requesting that all pertinent information
as specified in the Auction No. 69
Procedures Public Notice be supplied to
the FCC. For example, the Commission
must be provided with a Taxpayer
Identification Number (TIN) before it
can disburse refunds. Applicants can
provide the information electronically
during the initial short-form application
filing window after the form has been
submitted. (Applicants are reminded
that information submitted as part of an
FCC Form 175 will be available to the
public; for that reason, wire transfer
information should not be included in
an FCC Form 175.) Wire Transfer
Instructions can also be manually sent
by facsimile to the FCC, Financial
Operations Center, Auctions Accounting
Group, ATTN: Gail Glasser. 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.
E. Auction Registration
94. 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.
95. 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 and
will include the SecurID cards that
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will be required to place bids, the
Integrated Spectrum Auction System
(ISAS) Bidder’s Guide, and the Auction
Bidder Line phone number.
96. 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,
February 1, 2007, should call (717) 338–
2868. 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.
97. In the event that SecurID cards
are lost or damaged, only a person who
has been designated as an authorized
bidder, the contact person, or the
certifying official on the applicant’s
short-form application may request
replacement registration material.
Qualified bidders requiring the
replacement of these items must call
Technical Support.
F. Remote Electronic Bidding
98. The Commission will conduct this
auction over the Internet, and
telephonic bidding will be available as
well. Qualified bidders are permitted to
bid electronically and telephonically.
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 telephone
number, and the Integrated Spectrum
Auction 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. 69.
G. Mock Auction—February 5, 2007
99. All qualified bidders will be
eligible to participate in a mock auction
on Monday, February 5, 2007. 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.
IV. Auction Event
100. The first round of bidding for
Auction No. 69 will begin on
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Wednesday, February 7, 2007. The
initial bidding schedule will be
announced in a public notice listing the
qualified bidders, which is to be
released approximately 10 days before
the start of the auction.
A. Auction Structure
i. Simultaneous Multiple Round
Auction
101. In the Auction No. 69 Comment
Public Notice, the Bureau proposed to
auction all 1.4 GHz band licenses in a
single auction using the Commission’s
standard simultaneous multiple-round
(SMR) auction format. This type of
auction offers every license for bid at
the same time and consists of successive
bidding rounds in which eligible
bidders may place bids on individual
licenses. A bidder may bid on, and
potentially win, any number of licenses.
Typically, bidding remains open on all
licenses until bidding stops on every
license, unless a modified stopping rule
is invoked.
102. The Bureau also sought comment
on using a simultaneous multiple-round
with package bidding (SMR–PB) format
for Auction No. 69. A commenter
advocated in its brief comments that the
Bureau employ package bidding because
bidders likely will wish to aggregate
licenses to put together nationwide
coverage or coverage of substantial parts
of the country. However, the SMR
format addresses such a need to
aggregate spectrum licenses. The Bureau
does not believe that the circumstances
of Auction No. 69 present significant
conflicting complementarities that
could weigh more strongly in favor of
package bidding.
103. Two comments were filed
suggesting that package bidding be used
and recommending modifications to the
SMR–PB format as programmed in the
FCC Auction System, noting that the
current package bidding format may be
too complex. The Bureau is not
persuaded that the economic
characteristics of the 1.4 GHz Band
weigh in favor of package bidding and
therefore, the Bureau will not use an
SMR–PB format for Auction No. 69. As
a result, the Bureau did not address the
specifics of the SMR–PB format in the
Auction No. 69 Procedures Public
Notice.
104. The Bureau concludes that the
standard SMR auction format will meet
the needs of bidders in Auction No. 69,
and the Bureau adopted its proposal to
use a simultaneous multiple-round
auction format without package bidding.
Unless otherwise announced, bids will
be accepted on all licenses in each
round of the auction until bidding stops
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on every license. This approach, the
Bureau believes, allows bidders to take
advantage of synergies that exist among
licenses.
ii. Information Available to Bidders
Before and During the Auction
105. In the Auction No. 69 Comment
Public Notice, the Bureau sought
comment on whether to implement
procedures that would limit the
disclosure of information on bidder
interests and identities relative to the
information procedures that have
typically been used for Commission
auctions. In that connection, the Bureau
sought comment on whether
technological considerations or the
likely level of competition in Auction
No. 69 weigh in favor of or against
limiting the disclosure of information
on bidder interests and identities
relative to most past Commission
spectrum auctions, or whether the
Commission should condition the
implementation of such limits on a
measure of the competitiveness of the
auction, such as the eligibility ratio or
a modified version of the eligibility
ratio. The Bureau received no comments
on this issue.
106. Although the Commission has
the option to limit the availability of
information on an auction-by-auction
basis, in the past, the Commission
generally has elected not to limit such
information. However, as discussed by
the Commission in connection with
Auction No. 66, there are potential
harms as well as benefits from publicly
revealing all information during the
auction process. The potential harms
from anti-competitive behavior
facilitated by the release of certain
information are likely to be greater
when the auction is less competitive—
that is, when the number of bidders and
the level of upfront payments are
relatively low compared to the number
of licenses offered. Therefore, for
Auction No. 69, the Bureau will use
limited information procedures if it
appears likely that the competitiveness
of the auction will be low, and if the
Bureau believes that limited information
procedures will be effective in making
anti-competitive behavior less likely to
be successful. Alternatively, if the
Bureau determines that the auction is
likely to be sufficiently competitive, and
therefore, that the risk of successful
collusion is low, the Bureau will make
available bidding information that the
Bureau typically has made available in
previous Commission auctions.
107. Specifically, the Bureau will
estimate the likely level of competition
in the auction by considering the
eligibility ratio, defined as the total
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number of bidding units of eligibility
purchased by bidders through their
upfront payments divided by the total
number of bidding units for the licenses
in the auction. If the eligibility ratio
equals or exceeds three, the Bureau will
use the information procedures
typically used in past FCC auctions. If
the eligibility ratio is less than three, in
general the Bureau will withhold certain
information on bidder interests and
bidder identities.
108. However, if the eligibility ratio is
less than three, the Bureau reserves the
discretion to use information
procedures typically used in past FCC
auctions if circumstances indicate that
limited information procedures would
not be an effective tool for deterring
anti-competitive behavior. The Bureau
anticipates announcing the information
disclosure procedures to be used at or
about the time that the Bureau releases
a public notice announcing the
applicants that are qualified to
participate in the bidding.
109. If it is determined that limited
information procedures will be used,
the Bureau will make available prior to
the auction the total eligibility level for
the auction as well as the eligibility of
each bidder, but will not identify
bidders’ license selections. After each
round of bidding, the amounts of each
bid placed will be made available, but
not the identities of the bidders. This
information will give bidders an
indication of demand for the licenses, so
that bidders and their investors will be
able to assess whether their bids are
likely to be consistent with the
valuations of other bidders, mitigating
fear of the winner’s curse. In addition,
after each round bidders logged in to the
FCC Auction System will be able to
access reports indicating whether their
own bids are provisionally winning.
110. Other Issues. The Bureau does
not believe that the information
disclosure procedures established for
this auction will interfere with the
administration of or compliance with
the Commission’s anti-collusion rule, 47
CFR 1.2105(c). In Auction No. 69, the
Commission will not disclose
information regarding license selection
at least until the upfront payment
deadline has passed and the
Commission determines the information
disclosure procedures to be used for the
auction. The Commission will disclose
the other portions of applicants’ shortform applications, through its on-line
database and certain application-based
information through public notices.
Thus, even without information
regarding license selection, applicants
would be able to comply with
§ 1.2105(c) by not disclosing bids or
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bidding strategies to any other
applicants in the auction. This
approach, however, could inhibit
otherwise lawful communications with
applicants for licenses in other
geographic license areas, which the
Commission’s rule permits.
Consequently, the Bureau will notify
separately each applicant with shortform applications to participate in a
pending auction, including but not
limited to Auction No. 69, whether
applicants in Auction No. 69 have
applied for licenses in any of the same
geographic areas as that applicant.
Specifically, after the Bureau conducts
its initial review of applications to
participate in Auction No. 69, each
applicant with a short-form application
to participate in a pending auction will
receive a letter that lists the applicants
in Auction No. 69 that have applied for
licenses in any of the same geographic
areas as the applicant. The list will
identify the Auction No. 69 applicant(s)
by name but will not list the license
selections of the Auction No. 69
applicant(s).
111. For purposes of the anticollusion rule, the term applicant is
defined in 47 CFR 1.2105(c)(7) to
include all controlling interests, all
parties with ownership interests greater
than 10%, and all officers and directors
of the applicant. As in past auctions,
additional information regarding
applicants in Auction No. 69 that is
needed to comply with § 1.2105(c), such
as, the identifies of controlling interests
in the applicant and ownership interests
greater than 10%, will be available
through the publicly accessible on-line
short-for application database.
iii. Eligibility and Activity Rules
112. In the Auction No. 69 Comment
Public Notice, the Bureau proposed that
the amount of the upfront payment
submitted by a bidder would determine
the initial (maximum) eligibility (as
measured in bidding units) for each
bidder. The Bureau received no
comments on this issue.
113. The Bureau adopted the
proposed use of upfront payments to
determine initial (maximum) eligibility
(as measured in bidding units) for
Auction No. 69. 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 be active. Each
license is assigned a specific number of
bidding units equal to the upfront
payment listed in Attachment A of the
Auction No. 69 Procedures Public
Notice on a bidding unit per dollar
basis. Bidding units for a given license
do not change as prices rise during the
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auction. A bidder’s upfront payment is
not attributed to specific licenses.
Rather, a bidder may place bids on any
of the licenses selected on its FCC Form
175 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.
114. In order to ensure that an 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
percentage of their current bidding
eligibility during each round of the
auction.
115. 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. 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, the Bureau adopted them for
Auction No. 69. Failure to maintain the
requisite activity level will result in the
use of an activity rule waiver, if any
remain, or a reduction in the bidder’s
eligibility, possibly curtailing or
eliminating the bidder’s ability to place
bids in the auction.
iv. Auction Stages
116. In the Auction No. 69 Comment
Public Notice, the Bureau proposed to
conduct the auction in two stages and
employ an activity rule. The Bureau
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
Bureau proposed that in each round of
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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 Bureau received no comments on
this proposal.
117. The Bureau adopted its proposals
for the activity rules and stages. As
explained further in the Auction No. 69
Procedures Public Notice, 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 bids
during the current round) by fivefourths (5/4). 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). Because the
procedures have proven successful in
maintaining the proper pace in previous
auctions, the Bureau adopted them for
Auction No. 69.
118. Because activity requirements
increase in Stage Two, bidders must
check carefully their activity during the
first round following a stage transition
to ensure that they are meeting the
increased activity requirements. 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 lost
bidding eligibility inadvertently 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 logging into the FCC Auction
System.
v. Stage Transitions
119. In the Auction No. 69 Comment
Public Notice, the Bureau proposed that
the auction would generally advance to
the next stage (i.e., from Stage One to
Stage Two) when the auction activity
level, as measured by the percentage of
bidding units receiving new
provisionally winning bids, is
approximately 20 percent or lower for
three consecutive rounds of bidding.
The Bureau further proposed that the
Bureau would retain the discretion to
change stages unilaterally by
announcement during the auction. This
determination, the Bureau proposed,
would 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. The
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Bureau received no comments on this
issue. The Bureau believes that these
stage transition rules, having proven
successful in prior auctions, are
appropriate for use in Auction No. 69.
The Bureau adopted its proposal. Thus,
the auction will start in Stage One and
will generally advance 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). (However, the stage of the
auction does not affect the auction
stopping rules; the auction may
conclude in Stage One.) The Bureau will
retain the discretion to regulate the pace
of the auction by announcement.
vi. Activity Rule Waivers
120. In the Auction No. 69 Comment
Public Notice, the Bureau proposed that
each bidder in the auction be provided
with three activity rule waivers. The
Bureau received no comments on this
issue. The Bureau is satisfied that
providing three waivers over the course
of the auction will give bidders a
sufficient number of waivers and
flexibility, while also safeguarding the
integrity of the auction. Therefore, the
Bureau adopted its proposal that each
bidder be provided three activity rule
waivers.
121. 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 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 (a proactive waiver) or applied
automatically by the FCC Auction
System (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.
122. The FCC Auction System
assumes that bidder 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 bidding 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. If a bidder has no waivers
remaining and does not satisfy the
activity requirement, the FCC Auction
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System will permanently reduce the
bidder’s eligibility, possibly curtailing
or eliminating the bidder’s ability to
place additional bids in the auction.
123. 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. Once eligibility has
been reduced, a bidder will not be
permitted to regain its lost bidding
eligibility even if the round has not yet
closed.
124. 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 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, withdrawals, or
proactive waivers will not keep the
auction open. A bidder cannot submit a
proactive waiver after submitting a bid
in a round, and submitting a proactive
waiver will preclude a bidder from
placing any bids in that round.
Applying a waiver is irreversible; once
a proactive waiver is submitted that
waiver cannot be unsubmitted, even if
the round has not yet closed.
vii. Auction Stopping Rules
125. For Auction No. 69, the Bureau
proposed to employ a simultaneous
stopping rule approach. The Bureau also
sought comment on a modified version
of the simultaneous stopping rule
(modified stopping rule). The modified
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.
126. The Bureau further proposed
retaining the discretion to keep the
auction open even if no new bids or
proactive waivers are submitted and no
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
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insufficient activity will either use an
activity rule waiver (if it has any left) or
lose bidding eligibility.
127. In addition, the Bureau proposed
that it reserve 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.
128. 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.
129. The Bureau believes that the
proposed stopping rules are appropriate
for Auction No. 69, because experience
in prior auctions demonstrates that
these stopping rules balance interests of
administrative efficiency and maximum
bidder participation. The Bureau
received no comments concerning the
auction stopping rules. Therefore the
Bureau adopted the stopping rule
proposals made in the Auction No. 69
Comment Public Notice. Auction No. 69
will begin under the simultaneous
stopping rule approach, and the Bureau
will retain the discretion to employ the
other versions of the stopping rule.
Moreover, the Bureau will retain the
discretion to use the modified stopping
rule with or without prior
announcement during the auction.
viii. Auction Delay, Suspension, or
Cancellation
130. In the Auction No. 69 Comment
Public Notice, the Bureau proposed that,
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
conduct of competitive bidding. The
Bureau received no comment on this
issue.
131. Because the Bureau’s approach to
notification of delay during an auction
has proven effective in resolving exigent
circumstances in previous auctions, the
Bureau adopted its proposals regarding
auction delay, suspension, or
cancellation. 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. The
Bureau emphasizes that exercise of this
authority is solely within the discretion
of the Bureau, and its use is not
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intended to be a substitute for situations
in which bidders may wish to apply
their activity rule waivers.
B. Bidding Procedures
i. Round Structure
132. 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.
133. The Bureau 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 and Minimum Opening
Bids
a. Reserve Price.
134. Congress recently required the
Commission to revise existing
regulations regarding reserve prices for
auctions involving eligible frequencies
subject to CSEA. CSEA defines eligible
frequencies as including frequencies
from 1432–1435 MHz. Thus, twelve 1.4
GHz band licenses authorize use of
frequencies half of which are subject to
CSEA requirements. In CSEA, Congress
directed the Commission to make
revisions that would prescribe methods
by which the total cash proceeds from
any auction of licenses authorizing use
of eligible frequencies shall equal at
least 110 percent of the total estimated
relocation costs provided to the
Commission pursuant to CSEA.
Accordingly, the Commission recently
revised its reserve price rule.
135. CSEA also imposes other related
requirements regarding the proceeds
from an auction involving eligible
frequencies. Pursuant to CSEA, the total
cash proceeds attributable to eligible
spectrum must be at least 110 percent of
the total estimated relocation costs
before the Commission may conclude
the auction. If this condition is not met,
CSEA requires that the Commission
shall cancel the auction. Finally, in
CSEA, Congress also directed that cash
proceeds attributable to the auction of
any eligible frequencies * * * shall be
deposited in the Spectrum Relocation
Fund created by CSEA. Pursuant to
CSEA, on December 27, 2005, NTIA
notified the Commission that there are
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no costs associated with relocating
federal operations from the 1432–1435
MHz band. Accordingly, a reserve price
will not be used for this auction to cover
relocation costs under CSEA.
b. Minimum Opening Bids.
136. The Bureau proposed in the
Auction No. 69 Comment Public Notice
to establish minimum opening bids for
each license, while retaining discretion
to lower the minimum opening bids.
Specifically, for Auction No. 69, the
Bureau proposed the following formula
for calculating license-by-license
minimum opening bids:
$0.005 * MHz * License Area
Population with a minimum of $1,000
per license. The Bureau sought
comment on this proposal and, in the
alternative, whether, the public interest
would be served by having no minimum
opening bid.
137. In Commission auctions,
minimum opening bids are intended to
serve as useful starting points for
bidding. Minimum opening bids are not
intended to be estimates of final auction
prices or to reflect all differences
between license values. Accordingly,
differences in license characteristics,
such as population density, that may
result in different final prices do not
always necessitate different minimum
opening bids for the licenses.
138. A commenter proposed that the
minimum opening bids should be
reduced substantially, claiming that the
proposed minimum opening bids do not
take into account the amount of
spectrum being auctioned. The
commenter asserted that the proposed
minimum opening bid levels are
relatively high as compared with other
auctions and will discourage bidders
from participating. The commenter
further suggested the value of this
spectrum is constrained by other factors,
such as the need to protect the
radioastronomy service. Finally, the
commenter argues that the proposed
minimum opening bids for this auction
are higher than those used for the
auction of Multiple Address Systems
spectrum (Auction No. 59), which, in
the commenter’s view, is more valuable
spectrum than the 1.4 GHz band
licenses offered here. The Bureau,
however, was not persuaded that the
commenter’s comparison is apt in that
it compares two completely different
services with different bandwidth,
geographic areas and band plans. The
Bureau continued to believe that the
previously-proposed minimum opening
bids for this auction are reasonable.
Accordingly, the Bureau adopted its
proposal and set the minimum opening
bids using the proposed formula of
$0.005 * MHz * license area population.
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139. The Bureau did not receive any
comments addressing its proposal that it
retain the discretion to reduce minimum
opening bid amounts. The Bureau
adopted this proposal. The minimum
opening bid amounts adopted for
Auction No. 69 are reducible at the
discretion of the Bureau. The Bureau
emphasized, however, that such
discretion will be exercised, if at all,
sparingly and early in the auction, i.e.,
before bidders lose all activity waivers.
During the course of the auction, the
Bureau will not entertain requests to
reduce the minimum opening bid
amount on specific licenses. The Bureau
noted further that effectively the
minimum opening bids operate as
reserve prices.
140. The specific minimum opening
bid amounts for each license available
in Auction No. 69 calculated pursuant
to the procedure describe above are set
forth in Attachment A of the Auction
No. 69 Procedures Public Notice.
iii. Bid Amounts
141. In the Auction No. 69 Comment
Public Notice, the Bureau proposed that
in each round, eligible bidders be able
to place a bid on a given license in any
of nine different amounts, if the bidder
has sufficient eligibility to place a bid
on the particular license. Under the
proposal, the FCC Auction System
interface will list the nine acceptable
bid amounts for each license, unless
rounding produces duplicate bid
amounts. The Bureau received no
comment on this issue. Based on
experience in prior auctions, the Bureau
adopted its proposals for Auction No.
69.
142. The first of the nine acceptable
bid amounts is called the minimum
acceptable bid amount. The minimum
acceptable bid amount for a license will
be equal to its minimum opening bid
amount until there is a provisionally
winning bid for the license. After there
is a provisionally winning bid for a
license, the minimum acceptable bid
amount for that license will be equal to
the amount of the provisionally winning
bid plus a percentage of that bid amount
calculated using the specified formula.
In general, the percentage will be higher
for a license receiving many bids than
for a license receiving few bids. In the
case of a license for which the
provisionally winning bid has been
withdrawn, the minimum acceptable
bid amount will equal the second
highest bid received for the license.
143. The percentage of the
provisionally winning bid used to
establish the minimum acceptable bid
amount (the additional percentage) is
calculated at the end of each round,
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based on an activity index which is a
weighted average of the number of bids
in that round and the activity index
from the prior round. (Because there is
no prior round, for Round 1
calculations, the activity index from the
prior round is zero.) Specifically, the
activity index is equal to a weighting
factor times the number of bids on the
license in the most recent bidding round
plus one minus the weighting factor
times the activity index from the prior
round. The additional percentage is
determined as one plus the activity
index times a minimum percentage
amount, with the result not to exceed a
given maximum. The additional
percentage is then multiplied by the
provisionally winning bid amount to
obtain the minimum acceptable bid for
the next round. The Commission will
initially set the weighting factor at 0.5,
the minimum percentage at 0.1 (10%),
and the maximum percentage at 0.2
(20%). Hence, at these initial settings,
the minimum acceptable bid for a
license will be between 10% and 20%
higher than the provisionally winning
bid, depending upon the bidding
activity for the license. Equations and
examples are shown in Attachment E of
the Auction No. 69 Procedures Public
Notice.
144. The eight additional bid amounts
are calculated using the minimum
acceptable bid amount and a bid
increment percentage. The first
additional acceptable bid amount equals
the minimum acceptable bid amount
times one plus the bid increment
percentage, rounded. If, for example, the
bid increment percentage is 5 percent,
the calculation is (minimum acceptable
bid amount) * (1 + 0.05), rounded, or
(minimum acceptable bid amount) *
1.05, 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) * 1.1, 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) *
1.15, rounded; etc. The Bureau will
round the results of these calculations,
as well as the calculations to determine
the minimum acceptable bid amounts,
using its standard rounding procedures.
For Auction No. 69, the Bureau
proposed to use a bid increment
percentage of 5 percent to calculate the
eight additional acceptable bid amounts.
The Bureau received no comment on
this issue and will begin the auction
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with a bid increment percentage of 5
percent.
145. The Bureau did not receive any
comments on its proposal to retain the
discretion to change the minimum
acceptable bid amounts, the parameters
of the formula to determine the
percentage of the provisionally winning
bid used to determine the minimum
acceptable bid, and the bid increment
percentage if it determines that
circumstances so dictate. The Bureau
will do so by announcement in the FCC
Auction System during the auction if
circumstances warrant. The Bureau
adopted this proposal.
iv. Provisionally Winning Bids
146. At the end of each bidding
round, a provisionally winning bid will
be determined based on the highest bid
amount received for each license. 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.
Provisionally winning bids at the end of
the auction become the winning bids.
Bidders are reminded that provisionally
winning bids count toward activity for
purposes of the activity rule.
147. In the Auction No. 69 Comment
Public Notice, the Bureau proposed to
use a random number generator to select
a single provisionally winning bid in
the event of identical high bid amounts
being submitted on a license in a given
round (e.g. tied bids). No comments
were received on this proposal.
Therefore, the Bureau adopted its
proposal. A pseudo-random number
generator based on the L’Ecuyer
algorithms will be used to assign a
random number to each bid. The tied
bid with the highest random number
wins the tiebreaker, and becomes the
provisionally winning bid. The
remaining eligible bidders, as well as
the provisionally winning bidder, can
submit higher bids in subsequent
rounds. However, if the auction were to
close with no other bids being placed,
the winning bidder would be the one
that placed the selected provisionally
winning bid.
148. During a round, a bidder may
submit bids for as many licenses as it
wishes (providing that it is eligible to
bid), withdraw provisionally winning
bids from previous rounds, remove bids
placed in the current bidding round, or
permanently reduce eligibility. Bidders
also have the option of submitting and
removing multiple bids and
withdrawing multiple provisionally
winning bids (subject to the limitation
on withdrawal rounds discussed below)
during a round. If a bidder submits
multiple bids for a single license in the
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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 current activity.
149. All bidding will take place
remotely either through the FCC
Auction System or by telephonic
bidding. There will be no on-site
bidding during Auction No. 69. Please
note that 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.
150. A bidder’s ability to bid on
specific licenses is determined by two
factors: (1) the licenses selected on the
bidder’s FCC Form 175 and (2) the
bidder’s eligibility. The bid submission
screens will allow bidders to submit
bids on only those licenses the bidder
selected on its FCC Form 175.
151. In order to access the bidding
function of the FCC Auction System,
bidders must be logged in during the
bidding round using the passcode
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.
152. In each round, if there is
sufficient eligibility to place a bid on the
particular license, an eligible bidder
will be able to place bids on a given
license in any of nine different amounts.
(In the event of duplicate bid amounts
due to rounding, however, the FCC
Auction System will omit the duplicates
and will list fewer than nine acceptable
bid amounts for the license.) For each
license, the FCC Auction System will
list the nine acceptable bid amounts in
a drop-down box. Bidders use the dropdown box to select from among the
acceptable bid amounts. The FCC
Auction System also includes an upload
function that allows bidders to upload
text files containing bid information.
153. 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 are bids on a license, minimum
acceptable bids for a license will be
determined.
154. Finally, bidders are cautioned to
select their bid amounts carefully
because, bidders that withdraw a
provisionally winning bid from a
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67597
previous round, even if the bid was
mistakenly or erroneously made, are
subject to bid withdrawal payments.
v. Bid Removal and Bid Withdrawal
155. In the Auction No. 69 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 two
rounds during the course of the auction.
The round in which withdrawals are
used would be at each bidder’s
discretion. The Bureau received no
comments on this issue. In previous
auctions, the Bureau has detected
bidder conduct that, arguably, may have
constituted anti-competitive behavior
through the use of bid withdrawals.
While the Bureau continues to recognize
the important role that bid withdrawals
may play in an auction, i.e., reducing
risk associated with efforts to secure
various licenses in combination, the
Bureau concluded that, for Auction No.
69, adoption of a limit on the use of
withdrawals to two rounds per bidder is
appropriate and a reasonable
compromise that will allow bidders to
use withdrawals. The Bureau based its
decision on this issue upon experience
with bid withdrawals in prior auctions.
The Bureau will therefore limit the
number of rounds in which bidders may
place withdrawals to two rounds.
156. 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 Bureau adopted them for
Auction No. 69.
157. 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 already withdrawn bids in a
previous round). 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). Once a
withdrawal is submitted during a round,
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that withdrawal cannot be unsubmitted
even if the round has not yet ended.
158. The rounds in which a bidder
may withdraw its bids will be at the
bidder’s discretion and there will be no
limit on the number of bids that may be
withdrawn in either of these rounds.
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.
159. 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. The Bureau retains the
discretion to lower the minimum
acceptable bid on such licenses in the
next round or in later rounds.
160. Calculation of Bid Withdrawal
Payment. 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). Pursuant
to 47 CFR 1.2104(g)(1), the payment will
equal the lower of: (1) The difference
between the net withdrawn bid and the
subsequent net wining bid, or (2) the
difference between the gross withdrawn
bid and the subsequent gross wining
bid.
161. 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). The Bureau retains the
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22:25 Nov 21, 2006
Jkt 211001
discretion to scrutinize multiple bid
withdrawals on a single license for
evidence of anti-competitive strategic
behavior and take appropriate action
when deemed necessary.
162. The payment obligations of a
bidder that withdraws a high bid on a
license during the course of an auction
is specified in 47 CFR 1.2104(g)(1),
which also provides for the assessment
of interim bid withdrawal payments. In
the Auction No. 69 Comment Public
Notice, the Bureau proposed to establish
the percentage at ten percent (10%) for
the 1.4 GHz band auction and sought
comment on the proposal. The Bureau
received no comments on this issue and
adopted its proposal. The Commission
will assess an interim withdrawal
payment equal to 10 percent of the
amount of the withdrawn bids. The 10
percent interim payment will be applied
toward any final bid withdrawal
payment that will be assessed after
subsequent auction of the license.
vi. Round Results
163. The identities of parties that are
qualified to bid in Auction No. 69 will
be available before the auction. Thus,
bidders will know in advance of this
auction the identities of the parties
against which they may be bidding in
the auction. If information is withheld
in accordance with the procedures
described in the Auction No. 69
Procedures Public Notice, limited
information about the results of a round
will be made public after the conclusion
of the round. Specifically, after a round
closes, the Bureau will make available
for each license, its current
provisionally winning bid amount, the
minimum acceptable bid amount for the
following round, the amounts of all bids
placed on the license during the round,
and whether the license is FCC held.
The reports will be publicly accessible.
Moreover, after the auction, the Bureau
will make available complete reports of
all bids placed during each round of the
auction, including bidder identities.
164. If, however, limited information
procedures are not used, more
information will be provided after each
round in the auction. Bids placed
during a round, including bidder
identities, will be made public at the
conclusion of that round. Specifically,
after a round closes, the Bureau will
compile reports of all bids placed and
which bidders made them, current
provisionally winning bids, new
minimum acceptable bid amounts, and
bidder eligibility status (bidding
eligibility and activity rule waivers) and
will post the reports for public access.
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Frm 00058
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
vii. Auction Announcements
165. The Commission will use auction
announcements to announce items such
as schedule changes and stage
transitions. All auction announcements
will be available by clicking a link in
the FCC Auction System.
V. Post-Auction Procedures
A. Down Payments
166. After bidding has ended, the
Commission will issue a public notice
declaring the auction closed and
identifying winning bidders, down
payments and final payments due.
167. 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. 69 to 20
percent of the net amount of its winning
bids (gross bids less any applicable
small business or very small business
bidding credits).
B. Final Payments
168. 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)
169. 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. 69.
Winning bidders that are small
businesses or very small businesses
must demonstrate their eligibility for a
small business or very small business
bidding credit. Further filing
instructions will be provided to auction
winners at the close of the auction.
170. The CSEA/Part 1 Report and
Order modifies the procedure by which
a consortium that is a winning bidder in
Auction No. 69 will apply for a license.
In particular, (a) each member or group
of members of a winning consortium
seeking separate licenses will be
required to file a separate long-form
application for its respective license(s)
and, in the case of a license to be
partitioned or disaggregated, the
member or group filing the applicable
long-form application shall provide the
parties’ partitioning or disaggregation
agreement in its long-form application;
(b) two or more consortium members
seeking to be licensed together shall first
form a legal business entity; and (c) any
such entity must meet the applicable
E:\FR\FM\22NON1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 225 / Wednesday, November 22, 2006 / Notices
eligibility requirements in Commission
rules for small business status.
Applicants applying as consortia should
review the CSEA/Part 1 Report and
Order in detail and monitor any relevant
future proceedings to understand how
the members of the consortia will apply
for a license in the event they are
winning bidders.
pwalker on PROD1PC61 with NOTICES
D. Ownership Disclosure Information
Report (FCC Form 602)
171. 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
is automatically created in ULS for any
applicant that submits 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. Tribal Lands Bidding Credit
172. A winning bidder that intends to
use its license(s) to deploy facilities and
provide services to federally recognized
tribal lands that are unserved by any
telecommunications carrier or that have
a wireline penetration rate equal to or
below 85 percent is eligible to receive a
tribal lands bidding credit as set forth in
47 CFR 1.2107 and 1.2110(f). A tribal
lands bidding credit is in addition to,
and separate from, any other bidding
credit for which a winning bidder may
qualify.
173. Unlike other bidding credits that
are requested prior to the auction, a
winning bidder applies for the tribal
lands bidding credit after winning the
auction when it files its long-form
application (FCC Form 601). When
initially filing the long-form application,
the winning bidder will be required to
advise the Commission whether it
intends to seek a tribal lands bidding
credit, for each market won in the
auction, by checking the designated
box(es). After stating its intent to seek a
tribal lands bidding credit, the applicant
will have 180 days from the close of the
long-form filing window to amend its
application to select the specific tribal
lands to be served and provide the
required tribal government
certifications. Licensees receiving a
tribal lands bidding credit are subject to
performance criteria as set forth in 47
CFR 1.2110(f)(3)(vi).
174. For additional information on the
tribal lands bidding credit, including
how the amount of the credit is
calculated, applicants should review the
Commission’s rule making proceeding
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22:25 Nov 21, 2006
Jkt 211001
regarding tribal lands bidding credits
and related public notices.
F. Default and Disqualification
175. Any winning 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). The
payments include both a deficiency
payment, equal to the difference
between the amount of the bidder’s bid
and the amount of the winning bid the
next time a license covering the same
spectrum is won in an auction, plus an
additional payment equal to a
percentage of the defaulter’s bid or of
the subsequent winning bid, whichever
is less. Pursuant to recent modifications
to the rule governing default payments,
the percentage of the applicable bid to
be assessed as an additional payment for
defaults in a particular auction is
established in advance of the auction.
Accordingly, in the Auction No. 69
Comment Public Notice, the Bureau
proposed to set the additional default
payment for the auction of 1.4 GHz band
licenses at ten percent (10%) of the
applicable bid. The Bureau sought
comment on its proposal.
176. No comments were received on
this issue. The Bureau therefore adopted
its proposal and set the additional
default payment for the auction of 1.4
GHz band licenses at ten percent (10%)
of the applicable bid.
177. Finally, the Bureau noted that in
the event of a default, the Commission
may re-auction the license or offer it to
the next highest bidder (in descending
order) at its final bid amount. 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.
G. Refund of Remaining Upfront
Payment Balance
178. All applicants that submit
upfront payments but after the close of
the auction are not winning bidders for
a license in Auction No. 69 may be
entitled to a refund of their remaining
upfront payment balance after the
conclusion of the auction. All refunds
will be returned to the payer of record,
as identified on the FCC Form 159,
PO 00000
Frm 00059
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
67599
unless the payer submits written
authorization instructing otherwise.
179. 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
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 may also be eligible
for a refund of their upfront payment
before the close of the auction. If an
applicant has completed the refund
instructions electronically, the refund
will be sent automatically. If an
applicant has not completed the refund
instructions electronically, the applicant
must submit a written request for the
refund and 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, Gail Glasser, 445
12th Street, SW., Room 1–C864,
Washington, DC 20554.
Federal Communications Commission.
Gary D. Michaels,
Deputy Chief, Auctions and Spectrum Access
Division, WTB.
[FR Doc. E6–19744 Filed 11–21–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
FEDERAL MARITIME COMMISSION
Ocean Transportation Intermediary
License Revocations
The Federal Maritime Commission
hereby gives notice that the following
Ocean Transportation Intermediary
licenses have been revoked pursuant to
section 19 of the Shipping Act of 1984
(46 U.S.C. chapter 409) and the
regulations of the Commission
pertaining to the licensing of Ocean
Transportation Intermediaries, 46 CFR
Part 515, effective on the corresponding
date shown below:
License Number: 003121f.
Name: Aj International, Inc.
Address: 1300 Midland Avenue—B55,
P.O. Box 818, Yonkers, NY 10704.
Date Revoked: October 27, 2006.
Reason: Surrendered License
Voluntarily.
License Number: 003635f.
Name: F. Angel & Associates, Inc.
Address: 15231 SW 26th Terrace,
Miami, FL 33185.
Date Revoked: November 6, 2006.
E:\FR\FM\22NON1.SGM
22NON1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 225 (Wednesday, November 22, 2006)]
[Notices]
[Pages 67582-67599]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E6-19744]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
[AU Docket No. 06-104; Report No. AUC-06-69-B (Auction No. 69); DA 06-
2014]
Auction of 1.4 GHz Band Licenses Scheduled for February 7, 2007;
Notice and Filing Requirements, Minimum Opening Bids, Upfront Payments
and Other Procedures for Auction No. 69
AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document announces the procedures and minimum opening
bids for the upcoming auction of licenses in the paired 1392-1395 MHz
and 1432-1435 MHz bands, and in the unpaired 1390-1392 MHz band. This
document is intended to familiarize prospective bidders with the
procedures and minimum opening bids for this auction.
DATES: Bidding for Auction No. 69 is scheduled to begin on February 7,
2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Wireless Telecommunications Bureau,
Auctions Spectrum and Access Division: For legal questions: Howard
Davenport at (202) 418-0660. For general auction questions: Roy Knowles
or Barbara Sibert at (717) 338-2868.
Mobility Division: For questions: Erin McGrath or Michael Connelly
(legal) or Keith Harper (technical) and Bettye Woodward (licensing) at
(202) 418-
[[Page 67583]]
0620. To request materials in accessible formats (Braille, large print,
electronic files, audio format) for people with disabilities, send e-
mail to fcc504@fcc.gov or call the Consumer and Governmental Affairs
Bureau at (202) 418-0530 or (202) 418-0432 (TTY).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Auction No. 69
Procedures Public Notice released on November 2, 2006. The complete
text of the Auction No. 69 Procedures Public Notice, including
attachments, as well as related Commission documents, are available for
public inspection and copying from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Eastern Time
(ET) Monday through Thursday or from 8 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. on Friday at
the FCC Reference Information Center, Portals II, 445 12th Street, SW.,
Room CY-A257, Washington, DC 20554. The Auction No. 69 Procedures
Public Notice and related Commission documents 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 Web site: https://www.BCPIWEB.com. When ordering documents from BCPI
please provide the appropriate FCC document number, for example, DA 06-
2014 for the Auction No. 69 Procedures Public Notice. The Auction No.
69 Procedures Public Notice and related documents are also available on
the Internet at the Commission's Web site: https://wireless.fcc.gov/
auctions/69/.
I. General Information
A. Introduction
1. The Federal Communications Commission (Commission) announces the
procedures and minimum opening bid amounts for the upcoming auction of
1.4 GHz band licenses in the paired 1392-1395 MHz and 1432-1435 MHz
bands, and in the unpaired 1390-1392 MHz band scheduled to begin on
February 7, 2007 (Auction No. 69). On August 28, 2006, 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. 69 for this spectrum reallocated
for non-government use to provide fixed and mobile services, except for
aeronautical mobile services. The Bureau received two comments and no
reply comments in response to the Auction No. 69 Comment Public Notice
71 FR 51817, August 31, 2006.
2. In the Auction No. 69 Comment Public Notice, the Bureau proposed
to include all 64 1.4 GHz band licenses in a single auction using the
Commission's standard simultaneous multiple-round (SMR) auction format.
The Bureau sought comment on the feasibility and desirability of
allocating the 1.4 GHz band licenses using the Commission's package
bidding format. Based on the record and the particular circumstances of
the auction of 1.4 GHz band licenses, the Bureau will include all 64
1.4 GHz licenses in a single auction using the Commission's standard
SMR format, as proposed. Package bidding will not be used in Auction
No. 69.
3. The Bureau also sought comment in the Auction No. 69 Comment
Public Notice on whether to implement procedures that would withhold
certain information on bidder interests, and bidder identities that
typically has been revealed prior to and during past Commission
auctions. In particular, the Bureau asked commenters to indicate what
factors weigh for or against limiting disclosure of bidder interests
and identities, and whether the Commission should condition the use of
any disclosure limits on a measure of competition in the auction.
4. For Auction No. 69, the Bureau will determine the information
procedures based primarily on the eligibility ratio, a measure of
likely competition in the auction. The eligibility ratio is defined as
the total number of bidding units of eligibility purchased by bidders
through their upfront payments, divided by the total number of bidding
units for the licenses in the auction. Specifically, if the eligibility
ratio equals or exceeds three, the Bureau will use the information
procedures typically used in past FCC auctions, since with sufficient
likely competition, the anti-competitive behavior that limited
information procedures aim to deter is unlikely to be successful. If
the eligibility ratio is less than three, in general the Bureau will
withhold certain information on bidder interests and bidder identities.
However, if the eligibility ratio is less than three, the Commission
reserves the discretion to use information procedures typically used in
past FCC auctions if circumstances indicate that limited information
procedures would not be an effective tool for deterring anti-
competitive behavior.
5. In the event that the conditions described above result in the
use of procedures under which certain information is withheld, the
Bureau will release: (1) Each bidder's eligibility and upfront payment
made prior to the start of the auction; and (2) the amounts of all
gross bids for each license (including the losing bids) after each
round, but not the identities of the bidders placing the bids. The
Bureau believes this provides bidders with information regarding
license valuations without compromising the goal of reducing the
potential for anti-competitive outcomes.
6. Pursuant to these procedures, information on the license
selections of auction applicants will be withheld, at least until the
upfront payment deadline has passed and the Commission determines the
information procedures that will be used for the auction. Therefore, to
enable applicants to comply with the Commission's anti-collusion rules,
once the Bureau has conducted its initial review of applications to
participate in Auction No. 69, each applicant with a short-form
application to participate in the pending auction will receive a letter
that lists the applicants in Auction No. 69 that have applied for
licenses in any of the same geographic areas as the applicant. The list
will identify the applicants by name but will not provide the license
selections of the applicants.
7. Spectrum Relocation Fund. The upper half of paired frequencies
for 1.4 GHz band licenses, i.e., 1432-1435 MHz, is spectrum covered by
a Congressional mandate that requires that auction proceeds fund the
estimated relocation costs of incumbent federal entities and restricts
the conclusion of an auction of affected spectrum, based on 110 percent
of the estimated relocation costs. On December 27, 2005, pursuant to
the Commercial Spectrum Enhancement Act (CSEA), 71 FR 26245, May 4,
2006, the National Telecommunications and Information Administration
(NTIA) notified the Commission that there are no costs associated with
relocating federal operations from the 1432-1435 MHz band. Thus, the
CSEA revenue requirement will not affect the Commission's ability to
conclude Auction No. 69.
i. Background of Proceeding
8. In its Report and Order, 67 FR 41847, June 20, 2002, the
Commission adopted service rules to govern the licensing of the paired
1392-1395 MHz and 1432-1435 MHz bands, and the unpaired 1390-1392 MHz
band. The Commission provided for the assignment of the 1390-1392 MHz
band by Major Economic Areas, and the 1392-1395 MHz and 1432-1435 MHz
bands by Economic Area Groups (EAGs). Further, the Commission allowed
open eligibility for initial licenses assigned by geographic area
licensing, and adopted technical
[[Page 67584]]
standards that were consistent with the part 27 rules and provide
licensees flexibility. The Commission set a ten-year license term from
the date of grant. Licensees must demonstrate that they are providing
substantial service when they file their renewal application. The
Commission allowed licensees to partition and/or disaggregate their
licenses and applied the general competitive bidding rules set forth in
47 CFR part 1, Subpart Q.
ii. Licenses to be Auctioned
9. Auction No. 69 will offer 64 licenses: 12 Economic Area Grouping
(EAG) licenses and 52 Major Economic Area (MEA) licenses. A complete
list of the 1.4 GHz band licenses available in Auction No. 69 is
included in Attachment A of the Auction No. 69 Procedures Public
Notice.
B. Rules and Disclaimers
i. Relevant Authority
10. Prospective applicants must familiarize themselves thoroughly
with the Commission's general competitive bidding rules set forth in 47
CFR part 1, including recent amendments and clarifications; rules
relating to the 1.4 GHz band contained in Title 47 CFR part 27; and
rules relating to applications, practice and procedure contained in
Title 47 CFR part 1. Prospective applicants must also be thoroughly
familiar with the procedures, terms and conditions contained in the
Auction No. 69 Procedures Public Notice and the Commission's decisions
in proceedings regarding competitive bidding procedures, application
requirements, and obligations of Commission licensees.
11. The procedures, terms and conditions contained in the
Commission's rules, relevant orders, and public notices are not
negotiable. The Commission may amend or supplement the information
contained in its 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.
ii. Prohibition of Collusion; Compliance with Antitrust Laws
12. To ensure the competitiveness of the auction process, 47 CFR
1.2105(c) prohibits applicants competing for licenses in any of the
same geographic license areas from communicating with each other about
bids, bidding strategies, or settlements unless such applicants have
identified each other on their short-form applications (FCC Forms 175)
as parties with whom they have entered into agreements pursuant to
Sec. 1.2105(a)(2)(viii). In Auction No. 69, the rule would apply to
any applicants bidding for the same EAG or MEA. The rule would also
apply to applicants bidding for licenses in overlapping EAGs and MEAs,
such as a situation when one applicant applies for an EAG and a second
applicant applies for a MEA covering any area within that EAG. The rule
would preclude applicants that apply to bid for all markets from
communicating with all other applicants. Thus, applicants that have
applied for the same markets (unless they 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)) must affirmatively
avoid all communications with or disclosures to each other that affect
or have the potential to affect bids or bidding strategy, which may
include communications regarding the post-auction market structure.
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.
13. For purposes of this prohibition, Sec. 1.2105(c)(7)(i) defines
applicant as including all officers and directors of the entity
submitting a short-form application to participate in the auction, all
controlling interests of that entity, 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.
14. Applicants for licenses for any of the same geographic license
areas must not communicate directly or indirectly about bids or bidding
strategy. Accordingly, such applicants 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 such
applicants. Also, if the authorized bidders are different individuals
employed by the same organization a violation similarly could occur. 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. A violation of
the anti-collusion rule could occur in other contexts, such as an
individual serving as an officer for two or more applicants. Moreover,
the Commission has found a violation of the anti-collusion rule where a
bidder used the Commission's bidding system to disclose its bidding
strategy in a manner that explicitly invited other auction participants
to cooperate and collaborate in specific markets, and has placed
auction participants on notice that the use of its bidding system to
disclose market information to competitors will not be tolerated and
will subject bidders to sanctions. Bidders are cautioned that the
Commission remains vigilant about prohibited communications taking
place in other situations. The Commission has warned that prohibited
communications concerning bids and bidding strategies may include
communications regarding capital calls or requests for additional funds
in support of bids or bidding strategies to the extent such
communications convey information concerning the bids and bidding
strategies directly or indirectly. Applicants are hereby placed on
notice that public disclosure of information relating to bidder
interests and bidder identities that typically has been revealed prior
to and during past Commission auctions, but is confidential in this
auction at the time of disclosure, may violate the anti-collusion rule.
Thus, communication by an applicant to another applicant for one or
more of the same licenses of the applicant's license selections on its
short-form application, or of the fact that the applicant does nor does
not hold provisionally winning bids on particular licenses, may well
violate the anti-collusion rule. Bidders should use caution in their
dealings with other individuals, such as members of the press,
financial analysts, or others who might become a conduit for the
communication of prohibited bidding information. For example, where
limited information disclosure procedures are in place, as in this
auction, an applicant's statement to the press that it has lost bidding
eligibility and stopped bidding in the auction could give rise to a
finding of an anti-collusion violation.
15. The Commission's rules do not prohibit applicants from entering
into otherwise lawful bidding agreements before filing their short-form
applications, as long as they disclose the existence of the
agreement(s) in their
[[Page 67585]]
short-form application. If parties agree in principle on all material
terms prior to the short-form filing deadline, each party to the
agreement must identify the other party or parties to the agreement on
its short-form application under Sec. 1.2105(c), even if the agreement
has not been reduced to writing. If the parties have not agreed in
principle by the short-form filing deadline, they should not include
the names of parties to discussions on their applications, and they may
not continue negotiations, discussions or communications with any other
applicants after the short-form filing deadline.
16. By electronically submitting its short-form application, each
applicant certifies its compliance with Sec. 1.2105(c). However, the
Bureau caution 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 initiation of an investigation
when warranted. Any applicant found to have violated the anti-collusion
rule may be subject to sanctions.
17. Applicants are also reminded that, regardless of compliance
with the Commission's rules, they remain subject to the antitrust laws.
Compliance with the disclosure requirements of the Commission's anti-
collusion rule will not insulate a party from enforcement of the
antitrust laws. To the extent the Commission becomes aware of specific
allegations that may give rise to violations of the federal antitrust
laws the Commission may refer such allegations to the United States
Department of Justice for investigation. If an applicant is found to
have violated the antitrust laws or the Commission's rules 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, among other sanctions.
18. As required by 47 CFR 1.65, an applicant must maintain the
accuracy and completeness of information furnished in its pending
application and must notify the Commission within 30 days of any
substantial change that may be of decisional significance to that
application. Thus, Sec. 1.65 requires an auction applicant to notify
the Commission of any substantial change to the information or
certifications included in its pending short-form application.
Applicants are therefore required by Sec. 1.65 to report to the
Commission any communications they have made to or received from
another applicant after the short-form filing deadline that affect or
have the potential to affect bids or bidding strategy unless such
communications are made to or received from parties to agreements
identified under Sec. 1.2105(a)(2)(viii). In addition, Sec.
1.2105(c)(6) provides that any applicant that makes or receives a
communication prohibited by Sec. 1.2105(c) must report such
communication to the Commission in writing immediately, and in no case
later than five business days after the communication occurs.
19. As required by 47 CFR 1.2107(d), applicants that are winning
bidders will be required to disclose in their long-form applications
the specific terms, conditions, and parties involved in any bidding
consortia, joint ventures, partnerships, agreements and other
arrangements entered into relating to the competitive bidding process.
iii. Protection of Incumbent Government and Non-Government Operations
20. Potential applicants are advised that there are several
government operations that will continue to operate in these bands.
21. The 1390-1392 MHz Band. Radio astronomy observations may be
assigned in the 1350-1400 MHz band on an unprotected basis at the 16
radio astronomy observatories identified at 47 CFR 2.106 note US311. In
the 1390-1400 MHz band, government operations authorized as of March
22, 1995, at the 17 sites identified at 47 CFR 2.106 note US351 will
continue to operate on a fully protected basis until January 1, 2009.
All other government operations, except for medical telemetry (1395-
1400 MHz), will operate on a non-interference basis to authorized non-
Government operations and shall not hinder implementation of any non-
Government operations.
22. The 1392-1395 MHz and 1432-1435 MHz Bands. Radio astronomy
observations may be assigned in the 1350-1400 MHz band on an
unprotected basis at the 16 radio astronomy observatories identified at
47 CFR 2.106 note US311. In the 1390-1400 MHz band, government
operations authorized as of March 22, 1995, at the 17 sites identified
at 47 CFR 2.106 note US351 will continue to operate on a fully
protected basis until January 1, 2009. All other government operations,
except for medical telemetry (1395-1400 MHz), will operate on a non-
interference basis to authorized non-Government operations and shall
not hinder implementation of any non-Government operations. In the
1432-1435 MHz band, government stations in the fixed and mobile
services may operate indefinitely on a primary basis at the 23 sites
identified at 47 CFR 2.106 note US361. All other Government stations in
the fixed and mobile services shall operate on a primary basis until
re-accommodated in accordance with the National Defense Authorization
Act of 1999.
a. International Coordination.
23. Operations in the paired 1392-1395 MHz and 1432-1435 MHz bands
and in the unpaired 1390-1392 MHz band must not cause harmful
interference across the borders with Mexico and Canada. Until such time
as agreements between the United States, Mexico and Canada become
effective, the same technical restrictions at the border that are
adopted for operation between geographic service areas will apply, to
the extent they are not in violation of current bilateral agreements
and arrangements. When interim arrangements or agreements between the
United States, Mexico and Canada are final and become effective,
licensees in the paired 1392-1395 MHz and 1432-1435 MHz bands and in
the unpaired 1390-1392 MHz band must comply with these agreements. In
addition, if these agreements are modified in the future, licensees in
the paired 1392-1395 MHz and 1432-1435 MHz bands and in the unpaired
1390-1392 MHz band must comply with these modifications. Current
agreements and coordination arrangements between the United States and
Canada or Mexico may be found on the Commission's Web site under http:/
/www.fcc.gov/ib/sand/agree/welcome.html.
b. Quiet Zones.
24. As specified at 47 CFR 1.924, 1.4 GHz Band licensees must
protect the radio quiet zones set forth in the Commission's rules.
Licensees are cautioned that they must receive the appropriate
approvals directly from the relevant quiet zone entity prior to
operating within the areas described in the Commission's rules.
iv. Due Diligence
25. The Bureau cautions potential applicants formulating their
bidding strategies to investigate and consider the extent to which 1.4
GHz band frequencies are occupied. Applicants and their investors
should also understand that Commission rules and requirements place
limitations on the ability of 1.4 GHz band licensees to use this
spectrum. Government and non-government incumbent operations in the 1.4
GHz band must be protected. These limitations may restrict the ability
of 1.4 GHz band geographic area licensees to use certain portions of
the electromagnetic spectrum or provide service to certain areas in
their
[[Page 67586]]
geographic license areas. Bidders should become familiar with the
status of these operations, applicable Commission rules, orders and any
pending proceedings related to the service, in order to make reasoned,
appropriate decisions about their participation in Auction No. 69 and
their bidding strategy.
26. 1.4 GHz band licensees must comply with the pertinent rule
sections set forth in 47 CFR part 27. Potential bidders should be aware
that as part of the 2007 World Radio Communications Conference, WRC-07,
NTIA has proposed more stringent out-of-band emission limits than
presently specified in 47 CFR 27.53(i) in the bands 1350-1400 MHz and
1427-1452 MHz. The potential for stricter emission limits could impact
the operations in these bands.
27. Potential bidders are reminded that they are solely responsible
for investigating and evaluating all technical and marketplace factors
that may have a bearing on the value of the 1.4 GHz band licenses in
this auction. 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 the 1.4 GHz band subject to certain conditions and
regulations. An FCC auction does not constitute an endorsement by the
FCC of any particular service, technology, or product, nor does an FCC
license constitute a guarantee of business success. Applicants should
perform their individual due diligence before proceeding as they would
with any new business venture.
28. Potential bidders are strongly encouraged to conduct their own
research prior to the beginning of bidding in Auction No. 69 in order
to determine the existence of any pending administrative or judicial
proceedings that might affect their decision regarding participation in
the auction. Participants in Auction No. 69 are strongly encouraged to
continue such research throughout the auction. In addition, potential
bidders should perform technical analyses sufficient to assure
themselves that, should they prevail in competitive bidding for a
specific license, they will be able to build and operate facilities
that will fully comply with the Commission's technical and legal
requirements.
29. Applicants should also be aware that certain pending and future
proceedings, including applications (including those for modification),
petitions for rulemaking, requests for special temporary authority,
waiver requests, petitions to deny, petitions for reconsideration,
informal oppositions, and applications for review, before the
Commission may relate to particular applicants or incumbent licensees
or the licenses available in Auction No. 69. In addition, pending and
future judicial proceedings may relate to particular applicants or
incumbent licensees, or the licenses available in Auction No. 69.
Prospective bidders are responsible for assessing the likelihood of the
various possible outcomes, and considering their potential impact on
spectrum licenses available in this auction.
30. Applicants should perform due diligence to identify and
consider all proceedings that may affect the spectrum licenses being
auctioned and that could have an impact on the availability of spectrum
for Auction No. 69. 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 beginning of bidding in the auction.
31. Applicants are solely responsible for identifying associated
risks and for investigating and evaluating the degrees to which such
matters may affect their ability to bid on, otherwise acquire, or make
use of licenses available in Auction No. 69. Potential applicants are
strongly encouraged to physically inspect any prospective sites located
in, or near, the service area for which they plan to bid, and also to
familiarize themselves with environmental review obligations.
32. Applicants may obtain information about non-Federal Government
incumbent licenses that may have an effect on availability of licenses
in Auction No. 69 through the Bureau's licensing databases at https://
wireless.fcc.gov/uls.
33. The Commission makes no representations or guarantees regarding
the accuracy or completeness of information in its databases or any
third party databases. To the extent the Commission's databases may not
include all information deemed necessary or desirable by an applicant,
applicants may obtain or verify such information from independent
sources or assume the risk of any incompleteness or inaccuracy in said
databases. Furthermore, the Commission makes no representations or
guarantees regarding the accuracy or completeness of information that
has been provided by incumbent licensees and incorporated into its
databases.
v. Use of Integrated Spectrum Auction System
34. The Commission will make available a browser-based bidding
system to allow bidders to participate in Auction No. 69 over the
Internet using the Commission's Integrated Spectrum Auction System
(ISAS or FCC Auction System). The Commission makes no warranty
whatsoever with respect to the FCC Auction System. In no event shall
the Commission, or any of its officers, employees or agents, be liable
for any damages whatsoever (including, but not limited to, loss of
business profits, business interruption, loss of business information,
or any other loss) arising out of or relating to the existence,
furnishing, functioning or use of the FCC Auction System that is
accessible to qualified bidders in connection with this auction.
Moreover, no obligation or liability will arise out of the Commission's
technical, programming or other advice or service provided in
connection with the FCC Auction System.
vi. Bidder Alerts
35. As is the case with many business investment opportunities,
some unscrupulous entrepreneurs may attempt to use Auction No. 69 to
deceive and defraud unsuspecting investors. Information about deceptive
telemarketing investment schemes is available from the Commission as
well as the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC). Complaints about specific deceptive
telemarketing investment schemes should be directed to the FTC, the
SEC, or the National Fraud Information Center.
vii. Environmental Review Requirements
36. Licensees must comply with the Commission's rules regarding
implementation of the National Environmental Policy Act and other
federal environmental statutes. The construction of a wireless antenna
facility is a federal action and the licensee must comply with the
Commission's environmental rules for each such facility. The
Commission's environmental rules require, among other things, that the
licensee consult with expert agencies having environmental
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). In assessing the effect of facilities
[[Page 67587]]
construction on historic properties, the licensee must follow the
provisions of the Nationwide Programmatic Agreement Regarding the
Section 106 National Historic Preservation Act Review Process, 47 CFR
part 1, Appendix C. The licensee must prepare environmental assessments
for facilities that may have a significant impact in or on wilderness
areas, wildlife preserves, threatened or endangered species or
designated critical habitats, historical or archaeological sites,
Indian religious sites, floodplains, and surface features. The licensee
also must prepare environmental assessments for facilities that include
high intensity white lights in residential neighborhoods or excessive
radio frequency emission.
C. Auction Specifics
i. Auction Date
37. Bidding in Auction No. 69 will begin on Wednesday, February 7,
2007. 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 until bidding has stopped on all licenses.
ii. Auction Title
38. Auction No. 69--1.4 GHz band
iii. Bidding Methodology
39. As discussed in more detail below, the bidding methodology for
Auction No. 69 will be simultaneous multiple round bidding. The
Commission will conduct this auction over the Internet using the FCC
Auction System, and telephonic bidding will be available as well.
Qualified bidders are permitted to bid electronically via the Internet
or by telephone. All telephone calls are recorded.
iv. Pre-Auction Dates and Deadlines
40. Dates and Deadlines.
Auction Seminar November 29, 2006
Short-Form Application (FCC Form 175) Filing Window Opens--November 29,
2006; 12 noon ET.
Short-Form Application (FCC Form 175) Filing Window Deadline--December
11, 2006; 6 p.m. ET.
Upfront Payments (via wire transfer)--January 12, 2007; 6 p.m. ET.
Mock Auction--February 5, 2007.
Auction Begins--February 7, 2007.
v. Requirements for Participation
41. Those wishing to participate in the auction must: (1) Submit a
short-form application (FCC Form 175) electronically prior to 6 p.m.
Eastern Time (ET), December 11, 2006, following the electronic filing
procedures set forth in Attachment C to the Auction No. 69 Procedures
Public Notice; (2) submit a sufficient upfront payment and an FCC
Remittance Advice Form (FCC Form 159) by 6 p.m. ET, January 12, 2007;
and (3) comply with all provisions outlined in the Auction No. 69
Procedures Public Notice and applicable Commission rules.
II. Short-Form Application (FCC Form 175) Requirements
42. An application to participate in an FCC auction provides
information used in determining whether the applicant is legally,
technically, and financially qualified to participate in Commission
auctions for licenses or permits. The short-form application is the
first part of the Commission's two-phased auction application process.
In the first phase of this process, parties desiring to participate in
the auction file streamlined, short-form applications in which they
certify under penalty of perjury as to their qualifications.
Eligibility to participate in bidding is based on the applicants'
short-form applications and certifications as well as their upfront
payments. In the second phase of the process, winning bidders file a
more comprehensive long-form application.
43. Entities seeking licenses available in Auction No. 69 must file
a short-form application electronically via the FCC Auction System
prior to 6 p.m. ET on December 11, 2006, following the procedures
prescribed in Attachment C of the Auction No. 69 Procedures Public
Notice. If an applicant claims eligibility for a bidding credit, the
information provided in its FCC Form 175 will be used in determining
whether the applicant is eligible for the claimed bidding credit.
Applicants bear full responsibility for submitting accurate, complete
and timely short-form applications. All applicants must certify on
their short-form applications under penalty of perjury that they are
legally, technically, financially and otherwise qualified to hold a
license. Applicants should read the instructions set forth in
Attachment C carefully and should consult the Commission's 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 short-form applications.
44. An entity may not submit more than one short-form application
for a single auction. In the event that a party submits multiple short-
form applications, only one application will be accepted for filing.
45. Applicants also should note that submission of a short-form
application constitutes a representation by the certifying official
that he or she is an authorized representative of the applicant, that
he or she has read the form's instructions and certifications, and that
the contents of the application, its certifications, and any
attachments are true and correct. Applicants are not permitted to make
major modifications to their applications; such impermissible changes
include a change of the certifying official to the application.
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
46. A bidding credit represents the amount by which a bidder's
winning bid will be discounted. For Auction No. 69, bidding credits
will be available to small businesses and very small businesses, and
consortia thereof, as follows: (1) 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 bid; and (2) a bidder with
attributed average annual gross revenues that do not exceed $15 million
for the preceding three years (very small business) will receive a 25
percent discount on its winning bid. Bidding credits are not
cumulative; a qualifying applicant receives either the 15 percent or 25
percent bidding credit on its winning bid, but not both.
47. Every applicant that claims eligibility for a bidding credit as
either a small business or a very small business, or a consortium of
small businesses or very small businesses, will be required to provide
information regarding revenues attributable to the applicant, its
affiliates, its controlling interests, and the affiliates of its
controlling interests on its FCC Form 175 short-form application to
establish that it satisfies the applicable eligibility requirement.
Applicants claiming eligibility as a designated entity in Auction No.
69 should review carefully the CSEA/Part 1 Designated Entity FNPRM, 71
FR 6992, February 10, 2006, and the Designated Entity Second Report and
Order, 71 FR 26245, May 4, 2006. In that connection, the Commission
adopted rules governing eligibility for designated entity benefits
[[Page 67588]]
in the Designated Entity Second Report and Order. The Commission's new
rules regarding applicants seeking eligibility for designated entity
benefits requires the disclosure of a list of all parties with which
the applicant has entered into arrangements for the lease or resale
(including wholesale agreements) of any of the capacity of any of the
applicant's spectrum; and a list, separately and in the aggregate, of
the gross revenues of entities with which the applicant has an
attributable material relationship, as defined in 47 CFR
1.2110(b)(3)(iv)(B). Certain otherwise attributable material
relationships may not be attributable pursuant to the provisions of 47
CFR 1.2110(b)(3)(iv)(C)(2).
ii. Tribal Lands Bidding Credit
48. To encourage the growth of wireless services in federally
recognized tribal lands, the Commission has implemented a tribal lands
bidding credit.
iii. Installment Payments
49. Installment payment plans will not be available in Auction No.
69.
B. License Selection
50. In Auction No. 69, applicants must select the licenses on which
they want to bid from the eligible licenses list. In Auction No. 69,
the FCC Form 175 will include a filtering mechanism that allows an
applicant to filter the available licenses. The applicant will make
selections for one or more of the filter criteria and the system will
produce a list of licenses satisfying the specified criteria. The
applicant may select all the licenses in the customized list or select
individual licenses from the list. Applicants also will be able to
select licenses from one customized list and then create additional
customized lists to select additional licenses. There will be no
opportunity to change license selection after the short-form filing
deadline. It is critically important that an applicant confirm its
license selections before submitting its short-form application because
the FCC Auction System will not accept bids on licenses that an
applicant has not selected on its FCC Form 175.
C. Disclosure of Bidding Arrangements
51. Applicants will be required to identify in their short-form
applications all parties with whom they have entered into any
agreements, arrangements, or understandings of any kind relating to the
licenses being auctioned, including any agreements relating to post-
auction market structure. Applicants also will be required to certify
under penalty of perjury in their short-form applications that they
have not entered and will not enter into any explicit or implicit
agreements, arrangements or understandings of any kind with any
parties, other than those identified in the application, regarding the
amount of their bids, bidding strategies, or the particular licenses on
which they will or will not bid. If an applicant has had discussions,
but has not reached a joint bidding agreement by the short-form
application filing deadline, it would not include the names of parties
to the discussions on its application and may not continue such
discussions with any applicants after the deadline.
52. After the filing of short-form applications, the Commission's
rules do not prohibit a party holding a non-controlling, attributable
interest in one applicant from acquiring an ownership interest in or
entering into a joint bidding arrangement with other applicants
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 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. Further,
compliance with the disclosure requirements of the Commission's anti-
collusion rule will not insulate a party from enforcement of the
antitrust laws.
D. Ownership Disclosure Requirements
53. All applicants must comply with the uniform part 1 ownership
disclosure standards and provide information required by 47 CFR 1.2105
and 1.2112. Specifically, in completing the short-form application,
applicants will be required to fully disclose information on the real
party or parties-in-interest and ownership structure of the applicant.
The ownership disclosure standards for the short form are prescribed in
Sec. Sec. 1.2105 and 1.2112. Each applicant is responsible for
information submitted in its short-form application being complete and
accurate.
54. An applicant's most current ownership information on file with
the Commission, if in an electronic format compatible with the short-
form application (FCC Form 175) (such as information submitted in an
on-line FCC Form 602 or in an FCC Form 175 filed for a previous auction
using ISAS) will automatically be entered into the applicant's short-
form application. Applicants are responsible for ensuring that the
information submitted in their FCC Form 175 for Auction No. 69 is
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 the short-form application.
Applicants can update any information that was entered automatically
and needs to be changed directly in the short-form application.
E. Bidding Credit Revenue Disclosures
55. To determine which applicants qualify for bidding credits as
small businesses or very small businesses, the Commission considers the
gross revenues of the applicant, its affiliates, its controlling
interests, and the affiliates of its controlling interests. Therefore,
entities applying to bid as small businesses or very small businesses
(or consortia of small businesses or very small businesses) will be
required to disclose on their FCC Form 175 short-form applications the
gross revenues of each of the following for the preceding three years:
(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 of such entities and individuals for
the preceding three years do not exceed the applicable limit is not
sufficient. In order to comply with the Commission's 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 or very small businesses, this
information must be provided for each consortium member.
56. Controlling interests of an applicant include individuals and
entities with either de facto or 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: (1) The entity constitutes or appoints more than 50 percent of
the board of directors or management committee; (2) the entity has
authority to appoint, promote, demote, and fire senior executives that
control the day-to-day activities of the licensee; and (3)
[[Page 67589]]
the entity plays an integral role in management decisions.
57. Officers and directors of an applicant are also considered to
have controlling interest in the applicant. The Commission does not
impose specific equity requirements on controlling interest holders.
Once the principals or entities with a controlling interest are
determined, only the revenues of those principals or entities, the
affiliates of those principals or entities, and the applicant and its
affiliates will be counted in determining small business eligibility.
58. In recent years the Commission has made modifications to its
rules governing the attribution of gross revenues for purposes of
determining small business eligibility. These changes include 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 has also clarified that,
in calculating an applicant's gross revenues under the controlling
interest standard, it will not attribute the personal net worth,
including personal income, of its officers and directors to the
applicant. However, to the extent that the officers and directors of
the applicant are controlling interest holders of other entities, the
gross revenues of those entities will be attributed to the applicant.
59. A consortium of small businesses or very small businesses is a
conglomerate organization composed of two or more entities, each of
which individually satisfies the definition of a small business or very
small business as those terms are defined in the service-specific
rules. Thus, each member of a consortium of small or very small
businesses that applies to participate in Auction No. 69 must
individually meet the definition of small business or very small
business adopted by the Commission for the 1.4 GHz band. Each
consortium member must disclose its gross revenues along with those of
its affiliates, its controlling interests, and the affiliates of its
controlling interests. Although the gross revenues of the consortium
members will not be aggregated for purposes of determining the
consortium's eligibility as a small business or very small business,
this information must be provided to ensure that each individual
consortium member qualifies for any bidding credit awarded to the
consortium. Significantly, the CSEA/Part 1 Report and Order modified
the procedure by which a consortium that is a winning bidder will apply
for a license. Applicants applying as consortia should review that
order, as well as 47 CFR 1.2107(g) and 1.2110(b)(3), for this license
application procedure.
F. Provisions Regarding Former and Current Defaulters
60. Each applicant must state under penalty of perjury on its
short-form application whether or not the applicant, its affiliates,
its controlling interests, and the affiliates of its controlling
interests, as defined by 47 CFR 1.2110, have ever been in default on
any Commission license or have ever been delinquent on any non-tax debt
owed to any Federal agency. In addition, each applicant must certify
under penalty of perjury on its short-form application that as of the
short-form filing deadline, the applicant, its affiliates, its
controlling interests, and the affiliates of its controlling interests,
as defined by Sec. 1.2110, are not in default on any payment for a
Commission license (including downpayments) and that they are 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.
61. Former defaulters--i.e., applicants, including any of their
affiliates, any of their controlling interests, or any of the
affiliates of its controlling interests, that in the past have
defaulted on any Commission license 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. 69, provided that they are otherwise
qualified. However, former defaulters are required to pay upfront
payments that are fifty percent more than the normal upfront payment
amounts.
62. Current defaulters--i.e., applicants, including any of their
affiliates, any of their controlling interests, or any of the
affiliates of their controlling interests, that are in default on any
payment for any Commission license (including downpayments) or are
delinquent on any non-tax debt owed to any Federal agency as of the
filing deadline for applications to participate in this auction--are
not eligible to bid in Auction No. 69.
63. Applicants are encouraged to review the Bureau's previous
guidance on default and delinquency disclosure requirements in the
context of the short-form application process. For example, it has been
determined that to the extent that Commission rules permit late payment
of regulatory or application fees accompanied by late fees, such debts
will become delinquent for purposes of 47 CFR 1.2105(a) and 1.2106(a)
only after the expiration of a final payment deadline. Therefore, with
respect to regulatory or application fees, the provisions of Sec. Sec.
1.2105(a) and 1.2106(a) regarding default and delinquency in connection
with competitive bidding are limited to circumstances in which the
relevant party has not complied with a final Commission payment
deadline. However, even where Commission rules expressly permit late
payment subject to payment of an additional late fee, and do not impose
a final payment deadline, the Commission may in some cases issue a
demand for payment by a date certain. Failure to comply with the terms
of a particular demand letter in the time period provided may render
the subject debt delinquent, notwithstanding rules generally permitting
late payments.
64. The Commission considers outstanding debts owed to the United
States Government, in any amount, to be a serious matter. The
Commission adopted rules, including a provision referred to as the red
light rule, that implement the Commission's obligations under the Debt
Collection Improvement Act of 1996, which governs the collection of
claims owed to the United States. Under the red light rule, the
Commission will not process applications and other requests for
benefits filed by parties that have outstanding debts owed to the
Commission. In the same rulemaking order, the Commission explicitly
declared, however, that the Commission's competitive bidding rules are
not affected by the red light rule. As a consequence, the Commission's
adoption of the red light rule does not alter the applicability of any
of the Commission's competitive bidding rules, including the provisions
and certifications of Sec. Sec. 1.2105 and 1.2106, with regard to
current and former defaults or delinquencies. Applicants are reminded,
however, that the Commission's Red Light Display System, which provides
information regarding debts owed to the Commission, may not be
determinative of an auction applicant's ability to comply with the
default and delinquency disclosure requirements of Sec. 1.2105. Thus,
while the red light rule ultimately may prevent the processing of long-
form applications by auction winners, an auction applicant's red light
[[Page 67590]]
status is not necessarily determinative of its eligibility to
participate in this auction or of its upfront payment obligation.
65. Prospective applicants in Auction No. 69 should note that any
long-form applications filed after the close of competitive bidding
will be reviewed for compliance with the Commission's red light rule,
and such review may result in the dismissal of a winning bidder's long-
form application. Applicants that have their long-form applications
dismissed will be deemed to have defaulted and will be subject to
default payments under 47 CFR 1.2104(g) and 1.2109(c).
G. Other Information
66. Applicants owned by member of minority groups and/or women, as
defined in Sec. 1.2110(c)(3), may identify themselves in filling out
their short-form applications regarding this status. This applicant
status information is collected for statistical purposes only and
assists the Commission in monitoring the participation in its auctions
of designated entities, which include rural telephone companies.
H. Minor Modifications to Short-Form Applications (FCC Form 175)
67. As of the deadline for filing short-form applications (FCC
Forms 175) at 6:00 p.m. ET on December 11, 2006, applicants are
permitted to make only minor changes to their applications. Applicants
are not permitted to make major modifications to their applications
(e.g., change their license selections, change control of the
applicant, change the certifying official, or claim eligibility for a
higher bidding credit). Permissible minor changes include deletion and
addition of authorized bidders and revision of addresses and telephone
numbers of the applicants and their contact persons.
68. Any application amendment and related statements of fact must
be certified by: (1) The applicant, if the applicant is an individual,
(2) one of the partners if the applicant is a partnership, (3) an
officer, director, or duly authorized employee, if the applicant is a
corporation, (4) by a member who is an officer, if the applicant is an
unincorporated association, (5) the trustee if the applicant is an
amateur radio service club, or (6) a duly elected or appointed official
who is authorized to make such certifications under the laws of the
applicable jurisdiction, if the applicant is a governmental entity.
69. An applicant must make permissible minor changes to its short-
form application as such changes are defined by 47 CFR 1.2105(b),
electronically, using the FCC Auction System. Applicants must click on
the Submit button in the FCC Auction System for the changes to be
submitted and considered by the Commission. Note: After the filing
window has closed, the auction system will not permit applicants to
make certain changes, such as legal classification, and bidding credit.
70. In addition, an applicant should submit a letter briefly
summarizing the changes and subsequently update their short-form
applications in ISAS as soon as possible. Any letter describing changes
to an applicant's short-form application should be submitted by
electronic mail to the following address: auction69@fcc.gov. The
electronic mail summarizing the changes must include a subject or
caption referring to Auction No. 69 and the name of the applicant. The
Bureau requests that parties format any attachments to electronic mail
as Adobe [supreg] Acrobat [supreg] (pdf) or Microsoft [supreg] Word
documents.
71. Applicants must not submit application-specific material
through the Commission's Electronic Comment Filing System (ECFS), which
was used for submitting comments regarding Auction No. 69 procedures.
I. Maintaining Current Information in Short-Form Applications (FCC Form
175)
72. 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. Changes that cause a loss of or reduction in eligibility
for a bidding credit must be reported immediately. If an amendment
reporting substantial changes is a major amendment, as defined by 47
CFR 1.2105, the amendment will not be accepted and may result in the
dismissal of the short-form application.
73. After the short-form filing deadline, applicants may make only
minor changes to their FCC Form 175 applications. Applicants must click
on the SUBMIT button in the FCC Auction System for the changes to be
submitted and considered by the Commission. In addition, applicants
must submit a letter, briefly summarizing the changes, by electronic
mail at the following address: auction69@fcc.gov. The electronic mail
summarizing the changes must include a subject or caption referring to
Auction No. 69 and the name of the applicant. The Bureau requests that
parties format any attachments to electronic mail as Adobe [supreg]
Acrobat [supreg] (pdf) or Microsoft [supreg] Word documents.
74. Applicants must not submit application-specific material
through the Commission's Electronic Comment Filing System (ECFS) into
the record of the proceeding concerning Auction No. 69 procedures.
III. Pre-Auction Procedures
A. Auction Seminar--November 29, 2006
75. On Wednesday, November 29, 2006, the FCC will sponsor a free
seminar for parties interested in participating in Auction No. 69 at
the FCC headquarters, 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 1.4 GHz band rules. The seminar will
also provide an opportunity for prospective bidders to ask questions of
FCC staff concerning the auction, auction procedures, filing
requirements and other matters related to this auction.
76. To register, please provide the information listed on
Attachment B of the Auction No. 69 Procedures Public Notice by Monday,
November 27, 2006. Registrations are accepted on a first-come, first-
served basis.
77. For individuals who are unable to attend, an Audio/Video
webcast of this seminar will be available from the FCC's Auction No. 69
Web page at https://wireless.fcc.gov/auctions/69/.
B. Short-Form Application (FCC Form 175)--Due Prior to 6 p.m. ET on
December 11, 2006
78. In order to be eligible to bid in this auction, applicants must
first submit an FCC Form 175 application electronically via the FCC
Auction System. This application must be received at the Commission
prior to 6 p.m. ET on December 11, 2006. 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.
79. Applications may generally be filed at any time beginning at
noon ET on November 29, 2006, and the filing window will close at 6
p.m. ET on December 11, 2006. Applicants are strongly encouraged to
file early and are responsible for allowing adequate time for filing
their applications. Applicants may update or amend their applications
multiple times until the filing deadline on December 11, 2006.
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80. Applicants must always click on the SUBMIT button on the
Certify & Submit screen of the electronic form to successfully submit
their FCC Form 175's or modifications. Any form that is not submitted
will not be reviewed by the FCC. Information about accessing,
completing, and viewing the FCC Form 175 is included in Attachment C of
the Auction No. 69 Procedures Public Notice. FCC Auctions Technical
Support is available.
C. Application Processing and Minor Corrections
81. 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 corrected applications.
82. After the short-form filing deadline on December 11, 2006,
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 control of the applicant, change certifying
official, or claim eligibility for a higher bidding credit).
D. Upfront Payments--Due January 12, 2007
83. 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 sent by facsimile to Mellon Bank in Pittsburgh, PA. All upfront
payments must be received in the proper account at Mellon Bank by 6
p.m. ET on January 12, 2007.
i. Making Auction Payments by Wire Transfer
84. Wire transfer payments must be received by 6 p.m. ET on January
12, 2007. 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.
85. At least one hour before placing the order for the wire
transfer (but on the same business day), applicants must send by
facsimile a completed FCC Form 159 (Revised 2/03) to Mellon Bank at
(412) 209-6045. On the facsimile cover sheet, the applicant must write
Wire Transfer--Auction Payment for Auction No. 69. In order to meet the
Commission's upfront payment deadline, an applicant's payment must be
credited to the Commission's account before 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.
86. Please note that: (1) All payments must be made in U.S.
dollars; (2) all payments must be made by wire transfer; (3) upfront
payments for Auction No. 69 go to a lockbox number different from the
lockboxes used in previous FCC auctions, and different from the lockbox
number to be used for post-auction payments; and (4) failure to deliver
the upfront payment by the January 12, 2007 deadline, will result in
dismissal of the application and disqualification from participation in
the auction.
ii. FCC Form 159
87. A completed FCC Remittance Advice Form (FCC Form 159, Revised
2/03) must be sent by facsimile 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. Detailed
instructions for completion of FCC Form 159 are included in Attachment
D of the Auction No. 69 Procedures Public Notice. The FCC Form 159 can
be completed electronically, but must be filed with Mellon Bank via
facsimile.
iii. Upfront Payments and Bidding Eligibility
88. In the Auction No. 69 Comment Public Notice, the Bureau
proposed that t