Auction of Broadband Radio Service (BRS) Licenses Scheduled for October 27, 2009; Notice and Filing Requirements, Minimum Opening Bids, Upfront Payments, and Other Procedures for Auction 86, 38018-38033 [E9-18198]
Download as PDF
38018
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 145 / Thursday, July 30, 2009 / Notices
point-to-point (non-relay)
communications between VRS users,
when a user switches providers but
wishes to use equipment supplied by
another default provider.
Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene H. Dortch,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E9–18260 Filed 7–29–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
[AU Docket No. 09–56; DA 09–1376]
Auction of Broadband Radio Service
(BRS) Licenses Scheduled for October
27, 2009; Notice and Filing
Requirements, Minimum Opening Bids,
Upfront Payments, and Other
Procedures for Auction 86
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
erowe on DSK5CLS3C1PROD with NOTICES
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Wireless Telecommunications Bureau,
Auctions and Spectrum Access Division:
For legal questions: Sayuri Rajapakse at
(202) 418–0660. For general auction
questions: Debbie Smith or Linda
Sanderson at (717) 338–2868.
Broadband Division: For licensing
information and service rule questions:
Nancy Zaczek (legal) or Stephen Zak
(technical) at 202–418–2487. To request
materials in accessible formats (Braille,
large print, electronic files or audio
format) for people with disabilities,
send an 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 86 Procedures
Public Notice, which was released on
June 26, 2009. The complete text of the
Auction 86 Procedures Public Notice,
including attachments, as well as
related Commission documents, are
available for public inspection and
15:34 Jul 29, 2009
Jkt 217001
I. General Information
A. Introduction
SUMMARY: This document announces the
procedures and minimum opening bids
for the upcoming auction of Broadband
Radio Service Licenses (Auction 86).
This document is intended to
familiarize prospective bidders with the
procedures and minimum opening bids
for the auction.
DATES: Applications to participate in
Auction 86 must be filed prior to 6:00
p.m. Eastern Time (ET) on August 18,
2009. Bidding for licenses in Auction 86
is scheduled to begin on October 27,
2009.
VerDate Nov<24>2008
copying from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. ET
Monday through Thursday and from 8
a.m. to 11:30 a.m. ET on Fridays in the
FCC Reference Information Center, 445
12th Street, SW., Room CY–A257,
Washington, DC 20554. The Auction 86
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,
using document number DA 09–1376
for the Auction 86 Procedures Public
Notice. The Auction 86 Procedures
Public Notice and related documents are
also available on the Internet at the
Commission’s Web site: https://
wireless.fcc.gov/auctions/86/.
1. The Wireless Telecommunications
Bureau (Bureau) announces the
procedures and minimum opening bid
amounts for the upcoming auction of
licenses for unassigned Broadband
Radio Service (BR) spectrum. This
auction, which is designated as Auction
86, is scheduled to commence on
October 27, 2009. Auction 86 will offer
78 licenses. On April 24, 2009 the
Bureau released a public notice seeking
comment on competitive bidding
procedures to be used in Auction 86.
Interested parties submitted 7 comments
and 4 reply comments in response to the
Auction 86 Comment Public Notice 74
FR 22166, May 12, 2009.
i. Licenses To Be Offered in Auction 86
2. The licenses to be offered in
Auction 86 consist of the available
spectrum in 78 BRS service areas. BRS
service areas are BTAs or additional
service areas similar to BTAs adopted
by the Commission. In the BRS/EBS 4th
MO&O, the Commission amended its
rules to establish Gulf of Mexico service
areas for BRS, and Auction 86 therefore
includes licenses for three BRS service
areas in the Gulf of Mexico. A complete
list of licenses available for Auction 86
is included as Attachment A of the
Auction 86 Procedures Public Notice.
3. Two commenters sought the
removal of certain licenses from the
Auction 86 inventory: SarasotaBradenton, Florida, BTA 408;
Burlington, Vermont, BTA 063; and
Rutland-Bennington, Vermont, BTA
388. The Bureau does not believe that
the public interest would be served by
the removal of the licenses from the
auction. Therefore the Bureau declines
PO 00000
Frm 00040
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
to remove these three licenses from the
Auction 86 inventory.
B. License Descriptions
4. Where unencumbered, the licenses
to be auctioned consist of 76.5
megahertz of spectrum at 2496–2502,
2602–2615, and 2616–2673.5 MHz. We
note that the licenses issued pursuant to
this auction will be issued pursuant to
the post-transition band plan contained
in Section 27.5(i)(2) of the
Commission’s rules. A table showing
the channelization of this spectrum is
included as Attachment B of the
Auction 86 Procedures Public Notice.
C. Rules and Disclaimers
i. Relevant Authority
5. Prospective applicants must
familiarize themselves thoroughly with
the Commission’s general competitive
bidding as well as decisions in
proceedings regarding competitive
bidding procedures, application
requirements, and obligations of
Commission licensees.
6. Commenters sought a revision of
the performance requirement set forth in
the BRS service rules. 47 CFR 27.14(o)
provides that a BRS licensee must
demonstrate substantial service in its
service area no later than May 1, 2011.
Other commenters oppose the proposal,
contending that it would not be in the
public interest. The requests to change
the BRS service rules are beyond the
scope of the public notice regarding the
procedures for Auction 86. Any such
rule change would require action by the
full Commission. Absent such action,
new licensees will be subject to the
requirements set forth in the current
rules.
ii. Prohibition of Collusion; Compliance
With Antitrust Laws
7. To ensure the competitiveness of
the auction process, 47 CFR 1.2105(c) of
the Commission’s rules prohibits
auction applicants 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 Form 175) as parties
with whom they have entered into
agreements pursuant to 47 CFR
1.2105(a)(2)(viii).
a. Entities Subject to Section 1.2105
8. The anti-collusion rule will apply
to any applicants that submit short-form
applications seeking to participate in a
Commission auction and select licenses
in the same markets. In Auction 86, the
rule would prohibit any applicants that
have selected any of the same licenses
E:\FR\FM\30JYN1.SGM
30JYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 145 / Thursday, July 30, 2009 / Notices
in their short form applications from
communicating absent an agreement.
9. Under the terms of the rule,
applicants that have applied for licenses
covering the same markets—unless they
have identified each other on their short
form applications as parties with whom
they have entered into agreements
under 47 CFR 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 applies to all applicants
regardless of whether such applicants
become qualified bidders or actually
bid.
10. For purposes of this prohibition,
47 CFR 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.
11. Information concerning
applicants’ license selections will not be
available to the public. Therefore, the
Commission will inform each applicant
by letter of the identity of each of the
other applicants that has applied for
licenses covering any of the same
geographic areas as the licenses that it
has selected in its short-form
application.
b. Prohibition Applies Until Down
Payment Deadline
12. 47 CFR 1.2105(c)’s anti-collusion
prohibition begins at the short-form
application filing deadline and ends at
the down payment deadline after the
auction.
erowe on DSK5CLS3C1PROD with NOTICES
c. Prohibited Communications
13. Applicants for the upcoming
Auction 86 and other parties that may
be engaged in discussion with such
applicants are cautioned on the need to
comply with the Commission’s anticollusion rule, 47 CFR 1.2105(c). The
anti-collusion rule prohibits not only a
communication about an applicant’s
own bids or bidding strategy, but also a
communication of another applicant’s
bids or bidding strategy. While the anticollusion rule provisions do not
prohibit business negotiations among
auction applicants, applicants must
remain vigilant so as not to
communicate directly or indirectly
information that affects, or could affect,
VerDate Nov<24>2008
15:34 Jul 29, 2009
Jkt 217001
bids or bidding strategy, or the
negotiation of settlement agreements.
14. The Commission remains vigilant
about prohibited communications
taking place in other situations. For
example, 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.
15. Applicants are hereby placed on
notice that public disclosure of
information relating to bidder interests
and bidder identities that is confidential
at the time of disclosure may violate the
anti-collusion rule. This is so even
though similar types of information
were revealed prior to and during other
Commission auctions subject to
different information procedures.
Bidders should use caution in their
dealings with other parties, 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 for Auction
86, a qualified bidder’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 rule violation. Similarly, an
applicant’s public statement of intent
not to participate in Auction 86 bidding
could also violate the rule.
16. Applicants selecting 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
(e.g., law firm or engineering firm or
consulting firm), 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.
17. A violation of the anti-collusion
rule could occur in other contexts, such
PO 00000
Frm 00041
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
38019
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.
18. In addition, when completing
short-form applications, applicants
should avoid any statements or
disclosures that may violate the
Commission’s anti-collusion rule,
particularly in light of the limited
information procedures in effect for
Auction 86. Specifically, applicants
should avoid including any information
in their short-form applications that
might convey information regarding
their license selection, such as using
applicant names that refer to licenses
being offered, referring to certain
licenses or markets in describing
bidding agreements, or including any
information in attachments that may
otherwise disclose applicants’ license
selections.
d. Disclosure of Bidding Agreements
and Arrangements
19. 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
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 47
CFR 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 for licenses
covering any of the same geographic
areas after the short-form filing
deadline.
e. Anti-Collusion Certification
20. By electronically submitting a
short-form application following the
electronic filing procedures set forth in
Attachment C to the Auction 86
Procedures Public Notice, each
applicant certifies its compliance with
47 CFR 1.2105(c). However, the Bureau
E:\FR\FM\30JYN1.SGM
30JYN1
38020
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 145 / Thursday, July 30, 2009 / Notices
cautions that merely filing a certifying
statement as part of an application will
not outweigh specific evidence that
collusive behavior has occurred, nor
will it preclude the initiation of an
investigation when warranted. The
Commission has stated that it intends to
scrutinize carefully any instances in
which bidding patterns suggest that
collusion may be occurring. Any
applicant found to have violated the
anti-collusion rule may be subject to
sanctions.
erowe on DSK5CLS3C1PROD with NOTICES
f. Antitrust Laws
21. Applicants are also reminded that,
regardless of compliance with the
Commission’s rules, they remain subject
to the antitrust laws, which are designed
to prevent anticompetitive behavior in
the marketplace. 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 suggest that violations of
the federal antitrust laws may have
occurred, 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.
g. Duty To Report Prohibited
Communications; Reporting Procedure
22. If an applicant makes or receives
a communication that appears to violate
the anti-collusion rule, it must report
such communication in writing to the
Commission immediately, and in no
case later than five business days after
the communication occurs. 47 CFR
1.2105(c)(6) provides that any applicant
that makes or receives a communication
prohibited by 47 CFR 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.
The Commission has clarified that each
applicant’s obligation to report any such
communication continues beyond the
five-day period after the communication
is made, even if the report is not made
within the five-day period.
23. In addition, 47 CFR 1.65 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
VerDate Nov<24>2008
15:34 Jul 29, 2009
Jkt 217001
be of decisional significance to that
application. Thus, 47 CFR 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 47 CFR 1.65 to report to the
Commission any communications of
bids or bidding strategies that result in
a bidding arrangement, agreement, or
understanding after the short-form filing
application deadline.
24. Parties reporting communications
pursuant to 47 CFR 1.65 or 1.2105(c)(6)
must take care to ensure that any such
reports of prohibited communications
do not themselves give rise to a
violation of the anti-collusion rule. For
example, a party’s report of a prohibited
communication could violate the rule
by communicating prohibited
information to other applicants through
the use of Commission filing procedures
that would allow such materials to be
made available for public inspection. A
party seeking to report such prohibited
communications should consider
submitting its report with a request that
the report or portions of the submission
be withheld from public inspection.
Such parties are also encouraged to
consult with the Auctions and Spectrum
Access Division staff if they have any
questions about the procedures for
submitting such reports.
25. Applicants must be aware that
failure to comply with the
Commission’s rules can result in
enforcement action.
h. Winning Bidders Must Disclose
Terms of Agreements
26. 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, and other arrangements
entered into relating to the competitive
bidding process.
i. Additional Information Concerning
Anti-Collusion Rule
27. A summary listing of documents
issued by the Commission and the
Bureau addressing the application of the
anti-collusion rule may be found in
Attachment F of the Auction 86
Procedures Public Notice. These
documents are available on the
Commission’s auction anti-collusion
Web page.
iii. Incumbency Issues
28. There are pre-existing BRS sitebased incumbent licenses. The service
area for each of those incumbent
licenses is a 35-mile circle centered at
PO 00000
Frm 00042
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
the station’s reference coordinates, and
is bounded by the chord(s) drawn
between the intersection points of the
licensee’s previous protected service
area and those of respective adjacent
market, co-channel licensees. Any
licenses granted pursuant to this auction
will not include the geographic service
areas of any co-channel incumbent sitebased licenses. If a site-based incumbent
license cancels or is forfeited, however,
the right to operate within that area
shall revert to the overlay licensee that
holds the license for the BRS service
area that encompasses that BTA. BRS
incumbent licenses are entitled to
interference protection in accordance
with the applicable technical rules. BRS
licenses have previously been awarded
through auction (Auction 6) for BTAs
other than those in this auction, and the
previously-awarded licenses may have
since been assigned or partitioned. Such
BRS geographic area licenses authorize
operation within a BTA and provide the
licensee with rights similar to those
being offered in Auction 86.
29. In addition, on the E and F
channel groups, grandfathered
Educational Broadband Service (EBS)
licenses originally issued on those
channels prior to 1983 may continue to
operate indefinitely. Such grandfathered
EBS licenses must be protected in
accordance with the applicable
technical rules.
30. Operations within the 2614–2618
MHz band are secondary to adjacent
channel operations.
31. Finally, in the 2496–2500 MHz
band, BRS licensees must share the
band on a co-primary basis with the
Code Division Multiple Access, Mobile
Satellite Service, grandfathered
Broadcast Auxiliary Service stations,
and grandfathered land mobile and
microwave licenses licensed under Parts
90 and 101 of the Commission’s rules,
respectively. In addition, the 2400–2500
MHz band is allocated for use by
Industrial, Scientific, and Medical
equipment under Part 18 of the
Commission’s rules.
32. A comment was filed noting that
in certain markets, the transition to the
new band plan is not yet complete, and
in those markets, new licensees may not
be able to operate on some or all of their
spectrum until the transition process is
completed. Under the Commission’s
rules, until a transition has been
completed in a BTA, existing licensees
operating under the pre-transition band
plan are entitled to interference
protection in accordance with the
applicable technical rules. Potential
bidders can check on the status of
transition in a market by checking the
Commission’s Electronic Comment
E:\FR\FM\30JYN1.SGM
30JYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 145 / Thursday, July 30, 2009 / Notices
Filing System and reviewing WT Docket
No. 06–136. If a post-transition
notification has been filed for a BTA,
the transition has been completed in
that BTA. In a BTA where no transition
initiation plan had been filed by January
21, 2009, for a BTA, existing licensees
in the BTA could file notifications with
the Commission by April 21, 2009, of an
intent to self-transition. Once a licensee
completes a self-transition, it is required
to modify its license to reflect its
operation pursuant to the new band
plan. Potential bidders can review the
Universal Licensing System to see if a
license has been modified to operate
pursuant to the new band plan.
33. The commenter also asked that
potential bidders be reminded of
obligations to reimburse certain
licensees of their costs in transitioning
to the new BRS/EBS band plan. Under
the Commission’s rules, BRS licensees
are responsible for reimbursing
transition proponents or selftransitioning EBS licensees in
accordance with the Commission’s
rules. Potential bidders should be aware
that in BTAs where the transition to the
new band plan has not yet been
completed as of the date licenses are
issued pursuant to this auction, they
may be required to reimburse eligible
licensees for a pro rata share of
transition costs.
erowe on DSK5CLS3C1PROD with NOTICES
a. International Coordination
34. BRS licensees must individually
apply for and receive a separate license
for each transmitter if the proposed
operation requires coordination with
either Mexico or Canada. Potential
bidders seeking licenses in Auction 86
for geographic areas that are near the
Canadian or Mexican borders are
encouraged to consult all international
agreements with Canada and Mexico.
We also note that the current agreement
with Mexico does not provide for twoway operation in the border area. If the
agreements with Mexico or Canada are
modified in the future, licensees must
likewise comply with these
modifications.
b. Quiet Zones
35. BRS licensees must individually
apply for and receive a separate license
for each transmitter if the proposed
operation would affect the radio quiet
zones set forth in the Commission’s
rules.
iv. Due Diligence
36. The Bureau cautions potential
applicants formulating their bidding
strategies to investigate and consider the
extent to which these frequencies are
occupied. For example, there are
VerDate Nov<24>2008
15:34 Jul 29, 2009
Jkt 217001
incumbent operations already licensed
and operating in the band that must be
protected. These limitations may restrict
the ability of BRS licensees to use
certain portions of the electromagnetic
spectrum or provide service to certain
areas in their geographic license areas.
Bidders should become familiar with
the status of these operations and
applicable Commission rules, orders
and any pending proceedings related to
the service, in order to make reasoned,
appropriate decisions about their
participation in this auction and their
bidding strategy.
37. 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
licenses being offered in this auction.
The Commission makes no
representations or warranties about the
use of this spectrum for particular
services. Applicants should be aware
that a Commission auction represents an
opportunity to become a licensee
subject to certain conditions and
regulations. The auction does not
constitute an endorsement by the
Commission of any particular service,
technology, or product, nor does a
Commission license constitute a
guarantee of business success.
Applicants should perform their
individual due diligence before
proceeding as they would with any new
business venture.
38. Potential bidders are strongly
encouraged to conduct their own
research prior to the beginning of
bidding in Auction 86 in order to
determine the existence of any pending
legislative, administrative or judicial
proceedings that might affect their
decision regarding participation in the
auction. Participants in Auction 86 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 as well
as other applicable Federal, state, and
local laws.
39. Applicants should also be aware
that certain pending and future
proceedings, including rulemaking
proceedings or petitions for rulemaking,
applications (including those for
modification), requests for special
temporary authority, waiver requests,
petitions to deny, petitions for
reconsideration, informal oppositions,
and applications for review, before the
PO 00000
Frm 00043
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
38021
Commission may relate to particular
applicants or incumbent licensees or the
licenses available in Auction 86.
Pending and future judicial proceedings
may also relate to particular applicants
or incumbent licensees, or the licenses
available in Auction 86. 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.
40. 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 86.
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.
41. Applicants are solely responsible
for identifying associated risks and for
investigating and evaluating the degree
to which such matters may affect their
ability to bid on, otherwise acquire, or
make use of licenses being offered.
42. Applicants may obtain
information about licenses available in
Auction 86 through the Bureau’s online
licensing databases at https://
wireless.fcc.gov/uls. Applicants may
query the database online and download
a copy of their search results if desired.
Detailed instructions on using License
Search (including frequency searches
and the GeoSearch capability) and
downloading query results are available
online by selecting the ‘‘?’’ button at the
upper right-hand corner of the License
Search screen or by going to the
Universal Licensing System (ULS)
support site at https://esupport.fcc.gov/
licensing.htm. Applicants should direct
questions regarding the ULS search
capabilities to the FCC ULS Technical
Support hotline at (877) 480–3201,
option two. The hotline is available to
assist with questions Monday through
Friday, from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. ET. In
order to provide better service to the
public, all calls to the hotline are
recorded.
43. The Commission makes no
representations or guarantees regarding
the accuracy or completeness of
information in its databases or any third
party databases, including, for example,
court docketing systems. 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
E:\FR\FM\30JYN1.SGM
30JYN1
38022
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 145 / Thursday, July 30, 2009 / Notices
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.
44. Potential applicants are strongly
encouraged to physically inspect any
prospective sites located in, or near, the
geographic area for which they plan to
bid, and also to familiarize themselves
with the environmental review
obligations.
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.
v. Use of Integrated Spectrum Auction
System
45. The Commission will make
available a browser-based bidding
system to allow bidders to participate in
Auction 86 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
vi. Environmental Review Requirements
46. 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.
50. Those wishing to participate in
this auction must: (1) submit a shortform application (FCC Form 175)
electronically prior to 6:00 p.m. ET,
August 18, 2009; (2) submit a sufficient
upfront payment and an FCC
Remittance Advice Form (FCC Form
159) by 6:00 p.m. ET, September 24,
2009 and (3) comply with all provisions
outlined in the Auction 86 Procedures
Public Notice and applicable
Commission rules.
II. Short-Form Application (FCC Form
175) Requirements
erowe on DSK5CLS3C1PROD with NOTICES
A. General Information Regarding
Short-Form Applications
51. Entities seeking licenses available
in Auction 86 must file a short-form
application electronically via the FCC
Auction System prior to 6 p.m. ET on
August 18, 2009, following the
procedures prescribed in Attachment C
of the Auction 86 Procedures Public
Notice. Applicants filing a short-form
application are subject to the
Commission’s anti-collusion rules
beginning on the deadline for filing. The
information provided in its short-form
VerDate Nov<24>2008
15:34 Jul 29, 2009
Jkt 217001
i. Auction Start Date
47. Bidding in Auction 86 will begin
on Tuesday, October 27, 2009, as
announced in the Auction 86 Comment
Public Notice. 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. Bidding Methodology
48. The bidding methodology for
Auction 86 will be simultaneous
multiple round (SMR) 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.
iii. Pre-Auction Dates and Deadlines
49. The following dates and deadlines
apply:
Auction Seminar .................................................................................................................................
Short-Form Application (FCC Form 175) Filing Window Opens ...................................................
Short-Form Application (FCC Form 175) Filing Window Deadline ...............................................
Upfront Payments (via wire transfer) ................................................................................................
Mock Auction .....................................................................................................................................
Auction Begins ....................................................................................................................................
iv. Requirements for Participation
D. Auction Specifics
application will be used in determining,
among other things, if the applicant is
eligible for a bidding credit.
52. Applicants bear full responsibility
for submitting accurate, complete and
timely short-form applications. All
applicants must certify on their shortform 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 all
the information that is required under
the Commission’s rules is included with
their short-form applications.
53. An entity may not submit more
than one short-form application for a
single auction. If a party submits
multiple short-form applications, only
one application may become qualified
to bid.
54. Applicants also should note that
submission of a short-form application
and any amendments thereto 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
PO 00000
Frm 00044
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
August 5, 2009.
August 5, 2009; 12:00 noon ET.
August 18, 2009; prior to 6:00 p.m. ET.
September 24, 2009; 6:00 p.m. ET.
October 23, 2009.
October 27, 2009.
of the application, its certifications, and
any attachments are true and correct. An
applicant cannot change the certifying
official to its 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.
B. License Selection
55. An applicant must select the
licenses on which it wants to bid from
the Eligible Licenses list on its shortform application. Applicants will not be
able to change their license selections
after the short-form application
deadline. Applicants interested in
participating in Auction 86 must have
selected license(s) available in the
respective auction by the short-form
application deadline. Applicants must
confirm their license selections before
the deadline for submitting short-form
applications. The FCC Auction System
will not accept bids from an applicant
on licenses that the applicant has not
selected on its short-form application.
E:\FR\FM\30JYN1.SGM
30JYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 145 / Thursday, July 30, 2009 / Notices
C. Disclosure of Bidding Arrangements
56. An applicant must identify in its
short-form application all parties with
whom it has 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.
57. 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 an agreement by the shortform 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.
58. 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, as discussed above,
compliance with the disclosure
requirements of the Commission’s anticollusion rule will not insulate a party
from enforcement of the antitrust laws.
erowe on DSK5CLS3C1PROD with NOTICES
D. Ownership Disclosure Requirements
59. All applicants must comply with
the uniform Part 1 ownership disclosure
standards and provide information
required by 47 CFR 1.2105 and 1.2112
of the Commission’s rules. 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 application are
prescribed in 47 CFR 1.2105 and 1.2112
of the Commission’s rules. Each
applicant is responsible for information
submitted in its short-form application
being complete and accurate.
60. 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 with an
ownership disclosure information report
(FCC Form 602) or in a short-form
application (FCC Form 175) filed for a
VerDate Nov<24>2008
15:34 Jul 29, 2009
Jkt 217001
previous auction using ISAS) will
automatically be entered into the
applicant’s short-form application. An
applicant is responsible for ensuring
that the information submitted in its
short-form application for Auction 86 is
complete and accurate. Accordingly,
applicants should carefully review any
information automatically entered to
confirm that it is complete and accurate
as of the Auction 86 deadline for filing
the short-form application. If any
information that was entered
automatically needs to be changed,
applicants must do so directly in the
short-form application.
E. Designated Entity Provisions
61. Eligible applicants in Auction 86
may claim designated entity status, as
an entrepreneur, a small business, or
very small business eligible for bidding
credits. Applicants should review
carefully the Commission’s recent
decisions regarding the designated
entity provisions.
i. Bidding Credits for Small and Very
Small Businesses
62. A bidding credit represents the
amount by which a bidder’s winning
bid will be discounted. For Auction 86,
bidding credits will be available to
entrepreneurs, small businesses and
very small businesses, and consortia
thereof.
63. The level of bidding credit is
determined 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; (2) a bidder with attributed average
annual gross revenues that exceed $3
million and do not exceed $15 million
for the preceding three years (very small
business) will receive a 25 percent
discount on its winning bid; and (3) a
bidder with attributed average annual
gross revenues that do not exceed $3
million for the preceding three years
(entrepreneur) will receive a 35 percent
discount on its winning bid.
ii. Attributable Interests
a. Controlling Interests
64. Controlling interests of an
applicant include individuals and
entities with either de facto or de jure
control of the applicant. Typically,
ownership of greater than 50 percent of
an entity’s voting stock evidences de
jure control. De facto control is
determined on a case-by-case basis.
b. Affiliates
65. Affiliates of an applicant or
controlling interest include an
PO 00000
Frm 00045
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
38023
individual or entity that: (1) Directly or
indirectly controls or has the power to
control the applicant; (2) is directly or
indirectly controlled by the applicant;
(3) is directly or indirectly controlled by
a third party that also controls or has the
power to control the applicant; or (4)
has an identity of interest with the
applicant. The Commission’s definition
of an affiliate of the applicant
encompasses both controlling interests
of the applicant and affiliates of
controlling interests of the applicant.
For more information regarding
affiliates, applicants should refer to 47
CFR 1.2110(c)(5) and Attachment C to
the Auction 86 Procedures Public
Notice.
c. Material Relationships
66. The Commission requires the
consideration of certain leasing and
resale (including wholesale)
relationships—referred to as material
relationships—in determining
designated entity eligibility, i.e., for
bidding credits. Material relationships
fall into two categories: Impermissible
and attributable.
67. An applicant or licensee has an
impermissible material relationship
when it has agreements with one or
more other entities for the lease or resale
(including under a wholesale
agreement) of, on a cumulative basis,
more than 50 percent of the spectrum
capacity of any of its licenses. If an
applicant or a licensee has an
impermissible material relationship, it
is, as a result, (i) ineligible for the award
of designated entity benefits and (ii)
subject to unjust enrichment on a
license-by-license basis.
68. An applicant or licensee has an
attributable material relationship when
it has one or more agreements with any
individual entity for the lease or resale
(including under a wholesale
agreement) of, on a cumulative basis,
more than 25 percent of the spectrum
capacity of any individual license held
by the applicant or licensee. The
attributable material relationship will
cause the gross revenues of that entity
and its attributable interest holders to be
attributed to the applicant or licensee
for the purposes of determining the
applicant’s or licensee’s (i) eligibility for
designated entity benefits and (ii)
liability for unjust enrichment on a
license-by-license basis.
69. The Commission grandfathered
material relationships in existence
before the release of the Designated
Entity Second Report and Order, 71 FR
26245, May 5, 2006, meaning that those
preexisting relationships alone would
not cause the Commission to examine a
designated entity’s ongoing eligibility
E:\FR\FM\30JYN1.SGM
30JYN1
38024
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 145 / Thursday, July 30, 2009 / Notices
for benefits or its liability for unjust
enrichment. The Commission did not,
however, grandfather preexisting
material relationships for
determinations of an applicant’s or
licensee’s designated entity eligibility
for future auctions or in the context of
future assignments, transfers of control,
spectrum leases, or other reportable
eligibility events. Rather, the occurrence
of any of those eligibility events after
the release date of the Designated Entity
Second Report and Order triggers a
reexamination of the applicant’s or
licensee’s designated entity eligibility,
taking into account all existing material
relationships, including those
previously grandfathered.
erowe on DSK5CLS3C1PROD with NOTICES
d. Gross Revenue Exceptions
70. In recent years the Commission
has also made other modifications to its
rules governing the attribution of gross
revenues for purposes of determining
designated entity eligibility. For
example, the Commission has 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.
71. The Commission has also
exempted from attribution to the
applicant the gross revenues of the
affiliates of a rural telephone
cooperative’s officers and directors, if
certain conditions specified in 47 CFR
1.2110(b)(3)(iii) of the Commission’s
rules are met. An applicant claiming
this exemption must provide in an
attachment an affirmative statement that
the applicant, affiliate and/or
controlling interest is an eligible rural
telephone cooperative within the
meaning of 47 CFR 1.2110(b)(3)(iii), and
must supply any additional information
as may be required to demonstrate
eligibility for the exemption from the
attribution rule. Applicants seeking to
claim this exemption must meet all of
the conditions.
e. Bidding Consortia
72. A consortium of small businesses,
very small businesses, or entrepreneurs
is a conglomerate organization
composed of two or more entities, each
of which individually satisfies the
definition of a small business, very
small business, or entrepreneur. Thus,
each member of a consortium of small
businesses, very small businesses, or
entrepreneurs that applies to participate
in Auction 86 must individually meet
the criteria for small businesses, very
small businesses, or entrepreneurs. Each
consortium member must disclose its
gross revenues along with those of its
VerDate Nov<24>2008
15:34 Jul 29, 2009
Jkt 217001
affiliates, its controlling interests, the
affiliates of its controlling interests, and
any entities having an attributable
material relationship with the member.
Although the gross revenues of the
consortium members will not be
aggregated for purposes of determining
the consortium’s eligibility as a small
business, very small business, or
entrepreneur this information must be
provided to ensure that each individual
consortium member qualifies for any
bidding credit awarded to the
consortium.
F. Tribal Lands Bidding Credit
73. To encourage the growth of
wireless services in federally recognized
tribal lands, the Commission has
implemented a tribal lands bidding
credit. Applicants do not provide
information regarding tribal lands
bidding credits on their short-form
applications. Instead, winning bidders
may apply for the tribal lands bidding
credit after the auction when they file
their more detailed, long-form
applications.
G. Provisions Regarding Former and
Current Defaulters
74. Current defaulters are not eligible
to participate in Auction 86, but former
defaulters can participate so long as
they are otherwise qualified and must
make upfront payments that are fifty
percent more than the normal upfront
payment amounts.
75. On the short-form application, an
applicant must certify under penalty of
perjury that it, its affiliates, its
controlling interests, and the affiliates of
its controlling interests, as defined by 47
CFR 1.2110, are not in default on any
payments for Commission licenses
(including down payments) and that it
is not delinquent on any non-tax debt
owed to any Federal agency. Each
applicant must also state under penalty
of perjury whether or not it, its affiliates,
its controlling interests, and the
affiliates of its controlling interests,
have ever been in default on any
Commission licenses or have ever been
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. These statements
and certifications are prerequisites to
submitting an application to participate
in an FCC auction.
76. Applicants are encouraged to
review the Bureau’s previous guidance
PO 00000
Frm 00046
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
on default and delinquency disclosure
requirements in the context of the shortform 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 47 CFR 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. Parties
are also encouraged to coordinate with
the Commission’s Office of Managing
Director or the Bureau’s Auctions and
Spectrum Access Division staff if they
have any questions about default and
delinquency disclosure requirements.
77. 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 47 CFR 1.2105 and
1.2106, with regard to current and
former defaults or delinquencies.
78. 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
47 CFR 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 status is not necessarily
determinative of its eligibility to
participate in an auction or of its
upfront payment obligation.
E:\FR\FM\30JYN1.SGM
30JYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 145 / Thursday, July 30, 2009 / Notices
H. Minor Modifications to Short-Form
Applications
79. Applicants are not permitted to
make major modifications to their shortform applications (e.g., change their
license selections, change control of the
applicant, change the certifying official,
or change their size to claim eligibility
for a higher bidding credit) after the
short-form application deadline. Thus,
any change in control of an applicant,
resulting from a merger for example,
will be considered a major modification
to the applicant’s short-form
application, which will consequently be
dismissed.
80. Applicants are, however,
permitted to make minor changes to
their short-form applications after the
filing deadline. Permissible minor
changes include, for example, deletion
and addition of authorized bidders (to a
maximum of three) and revision of
addresses and telephone numbers of the
applicants and their contact persons.
erowe on DSK5CLS3C1PROD with NOTICES
I. Maintaining Current Information in
Short-Form Applications
81. 47 CFR 1.65 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 major
amendment will not be accepted and
may result in the dismissal of the shortform application.
82. After the short-form filing
deadline, applicants may make only
minor changes to their short-form
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 e-mail at the following address:
auction86@fcc.gov. The e-mail
summarizing the changes must include
a subject or caption referring to Auction
86 and the name of the applicant. The
Bureau requests that parties format any
attachments to e-mail as Adobe®
Acrobat® (pdf) or Microsoft® Word
documents. Applicants must not submit
application-specific material through
ECFS. A party seeking to submit
information that might reflect nonpublic information, such as an
applicant’s license selections, upfront
payment amount or bidding eligibility,
VerDate Nov<24>2008
15:34 Jul 29, 2009
Jkt 217001
should consider submitting any such
information along with a request that
the filing or portions of the filing be
withheld from public inspection until
the end of the anti-collusion period.
III. Pre-Auction Procedures
A. Auction Seminar—August 5, 2009
83. On Wednesday, August 5, 2009,
the Commission will conduct a seminar
for parties interested in participating in
Auction 86 at FCC headquarters, located
at 445 12th Street, SW., Washington,
DC. The seminar will provide attendees
with information about pre-auction
procedures, completing short-form
applications, auction conduct, the FCC
Auction System, auction rules, and
Broadband Radio Service 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. To register, see
Attachment G of the Auction 86
Procedures Public Notice.
B. Short-Form Applications—Due Prior
to 6 p.m. ET on August 18, 2009
84. In order to be eligible to bid in this
auction, applicants must first follow the
procedures set forth in Attachment C of
the Auction 86 Procedures Public Notice
to submit a short-form application (FCC
Form 175) electronically via the FCC
Auction System. This application must
be received at the Commission prior to
6:00 p.m. ET on August 18, 2009. Late
applications will not be accepted.
C. Application Processing and Minor
Corrections
85. After the deadline for filing shortform applications, the Commission will
process all timely submitted
applications to determine which are
complete, and subsequently will issue a
public notice identifying (1) Those
applications that are complete, (2) those
applications that are rejected, and (3)
those applications that are incomplete
because of minor defects that may be
corrected. The public notice will
include the deadline for resubmitting
corrected applications.
86. After the August 18, 2009, shortform filing deadline, applicants may
make only minor corrections to their
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
change their size to claim eligibility for
a higher bidding credit).
87. Applicants should be aware the
Commission staff will communicate
PO 00000
Frm 00047
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
38025
only with an applicant’s contact person
or certifying official, as designated on
the applicant’s short-form application,
unless the applicant’s certifying official
or contact person notifies the
Commission in writing that applicant’s
counsel or other representative is
authorized to speak on its behalf.
Authorizations may be submitted by
e-mail at the following address:
auction86@fcc.gov.
D. Upfront Payments—Due September
24, 2009
88. In order to be eligible to bid in this
auction, applicants must submit an
upfront payment accompanied by an
FCC Remittance Advice Form (FCC
Form 159). After completing its shortform application, an applicant will have
access to an electronic version of FCC
Form 159 that can be printed and sent
by fax to U.S. Bank in St. Louis,
Missouri. All upfront payments must be
made as instructed in the Auction 86
Procedures Public Notice and must be
received in the proper account at U.S.
Bank before 6 p.m. ET on September 24,
2009.
i. Making Upfront Payments by Wire
Transfer
89. Wire transfer payments must be
received by 6 p.m. ET on September 24,
2009. No other payment method is
acceptable. 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.
90. At least one hour before placing
the order for the wire transfer (but on
the same business day), applicants must
fax a completed FCC Form 159 (Revised
2/03) to U.S. Bank at (314) 418–4232.
On the fax cover sheet, applicants
should write Wire Transfer—Auction
Payment for Auction 86. 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. The applicant is
responsible for obtaining confirmation
from its financial institution that U.S.
Bank has timely received its upfront
payment and deposited it in the proper
account.
91. 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 86 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
E:\FR\FM\30JYN1.SGM
30JYN1
38026
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 145 / Thursday, July 30, 2009 / Notices
deliver a sufficient upfront payment as
instructed by the September 24, 2009,
deadline will result in dismissal of the
application and disqualification from
participation in the auction
erowe on DSK5CLS3C1PROD with NOTICES
ii. FCC Form 159
92. A completed FCC Remittance
Advice Form (FCC Form 159, Revised
2/03) must be faxed to U.S. Bank to
accompany each upfront payment.
Proper completion of FCC Form 159 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 86 Procedures Public Notice.
An electronic pre-filled version of the
FCC Form 159 is available after
submitting the short-form application.
Payors using the pre-filled FCC Form
159 are responsible for ensuring that all
of the information on the form,
including payment amounts, is accurate.
The FCC Form 159 can be completed
electronically, but must be filed with
U.S. Bank by fax.
iii. Upfront Payments and Bidding
Eligibility
93. The Commission has delegated to
the Bureau the authority and discretion
to determine appropriate upfront
payments for each auction. Upfront
payments help deter frivolous or
insincere bidding, and provide the
Commission with a source of funds in
the event that the bidder incurs liability
during the auction.
94. Applicants that are former
defaulters must pay upfront payments
50 percent greater than non-former
defaulters. For purposes of this
calculation, the applicant includes the
applicant itself, its affiliates, its
controlling interests, and affiliates of its
controlling interests, as defined by 47
CFR 1.2110.
95. Applicants must make upfront
payments sufficient to obtain bidding
eligibility on the licenses on which they
will bid. The Bureau proposed, in the
Auction 86 Comment Public Notice, 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. Under the
Bureau’s proposal, in order to bid on a
particular license, a qualified bidder
must have selected the license on its
short-form application and 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 short-form
VerDate Nov<24>2008
15:34 Jul 29, 2009
Jkt 217001
application, 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
short-form application, but only enough
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.
96. The Bureau proposed to calculate
upfront payments for Auction 86 on a
license-by-license basis using the
following formula based on bandwidth
and license area population.
97. Several commenters addressed the
proposed upfront payment amounts as
well as minimum opening bids for this
auction. These commenters sought a
downward adjustment of the formulas
used to calculate upfront payments and
minimum opening bids. Commenters
offered two alternatives to the upfront
payment amounts and minimum
opening bids proposed in the Auction
86 Comment Public Notice. The
Commission received reply comments
and an ex parte submission regarding
the proposal.
98. Upon careful consideration of the
comments, reply comments, and ex
parte submission, as well as the history
of this particular service, the Bureau has
decided to exercise its discretion to
adjust upfront payments. In making this
change, the Bureau recognizes the
concerns expressed regarding relative
incumbency of the licenses. The revised
upfront payments are calculated on a
license-by-license basis using formulas
based on bandwidth, license area
population, and the encumbrance data,
as follows:
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 that are former
defaulters must 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.
iv. Applicant’s Wire Transfer
Information for Purposes of Refunds of
Upfront Payments
101. To ensure that refunds of upfront
payments are processed in an
expeditious manner, the Commission is
requesting that all pertinent information
be supplied. 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. For wire transfer
instructions see Auction 86 Procedures
Public Notice at paragraph 129.
E. Auction Registration
102. Approximately ten days before
the auction, the Bureau will issue a
public notice announcing all qualified
bidders for the auction. Qualified
bidders are those applicants with
submitted short-form applications that
are deemed complete and upfront
payments that are sufficient to make
Encumbrance
$/MHz-pop them eligible to bid.
103. All qualified bidders are
0%–20% ...................................
$0.0125
automatically registered for the auction.
21%–50% .................................
0.0100
51%–80% .................................
0.0050 Registration materials will be
above 80% ................................
0.0025 distributed prior to the auction by
overnight mail. The mailing will be sent
only to the contact person at the contact
99. The results of the formulas are
address listed in the short-form
subject to the Bureaus standard
rounding procedures and to a minimum application and will include the
SecurID® tokens that will be required to
of $5,000 per license, except for the
place bids, the Integrated Spectrum
licenses for BRS service areas in the
Auction System (ISAS) Bidder’s Guide,
Gulf of Mexico, for which the upfront
and the Auction Bidder Line phone
payments will be $20,000 as originally
number.
proposed. The upfront payment and
bidding units for each license are set
104. Qualified bidders that do not
forth in Attachment A.
receive this registration mailing will not
100. In calculating its upfront
be able to submit bids. Therefore, any
payment amount, an applicant should
qualified bidder that has not received
determine the maximum number of
this mailing by noon on Wednesday,
bidding units on which it may wish to
October 21, 2009, should call (717) 338–
be active (bid on or hold provisionally
2868. Receipt of this registration mailing
winning bids on) in any single round,
is critical to participating in the auction,
and submit an upfront payment amount and each applicant is responsible for
PO 00000
Frm 00048
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
E:\FR\FM\30JYN1.SGM
30JYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 145 / Thursday, July 30, 2009 / Notices
ensuring it has received all of the
registration material.
105. 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
SecurID tokens.
F. Remote Electronic Bidding
106. The Commission will conduct
this auction over the Internet, and
telephonic bidding will be available as
well. Only qualified bidders are
permitted to bid. Each applicant should
indicate its bidding preference—
electronic or telephonic—on its shortform application. In either case, each
authorized bidder must have its own
SecurID® token, which the Commission
will provide at no charge. Each
applicant with one authorized bidder
will be issued two SecurID® tokens,
while applicants with two or three
authorized bidders will be issued three
tokens. For security purposes, the
SecurID® tokens, 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 short-form application.
Each SecurID® token is tailored to a
specific auction. SecurID® tokens issued
for other auctions or obtained from a
source other than the FCC will not work
for Auction 86.
G. Mock Auction—October 23, 2009
107. All qualified bidders will be
eligible to participate in a mock auction
on Friday, October 23, 2009. 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
A. Auction Structure
erowe on DSK5CLS3C1PROD with NOTICES
i. Simultaneous Multiple Round
Auction
108. The Bureau will auction all
licenses in Auction 86 using the
Commission’s standard simultaneous
multi-round 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.
VerDate Nov<24>2008
15:34 Jul 29, 2009
Jkt 217001
ii. Information Available to Bidders
Before and During the Auction
109. In the Auction 86 Comment
Public Notice, the Bureau proposed to
withhold, until after the close of
bidding, public release of (1) Bidders’
license selections on their short-form
applications (FCC Form 175), (2) the
amounts of bidders’ upfront payments
and bidding eligibility, and (3)
information that may reveal the
identities of bidders placing bids and
taking other bidding-related actions.
110. The Bureau adopts the limited
information procedures proposed in the
Auction 86 Comment Public Notice.
Thus, after the conclusion of each
round, the Bureau will disclose all
relevant information about the bids
placed and/or withdrawn except the
identities of the bidders performing the
actions and the net amounts of the bids
placed or withdrawn. As in past
auctions conducted with limited
information procedures, the Bureau will
indicate, for each license, the minimum
acceptable bid amount for the next
round and whether the license has a
provisionally winning bid. After each
round, the Bureau will also release, for
each license, the number of bidders that
placed a bid on the license.
Furthermore, the Bureau will indicate
whether any proactive waivers were
submitted in each round, and the
Bureau will release the stage transition
percentage—the percentages of licenses
(as measured in bidding units) on which
there were new bids—for the round. In
addition, bidders can log in to the FCC
Auction System to see, after each round,
whether their own bids are
provisionally winning. The Bureau will
provide descriptions and/or samples of
publicly-available and bidder-specific
(non-public) results files prior to the
start of the auction.
111. Other Issues. Information
disclosure procedures established for
this auction will not interfere with the
administration of or compliance with
the Commission’s anti-collusion rule. 47
CFR Section 1.2105(c)(1) of the
Commission’s rules provides that after
the short-form application filing
deadline, all applicants for licenses in
any of the same geographic license areas
are prohibited from disclosing to each
other in any manner the substance of
bids or bidding strategies until after the
down payment deadline, subject to
specified exceptions.
112. In Auction 86, the Commission
will not disclose information regarding
license selection or the amounts of
bidders’ upfront payments and bidding
eligibility. As in the past, the
Commission will disclose the other
PO 00000
Frm 00049
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
38027
portions of applicants’ short-form
applications through its online database,
and certain application-based
information through public notices.
113. To assist applicants in
identifying other parties subject to the
anti-collusion rule, the Bureau will
notify separately each applicant that has
filed a short-form application to
participate in a pending auction
whether applicants in Auction 86 have
applied for licenses in any of the same
geographic areas as the applicant.
Specifically, after the Bureau conducts
its initial review of applications to
participate in Auction 86, it will send to
each applicant in Auction 86 a letter
that lists the other applicants that have
pending short-form applications for
licenses in any of the same geographic
areas. The list will identify the other
applicants by name but will not list
their license selections. As in past
auctions, additional information
regarding other applicants that is
needed to comply with 47 CFR
1.2105(c)—such as the identities of
other applicants’ controlling interests
and entities with a greater than ten
percent ownership interest—will be
available through the publicly
accessible online short-form application
database.
114. When completing short-form
applications, applicants should avoid
any statements or disclosures that may
violate the Commission’s anti-collusion
rule, particularly in light of the
Commission’s procedures regarding the
availability of certain information in
Auction 86. While applicants’ license
selection will not be disclosed until
after Auction 86 closes, the Commission
will disclose other portions of shortform applications through its online
database and public notices.
Accordingly, applicants should avoid
including any information in their
short-form applications that might
convey information regarding license
selections. For example, applicants
should avoid using applicant names that
refer to licenses being offered, referring
to certain licenses or markets in
describing bidding agreements, or
including any information in
attachments that may otherwise disclose
applicants’ license selections.
115. If an applicant is found to have
violated the Commission’s rules or
antitrust laws in connection with its
participation in the competitive bidding
process, the applicant may be subject to
various sanctions, including forfeiture
of its upfront payment, down payment,
or full bid amount and prohibition from
participating in future auctions.
116. The Bureau hereby warns
applicants that the direct or indirect
E:\FR\FM\30JYN1.SGM
30JYN1
38028
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 145 / Thursday, July 30, 2009 / Notices
erowe on DSK5CLS3C1PROD with NOTICES
communication to other applicants or
the public disclosure of non-public
information, (e.g., bid withdrawals,
proactive waivers submitted, reductions
in eligibility) could violate the
Commission’s anonymous bidding
procedures and the anti-collusion rule.
To the extent an applicant believes that
such a disclosure is required by law or
regulation, including regulations issued
by the Securities and Exchange
Commission, the Bureau strongly urges
that the applicant consult with the
Commission before making such
disclosure.
iii. Eligibility and Activity Rules
117. The Bureau will use upfront
payments to determine initial eligibility
for Auction 86. 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 listed in Attachment A of
the Auction 86 Procedures Public
Notice. Bidding units for a given license
do not change as prices rise during the
auction. A bidder’s upfront payment is
not attributed to specific licenses.
Rather, a bidder may place bids on any
of the licenses selected on its short-form
application 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. At a
minimum, an applicant’s upfront
payment must cover the bidding units
for at least one of the licenses it selected
on its short-form application. The total
upfront payment does not affect the
total dollar amount a bidder may bid on
any given license.
118. 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
minimum percentage of their current
bidding eligibility during each round of
the auction.
119. A bidder’s activity level in a
round is the sum of the bidding units
associated with any licenses covered by
new and provisionally winning bids. A
bidder is considered active on a license
VerDate Nov<24>2008
15:34 Jul 29, 2009
Jkt 217001
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.
120. 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
Commission adopts them for Auction
86. 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 additional bids
in the auction.
iv. Auction Stages
121. In the Auction 86 Comment
Public Notice, the Bureau proposed to
conduct the auction in two stages and
employ an activity rule. Under the
Bureau’s proposal a bidder desiring to
maintain its current bidding eligibility
would be required to be active on
licenses representing at least 90 percent
of its current bidding eligibility, during
each round of Stage One, and at least 98
percent of its current bidding eligibility
in Stage Two. The Commission received
no comments on this proposal.
122. The Bureau has the discretion to
further alter the activity requirements
before and/or during the auction as
circumstances warrant, and also has
other mechanisms by which it may
influence the speed of an auction. The
Bureau finds that two stages for an
activity requirement adequately
balances the desire to conclude the
auction quickly with giving sufficient
time for bidders to consider the status
of the bidding and to place bids.
Therefore, the Bureau adopts the two
stages.
123. Stage One: During the first stage
of the auction, a bidder desiring to
maintain its current bidding eligibility
will be required to be active on licenses
representing at least 90 percent of its
current bidding eligibility in each
bidding round. Failure to maintain the
required activity level will result in the
use of an activity rule waiver or, if the
bidder has no activity rule waivers
remaining, a reduction in the bidder’s
bidding eligibility in the next round.
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 tenninths (10/9).
PO 00000
Frm 00050
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
124. Stage Two: During the second
stage of the auction, a bidder desiring to
maintain its current bidding eligibility
is required to be active on 98 percent of
its current bidding eligibility. Failure to
maintain the required activity level will
result in the use of an activity rule
waiver or, if the bidder has no activity
rule waivers remaining, a reduction in
the bidder’s bidding eligibility in the
next round. 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 fiftyfortyninths (50/49).
Caution: Since activity requirements
increase in Stage Two, bidders must carefully
check their activity during the first round
following a stage transition to ensure that
they are meeting the increased activity
requirement. This is especially critical for
bidders that have provisionally winning bids
and do not plan to submit new bids. In past
auctions, some bidders have inadvertently
lost bidding eligibility or used an activity
rule waiver because they did not re-verify
their activity status at stage transitions.
Bidders may check their activity against the
required activity level by logging into the
FCC Auction System.
125. Because the foregoing procedures
have proven successful in maintaining
the proper pace in previous auctions,
the Bureau adopts them for Auction 86.
v. Stage Transitions
126. In the Auction 86 Comment
Public Notice, the Bureau proposed that
it would advance the auction to the next
stage (i.e., from Stage One to Stage Two)
after considering a variety of measures
of auction activity, including, but not
limited to, the percentages of licenses
(as measured in bidding units) on which
there are new bids, the number of new
bids, and the increase in revenue. The
Bureau further proposed that it would
retain the discretion to change the
activity requirements during the
auction. For example, the Bureau could
decide not to transition to Stage Two if
it believes the auction is progressing
satisfactorily under the Stage One
activity requirement, or to transition to
Stage Two with an activity requirement
that is higher or lower than the 98
percent. The Bureau proposed to alert
bidders of stage advancements by
announcement during the auction. The
Bureau received no comments on this
issue.
127. The Bureau adopts its proposal
for stage transitions. Thus, the auction
will start in Stage One. The Bureau will
regulate the pace of the auction by
announcement. The Bureau retains the
E:\FR\FM\30JYN1.SGM
30JYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 145 / Thursday, July 30, 2009 / Notices
discretion to transition the auction to
Stage Two, to add an additional stage
with a higher activity requirement, not
to transition to Stage Two, and to
transition to Stage Two with an activity
requirement that is higher or lower than
98 percent. This determination will be
based on a variety of measures of
auction activity, including, but not
limited to, the number of new bids and
the percentages of licenses (as measured
in bidding units) on which there are
new bids.
vi. Activity Rule Waivers
128. In the Auction 86 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.
129. Therefore, the Bureau adopts its
proposal to provide bidders with three
activity rule waivers.
erowe on DSK5CLS3C1PROD with NOTICES
vii. Auction Stopping Rules
130. For Auction 86, the Bureau
proposed to employ a simultaneous
stopping rule approach. A simultaneous
stopping rule means that all licenses
remain available for bidding until
bidding closes simultaneously on all
licenses. More specifically, bidding will
close simultaneously on all licenses
after the first round in which no bidder
submits any new bids, applies a
proactive waiver, or withdraws any
provisionally winning bids.
131. The Bureau also sought comment
on alternative versions of the
simultaneous stopping rule for Auction
86:
Option 1. The auction would close for
all licenses after the first round in
which no bidder applies a waiver,
withdraws a provisionally winning bid,
or places 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.
Option 2. The auction would end after
a specified number of additional
rounds. If the Bureau invokes this
special stopping rule, it will accept bids
in the specified final round(s) and the
auction will close.
Option 3. The auction would remain
open even if no bidder places any new
bids, applies a waiver, or withdraws any
provisionally winning bids. In this
event, the activity rule will apply as
usual, and a bidder with insufficient
activity will either lose bidding
eligibility or use a waiver.
VerDate Nov<24>2008
15:34 Jul 29, 2009
Jkt 217001
132. The Bureau proposed to exercise
these options only in circumstances
such as where the auction is proceeding
unusually slowly or quickly, where
there is minimal overall bidding
activity, or where it appears likely that
the auction will not close within a
reasonable period of time or will close
prematurely. The Bureau noted that
before exercising these options, it is
likely to attempt to change the pace of
the auction by, for example, changing
the number of bidding rounds per day
and/or changing minimum acceptable
bids. The Bureau proposed to retain the
discretion to exercise any of these
options with or without prior
announcement during the auction. The
Bureau received no comment on these
proposals, and the Bureau adopts them
for Auction 86.
viii. Auction Delay, Suspension, or
Cancellation
133. In the Auction 86 Comment
Public Notice, the Bureau proposed that,
by public notice or by announcement
during the auction, it may delay,
suspend, or cancel the auction in the
event of natural disaster, technical
obstacle, administrative or weather
necessity, evidence of an auction
security breach or unlawful bidding
activity, or for any other reason that
affects the fair and efficient conduct of
competitive bidding. The Bureau
received no comment on this issue. The
Bureau adopts its proposed rules
regarding auction delay, suspension or
cancellation.
B. Bidding Procedures
i. Round Structure
134. The initial schedule of bidding
rounds will be announced in the public
notice listing the qualified bidders,
which is released approximately 10
days before the start of the auction. Each
bidding round is followed by the release
of round results. Multiple bidding
rounds may be conducted in a given
day. Details regarding round results
formats and locations will also be
included in the qualified bidders public
notice.
135. 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, the amount of
time between rounds, or the number of
rounds per day, depending upon
bidding activity and other factors.
PO 00000
Frm 00051
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
38029
ii. Reserve Price and Minimum Opening
Bids
136. Section 309(j) of the
Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, calls upon the Commission to
prescribe methods by which a
reasonable reserve price will be required
or a minimum opening bid established
when applications for FCC licenses are
subject to auction (i.e., because they are
mutually exclusive), unless the
Commission determines that a reserve
price or minimum opening bid is not in
the public interest.
137. In the Auction 86 Comment
Public Notice, the Bureau did not
propose to establish a separate reserve
price for the licenses to be offered in
Auction 86. The Bureau, however, did
propose to establish minimum opening
bids for each license, reasoning that a
minimum opening bid, which has been
used on other auctions, is an effective
bidding tool for accelerating the
competitive bidding process.
Specifically, for Auction 86, the Bureau
proposed to calculate minimum opening
bid amounts on a license-by-license
basis using a formula based on
bandwidth and license area population
as follows:
$0.01 * MHz * BTA population with a
minimum of $20,000 per license
138. The Bureau sought comment on
this proposal and, in the alternative, on
whether, consistent with Section 309(j),
the public interest would be served by
having no minimum opening bids.
139. Several commenters sought a
downward adjustment in the formula
for calculating minimum opening bids
(as well as the formula for upfront
payments). Commenters offer two
alternatives to the upfront payment
amounts and minimum opening bids
proposed in the Auction 86 Comment
Public Notice.
140. In the Auction 86 Comment
Public Notice, the Bureau noted the
presence of pre-existing BRS site-based
incumbent licenses within some of the
geographic areas available in Auction
86. In its discussion of the proposed
minimum opening bid amounts, the
Bureau noted, it had not attempted to
adjust minimum opening bid amounts
for licenses based on precise levels of
incumbency within particular
geographic areas, and have instead
proposed a formula intended to reflect
overall incumbency levels within the
BRS service areas being offered.
141. Upon careful consideration of the
comments, reply comments, and ex
parte submission, as well as the history
of this particular service, the Bureau has
decided to exercise its discretion to
adjust minimum opening bids. In
E:\FR\FM\30JYN1.SGM
30JYN1
38030
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 145 / Thursday, July 30, 2009 / Notices
145. The percentage of the
provisionally winning bid used to
establish the minimum acceptable bid
amount is calculated at the end of each
round, based on an activity index. The
activity index is a weighted average of
(a) the number of bidders placing a bid
on the license, and (b) the activity index
from the prior round. Specifically, the
activity index is equal to a weighting
Encumbrance
$/MHz-pop factor times the number of bidders
placing a bid on the license in the most
0%–20% ...................................
0.0125 recent bidding round plus one minus
21%–50% .................................
0.0100 the weighting factor times the activity
51%–80% .................................
0.0050
index from the prior round. The
above 80% ................................
0.0025
additional percentage is determined as
one plus the activity index times a
142. The results of the formulas are
minimum percentage amount, with the
subject to the Bureaus standard
result not to exceed a maximum. The
rounding procedures and to a minimum
additional percentage is then multiplied
of $5,000 per license, except for the
by the provisionally winning bid
licenses for BRS service areas in the
amount to obtain the minimum
Gulf of Mexico, for which the minimum
acceptable bid for the next round.
opening bids will be $20,000 as
146. The Bureau proposed initially to
originally proposed. The specific
set the weighting factor at 0.5, the
minimum opening bid amounts for each minimum percentage (floor) at 0.1
license available in Auction 86
(10%), and the maximum percentage
calculated pursuant to the procedure
(ceiling) at 0.3 (30%). At these initial
described above are set forth in
settings, the minimum acceptable bid
Attachment A of the Auction 86
for a license will generally be between
Procedures Public Notice.
ten percent and thirty percent higher
than the provisionally winning bid,
iii. Bid Amounts
depending upon the bidding activity for
143. In the Auction 86 Comment
the license.
Public Notice, the Bureau proposed that
b. Additional Bid Amounts
in each round, eligible bidders be able
to place a bid on a given license using
147. Any additional bid amounts are
one or more pre-defined bid amounts.
calculated using the minimum
Under the proposal, the FCC Auction
acceptable bid amount and a bid
System interface will list the acceptable increment percentage—more
bid amounts for each license. The
specifically, by multiplying the
Commission received no comment on
minimum acceptable bid by one plus
this issue. Based on the Commission’s
successively higher multiples of the bid
experience in prior auctions, we adopt
increment percentage. If, for example,
the proposals for Auction 86.
the bid increment percentage is five
percent, the calculation of the first
a. Minimum Acceptable Bids
additional acceptable bid amount is
144. Under the Bureaus proposed
(minimum acceptable bid amount) * (1
procedures, the first of the acceptable
+ 0.05), or (minimum acceptable bid
bid amounts is called the minimum
amount) * 1.05; the second additional
acceptable bid amount. The minimum
acceptable bid amount equals the
acceptable bid amount for a license will minimum acceptable bid amount times
be equal to its minimum opening bid
one plus two times the bid increment
amount until there is a provisionally
percentage, or (minimum acceptable bid
winning bid on the license. After there
amount) * 1.1, etc. The Bureau will
is a provisionally winning bid for a
round the results of these calculations
license, the minimum acceptable bid
and the minimum acceptable bid
amount for that license will be equal to
calculations using the Bureau’s standard
the amount of the provisionally winning rounding procedures.
bid plus a percentage of that bid amount
148. For Auction 86, the Bureau
calculated using the formula. In general, proposed to set the bid increment
the percentage will be higher for a
percentage at 0.05, so that any
license receiving many bids than for a
additional bid amounts would increase
license receiving few bids. In the case of by approximately 5 percent of the
a license for which the provisionally
minimum acceptable bid. The Bureau
winning bid has been withdrawn, the
received no comments on this proposal.
minimum acceptable bid amount will
Therefore, the Bureau adopts its
equal the second highest bid received
proposal to begin the auction with a bid
for the license.
increment percentage of 0.05.
erowe on DSK5CLS3C1PROD with NOTICES
making this change, the Bureau
recognizes the concerns expressed
regarding relative incumbency of the
licenses. The revised minimum opening
bids are calculated on a license-bylicense basis using formulas based on
bandwidth, license area population, and
the encumbrance data submitted in the
ex parte filing as follows:
VerDate Nov<24>2008
15:34 Jul 29, 2009
Jkt 217001
PO 00000
Frm 00052
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
149. The Bureau also sought comment
on whether we should start Auction 86
with eight additional bid amounts (for a
total of nine bid amounts) or with fewer
or no additional bid amounts per
license. The Bureau received no
comments on this proposal. The Bureau
adopts its proposal, and Auction 86 will
begin with eight additional bid amounts
per license.
150. The Bureau also sought comment
on circumstances under which the
Bureau should cap (a) the amount by
which a minimum acceptable bid for a
license may increase compared with the
corresponding provisionally winning
bid, and (b) the amount by which an
additional bid amount may increase
compared with the immediately
preceding acceptable bid amount. No
commenters addressed this question.
151. The Bureau will start the auction
without a cap on the dollar amount by
which minimum acceptable bids and
additional bid amounts may increase.
The Bureau retains the discretion to
impose a cap on bid amounts.
152. The Bureau retains the discretion
to change the minimum acceptable bid
amounts, the additional bid amounts,
the cap on bid amounts, the number of
acceptable bid amounts, and the
parameters of the formulas used to
calculate minimum acceptable bid
amounts and additional bid amounts if
it determines that circumstances so
dictate. Further, the Bureau retains the
discretion to do so on a license-bylicense basis.
iv. Provisionally Winning Bids
153. 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.
154. In the Auction 86 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 (i.e., tied bids). No comments
were received on this proposal. Hence,
the Bureau adopts the proposal.
v. Bidding
155. All bidding will take place
remotely either through the FCC
Auction System or by telephonic
bidding. There will be no on-site
E:\FR\FM\30JYN1.SGM
30JYN1
erowe on DSK5CLS3C1PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 145 / Thursday, July 30, 2009 / Notices
bidding during Auction 86. 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. The length of a call to place a
telephonic bid may vary; please allow a
minimum of ten minutes.
156. 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.
157. 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® token and a
personal identification number 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.
158. In each round, eligible bidders
will be able to place bids on a given
license in one or more pre-defined bid
amounts. For each license, the FCC
Auction System will list the acceptable
bid amounts in a drop-down box.
Bidders use the drop-down 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.
159. 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.
160. During a round, an eligible
bidder may submit bids for as many
licenses as it wishes (providing that it
is eligible to bid), remove bids placed in
the current bidding round, withdraw
provisionally winning bids from
previous rounds, or permanently reduce
eligibility. If a bidder submits multiple
bids for the same license in the same
round—multiple bids on the exact same
license, 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.
161. Finally, bidders are cautioned to
select their bid amounts carefully
because, as explained below, bidders
that withdraw a provisionally winning
VerDate Nov<24>2008
15:34 Jul 29, 2009
Jkt 217001
bid from a previous round, even if the
bid was mistakenly or erroneously
made, are subject to bid withdrawal
payments.
vi. Bid Removal and Bid Withdrawal
162. In the Auction 86 Comment
Public Notice, the Commission
proposed bid removal and bid
withdrawal procedures. The Bureau
sought comment on permitting a bidder
to remove a bid before the close of the
round in which the bid was placed.
With respect to bid withdrawals, the
Commission proposed limiting each
bidder to withdrawals of provisionally
winning bids on licenses in no more
than one round during the course of the
auction. The round in which
withdrawals are used would be at each
bidder’s discretion.
163. The Bureau received no
comments on this issue. Therefore, the
Bureau adopts its proposal.
164. Bid Removal. 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.
165. Bid Withdrawal. Once a round
closes, a bidder may no longer remove
a bid. However, in a later round, a
bidder may withdraw provisionally
winning bids from previous rounds for
licenses using the withdraw bids
function in the FCC Auction System. 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 Section 1.2104(g).
Once a withdrawal is submitted during
a round, that withdrawal cannot be
unsubmitted even if the round has not
yet ended.
166. 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. The
Commission will serve as a placeholder
provisionally winning bidder on the
license until a new bid is submitted on
that license.
167. These procedures will permit
bidder flexibility during the auction,
and therefore the Bureau adopts them
for Auction 86.
PO 00000
Frm 00053
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
38031
168. 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 winning bid in the same or
subsequent auction(s). If there are
multiple bid withdrawals on a single
license and no subsequent higher bid is
placed and/or the license is not won in
the same auction, 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 subsequent
intervening withdrawn bid, in either the
same or subsequent auction(s), equals or
exceeds that withdrawn bid. Thus, a
bidder that withdraws a bid will not be
responsible for any final withdrawal
payment if there is a subsequent higher
bid in the same or subsequent
auction(s).
169. 47 CFR 1.2104(g)(1) of the rules
sets forth the payment obligations of a
bidder that withdraws a provisionally
winning bid on a license during the
course of an auction, and provides for
the assessment of interim bid
withdrawal payments. In the Auction 86
Comment Public Notice, the Bureau
proposed to establish the percentage at
15% for Auction 86 and sought
comment on the proposal.
170. The Bureau received no
comments on this issue and adopts its
proposal. The Commission will assess
an interim withdrawal payment equal to
15% of the amount of the withdrawn
bids. The 15% interim payment will be
applied toward any final bid withdrawal
payment that will be assessed after
subsequent auction of the license.
Assessing an interim bid withdrawal
payment ensures that the Commission
receives a minimal withdrawal payment
pending assessment of any final
withdrawal payment. Section 1.2104(g)
provides specific examples showing
application of the bid withdrawal
payment rule.
vii. Round Results
171. 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
E:\FR\FM\30JYN1.SGM
30JYN1
38032
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 145 / Thursday, July 30, 2009 / Notices
whether the license is FCC held. The
system will also provide an entire
license history detailing all activity that
has taken place on a license with the
ability to sort by round number. 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.
viii. Auction Announcements
172. 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
173. Shortly after bidding has ended,
the Commission will issue a public
notice declaring the auction closed,
identifying the winning bidders, and
establishing the deadlines for
submitting down payments, long-form
applications, final payments, and
ownership disclosure information
reports.
A. Down Payments
174. 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 86 to 20
percent of the net amount of its winning
bids (gross bids less any applicable
entrepreneur, small business or very
small business bidding credits).
erowe on DSK5CLS3C1PROD with NOTICES
B. Final Payments
175. Each winning bidder will be
required to submit the balance of the net
amount of its winning bids within 10
business days after the applicable
deadline for submitting down payments.
C. Long-Form Application (FCC Form
601)
176. 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 the
license(s) they won through Auction 86.
Winning bidders claiming eligibility for
a small business, very small business, or
entrepreneur bidding credit must
demonstrate their eligibility for the
bidding credit. Further filing
instructions will be provided to winning
bidders in the auction closing notice.
177. Winning bidders organized as
bidding consortia must comply with the
long-form application procedures
established in the CSEA/Part 1 Report
VerDate Nov<24>2008
15:34 Jul 29, 2009
Jkt 217001
and Order 71 FR 6992, February 10,
2006. Specifically, each member (or
group of members) of a winning
consortium seeking separate licenses
will be required to file a separate longform application for its respective
license(s). If the license is to be
partitioned or disaggregated, the
member (or group) filing the long-form
application must provide the relevant
partitioning or disaggregation agreement
in its long-form application. In addition,
if two or more consortium members
wish to be licensed together, they must
first form a legal business entity, and
any such entity must meet the
applicable designated entity criteria.
D. Ownership Disclosure Information
Report (FCC Form 602)
178. Within ten business days after
release of the auction closing notice,
each winning bidder must also comply
with the ownership reporting
requirements in 47 CFR 1.913, 1.919,
and 1.2112 of the Commission’s rules by
submitting an ownership disclosure
information report (FCC Form 602) with
its long-form application.
179. If an applicant already has a
complete and accurate FCC Form 602 on
file in ULS, it is not necessary to file a
new report, but applicants must verify
that the information on file with the
Commission is complete and accurate. If
the applicant does not have an FCC
Form 602 on file, or if it is not complete
and accurate, the applicant must submit
one.
180. When an applicant submits a
short-form application, ULS
automatically creates an ownership
record. This record is not an FCC Form
602, but may be used to pre-fill the FCC
Form 602 with the ownership
information submitted on the
applicant’s short-form application.
Applicants must review the pre-filled
information and confirm that it is
complete and accurate as of the filing
date of the long-form application before
certifying and submitting the FCC Form
602. Further instructions will be
provided to winning bidders in the
auction closing notice.
E. Tribal Lands Bidding Credit
181. 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
PO 00000
Frm 00054
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
credit for which a winning bidder may
qualify.
182. 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 license 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)(vii).
F. Default and Disqualification
183. 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.
184. 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 86
Comment Public Notice, the Bureau
proposed to set the additional default
payment for this auction at fifteen
percent of the applicable bid. The
Bureau received no comments on this
proposal and therefore adopts the
proposal.
185. Finally, 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
E:\FR\FM\30JYN1.SGM
30JYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 145 / Thursday, July 30, 2009 / Notices
that it deems necessary, including
institution of proceedings to revoke any
existing licenses held by the applicant.
G. Refund of Remaining Upfront
Payment Balance
186. After the auction, applicants that
are not winning bidders or are winning
bidders whose upfront payment
exceeded the total net amount of their
winning bids may be entitled to a
refund of some or all of their upfront
payment. All refunds will be returned to
the payer of record, as identified on the
FCC Form 159, unless the payor submits
written authorization instructing
otherwise. Bidders should not request a
refund of their upfront payments before
the Commission releases a public notice
declaring the auction closed, identifying
the winning bidders, and establishing
the deadlines for submitting down
payments, long-form applications, and
final payments.
Federal Communications Commission.
Gary D. Michaels,
Deputy Chief, Auctions and Spectrum Access
Division, WTB.
[FR Doc. E9–18198 Filed 7–29–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
GENERAL SERVICES
ADMINISTRATION
[OMB Control No. 3090–0044]
Public Buildings Service; Submission
for OMB Review; GSA Form 3453,
Application/Permit for Use of Space in
Public Buildings and Grounds
Public Buildings Service, GSA.
ACTION: Notice of request for comments
regarding a renewal to an existing OMB
clearance.
erowe on DSK5CLS3C1PROD with NOTICES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: Under the provisions of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. Chapter 35), the General Services
Administration will be submitting to the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) a request to review and approve
a renewal of a currently approved
information collection requirement
regarding GSA Form 3453, Application/
Permit for Use of Space in Public
Buildings and Grounds. A request for
public comments was published at 74
FR 19094, April 27, 2009. No comments
were received.
Public comments are particularly
invited on: Whether this collection of
information is necessary and whether it
will have practical utility; whether our
estimate of the public burden of this
collection of information is accurate,
and based on valid assumptions and
methodology; ways to enhance the
VerDate Nov<24>2008
15:34 Jul 29, 2009
Jkt 217001
38033
quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected.
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
DATES: Submit comments on or before:
August 31, 2009.
Food and Drug Administration
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Frank Giblin, Public Buildings Service,
at telephone (202) 501–1856, or via email to frank.giblin@gsa.gov.
Submit comments regarding
this burden estimate or any other aspect
of this collection of information,
including suggestions for reducing this
burden to GSA Desk Officer, OMB,
Room 10236, NEOB, Washington, DC
20503, and a copy to the Regulatory
Secretariat (VPR), General Services
Administration, 1800 F Street, NW.,
Room 4041, Washington, DC 20405.
Please cite OMB Control No. 3090–0044,
GSA Form 3453, Application/Permit for
Use of Space in Public Buildings and
Grounds, in all correspondence.
ADDRESSES:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Purpose
The general public uses GSA Form
3453, Application/Permit for Use of
Space in Public Buildings and Grounds,
to request the use of public space in
Federal buildings and on Federal
grounds for cultural, educational, or
recreational activities. A copy, sample,
or description of any material or item
proposed for distribution or display
must also accompany this request.
B. Annual Reporting Burden
Respondents: 8,000.
Responses per Respondent: 1.
Hours per Response: 0.05.
Total Burden Hours: 400.
Obtaining Copies of Proposals:
Requesters may obtain a copy of the
information collection documents from
the General Services Administration,
Regulatory Secretariat (VPR), 1800 F
Street, NW., Room 4041, Washington,
DC 20405, telephone (202) 501–4755.
Please cite OMB Control No. 3090–0044,
GSA Form 3453, Application/Permit for
Use of Space in Public Buildings and
Grounds, in all correspondence.
Dated: July 21, 2009.
Casey Coleman,
Chief Information Officer.
[FR Doc. E9–18129 Filed 7–29–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6820–34–P
PO 00000
Frm 00055
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
[Docket No. FDA–2009–D–0324]
International Conference on
Harmonisation; Draft Guidance on E16
Genomic Biomarkers Related to Drug
Response: Context, Structure, and
Format of Qualification Submissions;
Availability
AGENCY:
Food and Drug Administration,
HHS.
ACTION:
Notice.
SUMMARY: The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) is announcing the
availability of a draft guidance entitled
‘‘E16 Genomic Biomarkers Related to
Drug Response: Context, Structure, and
Format of Qualification Submissions.’’
The draft guidance was prepared under
the auspices of the International
Conference on Harmonisation of
Technical Requirements for Registration
of Pharmaceuticals for Human Use
(ICH). The draft guidance describes
recommendations regarding context,
structure, and format of regulatory
submissions for qualification of genomic
biomarkers. The draft guidance is
intended to foster consistency of
applications across regions and facilitate
joint discussions with and among
regulatory authorities.
DATES: Although you can comment on
any guidance at any time (see 21 CFR
10.115(g)(5)), to ensure that the agency
considers your comment on this draft
guidance before it begins work on the
final version of the guidance, submit
written or electronic comments on the
draft guidance by September 28, 2009.
ADDRESSES: Submit written requests for
single copies of the draft guidance to the
Division of Drug Information, Center for
Drug Evaluation and Research, Food
and Drug Administration, 10903 New
Hampshire Ave., Bldg. 51, rm. 2201,
Silver Spring, MD 20993–0002; or the
Office of Communication, Outreach and
Development (HFM–40), Center for
Biologics Evaluation and Research
(CBER), Food and Drug Administration,
1401 Rockville Pike, Rockville, MD
20852–1448. The guidance may also be
obtained by mail by calling CBER at 1–
800–835–4709 or 301–827–1800. Send
two self-addressed adhesive labels to
assist the office in processing your
requests. Submit written comments on
the draft guidance to the Division of
Dockets Management (HFA–305), Food
and Drug Administration, 5630 Fishers
Lane, rm. 1061, Rockville, MD 20852.
Submit electronic comments to https://
E:\FR\FM\30JYN1.SGM
30JYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 145 (Thursday, July 30, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 38018-38033]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-18198]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
[AU Docket No. 09-56; DA 09-1376]
Auction of Broadband Radio Service (BRS) Licenses Scheduled for
October 27, 2009; Notice and Filing Requirements, Minimum Opening Bids,
Upfront Payments, and Other Procedures for Auction 86
AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document announces the procedures and minimum opening
bids for the upcoming auction of Broadband Radio Service Licenses
(Auction 86). This document is intended to familiarize prospective
bidders with the procedures and minimum opening bids for the auction.
DATES: Applications to participate in Auction 86 must be filed prior to
6:00 p.m. Eastern Time (ET) on August 18, 2009. Bidding for licenses in
Auction 86 is scheduled to begin on October 27, 2009.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Wireless Telecommunications Bureau,
Auctions and Spectrum Access Division: For legal questions: Sayuri
Rajapakse at (202) 418-0660. For general auction questions: Debbie
Smith or Linda Sanderson at (717) 338-2868. Broadband Division: For
licensing information and service rule questions: Nancy Zaczek (legal)
or Stephen Zak (technical) at 202-418-2487. To request materials in
accessible formats (Braille, large print, electronic files or audio
format) for people with disabilities, send an 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 86
Procedures Public Notice, which was released on June 26, 2009. The
complete text of the Auction 86 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. ET Monday
through Thursday and from 8 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. ET on Fridays in the FCC
Reference Information Center, 445 12th Street, SW., Room CY-A257,
Washington, DC 20554. The Auction 86 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, using document number DA 09-1376 for the
Auction 86 Procedures Public Notice. The Auction 86 Procedures Public
Notice and related documents are also available on the Internet at the
Commission's Web site: https://wireless.fcc.gov/auctions/86/.
I. General Information
A. Introduction
1. The Wireless Telecommunications Bureau (Bureau) announces the
procedures and minimum opening bid amounts for the upcoming auction of
licenses for unassigned Broadband Radio Service (BR) spectrum. This
auction, which is designated as Auction 86, is scheduled to commence on
October 27, 2009. Auction 86 will offer 78 licenses. On April 24, 2009
the Bureau released a public notice seeking comment on competitive
bidding procedures to be used in Auction 86. Interested parties
submitted 7 comments and 4 reply comments in response to the Auction 86
Comment Public Notice 74 FR 22166, May 12, 2009.
i. Licenses To Be Offered in Auction 86
2. The licenses to be offered in Auction 86 consist of the
available spectrum in 78 BRS service areas. BRS service areas are BTAs
or additional service areas similar to BTAs adopted by the Commission.
In the BRS/EBS 4th MO&O, the Commission amended its rules to establish
Gulf of Mexico service areas for BRS, and Auction 86 therefore includes
licenses for three BRS service areas in the Gulf of Mexico. A complete
list of licenses available for Auction 86 is included as Attachment A
of the Auction 86 Procedures Public Notice.
3. Two commenters sought the removal of certain licenses from the
Auction 86 inventory: Sarasota-Bradenton, Florida, BTA 408; Burlington,
Vermont, BTA 063; and Rutland-Bennington, Vermont, BTA 388. The Bureau
does not believe that the public interest would be served by the
removal of the licenses from the auction. Therefore the Bureau declines
to remove these three licenses from the Auction 86 inventory.
B. License Descriptions
4. Where unencumbered, the licenses to be auctioned consist of 76.5
megahertz of spectrum at 2496-2502, 2602-2615, and 2616-2673.5 MHz. We
note that the licenses issued pursuant to this auction will be issued
pursuant to the post-transition band plan contained in Section
27.5(i)(2) of the Commission's rules. A table showing the
channelization of this spectrum is included as Attachment B of the
Auction 86 Procedures Public Notice.
C. Rules and Disclaimers
i. Relevant Authority
5. Prospective applicants must familiarize themselves thoroughly
with the Commission's general competitive bidding as well as decisions
in proceedings regarding competitive bidding procedures, application
requirements, and obligations of Commission licensees.
6. Commenters sought a revision of the performance requirement set
forth in the BRS service rules. 47 CFR 27.14(o) provides that a BRS
licensee must demonstrate substantial service in its service area no
later than May 1, 2011. Other commenters oppose the proposal,
contending that it would not be in the public interest. The requests to
change the BRS service rules are beyond the scope of the public notice
regarding the procedures for Auction 86. Any such rule change would
require action by the full Commission. Absent such action, new
licensees will be subject to the requirements set forth in the current
rules.
ii. Prohibition of Collusion; Compliance With Antitrust Laws
7. To ensure the competitiveness of the auction process, 47 CFR
1.2105(c) of the Commission's rules prohibits auction applicants 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 Form 175) as parties with whom they have entered into
agreements pursuant to 47 CFR 1.2105(a)(2)(viii).
a. Entities Subject to Section 1.2105
8. The anti-collusion rule will apply to any applicants that submit
short-form applications seeking to participate in a Commission auction
and select licenses in the same markets. In Auction 86, the rule would
prohibit any applicants that have selected any of the same licenses
[[Page 38019]]
in their short form applications from communicating absent an
agreement.
9. Under the terms of the rule, applicants that have applied for
licenses covering the same markets--unless they have identified each
other on their short form applications as parties with whom they have
entered into agreements under 47 CFR 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 applies to all applicants regardless
of whether such applicants become qualified bidders or actually bid.
10. For purposes of this prohibition, 47 CFR 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.
11. Information concerning applicants' license selections will not
be available to the public. Therefore, the Commission will inform each
applicant by letter of the identity of each of the other applicants
that has applied for licenses covering any of the same geographic areas
as the licenses that it has selected in its short-form application.
b. Prohibition Applies Until Down Payment Deadline
12. 47 CFR 1.2105(c)'s anti-collusion prohibition begins at the
short-form application filing deadline and ends at the down payment
deadline after the auction.
c. Prohibited Communications
13. Applicants for the upcoming Auction 86 and other parties that
may be engaged in discussion with such applicants are cautioned on the
need to comply with the Commission's anti-collusion rule, 47 CFR
1.2105(c). The anti-collusion rule prohibits not only a communication
about an applicant's own bids or bidding strategy, but also a
communication of another applicant's bids or bidding strategy. While
the anti-collusion rule provisions do not prohibit business
negotiations among auction applicants, applicants must remain vigilant
so as not to communicate directly or indirectly information that
affects, or could affect, bids or bidding strategy, or the negotiation
of settlement agreements.
14. The Commission remains vigilant about prohibited communications
taking place in other situations. For example, 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.
15. Applicants are hereby placed on notice that public disclosure
of information relating to bidder interests and bidder identities that
is confidential at the time of disclosure may violate the anti-
collusion rule. This is so even though similar types of information
were revealed prior to and during other Commission auctions subject to
different information procedures. Bidders should use caution in their
dealings with other parties, 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 for Auction 86, a qualified
bidder'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 rule violation. Similarly, an applicant's public
statement of intent not to participate in Auction 86 bidding could also
violate the rule.
16. Applicants selecting 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 (e.g., law firm or engineering firm
or consulting firm), 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.
17. 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.
18. In addition, when completing short-form applications,
applicants should avoid any statements or disclosures that may violate
the Commission's anti-collusion rule, particularly in light of the
limited information procedures in effect for Auction 86. Specifically,
applicants should avoid including any information in their short-form
applications that might convey information regarding their license
selection, such as using applicant names that refer to licenses being
offered, referring to certain licenses or markets in describing bidding
agreements, or including any information in attachments that may
otherwise disclose applicants' license selections.
d. Disclosure of Bidding Agreements and Arrangements
19. 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 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 47 CFR
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 for licenses
covering any of the same geographic areas after the short-form filing
deadline.
e. Anti-Collusion Certification
20. By electronically submitting a short-form application following
the electronic filing procedures set forth in Attachment C to the
Auction 86 Procedures Public Notice, each applicant certifies its
compliance with 47 CFR 1.2105(c). However, the Bureau
[[Page 38020]]
cautions that merely filing a certifying statement as part of an
application will not outweigh specific evidence that collusive behavior
has occurred, nor will it preclude the initiation of an investigation
when warranted. The Commission has stated that it intends to scrutinize
carefully any instances in which bidding patterns suggest that
collusion may be occurring. Any applicant found to have violated the
anti-collusion rule may be subject to sanctions.
f. Antitrust Laws
21. Applicants are also reminded that, regardless of compliance
with the Commission's rules, they remain subject to the antitrust laws,
which are designed to prevent anticompetitive behavior in the
marketplace. 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 suggest that violations of the
federal antitrust laws may have occurred, 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.
g. Duty To Report Prohibited Communications; Reporting Procedure
22. If an applicant makes or receives a communication that appears
to violate the anti-collusion rule, it must report such communication
in writing to the Commission immediately, and in no case later than
five business days after the communication occurs. 47 CFR 1.2105(c)(6)
provides that any applicant that makes or receives a communication
prohibited by 47 CFR 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. The Commission has
clarified that each applicant's obligation to report any such
communication continues beyond the five-day period after the
communication is made, even if the report is not made within the five-
day period.
23. In addition, 47 CFR 1.65 requires an applicant to maintain the
accuracy and completeness of information furnished in its pending
application and to notify the Commission within 30 days of any
substantial change that may be of decisional significance to that
application. Thus, 47 CFR 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 47 CFR 1.65 to report to the
Commission any communications of bids or bidding strategies that result
in a bidding arrangement, agreement, or understanding after the short-
form filing application deadline.
24. Parties reporting communications pursuant to 47 CFR 1.65 or
1.2105(c)(6) must take care to ensure that any such reports of
prohibited communications do not themselves give rise to a violation of
the anti-collusion rule. For example, a party's report of a prohibited
communication could violate the rule by communicating prohibited
information to other applicants through the use of Commission filing
procedures that would allow such materials to be made available for
public inspection. A party seeking to report such prohibited
communications should consider submitting its report with a request
that the report or portions of the submission be withheld from public
inspection. Such parties are also encouraged to consult with the
Auctions and Spectrum Access Division staff if they have any questions
about the procedures for submitting such reports.
25. Applicants must be aware that failure to comply with the
Commission's rules can result in enforcement action.
h. Winning Bidders Must Disclose Terms of Agreements
26. 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, and other arrangements entered into relating to
the competitive bidding process.
i. Additional Information Concerning Anti-Collusion Rule
27. A summary listing of documents issued by the Commission and the
Bureau addressing the application of the anti-collusion rule may be
found in Attachment F of the Auction 86 Procedures Public Notice. These
documents are available on the Commission's auction anti-collusion Web
page.
iii. Incumbency Issues
28. There are pre-existing BRS site-based incumbent licenses. The
service area for each of those incumbent licenses is a 35-mile circle
centered at the station's reference coordinates, and is bounded by the
chord(s) drawn between the intersection points of the licensee's
previous protected service area and those of respective adjacent
market, co-channel licensees. Any licenses granted pursuant to this
auction will not include the geographic service areas of any co-channel
incumbent site-based licenses. If a site-based incumbent license
cancels or is forfeited, however, the right to operate within that area
shall revert to the overlay licensee that holds the license for the BRS
service area that encompasses that BTA. BRS incumbent licenses are
entitled to interference protection in accordance with the applicable
technical rules. BRS licenses have previously been awarded through
auction (Auction 6) for BTAs other than those in this auction, and the
previously-awarded licenses may have since been assigned or
partitioned. Such BRS geographic area licenses authorize operation
within a BTA and provide the licensee with rights similar to those
being offered in Auction 86.
29. In addition, on the E and F channel groups, grandfathered
Educational Broadband Service (EBS) licenses originally issued on those
channels prior to 1983 may continue to operate indefinitely. Such
grandfathered EBS licenses must be protected in accordance with the
applicable technical rules.
30. Operations within the 2614-2618 MHz band are secondary to
adjacent channel operations.
31. Finally, in the 2496-2500 MHz band, BRS licensees must share
the band on a co-primary basis with the Code Division Multiple Access,
Mobile Satellite Service, grandfathered Broadcast Auxiliary Service
stations, and grandfathered land mobile and microwave licenses licensed
under Parts 90 and 101 of the Commission's rules, respectively. In
addition, the 2400-2500 MHz band is allocated for use by Industrial,
Scientific, and Medical equipment under Part 18 of the Commission's
rules.
32. A comment was filed noting that in certain markets, the
transition to the new band plan is not yet complete, and in those
markets, new licensees may not be able to operate on some or all of
their spectrum until the transition process is completed. Under the
Commission's rules, until a transition has been completed in a BTA,
existing licensees operating under the pre-transition band plan are
entitled to interference protection in accordance with the applicable
technical rules. Potential bidders can check on the status of
transition in a market by checking the Commission's Electronic Comment
[[Page 38021]]
Filing System and reviewing WT Docket No. 06-136. If a post-transition
notification has been filed for a BTA, the transition has been
completed in that BTA. In a BTA where no transition initiation plan had
been filed by January 21, 2009, for a BTA, existing licensees in the
BTA could file notifications with the Commission by April 21, 2009, of
an intent to self-transition. Once a licensee completes a self-
transition, it is required to modify its license to reflect its
operation pursuant to the new band plan. Potential bidders can review
the Universal Licensing System to see if a license has been modified to
operate pursuant to the new band plan.
33. The commenter also asked that potential bidders be reminded of
obligations to reimburse certain licensees of their costs in
transitioning to the new BRS/EBS band plan. Under the Commission's
rules, BRS licensees are responsible for reimbursing transition
proponents or self-transitioning EBS licensees in accordance with the
Commission's rules. Potential bidders should be aware that in BTAs
where the transition to the new band plan has not yet been completed as
of the date licenses are issued pursuant to this auction, they may be
required to reimburse eligible licensees for a pro rata share of
transition costs.
a. International Coordination
34. BRS licensees must individually apply for and receive a
separate license for each transmitter if the proposed operation
requires coordination with either Mexico or Canada. Potential bidders
seeking licenses in Auction 86 for geographic areas that are near the
Canadian or Mexican borders are encouraged to consult all international
agreements with Canada and Mexico. We also note that the current
agreement with Mexico does not provide for two-way operation in the
border area. If the agreements with Mexico or Canada are modified in
the future, licensees must likewise comply with these modifications.
b. Quiet Zones
35. BRS licensees must individually apply for and receive a
separate license for each transmitter if the proposed operation would
affect the radio quiet zones set forth in the Commission's rules.
iv. Due Diligence
36. The Bureau cautions potential applicants formulating their
bidding strategies to investigate and consider the extent to which
these frequencies are occupied. For example, there are incumbent
operations already licensed and operating in the band that must be
protected. These limitations may restrict the ability of BRS licensees
to use certain portions of the electromagnetic spectrum or provide
service to certain areas in their geographic license areas. Bidders
should become familiar with the status of these operations and
applicable Commission rules, orders and any pending proceedings related
to the service, in order to make reasoned, appropriate decisions about
their participation in this auction and their bidding strategy.
37. 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 licenses being offered in
this auction. The Commission makes no representations or warranties
about the use of this spectrum for particular services. Applicants
should be aware that a Commission auction represents an opportunity to
become a licensee subject to certain conditions and regulations. The
auction does not constitute an endorsement by the Commission of any
particular service, technology, or product, nor does a Commission
license constitute a guarantee of business success. Applicants should
perform their individual due diligence before proceeding as they would
with any new business venture.
38. Potential bidders are strongly encouraged to conduct their own
research prior to the beginning of bidding in Auction 86 in order to
determine the existence of any pending legislative, administrative or
judicial proceedings that might affect their decision regarding
participation in the auction. Participants in Auction 86 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 as well as other applicable Federal,
state, and local laws.
39. Applicants should also be aware that certain pending and future
proceedings, including rulemaking proceedings or petitions for
rulemaking, applications (including those for modification), 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 86. Pending
and future judicial proceedings may also relate to particular
applicants or incumbent licensees, or the licenses available in Auction
86. 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.
40. 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 86. 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.
41. Applicants are solely responsible for identifying associated
risks and for investigating and evaluating the degree to which such
matters may affect their ability to bid on, otherwise acquire, or make
use of licenses being offered.
42. Applicants may obtain information about licenses available in
Auction 86 through the Bureau's online licensing databases at https://wireless.fcc.gov/uls. Applicants may query the database online and
download a copy of their search results if desired. Detailed
instructions on using License Search (including frequency searches and
the GeoSearch capability) and downloading query results are available
online by selecting the ``?'' button at the upper right-hand corner of
the License Search screen or by going to the Universal Licensing System
(ULS) support site at https://esupport.fcc.gov/licensing.htm. Applicants
should direct questions regarding the ULS search capabilities to the
FCC ULS Technical Support hotline at (877) 480-3201, option two. The
hotline is available to assist with questions Monday through Friday,
from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. ET. In order to provide better service to the
public, all calls to the hotline are recorded.
43. The Commission makes no representations or guarantees regarding
the accuracy or completeness of information in its databases or any
third party databases, including, for example, court docketing systems.
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
[[Page 38022]]
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.
44. Potential applicants are strongly encouraged to physically
inspect any prospective sites located in, or near, the geographic area
for which they plan to bid, and also to familiarize themselves with the
environmental review obligations.
v. Use of Integrated Spectrum Auction System
45. The Commission will make available a browser-based bidding
system to allow bidders to participate in Auction 86 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. Environmental Review Requirements
46. 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.
D. Auction Specifics
i. Auction Start Date
47. Bidding in Auction 86 will begin on Tuesday, October 27, 2009,
as announced in the Auction 86 Comment Public Notice. 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. Bidding Methodology
48. The bidding methodology for Auction 86 will be simultaneous
multiple round (SMR) 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.
iii. Pre-Auction Dates and Deadlines
49. The following dates and deadlines apply:
Auction Seminar............................ August 5, 2009.
Short-Form Application (FCC Form 175) August 5, 2009; 12:00 noon ET.
Filing Window Opens.
Short-Form Application (FCC Form 175) August 18, 2009; prior to 6:00 p.m. ET.
Filing Window Deadline.
Upfront Payments (via wire transfer)....... September 24, 2009; 6:00 p.m. ET.
Mock Auction............................... October 23, 2009.
Auction Begins............................. October 27, 2009.
iv. Requirements for Participation
50. Those wishing to participate in this auction must: (1) submit a
short-form application (FCC Form 175) electronically prior to 6:00 p.m.
ET, August 18, 2009; (2) submit a sufficient upfront payment and an FCC
Remittance Advice Form (FCC Form 159) by 6:00 p.m. ET, September 24,
2009 and (3) comply with all provisions outlined in the Auction 86
Procedures Public Notice and applicable Commission rules.
II. Short-Form Application (FCC Form 175) Requirements
A. General Information Regarding Short-Form Applications
51. Entities seeking licenses available in Auction 86 must file a
short-form application electronically via the FCC Auction System prior
to 6 p.m. ET on August 18, 2009, following the procedures prescribed in
Attachment C of the Auction 86 Procedures Public Notice. Applicants
filing a short-form application are subject to the Commission's anti-
collusion rules beginning on the deadline for filing. The information
provided in its short-form application will be used in determining,
among other things, if the applicant is eligible for a bidding credit.
52. 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 all the information that is required under the Commission's
rules is included with their short-form applications.
53. An entity may not submit more than one short-form application
for a single auction. If a party submits multiple short-form
applications, only one application may become qualified to bid.
54. Applicants also should note that submission of a short-form
application and any amendments thereto 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. An applicant
cannot change the certifying official to its 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.
B. License Selection
55. An applicant must select the licenses on which it wants to bid
from the Eligible Licenses list on its short-form application.
Applicants will not be able to change their license selections after
the short-form application deadline. Applicants interested in
participating in Auction 86 must have selected license(s) available in
the respective auction by the short-form application deadline.
Applicants must confirm their license selections before the deadline
for submitting short-form applications. The FCC Auction System will not
accept bids from an applicant on licenses that the applicant has not
selected on its short-form application.
[[Page 38023]]
C. Disclosure of Bidding Arrangements
56. An applicant must identify in its short-form application all
parties with whom it has 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.
57. 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
an 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.
58. 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, as discussed above,
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
59. All applicants must comply with the uniform Part 1 ownership
disclosure standards and provide information required by 47 CFR 1.2105
and 1.2112 of the Commission's rules. 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 application are prescribed in 47 CFR 1.2105 and 1.2112 of
the Commission's rules. Each applicant is responsible for information
submitted in its short-form application being complete and accurate.
60. 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 with an
ownership disclosure information report (FCC Form 602) or in a short-
form application (FCC Form 175) filed for a previous auction using
ISAS) will automatically be entered into the applicant's short-form
application. An applicant is responsible for ensuring that the
information submitted in its short-form application for Auction 86 is
complete and accurate. Accordingly, applicants should carefully review
any information automatically entered to confirm that it is complete
and accurate as of the Auction 86 deadline for filing the short-form
application. If any information that was entered automatically needs to
be changed, applicants must do so directly in the short-form
application.
E. Designated Entity Provisions
61. Eligible applicants in Auction 86 may claim designated entity
status, as an entrepreneur, a small business, or very small business
eligible for bidding credits. Applicants should review carefully the
Commission's recent decisions regarding the designated entity
provisions.
i. Bidding Credits for Small and Very Small Businesses
62. A bidding credit represents the amount by which a bidder's
winning bid will be discounted. For Auction 86, bidding credits will be
available to entrepreneurs, small businesses and very small businesses,
and consortia thereof.
63. The level of bidding credit is determined 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;
(2) a bidder with attributed average annual gross revenues that exceed
$3 million and do not exceed $15 million for the preceding three years
(very small business) will receive a 25 percent discount on its winning
bid; and (3) a bidder with attributed average annual gross revenues
that do not exceed $3 million for the preceding three years
(entrepreneur) will receive a 35 percent discount on its winning bid.
ii. Attributable Interests
a. Controlling Interests
64. Controlling interests of an applicant include individuals and
entities with either de facto or de jure control of the applicant.
Typically, ownership of greater than 50 percent of an entity's voting
stock evidences de jure control. De facto control is determined on a
case-by-case basis.
b. Affiliates
65. Affiliates of an applicant or controlling interest include an
individual or entity that: (1) Directly or indirectly controls or has
the power to control the applicant; (2) is directly or indirectly
controlled by the applicant; (3) is directly or indirectly controlled
by a third party that also controls or has the power to control the
applicant; or (4) has an identity of interest with the applicant. The
Commission's definition of an affiliate of the applicant encompasses
both controlling interests of the applicant and affiliates of
controlling interests of the applicant. For more information regarding
affiliates, applicants should refer to 47 CFR 1.2110(c)(5) and
Attachment C to the Auction 86 Procedures Public Notice.
c. Material Relationships
66. The Commission requires the consideration of certain leasing
and resale (including wholesale) relationships--referred to as material
relationships--in determining designated entity eligibility, i.e., for
bidding credits. Material relationships fall into two categories:
Impermissible and attributable.
67. An applicant or licensee has an impermissible material
relationship when it has agreements with one or more other entities for
the lease or resale (including under a wholesale agreement) of, on a
cumulative basis, more than 50 percent of the spectrum capacity of any
of its licenses. If an applicant or a licensee has an impermissible
material relationship, it is, as a result, (i) ineligible for the award
of designated entity benefits and (ii) subject to unjust enrichment on
a license-by-license basis.
68. An applicant or licensee has an attributable material
relationship when it has one or more agreements with any individual
entity for the lease or resale (including under a wholesale agreement)
of, on a cumulative basis, more than 25 percent of the spectrum
capacity of any individual license held by the applicant or licensee.
The attributable material relationship will cause the gross revenues of
that entity and its attributable interest holders to be attributed to
the applicant or licensee for the purposes of determining the
applicant's or licensee's (i) eligibility for designated entity
benefits and (ii) liability for unjust enrichment on a license-by-
license basis.
69. The Commission grandfathered material relationships in
existence before the release of the Designated Entity Second Report and
Order, 71 FR 26245, May 5, 2006, meaning that those preexisting
relationships alone would not cause the Commission to examine a
designated entity's ongoing eligibility
[[Page 38024]]
for benefits or its liability for unjust enrichment. The Commission did
not, however, grandfather preexisting material relationships for
determinations of an applicant's or licensee's designated entity
eligibility for future auctions or in the context of future
assignments, transfers of control, spectrum leases, or other reportable
eligibility events. Rather, the occurrence of any of those eligibility
events after the release date of the Designated Entity Second Report
and Order triggers a reexamination of the applicant's or licensee's
designated entity eligibility, taking into account all existing
material relationships, including those previously grandfathered.
d. Gross Revenue Exceptions
70. In recent years the Commission has also made other
modifications to its rules governing the attribution of gross revenues
for purposes of determining designated entity eligibility. For example,
the Commission has 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.
71. The Commission has also exempted from attribution to the
applicant the gross revenues of the affiliates of a rural telephone
cooperative's officers and directors, if certain conditions specified
in 47 CFR 1.2110(b)(3)(iii) of the Commission's rules are met. An
applicant claiming this exemption must provide in an attachment an
affirmative statement that the applicant, affiliate and/or controlling
interest is an eligible rural telephone cooperative within the meaning
of 47 CFR 1.2110(b)(3)(iii), and must supply any additional information
as may be required to demonstrate eligibility for the exemption from
the attribution rule. Applicants seeking to claim this exemption must
meet all of the conditions.
e. Bidding Consortia
72. A consortium of small businesses, very small businesses, or
entrepreneurs is a conglomerate organization composed of two or more
entities, each of which individually satisfies the definition of a
small business, very small business, or entrepreneur. Thus, each member
of a consortium of small businesses, very small businesses, or
entrepreneurs that applies to participate in Auction 86 must
individually meet the criteria for small businesses, very small
businesses, or entrepreneurs. Each consortium member must disclose its
gross revenues along with those of its affiliates, its controlling
interests, the affiliates of its controlling interests, and any
entities having an attributable material relationship with the member.
Although the gross revenues of the consortium members will not be
aggregated for purposes of determining the consortium's eligibility as
a small business, very small business, or entrepreneur this information
must be provided to ensure that each individual consortium member
qualifies for any bidding credit awarded to the consortium.
F. Tribal Lands Bidding Credit
73. To encourage the growth of wireless services in federally
recognized tribal lands, the Commission has implemented a tribal lands
bidding credit. Applicants do not provide information regarding tribal
lands bidding credits on their short-form applications. Instead,
winning bidders may apply for the tribal lands bidding credit after the
auction when they file their more detailed, long-form applications.
G. Provisions Regarding Former and Current Defaulters
74. Current defaulters are not eligible to participate in Auction
86, but former defaulters can participate so long as they are otherwise
qualified and must make upfront payments that are fifty percent more
than the normal upfront payment amounts.
75. On the short-form application, an applicant must certify under
penalty of perjury that it, its affiliates, its controlling interests,
and the affiliates of its controlling interests, as defined by 47 CFR
1.2110, are not in default on any payments for Commission licenses
(including down payments) and that it is not delinquent on any non-tax
debt owed to any Federal agency. Each applicant must also state under
penalty of perjury whether or not it, its affiliates, its controlling
interests, and the affiliates of its controlling interests, have ever
been in default on any Commission licenses or have ever been 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. These statements and
certifications are prerequisites to submitting an application to
participate in an FCC auction.
76. 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 47 CFR
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. Parties are also encouraged to coordinate with the
Commission's Office of Managing Director or the Bureau's Auctions and
Spectrum Access Division staff if they have any questions about default
and delinquency disclosure requirements.
77. 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 47 CFR 1.2105 and 1.2106, with regard to current
and former defaults or delinquencies.
78. 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 47 CFR 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 status is not
necessarily determinative of its eligibility to participate in an
auction or of its upfront payment obligation.
[[Page 38025]]
H. Minor Modifications to Short-Form Applications
79. Applicants are not permitted to make major modifications to
their short-form applications (e.g., change their license selections,
change control of the applicant, change the certifying official, or
change their size to claim eligibility for a higher bidding credit)
after the short-form application deadline. Thus, any change in control
of an applicant, resulting from a merger for example, will be
considered a major modification to the applicant's short-form
application, which will consequently be dismissed.
80. Applicants are, however, permitted to make minor changes to
their short-form applications after the filing deadline. Permissible
minor changes include, for example, deletion and addition of authorized
bidders (to a maximum of three) and revision of addresses and telephone
numbers of the applicants and their contact persons.
I. Maintaining Current Information in Short-Form Applications
81. 47 CFR 1.65 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 major amendment
will not be accepted and may result in the dismissal of the short-form
application.
82. After the short-form filing deadline, applicants may make only
minor changes to their short-form 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 e-mail at the
following address: auction86@fcc.gov. The e-mail summarizing the
changes must include a subject or caption referring to Auction 86 and
the name of the applicant. The Bureau requests that parties format any
attachments to e-mail as Adobe[supreg] Acrobat[supreg] (pdf) or
Microsoft[supreg] Word documents. Applicants must not submit
application-specific material through ECFS. A party seeking to submit
information that might reflect non-public information, such as an
applicant's license selections, upfront payment amount or bidding
eligibility, should consider submitting any such information along with
a request that the filing or portions of the filing be withheld from
public inspection until the end of the anti-collusion period.
III. Pre-Auction Procedures
A. Auction Seminar--August 5, 2009
83. On Wednesday, August 5, 2009, the Commission will conduct a
seminar for parties interested in participating in Auction 86 at FCC
headquarters, located at 445 12th Street, SW., Washington, DC. The
seminar will provide attendees with information about pre-auction
procedures, completing short-form applications, auction conduct, the
FCC Auction System, auction rules, and Broadband Radio Service 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. To
register, see Attachment G of the Auction 86 Procedures Public Notice.
B. Short-Form Applications--Due Prior to 6 p.m. ET on August 18, 2009
84. In order to be eligible to bid in this auction, applicants must
first follow the procedures set forth in Attachment C of the Auction 86
Procedures Public Notice to submit a short-form application (FCC Form
175) electronically via the FCC Auction System. This application must
be received at the Commission prior to 6:00 p.m. ET on August 18, 2009.
Late applications will not be accepted.
C. Application Processing and Minor Corrections
85. After the deadline for filing short-form applications, the
Commission will process all timely submitted applications to determine
which are complete, and subsequently will issue a public notice
identifying (1) Those applications that are complete, (2) those
applications that are rejected, and (3) those applications that are
incomplete because of minor defects that may be corrected. The public
notice will include the deadline for resubmitting corrected
applications.
86. After the August 18, 2009, short-form filing deadline,
applicants may make only minor corrections to their 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 change their size to
claim eligibility for a higher bidding credit).
87. Applicants should be aware the Commission staff will
communicate only with an applicant's contact person or certifying
official, as designated on the applicant's short-form application,
unless the applicant's certifying official or contact person notifies
the Commission in writing that applicant's counsel or other
representative is authorized to speak on its behalf. Authorizations may
be submitted by e-mail at the following address: auction86@fcc.gov.
D. Upfront Payments--Due September 24, 2009
88. In order to be eligible to bid in this auction, applicants must
submit an upfront payment accompanied by an FCC Remittance Advice Form
(FCC Form 159). After completing its short-form application, an
applicant will have access to an electronic version of FCC Form 159
that can be printed and sent by fax to U.S. Bank in St. Louis,
Missouri. All upfront payments must be made as instructed in the
Auction 86 Procedures Public Notice and must be received in the proper
account at U.S. Bank before 6 p.m. ET on September 24, 2009.
i. Making Upfront Payments by Wire Transfer
89. Wire transfer payments must be received by 6 p.m. ET on
September 24, 2009. No other payment method is acceptable. 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.
90. At least one hour before placing the order for the wire
transfer (but on the same business day), applicants must fax a
completed FCC Form 159 (Revised 2/03) to U.S. Bank at (314) 418-4232.
On the fax cover sheet, applicants should write Wire Transfer--Auction
Payment for Auction 86. 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. The applicant is responsible
for obtaining confirmation from its financial institution that U.S.
Bank has timely received its upfront payment and deposited it in the
proper account.
91. 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 86 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
[[Page 38026]]
deliver a sufficient upfront payment as instructed by the September 24,
2009, deadline will result in dismissal of the application and
disqualification from participation in the auction
ii. FCC Form 159
92. A completed FCC Remittance Advice Form (FCC Form 159, Revised
2/03) must be faxed to U.S. Bank to accompany each upfront payment.
Proper completion of FCC Form 159 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 86 Procedures
Public Notice. An electronic pre-filled version of the FCC Form 159 is
available after submitting the short-form application. Payors using the
pre-filled FCC Form 159 are responsible for ensuring that all of the
information on the form, including payment amounts, is accurate. The
FCC Form 159 can be completed electronically, but must be filed with
U.S. Bank by fax.
iii. Upfront Payments and Bidding Eligibility
93. The Commission has delegated to the Bureau the authority and
discretion to determine appropriate upfront payments for each auction.
Upfront payments help deter frivolous or insincere bidding, and provide
the Commission with a source of funds in the event that the bidder
incurs liability during the auction.
94. Applicants that are former defaulters must pay upfront payments
50 percent greater than non-former defaulters. For purposes of this
calculation, the applicant includes the applicant itself, its
affiliates, its controlling interests, and affiliates of its
controlling interests, as defined by 47 CFR 1.2110.
95. Applicants must make upfront payments sufficient to obtain
bidding eligibility on the licenses on which they will bid. The Bureau
proposed, in the Auction 86 Comment Public Notice, 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. Under the Bureau's proposal, in order to bid on a
particular license, a qualified bidder must have selected the license
on its short-form application and 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 short-form application, 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 short-form application, but only enough 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.
96. The Bureau proposed to calculate upfront payments for Auction
86 on a license-by-license basis using the following formula based on
bandwidth and license area population.
97. Several commenters addressed the proposed upfront payment
amounts as well as minimum opening bids for this auction. These
commenters sought a downward adjustment of the formulas used to
calculate upfront payments and minimum opening bids. Commenters offered
two alternatives to the upfront payment amounts and minimum opening
bids proposed in the Auction 86 Comment Public Notice. The Commission
received reply comments and an ex parte submission regarding the
proposal.
98. Upon careful consideration of the comments, reply comments, and
ex parte submission, as well as the history of this particular service,
the Bureau has decided to exercise its discretion to adjust upfront
payments. In making this change, the Bureau recognizes the concerns
expressed regarding relative incumbency of the licenses. The revised
upfront payments are calculated on a license-by-license basis using
formulas based on bandwidth, license area population, and the
encumbrance data, as follows:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Encumbrance $/MHz-pop
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0%-20%..................................................... $0.0125
21%-50%.................................................... 0.0100
51%-80%.................................................... 0.0050
above 80%.................................................. 0.0025
------------------------------------------------------------------------
99. The results of the formulas are subject to the Bureaus standard
rounding procedures and to a minimum of $5,000 per license, except for
the licenses for BRS service areas in the Gulf of Mexico, for which the
upfront payments will be $20,000 as originally proposed. The upfront
payment and bidding units for each license are set forth in Attachment
A.
100. 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 that are former defaulters
must 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.
iv. Applicant's Wire Transfer Information for Purposes of Refunds of
Upfront Payments
101. To ensure that refunds of upfront payments are processed in an
expeditious manner, the Commission is requesting that all pertinent
information be supplied. 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. For wire transfer instructions see Auction
86 Procedures Public Notice at paragraph 129.
E. Auction Registration
102. Approximately ten days before the auction, the Bureau will
issue a public notice announcing all qualified bidders for the auction.
Qualified bidders are those applicants with submitted short-form
applications that are deemed complete and upfront payments that are
sufficient to make them eligible to bid.
103. 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 short-form application and
will include the SecurID[supreg] tokens that will be required to place
bids, the Integrated Spect