Relocation Cost Sharing in the Broadcast Auxiliary Service, 67227-67233 [2010-27577]
Download as PDF
hsrobinson on DSK69SOYB1PROD with RULES
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 211 / Tuesday, November 2, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
• Does not contain any unfunded
mandate or significantly or uniquely
affect small governments, as described
in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4);
• Does not have Federalism
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999);
• Is not an economically significant
regulatory action based on health or
safety risks subject to Executive Order
13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997); is
not a significant regulatory action
subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR
28355, May 22, 2001);
• Is not subject to requirements of
Section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because
application of those requirements would
be inconsistent with the CAA; and
• Does not provide EPA with the
discretionary authority to address, as
appropriate, disproportionate human
health or environmental effects, using
practicable and legally permissible
methods, under Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, this rule does not have
tribal implications as specified by
Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249,
November 9, 2000), because it will not
impose substantial direct costs on tribal
governments or preempt tribal law.
The Congressional Review Act, 5
U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996, generally provides
that before a rule may take effect, the
agency promulgating the rule must
submit a rule report, which includes a
copy of the rule, to each House of the
Congress and to the Comptroller General
of the United States. EPA will submit a
report containing this action and other
required information to the U.S. Senate,
the U.S. House of Representatives, and
the Comptroller General of the United
States prior to publication of the rule in
the Federal Register. A major rule
cannot take effect until 60 days after it
is published in the Federal Register.
This action is not a ‘‘major rule’’ as
defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
Under section 307(b)(1) of the Clean
Air Act, petitions for judicial review of
this action must be filed in the United
States Court of Appeals for the
appropriate circuit by January 3, 2011.
Filing a petition for reconsideration by
the Administrator of this final rule does
not affect the finality of this action for
the purposes of judicial review nor does
it extend the time within which a
petition for judicial review may be filed,
and shall not postpone the effectiveness
of such rule or action. Parties with
objections to this direct final rule are
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:21 Nov 01, 2010
Jkt 223001
encouraged to file a comment in
response to the parallel notice of
proposed rulemaking for this action
published in the proposed rules section
of today’s Federal Register, rather than
file an immediate petition for judicial
review of this direct final rule, so that
EPA can withdraw this direct final rule
and address the comment in the
proposed rulemaking. This action may
not be challenged later in proceedings to
enforce its requirements. (See section
307(b)(2).)
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 81
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, National parks,
Particulate matter, Wilderness areas.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: October 25, 2010.
Jared Blumenfeld,
Regional Administrator, EPA Region IX.
[FR Doc. 2010–27634 Filed 11–1–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Parts 74 and 78
[WT Docket No. 02–55, ET Docket No. 00–
258 and 95–18; FCC 10–179]
Relocation Cost Sharing in the
Broadcast Auxiliary Service
AGENCY: Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
SUMMARY: This document concludes the
Commission’s longstanding efforts to
relocate the Broadcast Auxiliary Service
(BAS) from the 1990–2110 MHz band to
the 2025–2110 MHz band, freeing up 35
megahertz of spectrum in order to foster
the development of new and innovative
services. This decision addresses the
outstanding matter of Sprint Nextel
Corporation’s (Sprint Nextel) inability to
agree with Mobile Satellite Service
(MSS) operators in the band on the
sharing of the costs to relocate the BAS
incumbents. To resolve this controversy,
the Commission applies its timehonored relocation principles for
emerging technologies previously
adopted for the BAS band to the instant
relocation process, where delays and
unanticipated developments have left
ambiguities and misconceptions among
the relocating parties. In the process, the
Commission balances the
responsibilities for and benefits of
relocating incumbent BAS operations
among all the new entrants in the
different services that will operate in the
band.
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
DATES:
67227
Effective December 2, 2010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Nicholas Oros, (202) 418–0636, Policy
and Rules Division, Office of
Engineering and Technology,
Nicholas.Oros@fcc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a
summary of the Commission’s Fifth
Report and Order, Eleventh Report and
Order, Sixth Report and Order, and
Declaratory Ruling, WT Docket No. 02–
55, ET Docket No. 00–258 and 95–18,
adopted September 29, 2010, and
released September 29, 2010. The full
text of this document is available on the
Commission’s Internet site at
www.fcc.gov. It is also available for
inspection and copying during regular
business hours in the FCC Reference
Center (Room CY–A257), 445 12th
Street, SW., Washington, DC 20554. The
full text of this document also may be
purchased from the Commission’s
duplication contractor, Best Copy and
Printing Inc., Portals II, 445 12th St.,
SW., Room CY–B402, Washington, DC
20554; telephone (202) 488–5300; fax
(202) 488–5563; e-mail
FCC@BCPIWEB.COM.
Summary of the Fifth Report and
Order, Eleventh Report and Order,
Sixth Report and Order, and
Declaratory Ruling
1. This Report and Order and
Declaratory Ruling concludes the
Commission’s longstanding efforts to
relocate the Broadcast Auxiliary Service
(BAS) from the 1990–2110 MHz band to
the 2025–2110 MHz band, freeing up 35
megahertz of spectrum in order to foster
the development of new and innovative
services that can provide mobile
broadband and nationwide
communications capabilities. This
decision in particular addresses the
outstanding matter of Sprint Nextel
Corporation’s (Sprint Nextel) inability to
agree with Mobile Satellite Service
(MSS) operators in the band on the
sharing of the costs to relocate the BAS
incumbents. To date, Sprint has
shouldered the entire cost of this
relocation, which was completed on
July 15, 2010.
2. To resolve this important issue, the
Commission applied its time-honored
relocation principles for emerging
technologies previously adopted for the
BAS band to the instant relocation
process, where delays and
unanticipated developments have left
ambiguities and misconceptions among
the relocating parties. These principles
have been a fundamental part of the
Commission’s past efforts to unlock
value and promote investment through
the relocation process. In the end, the
E:\FR\FM\02NOR1.SGM
02NOR1
67228
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 211 / Tuesday, November 2, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
Commission balanced the
responsibilities for and benefits of
relocating incumbent BAS operations
among all the new entrants in the
different services that will operate in the
band.
3. The Commission has sought to
relocate BAS licensees to a more
spectrally efficient band plan and make
spectrum available for other uses, while
fairly distributing the relocation costs
among the new users. Because the path
leading to this Fifth Report and Order,
Eleventh Report and Order, Sixth Report
and Order, and Declaratory Ruling
(Report and Order and Declaratory
Ruling) has been especially complex,
the Commission summarized the history
of this proceeding to the extent relevant
to the decisions it was making; see
paragraphs 4 through 12 of the Report
and Order and Declaratory Ruling. In
the Declaratory Ruling the Commission
addresses a number of disputes that
have arisen in this proceeding involving
requirements that were established
when the current BAS relocation
scheme was adopted in 2004; see
paragraphs 15 through 44 of the Report
and Order and Declaratory Ruling.
hsrobinson on DSK69SOYB1PROD with RULES
Discussion
4. The Report and Order and
Declaratory Ruling addresses disputes
regarding sharing the cost of relocating
the 2 GHz BAS incumbents. The
Commission concludes that the best
course of action is to clarify and modify
the cost sharing requirements to address
the ambiguity or lack of definition in the
current requirements to correspond to
the stated purposes and structure of the
cost sharing principles set forth in the
Commission decision which established
Sprint Nextel’s entry into the band, the
800 MHz R&O (69 FR 67823), as well as
to balance the responsibilities for and
benefits of relocating incumbent BAS
operations among all the new entrants
in the band in a way that is consistent
with the Commission’s relocation
policies set forth in the Emerging
Technologies proceeding. One of the
important underlying principles of the
relocation policy is that licensees that
ultimately benefit from the spectrum
cleared by the first entrant shall bear the
cost of reimbursing the first entrant for
the accrual of that benefit. The
Commission noted its concern that were
it to stray from the traditional
application of the Emerging
Technologies relocation policy, future
licensees might be unwilling or unable
to assume the burden and cost of
clearing spectrum quickly if they were
unsure of the likelihood that they will
be reimbursed by other new entrants.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:21 Nov 01, 2010
Jkt 223001
Termination Date of the Cost Sharing
Obligations
5. As explained in the Declaratory
Ruling adopted along with this Report
and Order, the MSS and AWS entrants
have an obligation to reimburse Sprint
Nextel for a portion of the costs of
relocating the BAS incumbents if they
enter the band prior to either the end of
two future events connected to adoption
of the 800 MHz R&O: the 800 MHz
reconfiguration or the 800 MHz true-up.
Because the timing of either of these
events is presently unknown, the new
entrants are in a state of uncertainty as
to their financial obligation. The
Commission believes that all of the
parties will be served by adopting a date
certain for extinguishing cost-sharing
obligations—the band sunset date of
December 9, 2013. This will harmonize
the relocation requirements for the BAS
band with the relocation rules for other
bands that were based on the Emerging
Technologies principles. The MSS
entrants argue that the cost sharing
requirements for this band have
departed from the Emerging
Technologies principles in a number of
ways and argue that the Commission
should not follow the principles in
regard to their cost sharing obligations.
While the Commission has made
departures from the Emerging
Technologies procedures, those limited
departures were made because of the
unique features of the BAS transition.
However, where circumstances do not
require some deviation from Emerging
Technologies, the Commission shall
adhere closely to these time-tested
principles to balance the interest of
incumbent licensees, new entrants who
relocate incumbents, and new entrants
who benefit from the band clearing. In
this case, because the main reason for
allowing early termination of the new
entrants’ cost-sharing obligation no
longer applies—i.e. Sprint Nextel will
probably not be taking credit for all of
its BAS relocation costs against the antiwindfall payment that is described in
the 800 MHz R&O—there is no
compelling reason to end the cost
sharing obligation of the new entrants
any earlier than the band sunset date.
Consequently, any new entrant that
enters the band before December 9, 2013
will be required to reimburse the entrant
who relocated BAS incumbents a pro
rata share of the relocation costs, subject
to the limitations discussed in the
Report and Order.
6. The Commission left in place the
current band sunset date of December 9,
2013, despite the request by Sprint
Nextel to adjust the date until 2015. The
sunset date is a vital component of the
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
Emerging Technologies policies
because, among other things, it specifies
the date upon which unrelocated
incumbents become secondary and it
provides a length of time for incumbent
licensees to transition from the band.
Because the BAS relocation has been
completed, there is no need to change
the sunset date to 2015. While Sprint
Nextel is correct that AWS licensees
may not enter the band by the current
sunset date, the Commission’s goal in
choosing the sunset date is not to
provide the entrant who relocates
incumbents with a greater likelihood of
receiving cost sharing from later
entrants. When Sprint Nextel undertook
the responsibility to relocate the BAS
incumbents as a result of the 800 MHz
R&O, it knew the timing of the band
sunset and the uncertainties of the
entrance of AWS licensees.
Definition of ‘‘Enter the Band’’
7. The ‘‘enter the band’’ terminology
was used in the 800 MHz R&O and AWS
Sixth R&O to denote when the new
entrants would incur an obligation to
reimburse Sprint Nextel for a pro rata
share of the cost of relocating the BAS
incumbents, but neither order defined
the term.
8. The Commission concludes that an
MSS entrant will ‘‘enter the band’’ and
therefore incur a cost sharing obligation
when the MSS entrant certifies that its
satellite is operational for purposes of
meeting its operational milestone. In
previous Emerging Technologies band
clearings, the later entrant becomes
responsible for reimbursing the earlier
entrants’ relocation cost when the later
entrant is in the position to cause
interference to the incumbent licensees
prior to their relocation. The
Commission previously determined that
it does not believe in general that the
MSS entrants may operate without
causing interference to the BAS
incumbents. Consequently, once the
MSS satellites are operational, they
would have the potential for causing
interference to the incumbent BAS
operations. As with the tests used in
previous band clearings, the definition
adopted here is easy to apply and not
subject to contention. Also, the test is in
keeping with the nature of the BAS
service.
9. The AWS entrants require a
different definition of ‘‘enter the band.’’
The Commission concludes that an
AWS entrant will ‘‘enter the band’’ on a
license-by-license basis on the date that
the grant of each long-form application
becomes a final action. This
requirement has the advantage of ease of
administration, and conforms to the
overall Emerging Technologies policies.
E:\FR\FM\02NOR1.SGM
02NOR1
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 211 / Tuesday, November 2, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
hsrobinson on DSK69SOYB1PROD with RULES
Once the AWS entrant’s long form
application has been granted, signifying
the issuance of a license, the AWS
entrant will be in the position to roll out
service and benefit from Sprint’s
relocation of the BAS incumbents.
Sprint Nextel’s right to seek
reimbursement from an AWS licensee
that enters the band prior to the sunset
date is limited to an AWS licensee’s
proportional share of the costs incurred
in the BAS clearance, on a pro rata basis
according to the amount of spectrum
that each licensee is assigned in the
1990–2025 MHz band. The Commission
intends to adopt specific cost sharing
rules for AWS in the 1995–2000 MHz
and 2020–2025 MHz bands when it
adopts service rules which define the
licensing scheme for these bands.
Limitations on MSS Cost Sharing
Obligations
10. In the 800 MHz R&O, the costs for
which the MSS entrants had to
reimburse Sprint Nextel were limited to
a pro rata share of relocating the top 30
markets and fixed BAS links because
these were the BAS incumbents that the
MSS entrants had to relocate before they
could begin operations. The
Commission concludes that even with
the changed circumstances surrounding
the BAS relocation, the most
appropriate course is to retain the
current cost sharing obligations for MSS
entrants. Although the Commission
recognizes that the parties have
conflicting interests at stake, this
requirement was clearly established
from the outset and the Commission
declines to reverse it now, where all
parties involved have been aware of
their respective rights and obligations
and presumably structured their
activities accordingly.
11. TerreStar, one of the MSS
entrants, claims that equitable factors
argue for limiting the MSS entrants’
reimbursement obligation to the
expenses Sprint Nextel incurred before
September 7, 2007 because if Sprint
Nextel had completed the BAS
relocation by the end of the BAS 30month relocation period there would
have been no relocation expenses
incurred after this date. The
Commission is not persuaded that
equitable factors support allowing
TerreStar or DBSD (the other MSS
entrant) to escape paying a pro rata
share of the BAS relocation costs. The
MSS entrants have suffered little harm
from the delays in the BAS relocation,
and the Commission has taken steps to
minimize the impact that delays in the
transition would have on DBSD and
TerreStar’s plans to begin operations. It
concludes that there is no reason to
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:21 Nov 01, 2010
Jkt 223001
reduce their cost sharing obligations
further.
12. The Commission rejects DBSD’s
suggestion that the amount that the MSS
entrants owe for BAS relocation be
depreciated from when Sprint Nextel
signed frequency relocation agreements
with the BAS incumbents. The
Commission also rejects DBSD’s
suggestion that cost caps be applied to
the BAS relocation costs. Finally, the
Commission will not limit Sprint
Nextel’s ability to seek reimbursement
from MSS entrants to only those
expenses it cannot receive credit against
the 800 MHz anti-windfall payment, as
suggested by TerreStar.
Payment Issues
13. In the Report and Order the
Commission adopts a policy affirming
the tentative conclusion made in the
June 2009 Further Notice that Sprint
Nextel may not both receive credit in
the 800 MHz true-up and receive
reimbursement from the MSS and AWS
entrants for the same costs. This has
been the rule since the cost sharing
requirements were adopted in the 800
MHz R&O, and is necessary to prevent
Sprint Nextel from receiving the
unjustified windfall of a double
recovery, and no party has objected to
this conclusion. If the true-up occurs
prior to Sprint Nextel receiving
reimbursement from another entrant,
the Commission will require Sprint
Nextel to inform the other entrant of the
expenses for which it has received
credit in the 800 MHz true-up prior to
receiving reimbursement. The other
entrant will not be obligated to
reimburse Sprint Nextel for what would
otherwise be its share of those particular
expenses.
14. The principle that Sprint Nextel is
not entitled to make a double recovery
also applies to reimbursements it
receives from among the new entrants.
Multiple new entrants may have an
interest in the same portion of the
relocated BAS spectrum because, for
example, entrants change business
structure or assign their licenses.
Accordingly, the Commission specifies
that Sprint Nextel is not entitled to
obtain reimbursement from a new
entrant for relocation costs that Sprint
Nextel has already received from
another new entrant. Thus, if a new
entrant assigns its license to a third
party after the new entrant has
reimbursed Sprint Nextel, the
Commission would reject a claim that
the assignee is responsible for
reimbursing Sprint Nextel for that same
relocation expense. The converse also
holds: An assignee would be considered
a new entrant and is responsible for
PO 00000
Frm 00029
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
67229
unpaid cost sharing associated with a
particular portion of the spectrum.
However, to the extent that a new
entrant seeks to assign its license to a
third party prior to satisfying its
reimbursement obligation, the assignor
and assignee would be jointly and
severally liable for the reimbursement
costs until paid.
15. As for when Sprint Nextel should
be reimbursed by the other new entrants
for its BAS relocation cost, the
Commission does not adopt either of the
proposals on which it sought comment
on the June 2009 Further Notice. The
Commission concludes that the
reimbursement deadline for a new MSS
or AWS entrant will be based on when
the new entrant has ‘‘entered the band.’’
Once the new entrant has entered the
band, but no later than the sunset date,
Sprint Nextel may provide the new
entrant with the required
documentation and request payment.
The new entrant will then have thirty
days to submit its reimbursement to
Sprint Nextel, unless, the parties agree
to different terms (such as an
installment plan). This approach avoids
complexities of administering separate
deadlines for each market and provides
certainty to the parties.
16. The Commission will not require,
nor will it object if parties agree to, an
installment payment plan for BAS
relocation reimbursement. The
Commission encourages the parties
interested in making installment
payments to use the 30-day payment
window to negotiate an appropriate
installment payment plan. If no
installment plan is agreed upon, a new
entrant must pay the full cost sharing
amount in one payment at the
reimbursement deadline.
17. The Commission sees no reason to
link the payment of new entrants’ cost
sharing obligations to the true-up as the
MSS entrants have suggested. The
Commission does not think it would be
prudent to introduce the uncertainty
associated with the true-up date to the
payment date of the BAS cost sharing,
especially given that it has prohibited
Sprint Nextel from both claiming credit
for BAS relocation costs against the antiwindfall payment and receiving cost
sharing payments from new entrants for
the same costs.
18. As the Commission proposed in
the June 2009 Further Notice, it will
require that Sprint Nextel share with
any other entrant from whom it seeks
reimbursement its relocation cost as
documented in its annual audit as
provided to the transition administrator,
copies of third-party audited statements
of expenses associated with the BAS
relocation, and copies of the relevant
E:\FR\FM\02NOR1.SGM
02NOR1
hsrobinson on DSK69SOYB1PROD with RULES
67230
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 211 / Tuesday, November 2, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
frequency relocation agreements. As
discussed, the new entrant will have 30
days, unless other terms are agreed
upon, to make its reimbursement
payment after Sprint Nextel has
provided this documentation.
19. The MSS entrants have requested
the ability to examine and contest
individual expenses while Sprint Nextel
has expressed concern that the MSS
entrants are merely trying to delay or
limit their cost sharing obligations. With
regard to disputes that may arise with
either MSS entrants or future AWS
entrants, we note that parties have
several options to resolve disputes that
may arise including mediation,
arbitration, or pursuing civil remedies
in the court system. Parties contesting a
specific cost sharing obligation shall
provide evidentiary support to
demonstrate that their calculation is
reasonable and made in good faith;
specifically, they are expected to
exercise due diligence to obtain the
information necessary to prepare an
independent estimate of the relocation
costs in question.
20. The Commission did not adopt the
proposal in the June 2009 Further
Notice to allow Sprint Nextel to recover
relocation costs associated with all 20
megahertz of MSS spectrum from a
single MSS entrant. In reaching the
decision, we observe that under the
Commission’s Emerging Technologies
policies the amount that the earlier
entrant could recover has always been
based on the amount of the later
entrant’s spectrum that the earlier
entrant has cleared. The Commission
concludes that it should not depart from
these traditional Emerging Technologies
policies.
21. As to future AWS entrants, the
Commission adopted rules consistent
with the tentative conclusion the
Commission made in the June 2009
Further Notice that the future AWS
licensees that enter the band prior to the
sunset date will be responsible for
reimbursing Sprint Nextel for relocating
the BAS incumbents, less any BAS
relocation costs for which Sprint Nextel
had received credit against the antiwindfall payment. This conclusion is
consistent with past actions in this
proceeding and with the traditional
Emerging Technologies policies.
However, as the Commission noted in
the June 2009 Further Notice,
determining how to apportion the
relocation cost among the future AWS
licensees will have to wait until the
licensing scheme for the AWS licensees
is adopted. The Commission intends to
adopt specific cost sharing rules,
consistent with this Order, to govern the
cost-sharing process between Sprint
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:21 Nov 01, 2010
Jkt 223001
Nextel and AWS entrants in the 1995–
2000 MHz and the 2020–2025 MHz
bands, when the Commission adopted
service rules which defined the
licensing scheme for these bands.
22. The Commission will adopt no
specific policies or procedures as to
how it should proceed if later new
entrants fail to reimburse an earlier
entrant for the cost of relocating BAS
incumbents as required. Instead, it will
address complaints regarding failure to
make required payments that are filed
before the Commission through our
existing enforcement mechanisms.
The Automatic Stay of Section 362 of
the Bankruptcy Code
23. DBSD filed a petition to stay the
rulemaking proposed in the June 2009
Further Notice on the grounds that the
rulemaking must be automatically
stayed under section 362(a) of the
Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. 362(a). The
Commission finds DBSD’s arguments
misplaced, and denies its petition for
stay.
24. The automatic stay of the
Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. 362(a),
essentially bars actions against the
debtor to recover a pre-petition claim
against the bankruptcy estate or to
obtain possession or exercise control
over property of the estate. The
regulatory exception to the automatic
stay, 11 U.S.C. 362(b)(4), excepts from
the automatic stay actions taken
pursuant to a government unit’s or
organization’s police or regulatory
powers, including enforcement of a
judgment other than a money judgment.
25. The June 2009 Further Notice,
which focused on clarifying the costsharing and reimbursement obligations
set forth in prior Commission orders,
was designed to further the
Commission’s long stated public policy
goals of efficient management of the
radio spectrum. The June 2009 Further
Notice, therefore, falls squarely within
the regulatory exception to the
automatic stay. DBSD’s arguments to the
contrary are without merit. The
declaratory ruling, which includes
matters of Commission policy related to
but not subject to the June 2009 Further
Notice, likewise fits the regulatory
exception: the Commission has no
pecuniary interest in the outcome and is
acting in the public interest for a public
purpose.
26. Based on the legal standards, the
Commission agrees with Sprint Nextel
that the general rulemaking proceeding
is not subject to the automatic stay
merely because one of the parties to the
rulemaking is a debtor in a bankruptcy
case.
PO 00000
Frm 00030
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
27. Nor is there any basis to exclude
the DBSD debtors from the effects of this
Report and Order and accompanying
Declaratory Ruling merely because it
may result in a financial impact on one
or more of those parties. Moreover,
under the well-established principles of
the regulatory exception to the
automatic stay, a regulatory body can
implement its public policies, and even
adopt orders directed at particular
industry participants, without violating
the automatic stay so long as the
regulatory body does not seek to enforce
a money judgment outside of the
bankruptcy claims process.
28. The Commission rejects DBSD’s
contention that the regulatory exception
does not apply because, according to
DBSD, the June 2009 Further Notice will
effectively adjudicate or resolve the
reimbursement dispute between Sprint
Nextel and DBSD. The express purpose
of this Report and Order and
accompanying Declaratory Ruling is to
further the policy goals of promoting
more efficient use of spectrum and
permitting the introduction of new
services. This Report and Order and
accompanying Declaratory Ruling
promotes the general regulatory policies
of the Commission, but does not seek to
determine the pecuniary interest of any
individual debtor or creditor. The
rulemaking and declaratory ruling apply
to a variety of industry participants, not
just to DBSD, and are applicable to all
similarly situated entities. Moreover, the
final result of this Report and Order and
accompanying Declaratory Ruling is not
a judgment for or against Sprint Nextel
on its particular reimbursement claims.
Now that the obligations are clarified, it
is up to Sprint Nextel to pursue its
claims. With respect to the DBSD
bankruptcy, any proceedings by Sprint
Nextel on a claim for monetary recovery
against a debtor in the DBSD bankruptcy
case is a matter for the Bankruptcy
Court and is not addressed in this
Report and Order and accompanying
Declaratory Ruling. Thus, the
Commission’s rulemaking and issuance
of a declaratory ruling have remained
within the limits of the regulatory
exception to the automatic stay.
29. In addition, the results of this
Report and Order and Declaratory
Ruling meet both the pecuniary purpose
and public policy tests limiting the
regulatory exception. With respect to
the pecuniary purpose test, the
Commission is acting solely in its
regulatory capacity and has no creditor
interest in the DBSD bankruptcy case or
in the outcome of the Sprint NextelDBSD dispute. The Commission’s
actions here also meet the ‘‘public
policy’’ test. The Commission’s actions
E:\FR\FM\02NOR1.SGM
02NOR1
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 211 / Tuesday, November 2, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
hsrobinson on DSK69SOYB1PROD with RULES
are not designed to protect the claim of
Sprint Nextel or any other creditor
against the DBSD bankruptcy estates.
30. Although the Eastern District of
Virginia has referred claims to the
Commission for ‘‘resolution,’’ the actions
the Commission takes here are not an
adjudication of the claims that Sprint
Nextel, DBSD, and TerreStar have raised
in that court proceeding. Instead, the
Commission clarifies its relocation rules
to assist the parties, as well as the court,
in determining the responsibilities of
each party in the ongoing BAS
relocation.
Retroactivity
31. The question about cost sharing
requirements in the Report and Order
involves when the MSS entrants’
obligation to share the costs of BAS
relocation ends, not whether they are
under such an obligation. In the
Declaratory Ruling, the Commission
explained that under the requirements
set out in the 800 MHz Order, the MSS
operators incur a cost sharing obligation
if they enter the band before the 800
MHz band reconfiguration or true-up
process is complete. Once incurred, the
operator’s reimbursement obligation
continues until discharged by payment
or cut off by intervening events. Because
the 800 MHz rebanding process has
unfolded in unexpected ways, the
precise timing and nature of the
triggering events that would cut off
these obligations was unspecified, and,
under these circumstances, the exact
dates that the MSS operators’ ongoing
payment obligations would terminate
were not set.
32. To the extent the Commission’s
clarification of the triggering events for
termination of the payment obligations
constitutes a new or modified rule, it
would be considered primarily
retroactive only if it changed the past
legal consequences of past actions. This
clarification, however, has worked no
change in the legal consequences (i.e.,
incurrence of the reimbursement
obligation) of the MSS operators’ past
actions (i.e., entering the band).
Moreover, the clarification does not
change how the MSS operators would
have been treated if the band
reconfiguration had proceeded
according to plan. Since it did not,
however, the circumstances that would
have relieved the MSS operators of their
payment obligations did not come
about, leaving them with these
obligations intact and the manner of
their termination (other than for
payment) unspecified. In taking action
now to establish a firm date in the
future (December 9, 2013) that will cut
off the MSS operators’ cost sharing
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:21 Nov 01, 2010
Jkt 223001
obligations, the Commission acts
prospectively.
Paperwork Reduction Analysis
33. This document does not contain
new or modified information collection
requirements subject to the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA), Public
Law 104–13. In addition, therefore, it
does not contain any new or modified
information collection burden for small
business concerns with fewer than 25
employees, pursuant to the Small
Business Paperwork Relief Act of 2002,
Public Law 107–198, see 44 U.S.C.
3506(c)(4).
Congressional Review Act
34. The Commission SHALL SEND a
copy of this Fifth Report and Order,
Eleventh Report and Order, Sixth Report
and Order, and Declaratory Ruling in a
report to be sent to Congress and the
General Accounting Office pursuant to
the Congressional Review Act, see 5
U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A). In addition, the
Commission’s Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau will send
a copy of the Fifth Report and Order,
Eleventh Report and Order, Sixth Report
and Order, and Declaratory Ruling,
including the FRFA, to the Chief
Counsel for Advocacy of the SBA.
Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
35. As required by the Regulatory
Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended
(RFA),1 an Initial Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis (IRFA) was incorporated in the
Further Notice of Proposed Rule Making
(FNPRM).2 The Commission sought
written public comment on the
proposals in the FNPRM, including
comment on the IRFA.3 No commenting
parties specifically addressed the IRFA.
This present Final Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis (FRFA) conforms to the RFA.4
A. Need for, and Objectives of, the Rules
36. In this Fifth Report and Order,
Eleventh Report and Order, and Sixth
Report and Order and Declaratory
Ruling (collectively, Report and Order),
we modify and clarify the Commission’s
requirements for the new entrants to the
1990–2025 MHz band to share the cost
of relocating the incumbent BAS
1 See 5 U.S.C. 603. The RFA, see 5 U.S.C. 601–
612, has been amended by the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996
(SBREFA), Public Law 104–121, Title II, 110 Stat.
857 (1996).
2 See Improving Public Safety Communications in
the 800 MHz Band, WT Docket No. 02–55, ET
Docket No. 00–258 and ET Docket No. 95–18,
Report and Order and Order and Further Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking, 24 FCC Rcd 7904 Appendix
C (2009).
3 See Id. at ¶ 1.
4 See 5 U.S.C. 604.
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
67231
licensees from that band. The BAS
incumbents have been removed from
the 1990–2025 MHz band to make way
for Sprint Nextel, MSS entrants, and
future AWS licensees. Sprint Nextel,
who will occupy the 1990–1995 MHz
spectrum, completed relocation of the
BAS incumbents from the band on July
15, 2010. The MSS entrants (DBSD and
TerreStar), who will occupy the 2000–
2020 MHz spectrum, have both
launched satellites. The AWS licenses
for the 1995–2000 MHz and 2020–2025
MHz bands have not yet been issued.
37. The cost sharing requirements for
the BAS relocation must be modified
because circumstances surrounding the
relocation have significantly changed
since the requirements were adopted.
When the current cost sharing
requirements were adopted in 2004,
Sprint Nextel was expected to have
completed the BAS transition by
September 7, 2007; one or both of the
MSS entrants was expected to have
entered the band and incurred a cost
sharing obligation to Sprint; the
reconfiguration of the 800 MHz band,
which Sprint Nextel was also
undertaking, would have been
completed by June 26, 2008; and Sprint
Nextel was expected to be able to
receive credit for the BAS relocation
costs not reimbursed by MSS and AWS
licenses toward the value of spectrum it
was receiving. None of these
assumptions has in fact been correct.
Furthermore, the current requirements
have a number of ambiguities, such as
not specifying a standard for
determining how MSS and AWS
licenses incur a cost sharing obligation
to Sprint Nextel and not specifying
when reimbursement of BAS relocation
expenses is to occur.
38. The Report and Order concludes
that Sprint Nextel may not both receive
reimbursement for cost sharing from
other new entrants and receive credit for
the same relocation costs against the
value of the spectrum it is receiving.
The MSS and AWS entrants can incur
a relocation obligation until the band
relocation rules sunset on December 9,
2013. The Report and Order further
concludes that an MSS entrant will
incur an obligation to reimburse Sprint
for BAS relocation costs when it
certifies that its satellite is operational
for purposes of meeting its operational
milestone. As for AWS licensees, the
Report and Order concludes that AWS
entrants will incur a cost sharing
obligation upon grant of their long form
application for their licenses. The
Report and Order decrees that Sprint
Nextel may provide a new entrant with
documentation of the relocation
expenses for which reimbursement is
E:\FR\FM\02NOR1.SGM
02NOR1
67232
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 211 / Tuesday, November 2, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
owed only after the new entrant has
‘‘entered the band’’ and therefore
incurred a cost sharing obligation. The
new entrant will then have thirty days
to pay the amount owed Sprint Nextel,
unless the parties agree to a different
schedule.
39. In addition, the Report and Order
concludes that the MSS entrants’
reimbursement obligation to Sprint
Nextel should continue to be limited to
a pro rata share of the costs of relocating
BAS in the thirty largest markets (by
population) and all fixed BAS links. The
Report and Order requires Sprint Nextel
to share with other new entrants from
whom it is seeking reimbursement,
information about its relocation cost as
documented in its annual external audit
and as Sprint Nextel provides to the
Transition Administrator of the 800
MHz transition, copies of frequency
relocation agreements that it has with
any BAS incumbent for which it is
seeking cost sharing, and third-party
audited statements of expenses
associated with the BAS relocation.
B. Legal Basis
40. The action is taken pursuant to
sections 4(i), 301, 303(c), 303(f), 303(g),
303(r), 303(y), and 332 of the
Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, 47 U.S.C. 154(i), 301, 303(c),
303(f), 303(g), 303(r), 303(y), and 332.
C. Description and Estimate of the
Number of Small Entities to Which the
Rules Will Apply
41. The RFA directs agencies to
provide a description of and, where
feasible, an estimate of the number of
small entities that may be affected by
the rules, if adopted.5 The RFA
generally defines the term ‘‘small entity’’
as having the same meaning as the terms
‘‘small business,’’ ‘‘small organization,’’
and ‘‘small governmental jurisdiction.’’ 6
In addition, the term ‘‘small business’’
has the same meaning as the term ‘‘small
business concern’’ under the Small
Business Act.7 A small business concern
is one which: (1) Is independently
owned and operated; (2) is not
dominant in its field of operation; and
55
U.S.C. 603(b)(3).
U.S.C. 601(6).
7 5 U.S.C. 601(3) (incorporating by reference the
definition of ‘‘small business concern’’ in 15 U.S.C.
632). Pursuant to the RFA, the statutory definition
of a small business applies ‘‘unless an agency, after
consultation with the Office of Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration and after
opportunity for public comment, establishes one or
more definitions of such term which are
appropriate to the activities of the agency and
publishes such definition(s) in the Federal
Register.’’ 5 U.S.C. 601(3).
hsrobinson on DSK69SOYB1PROD with RULES
65
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:21 Nov 01, 2010
Jkt 223001
(3) satisfies any additional criteria
established by the SBA.8
42. The rule modifications will affect
the interest of the new entrants to the
1990–2025 MHz band: MSS, Sprint
Nextel, and future AWS entrants to the
band.
43. MSS. There are two MSS operators
in the 1990–2110 MHz band. These
operators will provide services using the
2000–2020 MHz portion of the band.
The SBA has developed a small
business size for Satellite
Telecommunications, which consist of
all companies having annual revenues
of less than $15 million.9 Neither of the
two MSS operators currently has
revenues because, while they both have
operational satellites, they are not
providing commercial service. However,
given that as of December 31, 2008,
these MSS operators had assets of
$1.341 billion and $664 million,
respectively, we expect that both of
these companies will have annual
revenue of over $15 million once they
are able to offer commercial services.10
Consequently, we find that neither MSS
operator is a small business. Small
businesses often do not have the
financial ability to become MSS system
operators due to high implementation
costs associated with launching and
operating satellite systems and services.
44. Wireless Telecommunications
Carriers (except Satellite). Since 2007,
the Census Bureau has placed wireless
firms within this new, broad, economic
census category.11 Prior to that time,
such firms were within the nowsuperseded categories of ‘‘Paging’’ and
‘‘Cellular and Other Wireless
Telecommunications.’’ 12 Under the
present and prior categories, the SBA
has deemed a wireless business to be
small if it has 1,500 or fewer
employees.13 Because Census Bureau
data are not yet available for the new
8 Small
Business Act, 15 U.S.C. 632 (1996).
CFR 121.201, NAICS Code 517410.
10 TerreStar Corp., SEC Form 10–K 2008 Annual
Report, filed March 12, 2009 at F–2; ICO Global
Communications (Holdings) Limited, SEC Form 10–
K 2008 Annual Report, filed March 31, 2009 at 52.
ICO’s subsidiary which controls its satellite
covering the United States is currently in
bankruptcy. ICO Global Communications
(Holdings) Limited, Form 8–K, filed May 15, 2009.
11 U.S. Census Bureau, 2007 NAICS Definitions,
‘‘517210 Wireless Telecommunications Categories
(Except Satellite)’’; https://www.census.gov/naics/
2007/def/ND517210.HTM#N517210.
12 U.S. Census Bureau, 2002 NAICS Definitions,
‘‘517211 Paging’’; https://www.census.gov/epcd/
naics02/def/NDEF517.HTM.; U.S. Census Bureau,
2002 NAICS Definitions, ‘‘517212 Cellular and
Other Wireless Telecommunications’’; https://
www.census.gov/epcd/naics02/def/NDEF517.HTM.
13 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517210 (2007
NAICS). The now-superseded, pre-2007 CFR
citations were 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS codes
517211 and 517212 (referring to the 2002 NAICS).
9 13
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
category, we will estimate small
business prevalence using the prior
categories and associated data. For the
category of Paging, data for 2002 show
that there were 807 firms that operated
for the entire year.14 Of this total, 804
firms had employment of 999 or fewer
employees, and three firms had
employment of 1,000 employees or
more.15 For the category of Cellular and
Other Wireless Telecommunications,
data for 2002 show that there were 1,397
firms that operated for the entire year.16
Of this total, 1,378 firms had
employment of 999 or fewer employees,
and 19 firms had employment of 1,000
employees or more.17 Thus, we estimate
that the majority of wireless firms are
small.
45. AWS. The AWS licenses have not
been issued and the Commission has no
definite plans to issue these licenses.
Presumably some of the businesses
which will eventually obtain AWS
licenses will be small businesses.
However, we have no means to estimate
how many of these licenses will be
small businesses.
46. Sprint Nextel. Sprint Nextel as a
new entrant to the band will occupy
spectrum from 1990–1995 MHz. The
Third Report and Order grants Sprint
Nextel a waiver of the deadline by
which it must relocate the BAS, CARS,
and LTTS incumbents from the 1990–
2025 MHz portion of the band. Sprint
Nextel belongs to the SBA category,
Wireless Telecommunications Carriers
(except satellite).18 Businesses in this
category are considered small if they
have fewer than 1,500 employees.19 As
of December 31, 2009 Sprint Nextel had
about 40,000 employees.20
Consequently, we find that Sprint
Nextel is not a small business.
14 U.S. Census Bureau, 2002 Economic Census,
Subject Series: Information, ‘‘Establishment and
Firm Size (Including Legal Form of Organization,’’
Table 5, NAICS code 517211 (issued Nov. 2005)).
15 Id. The census data do not provide a more
precise estimate of the number of firms that have
employment of 1,500 or fewer employees; the
largest category provided is for firms with ‘‘1,000
employees or more.’’
16 U.S. Census Bureau, 2002 Economic Census,
Subject Series: Information, ‘‘Establishment and
Firm Size (Including Legal Form of Organization,’’
Table 5, NAICS code 517212 (issued Nov. 2005)).
17 Id. The census data do not provide a more
precise estimate of the number of firms that have
employment of 1,500 or fewer employees; the
largest category provided is for firms with ‘‘1,000
employees or more.’’
18 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS Code 517210.
19 Id.
20 Sprint Nextel Corp., SEC Form 10–K 2009
Annual Report, filed Feb. 26, 2010 at 12.
E:\FR\FM\02NOR1.SGM
02NOR1
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 211 / Tuesday, November 2, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
D. Description of Projected Reporting,
Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance
Requirements for Small Entities
47. The Report and Order clarifies the
existing obligation of new entrants to
reimburse the party who relocates BAS
incumbents for a portion of the
relocation costs. It specifies that an
AWS entrant incurs a cost sharing
obligation upon grant of the long-form
application for its license, and an MSS
entrant incurs an obligation when it
certifies that its satellite is operational
for purposes of meeting its operational
milestone. The reimbursement
obligation continues until the December
9, 2013 band sunset date. The Report
and Order also specifies when payment
of relocation cost is due.
hsrobinson on DSK69SOYB1PROD with RULES
E. Steps Taken To Minimize the
Significant Economic Impact on Small
Entities, and Significant Alternatives
Considered
48. The RFA requires an agency to
describe any significant alternatives that
it has considered in reaching its
proposed approach, which may include
the following four alternatives (among
others): (1) The establishment of
differing compliance or reporting
requirements or timetables that take into
account the resources available to small
entities; (2) the clarification,
consolidation, or simplification of
compliance or reporting requirements
under the rule for small entities; (3) the
use of performance, rather than design,
standards; and (4) an exemption from
coverage of the rule, or any part thereof,
for small entities.21
49. Most of the decisions in the
Report and Order address cost sharing
obligations between the MSS entrants,
future AWS entrants, and Sprint Nextel
for relocating the BAS incumbents. Of
these new entrants only the future AWS
entrants may be small entities. Because
no licensing scheme for the AWS
spectrum has been determined, we are
unable to determine how many (if any)
of these future licensees may be small
entities. It is also difficult to determine
how the impact of the cost sharing rules
on them may be reduced.
50. All of the new entrants benefit
from the clarity that the Report and
Order brings to the cost sharing rules.
The new entrants can now be certain
how they incur a cost sharing
obligation, what expenses are eligible
for cost sharing, when they must make
payment, and when the obligation will
end if they do not incur a cost sharing
obligation (i.e. they do not enter the
band by the sunset date). In this way the
21 See
5 U.S.C. 603(c).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:21 Nov 01, 2010
Jkt 223001
cost sharing requirements adopted in
the Report and Order benefit those
future AWS entrants who may be small
entities.
51. Under the cost sharing rules,
Sprint Nextel may receive cost sharing
from the other new entrants to the band.
One possible alternative to lessen the
impact on new entrants who are small
entities would be to reduce the amount
that small entities are required to
reimburse other entrants for the BAS
relocation. This would in effect require
Sprint Nextel to subsidize the small
entities. This would be unfair because
Sprint Nextel did not volunteer to
subsidize the small entities, the small
entities would likely be direct
competitors of Sprint Nextel, and Sprint
Nextel has spent a large sum of money
on the BAS transition. Sprint Nextel is
only receiving 5 megahertz of the 35
megahertz of spectrum and up to this
point has shouldered the entire cost of
the BAS transition. Not requiring the
future AWS entrants who are small
entities to pay their share of the
relocation cost would also harm the
Commission’s future relocation policies.
In the future licensees are not likely to
volunteer to relocate incumbents if they
are forced to subsidize other licensees.
52. Another alternative would be to
let the small entities pay their cost
sharing obligation on the installment
plan.22 Allowing use of installment
payments would in effect make the
party who relocated the incumbents a
creditor of the small entity. This would
be more costly for the party who
relocated the incumbents because they
will receive payment later. It would also
subject the relocating party to increased
risk of non-payment. There is also no
record as to what specific installment
plan could be adopted.
53. Because of these drawbacks, we
do not believe either of these
alternatives is appropriate. Furthermore,
because no AWS licenses have been
issued, no small entities currently have
a cost sharing obligation for the BAS
transition. When AWS licenses are
issued at some future date, the potential
licensees will know for certain that they
face a cost sharing liability because of
the refinement of the cost sharing rules
adopted in this Report and Order.
F. Federal Rules That May Duplicate,
Overlap or Conflict With the Rules
54. None.
22 We rejected requiring the MSS entrants to pay
their obligation under an installment plan. See
paragraph 16, supra.
PO 00000
Frm 00033
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
67233
Ordering Clauses
55. Pursuant to sections 4(i), 301,
303(c), 303(f), 303(g), 303(r), 303(y), and
332 of the Communications Act of 1934,
as amended, 47 U.S.C. 154(i), 301,
303(c), 303(f), 303(g), 303(r), 303(y), and
332, this Fifth Report and Order,
Eleventh Report and Order, Sixth Report
and Order is adopted and will become
effective 30 days after publication in the
Federal Register.
56. Pursuant to sections 4(i), 301,
303(c), 303(f), 303(g), 303(r), 303(y), and
332 of the Communications Act of 1934,
as amended, 47 U.S.C. 154(i), 301,
303(c), 303(f), 303(g), 303(r), 303(y), and
332, this Declaratory Ruling is adopted
and was effective September 29, 2010.
57. The Petition for Stay filed by New
DBSD Satellite Services G.P. is denied.
58. The Commission shall send a copy
of this Fifth Report and Order, Eleventh
Report and Order, Sixth Report and
Order, and Declaratory Ruling in a
report to be sent to Congress and the
General Accounting Office pursuant to
the Congressional Review Act, see 5
U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene H. Dortch,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2010–27577 Filed 11–1–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration
49 CFR Part 571
[Docket No. NHTSA–2010–0148]
RIN 2127–AK39
Federal Motor Vehicle Safety
Standards; Head Restraints
AGENCY: National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration (NHTSA), DOT.
ACTION: Final rule; technical
amendments; response to petitions for
reconsideration and petitions for
rulemaking.
SUMMARY: This document responds to
petitions for reconsideration of the
agency’s May 2007 final rule amending
our head restraint standard, and to
related petitions for rulemaking. This
document also makes technical
corrections. The May 2007 final rule
was issued in response to petitions for
reconsideration of our December 2004
final rule upgrading our head restraint
standard. We are partially granting and
partially denying the petitions for
reconsideration.
E:\FR\FM\02NOR1.SGM
02NOR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 211 (Tuesday, November 2, 2010)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 67227-67233]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-27577]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
47 CFR Parts 74 and 78
[WT Docket No. 02-55, ET Docket No. 00-258 and 95-18; FCC 10-179]
Relocation Cost Sharing in the Broadcast Auxiliary Service
AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document concludes the Commission's longstanding efforts
to relocate the Broadcast Auxiliary Service (BAS) from the 1990-2110
MHz band to the 2025-2110 MHz band, freeing up 35 megahertz of spectrum
in order to foster the development of new and innovative services. This
decision addresses the outstanding matter of Sprint Nextel
Corporation's (Sprint Nextel) inability to agree with Mobile Satellite
Service (MSS) operators in the band on the sharing of the costs to
relocate the BAS incumbents. To resolve this controversy, the
Commission applies its time-honored relocation principles for emerging
technologies previously adopted for the BAS band to the instant
relocation process, where delays and unanticipated developments have
left ambiguities and misconceptions among the relocating parties. In
the process, the Commission balances the responsibilities for and
benefits of relocating incumbent BAS operations among all the new
entrants in the different services that will operate in the band.
DATES: Effective December 2, 2010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Nicholas Oros, (202) 418-0636, Policy
and Rules Division, Office of Engineering and Technology,
Nicholas.Oros@fcc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Commission's Fifth
Report and Order, Eleventh Report and Order, Sixth Report and Order,
and Declaratory Ruling, WT Docket No. 02-55, ET Docket No. 00-258 and
95-18, adopted September 29, 2010, and released September 29, 2010. The
full text of this document is available on the Commission's Internet
site at www.fcc.gov. It is also available for inspection and copying
during regular business hours in the FCC Reference Center (Room CY-
A257), 445 12th Street, SW., Washington, DC 20554. The full text of
this document also may be purchased from the Commission's duplication
contractor, Best Copy and Printing Inc., Portals II, 445 12th St., SW.,
Room CY-B402, Washington, DC 20554; telephone (202) 488-5300; fax (202)
488-5563; e-mail FCC@BCPIWEB.COM.
Summary of the Fifth Report and Order, Eleventh Report and Order, Sixth
Report and Order, and Declaratory Ruling
1. This Report and Order and Declaratory Ruling concludes the
Commission's longstanding efforts to relocate the Broadcast Auxiliary
Service (BAS) from the 1990-2110 MHz band to the 2025-2110 MHz band,
freeing up 35 megahertz of spectrum in order to foster the development
of new and innovative services that can provide mobile broadband and
nationwide communications capabilities. This decision in particular
addresses the outstanding matter of Sprint Nextel Corporation's (Sprint
Nextel) inability to agree with Mobile Satellite Service (MSS)
operators in the band on the sharing of the costs to relocate the BAS
incumbents. To date, Sprint has shouldered the entire cost of this
relocation, which was completed on July 15, 2010.
2. To resolve this important issue, the Commission applied its
time-honored relocation principles for emerging technologies previously
adopted for the BAS band to the instant relocation process, where
delays and unanticipated developments have left ambiguities and
misconceptions among the relocating parties. These principles have been
a fundamental part of the Commission's past efforts to unlock value and
promote investment through the relocation process. In the end, the
[[Page 67228]]
Commission balanced the responsibilities for and benefits of relocating
incumbent BAS operations among all the new entrants in the different
services that will operate in the band.
3. The Commission has sought to relocate BAS licensees to a more
spectrally efficient band plan and make spectrum available for other
uses, while fairly distributing the relocation costs among the new
users. Because the path leading to this Fifth Report and Order,
Eleventh Report and Order, Sixth Report and Order, and Declaratory
Ruling (Report and Order and Declaratory Ruling) has been especially
complex, the Commission summarized the history of this proceeding to
the extent relevant to the decisions it was making; see paragraphs 4
through 12 of the Report and Order and Declaratory Ruling. In the
Declaratory Ruling the Commission addresses a number of disputes that
have arisen in this proceeding involving requirements that were
established when the current BAS relocation scheme was adopted in 2004;
see paragraphs 15 through 44 of the Report and Order and Declaratory
Ruling.
Discussion
4. The Report and Order and Declaratory Ruling addresses disputes
regarding sharing the cost of relocating the 2 GHz BAS incumbents. The
Commission concludes that the best course of action is to clarify and
modify the cost sharing requirements to address the ambiguity or lack
of definition in the current requirements to correspond to the stated
purposes and structure of the cost sharing principles set forth in the
Commission decision which established Sprint Nextel's entry into the
band, the 800 MHz R&O (69 FR 67823), as well as to balance the
responsibilities for and benefits of relocating incumbent BAS
operations among all the new entrants in the band in a way that is
consistent with the Commission's relocation policies set forth in the
Emerging Technologies proceeding. One of the important underlying
principles of the relocation policy is that licensees that ultimately
benefit from the spectrum cleared by the first entrant shall bear the
cost of reimbursing the first entrant for the accrual of that benefit.
The Commission noted its concern that were it to stray from the
traditional application of the Emerging Technologies relocation policy,
future licensees might be unwilling or unable to assume the burden and
cost of clearing spectrum quickly if they were unsure of the likelihood
that they will be reimbursed by other new entrants.
Termination Date of the Cost Sharing Obligations
5. As explained in the Declaratory Ruling adopted along with this
Report and Order, the MSS and AWS entrants have an obligation to
reimburse Sprint Nextel for a portion of the costs of relocating the
BAS incumbents if they enter the band prior to either the end of two
future events connected to adoption of the 800 MHz R&O: the 800 MHz
reconfiguration or the 800 MHz true-up. Because the timing of either of
these events is presently unknown, the new entrants are in a state of
uncertainty as to their financial obligation. The Commission believes
that all of the parties will be served by adopting a date certain for
extinguishing cost-sharing obligations--the band sunset date of
December 9, 2013. This will harmonize the relocation requirements for
the BAS band with the relocation rules for other bands that were based
on the Emerging Technologies principles. The MSS entrants argue that
the cost sharing requirements for this band have departed from the
Emerging Technologies principles in a number of ways and argue that the
Commission should not follow the principles in regard to their cost
sharing obligations. While the Commission has made departures from the
Emerging Technologies procedures, those limited departures were made
because of the unique features of the BAS transition. However, where
circumstances do not require some deviation from Emerging Technologies,
the Commission shall adhere closely to these time-tested principles to
balance the interest of incumbent licensees, new entrants who relocate
incumbents, and new entrants who benefit from the band clearing. In
this case, because the main reason for allowing early termination of
the new entrants' cost-sharing obligation no longer applies--i.e.
Sprint Nextel will probably not be taking credit for all of its BAS
relocation costs against the anti-windfall payment that is described in
the 800 MHz R&O--there is no compelling reason to end the cost sharing
obligation of the new entrants any earlier than the band sunset date.
Consequently, any new entrant that enters the band before December 9,
2013 will be required to reimburse the entrant who relocated BAS
incumbents a pro rata share of the relocation costs, subject to the
limitations discussed in the Report and Order.
6. The Commission left in place the current band sunset date of
December 9, 2013, despite the request by Sprint Nextel to adjust the
date until 2015. The sunset date is a vital component of the Emerging
Technologies policies because, among other things, it specifies the
date upon which unrelocated incumbents become secondary and it provides
a length of time for incumbent licensees to transition from the band.
Because the BAS relocation has been completed, there is no need to
change the sunset date to 2015. While Sprint Nextel is correct that AWS
licensees may not enter the band by the current sunset date, the
Commission's goal in choosing the sunset date is not to provide the
entrant who relocates incumbents with a greater likelihood of receiving
cost sharing from later entrants. When Sprint Nextel undertook the
responsibility to relocate the BAS incumbents as a result of the 800
MHz R&O, it knew the timing of the band sunset and the uncertainties of
the entrance of AWS licensees.
Definition of ``Enter the Band''
7. The ``enter the band'' terminology was used in the 800 MHz R&O
and AWS Sixth R&O to denote when the new entrants would incur an
obligation to reimburse Sprint Nextel for a pro rata share of the cost
of relocating the BAS incumbents, but neither order defined the term.
8. The Commission concludes that an MSS entrant will ``enter the
band'' and therefore incur a cost sharing obligation when the MSS
entrant certifies that its satellite is operational for purposes of
meeting its operational milestone. In previous Emerging Technologies
band clearings, the later entrant becomes responsible for reimbursing
the earlier entrants' relocation cost when the later entrant is in the
position to cause interference to the incumbent licensees prior to
their relocation. The Commission previously determined that it does not
believe in general that the MSS entrants may operate without causing
interference to the BAS incumbents. Consequently, once the MSS
satellites are operational, they would have the potential for causing
interference to the incumbent BAS operations. As with the tests used in
previous band clearings, the definition adopted here is easy to apply
and not subject to contention. Also, the test is in keeping with the
nature of the BAS service.
9. The AWS entrants require a different definition of ``enter the
band.'' The Commission concludes that an AWS entrant will ``enter the
band'' on a license-by-license basis on the date that the grant of each
long-form application becomes a final action. This requirement has the
advantage of ease of administration, and conforms to the overall
Emerging Technologies policies.
[[Page 67229]]
Once the AWS entrant's long form application has been granted,
signifying the issuance of a license, the AWS entrant will be in the
position to roll out service and benefit from Sprint's relocation of
the BAS incumbents. Sprint Nextel's right to seek reimbursement from an
AWS licensee that enters the band prior to the sunset date is limited
to an AWS licensee's proportional share of the costs incurred in the
BAS clearance, on a pro rata basis according to the amount of spectrum
that each licensee is assigned in the 1990-2025 MHz band. The
Commission intends to adopt specific cost sharing rules for AWS in the
1995-2000 MHz and 2020-2025 MHz bands when it adopts service rules
which define the licensing scheme for these bands.
Limitations on MSS Cost Sharing Obligations
10. In the 800 MHz R&O, the costs for which the MSS entrants had to
reimburse Sprint Nextel were limited to a pro rata share of relocating
the top 30 markets and fixed BAS links because these were the BAS
incumbents that the MSS entrants had to relocate before they could
begin operations. The Commission concludes that even with the changed
circumstances surrounding the BAS relocation, the most appropriate
course is to retain the current cost sharing obligations for MSS
entrants. Although the Commission recognizes that the parties have
conflicting interests at stake, this requirement was clearly
established from the outset and the Commission declines to reverse it
now, where all parties involved have been aware of their respective
rights and obligations and presumably structured their activities
accordingly.
11. TerreStar, one of the MSS entrants, claims that equitable
factors argue for limiting the MSS entrants' reimbursement obligation
to the expenses Sprint Nextel incurred before September 7, 2007 because
if Sprint Nextel had completed the BAS relocation by the end of the BAS
30-month relocation period there would have been no relocation expenses
incurred after this date. The Commission is not persuaded that
equitable factors support allowing TerreStar or DBSD (the other MSS
entrant) to escape paying a pro rata share of the BAS relocation costs.
The MSS entrants have suffered little harm from the delays in the BAS
relocation, and the Commission has taken steps to minimize the impact
that delays in the transition would have on DBSD and TerreStar's plans
to begin operations. It concludes that there is no reason to reduce
their cost sharing obligations further.
12. The Commission rejects DBSD's suggestion that the amount that
the MSS entrants owe for BAS relocation be depreciated from when Sprint
Nextel signed frequency relocation agreements with the BAS incumbents.
The Commission also rejects DBSD's suggestion that cost caps be applied
to the BAS relocation costs. Finally, the Commission will not limit
Sprint Nextel's ability to seek reimbursement from MSS entrants to only
those expenses it cannot receive credit against the 800 MHz anti-
windfall payment, as suggested by TerreStar.
Payment Issues
13. In the Report and Order the Commission adopts a policy
affirming the tentative conclusion made in the June 2009 Further Notice
that Sprint Nextel may not both receive credit in the 800 MHz true-up
and receive reimbursement from the MSS and AWS entrants for the same
costs. This has been the rule since the cost sharing requirements were
adopted in the 800 MHz R&O, and is necessary to prevent Sprint Nextel
from receiving the unjustified windfall of a double recovery, and no
party has objected to this conclusion. If the true-up occurs prior to
Sprint Nextel receiving reimbursement from another entrant, the
Commission will require Sprint Nextel to inform the other entrant of
the expenses for which it has received credit in the 800 MHz true-up
prior to receiving reimbursement. The other entrant will not be
obligated to reimburse Sprint Nextel for what would otherwise be its
share of those particular expenses.
14. The principle that Sprint Nextel is not entitled to make a
double recovery also applies to reimbursements it receives from among
the new entrants. Multiple new entrants may have an interest in the
same portion of the relocated BAS spectrum because, for example,
entrants change business structure or assign their licenses.
Accordingly, the Commission specifies that Sprint Nextel is not
entitled to obtain reimbursement from a new entrant for relocation
costs that Sprint Nextel has already received from another new entrant.
Thus, if a new entrant assigns its license to a third party after the
new entrant has reimbursed Sprint Nextel, the Commission would reject a
claim that the assignee is responsible for reimbursing Sprint Nextel
for that same relocation expense. The converse also holds: An assignee
would be considered a new entrant and is responsible for unpaid cost
sharing associated with a particular portion of the spectrum. However,
to the extent that a new entrant seeks to assign its license to a third
party prior to satisfying its reimbursement obligation, the assignor
and assignee would be jointly and severally liable for the
reimbursement costs until paid.
15. As for when Sprint Nextel should be reimbursed by the other new
entrants for its BAS relocation cost, the Commission does not adopt
either of the proposals on which it sought comment on the June 2009
Further Notice. The Commission concludes that the reimbursement
deadline for a new MSS or AWS entrant will be based on when the new
entrant has ``entered the band.'' Once the new entrant has entered the
band, but no later than the sunset date, Sprint Nextel may provide the
new entrant with the required documentation and request payment. The
new entrant will then have thirty days to submit its reimbursement to
Sprint Nextel, unless, the parties agree to different terms (such as an
installment plan). This approach avoids complexities of administering
separate deadlines for each market and provides certainty to the
parties.
16. The Commission will not require, nor will it object if parties
agree to, an installment payment plan for BAS relocation reimbursement.
The Commission encourages the parties interested in making installment
payments to use the 30-day payment window to negotiate an appropriate
installment payment plan. If no installment plan is agreed upon, a new
entrant must pay the full cost sharing amount in one payment at the
reimbursement deadline.
17. The Commission sees no reason to link the payment of new
entrants' cost sharing obligations to the true-up as the MSS entrants
have suggested. The Commission does not think it would be prudent to
introduce the uncertainty associated with the true-up date to the
payment date of the BAS cost sharing, especially given that it has
prohibited Sprint Nextel from both claiming credit for BAS relocation
costs against the anti-windfall payment and receiving cost sharing
payments from new entrants for the same costs.
18. As the Commission proposed in the June 2009 Further Notice, it
will require that Sprint Nextel share with any other entrant from whom
it seeks reimbursement its relocation cost as documented in its annual
audit as provided to the transition administrator, copies of third-
party audited statements of expenses associated with the BAS
relocation, and copies of the relevant
[[Page 67230]]
frequency relocation agreements. As discussed, the new entrant will
have 30 days, unless other terms are agreed upon, to make its
reimbursement payment after Sprint Nextel has provided this
documentation.
19. The MSS entrants have requested the ability to examine and
contest individual expenses while Sprint Nextel has expressed concern
that the MSS entrants are merely trying to delay or limit their cost
sharing obligations. With regard to disputes that may arise with either
MSS entrants or future AWS entrants, we note that parties have several
options to resolve disputes that may arise including mediation,
arbitration, or pursuing civil remedies in the court system. Parties
contesting a specific cost sharing obligation shall provide evidentiary
support to demonstrate that their calculation is reasonable and made in
good faith; specifically, they are expected to exercise due diligence
to obtain the information necessary to prepare an independent estimate
of the relocation costs in question.
20. The Commission did not adopt the proposal in the June 2009
Further Notice to allow Sprint Nextel to recover relocation costs
associated with all 20 megahertz of MSS spectrum from a single MSS
entrant. In reaching the decision, we observe that under the
Commission's Emerging Technologies policies the amount that the earlier
entrant could recover has always been based on the amount of the later
entrant's spectrum that the earlier entrant has cleared. The Commission
concludes that it should not depart from these traditional Emerging
Technologies policies.
21. As to future AWS entrants, the Commission adopted rules
consistent with the tentative conclusion the Commission made in the
June 2009 Further Notice that the future AWS licensees that enter the
band prior to the sunset date will be responsible for reimbursing
Sprint Nextel for relocating the BAS incumbents, less any BAS
relocation costs for which Sprint Nextel had received credit against
the anti-windfall payment. This conclusion is consistent with past
actions in this proceeding and with the traditional Emerging
Technologies policies. However, as the Commission noted in the June
2009 Further Notice, determining how to apportion the relocation cost
among the future AWS licensees will have to wait until the licensing
scheme for the AWS licensees is adopted. The Commission intends to
adopt specific cost sharing rules, consistent with this Order, to
govern the cost-sharing process between Sprint Nextel and AWS entrants
in the 1995-2000 MHz and the 2020-2025 MHz bands, when the Commission
adopted service rules which defined the licensing scheme for these
bands.
22. The Commission will adopt no specific policies or procedures as
to how it should proceed if later new entrants fail to reimburse an
earlier entrant for the cost of relocating BAS incumbents as required.
Instead, it will address complaints regarding failure to make required
payments that are filed before the Commission through our existing
enforcement mechanisms.
The Automatic Stay of Section 362 of the Bankruptcy Code
23. DBSD filed a petition to stay the rulemaking proposed in the
June 2009 Further Notice on the grounds that the rulemaking must be
automatically stayed under section 362(a) of the Bankruptcy Code, 11
U.S.C. 362(a). The Commission finds DBSD's arguments misplaced, and
denies its petition for stay.
24. The automatic stay of the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. 362(a),
essentially bars actions against the debtor to recover a pre-petition
claim against the bankruptcy estate or to obtain possession or exercise
control over property of the estate. The regulatory exception to the
automatic stay, 11 U.S.C. 362(b)(4), excepts from the automatic stay
actions taken pursuant to a government unit's or organization's police
or regulatory powers, including enforcement of a judgment other than a
money judgment.
25. The June 2009 Further Notice, which focused on clarifying the
cost-sharing and reimbursement obligations set forth in prior
Commission orders, was designed to further the Commission's long stated
public policy goals of efficient management of the radio spectrum. The
June 2009 Further Notice, therefore, falls squarely within the
regulatory exception to the automatic stay. DBSD's arguments to the
contrary are without merit. The declaratory ruling, which includes
matters of Commission policy related to but not subject to the June
2009 Further Notice, likewise fits the regulatory exception: the
Commission has no pecuniary interest in the outcome and is acting in
the public interest for a public purpose.
26. Based on the legal standards, the Commission agrees with Sprint
Nextel that the general rulemaking proceeding is not subject to the
automatic stay merely because one of the parties to the rulemaking is a
debtor in a bankruptcy case.
27. Nor is there any basis to exclude the DBSD debtors from the
effects of this Report and Order and accompanying Declaratory Ruling
merely because it may result in a financial impact on one or more of
those parties. Moreover, under the well-established principles of the
regulatory exception to the automatic stay, a regulatory body can
implement its public policies, and even adopt orders directed at
particular industry participants, without violating the automatic stay
so long as the regulatory body does not seek to enforce a money
judgment outside of the bankruptcy claims process.
28. The Commission rejects DBSD's contention that the regulatory
exception does not apply because, according to DBSD, the June 2009
Further Notice will effectively adjudicate or resolve the reimbursement
dispute between Sprint Nextel and DBSD. The express purpose of this
Report and Order and accompanying Declaratory Ruling is to further the
policy goals of promoting more efficient use of spectrum and permitting
the introduction of new services. This Report and Order and
accompanying Declaratory Ruling promotes the general regulatory
policies of the Commission, but does not seek to determine the
pecuniary interest of any individual debtor or creditor. The rulemaking
and declaratory ruling apply to a variety of industry participants, not
just to DBSD, and are applicable to all similarly situated entities.
Moreover, the final result of this Report and Order and accompanying
Declaratory Ruling is not a judgment for or against Sprint Nextel on
its particular reimbursement claims. Now that the obligations are
clarified, it is up to Sprint Nextel to pursue its claims. With respect
to the DBSD bankruptcy, any proceedings by Sprint Nextel on a claim for
monetary recovery against a debtor in the DBSD bankruptcy case is a
matter for the Bankruptcy Court and is not addressed in this Report and
Order and accompanying Declaratory Ruling. Thus, the Commission's
rulemaking and issuance of a declaratory ruling have remained within
the limits of the regulatory exception to the automatic stay.
29. In addition, the results of this Report and Order and
Declaratory Ruling meet both the pecuniary purpose and public policy
tests limiting the regulatory exception. With respect to the pecuniary
purpose test, the Commission is acting solely in its regulatory
capacity and has no creditor interest in the DBSD bankruptcy case or in
the outcome of the Sprint Nextel-DBSD dispute. The Commission's actions
here also meet the ``public policy'' test. The Commission's actions
[[Page 67231]]
are not designed to protect the claim of Sprint Nextel or any other
creditor against the DBSD bankruptcy estates.
30. Although the Eastern District of Virginia has referred claims
to the Commission for ``resolution,'' the actions the Commission takes
here are not an adjudication of the claims that Sprint Nextel, DBSD,
and TerreStar have raised in that court proceeding. Instead, the
Commission clarifies its relocation rules to assist the parties, as
well as the court, in determining the responsibilities of each party in
the ongoing BAS relocation.
Retroactivity
31. The question about cost sharing requirements in the Report and
Order involves when the MSS entrants' obligation to share the costs of
BAS relocation ends, not whether they are under such an obligation. In
the Declaratory Ruling, the Commission explained that under the
requirements set out in the 800 MHz Order, the MSS operators incur a
cost sharing obligation if they enter the band before the 800 MHz band
reconfiguration or true-up process is complete. Once incurred, the
operator's reimbursement obligation continues until discharged by
payment or cut off by intervening events. Because the 800 MHz rebanding
process has unfolded in unexpected ways, the precise timing and nature
of the triggering events that would cut off these obligations was
unspecified, and, under these circumstances, the exact dates that the
MSS operators' ongoing payment obligations would terminate were not
set.
32. To the extent the Commission's clarification of the triggering
events for termination of the payment obligations constitutes a new or
modified rule, it would be considered primarily retroactive only if it
changed the past legal consequences of past actions. This
clarification, however, has worked no change in the legal consequences
(i.e., incurrence of the reimbursement obligation) of the MSS
operators' past actions (i.e., entering the band). Moreover, the
clarification does not change how the MSS operators would have been
treated if the band reconfiguration had proceeded according to plan.
Since it did not, however, the circumstances that would have relieved
the MSS operators of their payment obligations did not come about,
leaving them with these obligations intact and the manner of their
termination (other than for payment) unspecified. In taking action now
to establish a firm date in the future (December 9, 2013) that will cut
off the MSS operators' cost sharing obligations, the Commission acts
prospectively.
Paperwork Reduction Analysis
33. This document does not contain new or modified information
collection requirements subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA), Public Law 104-13. In addition, therefore, it does not contain
any new or modified information collection burden for small business
concerns with fewer than 25 employees, pursuant to the Small Business
Paperwork Relief Act of 2002, Public Law 107-198, see 44 U.S.C.
3506(c)(4).
Congressional Review Act
34. The Commission SHALL SEND a copy of this Fifth Report and
Order, Eleventh Report and Order, Sixth Report and Order, and
Declaratory Ruling in a report to be sent to Congress and the General
Accounting Office pursuant to the Congressional Review Act, see 5
U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A). In addition, the Commission's Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau will send a copy of the Fifth Report and
Order, Eleventh Report and Order, Sixth Report and Order, and
Declaratory Ruling, including the FRFA, to the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy of the SBA.
Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
35. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as
amended (RFA),\1\ an Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) was
incorporated in the Further Notice of Proposed Rule Making (FNPRM).\2\
The Commission sought written public comment on the proposals in the
FNPRM, including comment on the IRFA.\3\ No commenting parties
specifically addressed the IRFA. This present Final Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) conforms to the RFA.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See 5 U.S.C. 603. The RFA, see 5 U.S.C. 601-612, has been
amended by the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996 (SBREFA), Public Law 104-121, Title II, 110 Stat. 857 (1996).
\2\ See Improving Public Safety Communications in the 800 MHz
Band, WT Docket No. 02-55, ET Docket No. 00-258 and ET Docket No.
95-18, Report and Order and Order and Further Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking, 24 FCC Rcd 7904 Appendix C (2009).
\3\ See Id. at ] 1.
\4\ See 5 U.S.C. 604.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. Need for, and Objectives of, the Rules
36. In this Fifth Report and Order, Eleventh Report and Order, and
Sixth Report and Order and Declaratory Ruling (collectively, Report and
Order), we modify and clarify the Commission's requirements for the new
entrants to the 1990-2025 MHz band to share the cost of relocating the
incumbent BAS licensees from that band. The BAS incumbents have been
removed from the 1990-2025 MHz band to make way for Sprint Nextel, MSS
entrants, and future AWS licensees. Sprint Nextel, who will occupy the
1990-1995 MHz spectrum, completed relocation of the BAS incumbents from
the band on July 15, 2010. The MSS entrants (DBSD and TerreStar), who
will occupy the 2000-2020 MHz spectrum, have both launched satellites.
The AWS licenses for the 1995-2000 MHz and 2020-2025 MHz bands have not
yet been issued.
37. The cost sharing requirements for the BAS relocation must be
modified because circumstances surrounding the relocation have
significantly changed since the requirements were adopted. When the
current cost sharing requirements were adopted in 2004, Sprint Nextel
was expected to have completed the BAS transition by September 7, 2007;
one or both of the MSS entrants was expected to have entered the band
and incurred a cost sharing obligation to Sprint; the reconfiguration
of the 800 MHz band, which Sprint Nextel was also undertaking, would
have been completed by June 26, 2008; and Sprint Nextel was expected to
be able to receive credit for the BAS relocation costs not reimbursed
by MSS and AWS licenses toward the value of spectrum it was receiving.
None of these assumptions has in fact been correct. Furthermore, the
current requirements have a number of ambiguities, such as not
specifying a standard for determining how MSS and AWS licenses incur a
cost sharing obligation to Sprint Nextel and not specifying when
reimbursement of BAS relocation expenses is to occur.
38. The Report and Order concludes that Sprint Nextel may not both
receive reimbursement for cost sharing from other new entrants and
receive credit for the same relocation costs against the value of the
spectrum it is receiving. The MSS and AWS entrants can incur a
relocation obligation until the band relocation rules sunset on
December 9, 2013. The Report and Order further concludes that an MSS
entrant will incur an obligation to reimburse Sprint for BAS relocation
costs when it certifies that its satellite is operational for purposes
of meeting its operational milestone. As for AWS licensees, the Report
and Order concludes that AWS entrants will incur a cost sharing
obligation upon grant of their long form application for their
licenses. The Report and Order decrees that Sprint Nextel may provide a
new entrant with documentation of the relocation expenses for which
reimbursement is
[[Page 67232]]
owed only after the new entrant has ``entered the band'' and therefore
incurred a cost sharing obligation. The new entrant will then have
thirty days to pay the amount owed Sprint Nextel, unless the parties
agree to a different schedule.
39. In addition, the Report and Order concludes that the MSS
entrants' reimbursement obligation to Sprint Nextel should continue to
be limited to a pro rata share of the costs of relocating BAS in the
thirty largest markets (by population) and all fixed BAS links. The
Report and Order requires Sprint Nextel to share with other new
entrants from whom it is seeking reimbursement, information about its
relocation cost as documented in its annual external audit and as
Sprint Nextel provides to the Transition Administrator of the 800 MHz
transition, copies of frequency relocation agreements that it has with
any BAS incumbent for which it is seeking cost sharing, and third-party
audited statements of expenses associated with the BAS relocation.
B. Legal Basis
40. The action is taken pursuant to sections 4(i), 301, 303(c),
303(f), 303(g), 303(r), 303(y), and 332 of the Communications Act of
1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 154(i), 301, 303(c), 303(f), 303(g),
303(r), 303(y), and 332.
C. Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities to Which
the Rules Will Apply
41. The RFA directs agencies to provide a description of and, where
feasible, an estimate of the number of small entities that may be
affected by the rules, if adopted.\5\ The RFA generally defines the
term ``small entity'' as having the same meaning as the terms ``small
business,'' ``small organization,'' and ``small governmental
jurisdiction.'' \6\ In addition, the term ``small business'' has the
same meaning as the term ``small business concern'' under the Small
Business Act.\7\ A small business concern is one which: (1) Is
independently owned and operated; (2) is not dominant in its field of
operation; and (3) satisfies any additional criteria established by the
SBA.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ 5 U.S.C. 603(b)(3).
\6\ 5 U.S.C. 601(6).
\7\ 5 U.S.C. 601(3) (incorporating by reference the definition
of ``small business concern'' in 15 U.S.C. 632). Pursuant to the
RFA, the statutory definition of a small business applies ``unless
an agency, after consultation with the Office of Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration and after opportunity for public
comment, establishes one or more definitions of such term which are
appropriate to the activities of the agency and publishes such
definition(s) in the Federal Register.'' 5 U.S.C. 601(3).
\8\ Small Business Act, 15 U.S.C. 632 (1996).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
42. The rule modifications will affect the interest of the new
entrants to the 1990-2025 MHz band: MSS, Sprint Nextel, and future AWS
entrants to the band.
43. MSS. There are two MSS operators in the 1990-2110 MHz band.
These operators will provide services using the 2000-2020 MHz portion
of the band. The SBA has developed a small business size for Satellite
Telecommunications, which consist of all companies having annual
revenues of less than $15 million.\9\ Neither of the two MSS operators
currently has revenues because, while they both have operational
satellites, they are not providing commercial service. However, given
that as of December 31, 2008, these MSS operators had assets of $1.341
billion and $664 million, respectively, we expect that both of these
companies will have annual revenue of over $15 million once they are
able to offer commercial services.\10\ Consequently, we find that
neither MSS operator is a small business. Small businesses often do not
have the financial ability to become MSS system operators due to high
implementation costs associated with launching and operating satellite
systems and services.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS Code 517410.
\10\ TerreStar Corp., SEC Form 10-K 2008 Annual Report, filed
March 12, 2009 at F-2; ICO Global Communications (Holdings) Limited,
SEC Form 10-K 2008 Annual Report, filed March 31, 2009 at 52. ICO's
subsidiary which controls its satellite covering the United States
is currently in bankruptcy. ICO Global Communications (Holdings)
Limited, Form 8-K, filed May 15, 2009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
44. Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite). Since
2007, the Census Bureau has placed wireless firms within this new,
broad, economic census category.\11\ Prior to that time, such firms
were within the now-superseded categories of ``Paging'' and ``Cellular
and Other Wireless Telecommunications.'' \12\ Under the present and
prior categories, the SBA has deemed a wireless business to be small if
it has 1,500 or fewer employees.\13\ Because Census Bureau data are not
yet available for the new category, we will estimate small business
prevalence using the prior categories and associated data. For the
category of Paging, data for 2002 show that there were 807 firms that
operated for the entire year.\14\ Of this total, 804 firms had
employment of 999 or fewer employees, and three firms had employment of
1,000 employees or more.\15\ For the category of Cellular and Other
Wireless Telecommunications, data for 2002 show that there were 1,397
firms that operated for the entire year.\16\ Of this total, 1,378 firms
had employment of 999 or fewer employees, and 19 firms had employment
of 1,000 employees or more.\17\ Thus, we estimate that the majority of
wireless firms are small.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ U.S. Census Bureau, 2007 NAICS Definitions, ``517210
Wireless Telecommunications Categories (Except Satellite)''; https://www.census.gov/naics/2007/def/ND517210.HTM#N517210.
\12\ U.S. Census Bureau, 2002 NAICS Definitions, ``517211
Paging''; https://www.census.gov/epcd/naics02/def/NDEF517.HTM.; U.S.
Census Bureau, 2002 NAICS Definitions, ``517212 Cellular and Other
Wireless Telecommunications''; https://www.census.gov/epcd/naics02/def/NDEF517.HTM.
\13\ 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517210 (2007 NAICS). The now-
superseded, pre-2007 CFR citations were 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS codes
517211 and 517212 (referring to the 2002 NAICS).
\14\ U.S. Census Bureau, 2002 Economic Census, Subject Series:
Information, ``Establishment and Firm Size (Including Legal Form of
Organization,'' Table 5, NAICS code 517211 (issued Nov. 2005)).
\15\ Id. The census data do not provide a more precise estimate
of the number of firms that have employment of 1,500 or fewer
employees; the largest category provided is for firms with ``1,000
employees or more.''
\16\ U.S. Census Bureau, 2002 Economic Census, Subject Series:
Information, ``Establishment and Firm Size (Including Legal Form of
Organization,'' Table 5, NAICS code 517212 (issued Nov. 2005)).
\17\ Id. The census data do not provide a more precise estimate
of the number of firms that have employment of 1,500 or fewer
employees; the largest category provided is for firms with ``1,000
employees or more.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
45. AWS. The AWS licenses have not been issued and the Commission
has no definite plans to issue these licenses. Presumably some of the
businesses which will eventually obtain AWS licenses will be small
businesses. However, we have no means to estimate how many of these
licenses will be small businesses.
46. Sprint Nextel. Sprint Nextel as a new entrant to the band will
occupy spectrum from 1990-1995 MHz. The Third Report and Order grants
Sprint Nextel a waiver of the deadline by which it must relocate the
BAS, CARS, and LTTS incumbents from the 1990-2025 MHz portion of the
band. Sprint Nextel belongs to the SBA category, Wireless
Telecommunications Carriers (except satellite).\18\ Businesses in this
category are considered small if they have fewer than 1,500
employees.\19\ As of December 31, 2009 Sprint Nextel had about 40,000
employees.\20\ Consequently, we find that Sprint Nextel is not a small
business.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS Code 517210.
\19\ Id.
\20\ Sprint Nextel Corp., SEC Form 10-K 2009 Annual Report,
filed Feb. 26, 2010 at 12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 67233]]
D. Description of Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other
Compliance Requirements for Small Entities
47. The Report and Order clarifies the existing obligation of new
entrants to reimburse the party who relocates BAS incumbents for a
portion of the relocation costs. It specifies that an AWS entrant
incurs a cost sharing obligation upon grant of the long-form
application for its license, and an MSS entrant incurs an obligation
when it certifies that its satellite is operational for purposes of
meeting its operational milestone. The reimbursement obligation
continues until the December 9, 2013 band sunset date. The Report and
Order also specifies when payment of relocation cost is due.
E. Steps Taken To Minimize the Significant Economic Impact on Small
Entities, and Significant Alternatives Considered
48. The RFA requires an agency to describe any significant
alternatives that it has considered in reaching its proposed approach,
which may include the following four alternatives (among others): (1)
The establishment of differing compliance or reporting requirements or
timetables that take into account the resources available to small
entities; (2) the clarification, consolidation, or simplification of
compliance or reporting requirements under the rule for small entities;
(3) the use of performance, rather than design, standards; and (4) an
exemption from coverage of the rule, or any part thereof, for small
entities.\21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ See 5 U.S.C. 603(c).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
49. Most of the decisions in the Report and Order address cost
sharing obligations between the MSS entrants, future AWS entrants, and
Sprint Nextel for relocating the BAS incumbents. Of these new entrants
only the future AWS entrants may be small entities. Because no
licensing scheme for the AWS spectrum has been determined, we are
unable to determine how many (if any) of these future licensees may be
small entities. It is also difficult to determine how the impact of the
cost sharing rules on them may be reduced.
50. All of the new entrants benefit from the clarity that the
Report and Order brings to the cost sharing rules. The new entrants can
now be certain how they incur a cost sharing obligation, what expenses
are eligible for cost sharing, when they must make payment, and when
the obligation will end if they do not incur a cost sharing obligation
(i.e. they do not enter the band by the sunset date). In this way the
cost sharing requirements adopted in the Report and Order benefit those
future AWS entrants who may be small entities.
51. Under the cost sharing rules, Sprint Nextel may receive cost
sharing from the other new entrants to the band. One possible
alternative to lessen the impact on new entrants who are small entities
would be to reduce the amount that small entities are required to
reimburse other entrants for the BAS relocation. This would in effect
require Sprint Nextel to subsidize the small entities. This would be
unfair because Sprint Nextel did not volunteer to subsidize the small
entities, the small entities would likely be direct competitors of
Sprint Nextel, and Sprint Nextel has spent a large sum of money on the
BAS transition. Sprint Nextel is only receiving 5 megahertz of the 35
megahertz of spectrum and up to this point has shouldered the entire
cost of the BAS transition. Not requiring the future AWS entrants who
are small entities to pay their share of the relocation cost would also
harm the Commission's future relocation policies. In the future
licensees are not likely to volunteer to relocate incumbents if they
are forced to subsidize other licensees.
52. Another alternative would be to let the small entities pay
their cost sharing obligation on the installment plan.\22\ Allowing use
of installment payments would in effect make the party who relocated
the incumbents a creditor of the small entity. This would be more
costly for the party who relocated the incumbents because they will
receive payment later. It would also subject the relocating party to
increased risk of non-payment. There is also no record as to what
specific installment plan could be adopted.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ We rejected requiring the MSS entrants to pay their
obligation under an installment plan. See paragraph 16, supra.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
53. Because of these drawbacks, we do not believe either of these
alternatives is appropriate. Furthermore, because no AWS licenses have
been issued, no small entities currently have a cost sharing obligation
for the BAS transition. When AWS licenses are issued at some future
date, the potential licensees will know for certain that they face a
cost sharing liability because of the refinement of the cost sharing
rules adopted in this Report and Order.
F. Federal Rules That May Duplicate, Overlap or Conflict With the Rules
54. None.
Ordering Clauses
55. Pursuant to sections 4(i), 301, 303(c), 303(f), 303(g), 303(r),
303(y), and 332 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47
U.S.C. 154(i), 301, 303(c), 303(f), 303(g), 303(r), 303(y), and 332,
this Fifth Report and Order, Eleventh Report and Order, Sixth Report
and Order is adopted and will become effective 30 days after
publication in the Federal Register.
56. Pursuant to sections 4(i), 301, 303(c), 303(f), 303(g), 303(r),
303(y), and 332 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47
U.S.C. 154(i), 301, 303(c), 303(f), 303(g), 303(r), 303(y), and 332,
this Declaratory Ruling is adopted and was effective September 29,
2010.
57. The Petition for Stay filed by New DBSD Satellite Services G.P.
is denied.
58. The Commission shall send a copy of this Fifth Report and
Order, Eleventh Report and Order, Sixth Report and Order, and
Declaratory Ruling in a report to be sent to Congress and the General
Accounting Office pursuant to the Congressional Review Act, see 5
U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene H. Dortch,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2010-27577 Filed 11-1-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712-01-P