WRC-07 Implementation, 76250-76287 [2012-31049]
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Proposed Rules
Federal Register
Vol. 77, No. 248
Thursday, December 27, 2012
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains notices to the public of the proposed
issuance of rules and regulations. The
purpose of these notices is to give interested
persons an opportunity to participate in the
rule making prior to the adoption of the final
rules.
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Parts 1, 2, 74, 87, 90, and 97
[ET Docket No. 12–338; FCC 12–140]
WRC–07 Implementation
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
This document proposes to
amend the Commission’s rules to
implement allocation decisions from the
World Radiocommunication Conference
(Geneva, 2007) (WRC–07), make other
allocation changes that are not related to
WRC–07, and make certain updates to
its service rules. The proposed actions
are designed to conform the
Commission’s rules to the WRC–07
Final Acts and to provide significant
benefits to the American public.
DATES: Comments must be filed on or
before February 25, 2013, and reply
comments must be filed on or before
March 27, 2013.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tom
Mooring, Office of Engineering and
Technology, (202) 418–2450, email:
tom.mooring@fcc.gov, TTY (202) 418–
2989.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by ET Docket No. 12–338, by
any of the following methods:
D Federal Communications
Commission’s Web Site: https://
fjallfoss.fcc.gov/ecfs2/. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
D Mail: Tom Mooring, Office of
Engineering and Technology, Room 7–
A123, Federal Communications
Commission, 445 12th Street SW.,
Washington, DC 20554.
D People with Disabilities: Contact the
FCC to request reasonable
accommodations (accessible format
documents, sign language interpreters,
CART, etc.) by email: FCC504@fcc.gov
or phone: 202–418–0530 or TTY: 202–
418–0432.
For detailed instructions for
submitting comments and additional
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SUMMARY:
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information on the rulemaking process,
see the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section of this document.
This is a
summary of the Commission’s Notice of
Proposed Rule Making, ET Docket No.
12–338, FCC 12–140, adopted
November 15, 2012, and released
November 19, 2012. The full text of this
document is available for inspection
and copying during normal business
hours in the FCC Reference Center
(Room CY–A257), 445 12th Street SW.,
Washington, DC 20554. The complete
text of this document also may be
purchased from the Commission’s copy
contractor, Best Copy and Printing, Inc.,
445 12th Street SW., Room, CY–B402,
Washington, DC 20554. The full text
may also be downloaded at:
www.fcc.gov. Pursuant to §§ 1.415 and
1.419 of the Commission’s rules, 47 CFR
1.415, 1.419, interested parties may file
comments and reply comments on or
before the dates indicated on the first
page of this document. Comments may
be filed using the Commission’s
Electronic Comment Filing System
(ECFS). See Electronic Filing of
Documents in Rulemaking Proceedings,
63 FR 24121 (1998).
D Electronic Filers: Comments may be
filed electronically using the Internet by
accessing the ECFS: https://
fjallfoss.fcc.gov/ecfs2/.
D Paper Filers: Parties who choose to
file by paper must file an original and
one copy of each filing. If more than one
docket or rulemaking number appears in
the caption of this proceeding, filers
must submit two additional copies for
each additional docket or rulemaking
number. Filings can be sent by hand or
messenger delivery, by commercial
overnight courier, or by first-class or
overnight U.S. Postal Service mail. All
filings must be addressed to the
Commission’s Secretary, Office of the
Secretary, Federal Communications
Commission.
D All hand-delivered or messengerdelivered paper filings for the
Commission’s Secretary must be
delivered to FCC Headquarters at 445
12th St. SW., Room TW–A325,
Washington, DC 20554. The filing hours
are 8:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. All hand
deliveries must be held together with
rubber bands or fasteners. Any
envelopes and boxes must be disposed
of before entering the building.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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D Commercial overnight mail (other
than U.S. Postal Service Express Mail
and Priority Mail) must be sent to 9300
East Hampton Drive, Capitol Heights,
MD 20743.
D U.S. Postal Service first-class,
Express, and Priority mail must be
addressed to 445 12th Street SW.,
Washington, DC 20554.
People with Disabilities: To request
materials in accessible formats for
people with disabilities (braille, large
print, electronic files, audio format),
send an email to fcc504@fcc.gov or call
the Consumer & Governmental Affairs
Bureau at 202–418–0530 (voice), 202–
418–0432 (tty).
Summary of Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking
1. In the Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (NPRM), the Commission
proposed to amend parts 1, 2, 74, 78, 87,
90, and 97 of its rules to implement
allocation decisions from the World
Radiocommunication Conference
(Geneva, 2007) (WRC–07) concerning
portions of the radio frequency (RF)
spectrum between 108 MHz and 20.2
GHz and to make certain updates to its
rules in this frequency range. The NPRM
follows the Commission’s July 2010
WRC–07 Table Clean-up Order, which
made certain non-substantive, editorial
revisions to the Table of Frequency
Allocations (Allocation Table) and to
other related rules. The Commission
also addressed the recommendations for
implementation of the WRC–07 Final
Acts that the National
Telecommunications and Information
Administration (NTIA) submitted to the
Commission in August 2009. As part of
its comprehensive review of the
Allocation Table, the Commission also
proposed to make allocation changes
that are not related to the WRC–07 Final
Acts and update certain service rules,
and requested comment on other
allocation issues that concern portions
of the RF spectrum between 137.5 kHz
and 54.25 GHz.
2. Specifically, the Commission
proposed to:
• Raise the secondary amateur service
allocation in the 1900–2000 kHz band to
primary status, remove the Federal and
non-Federal radiolocation service (RLS)
allocations from this band, and remove
this band from §§ 90.103, 97.301, and
97.303.
• Allocate the 108–117.975 MHz
band to the aeronautical mobile route
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(R) service (AM(R)S) on a primary basis
for Federal/non-Federal shared use,
limited to systems operating in
accordance with recognized
international aeronautical standards and
Resolution 413 (Rev.WRC–07), and in
the 108–112 MHz sub-band, to systems
composed of ground-based transmitters
and associated receivers that provide
navigational information in support of
air navigation functions. Further, the
Commission proposed to prohibit the
proposed AMR(R)S use from
constraining the use of the 88–108 MHz
band by stations in the broadcasting
service (FM radio stations) operating in
accordance with 47 CFR part 73.
• Allocate the 156.4875–156.5125
MHz and 156.5375–156.5625 MHz
bands to the fixed and land mobile
services on a primary basis for nonFederal use, subject to not causing
harmful interference to, nor claiming
protection from, the maritime mobile
VHF radiocommunication service, and
with the licensing of this spectrum
restricted to the area consisting of VHF
Public Coast Station Areas 10–42. The
NPRM also requested comment on
whether additional areas can be
licensed while fully protecting VHF
Channel 70 reception.
• Allocate the 156.5125–156.5375
MHz band to the maritime mobile
service (MMS) on a primary basis for
Federal and non-Federal use, restricted
to the following types of operations:
Distress, urgency, safety, and calling via
Digital Selective Calling (DSC)
techniques.
• Make the frequencies 156.525 MHz
and 156.8 MHz available for search and
rescue (SAR) operations concerning
manned space vehicles.
• Make the frequency 156.3 MHz
available for use by aircraft stations for
the purpose of SAR operations and
other safety-related communications,
permit Federal ship and coast stations to
operate on certain navigation
frequencies (156.775 MHz and 156.825
MHz) on a primary basis, and simplify
the U.S. Table by combining these
proposed provisions with existing
provisions in a new U.S. footnote
(US52).
• Allocate the 161.9625–161.9875
MHz (AIS 1) and 162.0125–162.0375
MHz (AIS 2) bands to the mobilesatellite service (MSS) on a secondary
basis for Federal/non-Federal shared use
for the reception of automatic
identification system (AIS) emissions
from stations operating in the maritime
mobile service. The NPRM also solicited
comment on whether the Commission
should implement the WRC–12
allocation decisions with regard to the
AIS 1 and AIS 2 bands, i.e., whether the
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Commission should allocate these bands
to the aeronautical mobile (off-route)
service (AM(OR)S) and the MSS (Earthto-space) on a primary basis, restrict the
use of these bands by the AM(OR)S to
AIS emissions from SAR aircraft, and
require that these operations not
constrain the operation of allocated
services in adjacent bands.
• Amend the quiet zone rules in
§ 1.924(f) to reflect the areas listed in
paragraph (a) of US270, limit its
applicability to RLS systems, and move
the revised text from paragraph (f) to
paragraph (e).
• Amend NG120 by revising ‘‘band
928–960 MHz’’ and ‘‘mobile operations’’
to ‘‘bands 928–929 MHz, 932–932.5
MHz, 941–941.5 MHz, and 952–960
MHz’’ and ‘‘associated mobile
operations,’’ respectively, by deleting
the phrase ‘‘as specified in 47 CFR part
101.’’
• Allocate the 960–1164 MHz band to
the AM(R)S on a primary basis for
Federal/non-Federal use to the 960–
1164 MHz band and require that any
AM(R)S systems operating in the 960–
1164 MHz band not cause harmful
interference to, claim protection from,
or impose constraints on aeronautical
radionavigation service (ARNS) systems
operating in that band.
• Remove the conditional secondary
non-Federal fixed-satellite service (FSS)
allocation from the 1390–1392 MHz and
1430–1432 MHz bands.
• Delete the unused non-Federal
aeronautical mobile telemetry (AMT)
allocation in the 2310–2320 MHz band
from US339 and remove non-Federal
access to two unused frequencies
(2312.5 MHz and 2352.5 MHz) that are
available for telemetry or telecommand
operations of expendable and reusable
launch vehicles.
• Update US203 to list the radio
astronomy stations that observe in the
4800–4940 MHz and 14.47–14.5 GHz
bands.
• Allocate the 5091–5150 MHz band
to the aeronautical mobile service on a
primary basis for Federal/non-Federal
shared use, restricted to surface
applications at airports, AMT
transmissions, and aeronautical security
transmissions. The NPRM proposed to
restrict AMT use of the 5091–5150 MHz
band to the 52 flight test areas listed in
new footnote US111, except that
additional locations may be authorized
on a case-by-case basis. The NPRM
requested comment on whether
aeronautical security transmissions
should be excluded from the list of
permitted uses. The NPRM proposed to
remove the precedence that the
Microwave Landing System (MLS)
currently has over other uses of the
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5091–5150 MHz band and to extend the
date after which no new assignments
may be made to earth stations providing
feeder links for non-geostationary MSS
systems to January 1, 2016.
• Amend part 87 of the Commission’s
rules to bring the proposed AMT
allocation in the 5091–5150 MHz band
into immediate effect, remove all
references to the 1525–1535 MHz and
2310–2345 MHz bands from part 87,
and list the 2390–2395 MHz band in all
appropriate rule sections.
• Raise the secondary Federal RLS
allocation in the 9000–9200 MHz and
9300–9500 MHz bands to primary
status, allocate the 9300–9500 MHz
band to the Earth exploration-satellite
service (EESS) (active) and the space
research service (SRS) (active) on a
primary basis for Federal use, allocate
the 9800–9900 MHz band to the EESS
(active) and SRS (active) on a secondary
basis for Federal use, require that the
use of these proposed allocations not
cause harmful interference to existing
primary operations, and limit active
sensor use of the 9300–9500 MHz band
to systems requiring more than 300 MHz
of bandwidth.
• Allocate the 9300–9500 MHz and
9800–9900 MHz bands to the EESS
(active) and the SRS (active) on a
secondary basis for non-Federal use.
The NPRM solicited comment on
whether there is a non-Federal
requirement for primary EESS (active)
and SRS (active) allocations in the
9300–9500 MHz band.
• Amend US401 and §§ 1.924, 74.32,
and 78.19 of the Commission’s rules by
adding coordination areas in San
Miguel, California and Guam for
terrestrial operations in the 17.7–19.7
GHz band, consistent with a request by
NTIA. The NPRM also proposed to
amend US334 to limit primary Federal
earth stations in the 17.8–18.3 GHz and
19.3–19.7 GHz sub-bands to the Denver,
Colorado; Washington, DC; San Miguel,
California; and Guam areas.
• Amend §§ 1.924, 74.32, and 78.19
to bring better consistency between
these rules and to update these rules,
e.g., to remove the Morrison, Colorado
location from § 78.19. The NPRM sought
comment on whether the coordination
requirements for Multichannel Video
Programming Distributors (MVPD)
operations in § 74.32, and references in
§ 1.924 to MVPD operations pursuant to
parts 74 and 78, should be removed
from the Commission’s rules.
• Allocate the 18–18.1 GHz band to
the meteorological-satellite service for
space-to-Earth transmission on a
primary basis.
• Update the list of radio astronomy
stations in US388 that observe in the
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81–86 GHz, 92–94 GHz, and 94.1–95
GHz bands by removing the Five
Colleges Radio Observatory and by
adding the Heinrich Hertz
Submillimeter Observatory, which is
located at Mount Graham, Arizona. The
NPRM proposed to require coordination
within 150 kilometers of the new
observatory at Mount Graham.
• Implement WRC–07’s mandatory
unwanted emission limits in the 22.55–
23.55 GHz band for all new NGSO intersatellite service systems, and requested
comment on how these limits should
apply to the incumbent licensees system
on a going-forward basis.
• Implement WRC–07’s mandatory
unwanted emission limits for nonFederal FSS earth stations that transmit
in the 49.7–50.2 GHz and 50.4–50.9 GHz
bands. The NPRM sought comment on
how adoption of these mandatory
unwanted emission limits for earth
stations transmitting in the 49.7–50.2
GHz band will affect the
implementation of the Commission’s
band plan for the 36–51.4 GHz band (Vband) and on whether and how these
provisions should apply to existing
licensees in these bands.
• Urge licensees of fixed stations in
the 31–31.3 GHz band to limit the
maximum elevation angle of the
antenna main beam to 20° and to
employ automatic transmitter power
control (ATPC). The NPRM solicits
comment on whether the Commission
should adopt WRC–07’s mandatory
unwanted emission limit for the 31–31.3
GHz band or whether an alternative
emission limit would be sufficient. The
NRPM also requested comment on
whether the aeronautical mobile service
allocation should be removed from the
31–31.3 GHz band.
• Implement WRC–07’s mandatory
unwanted emission limits for future
non-Federal fixed stations that transmit
in the 51.4–52.6 GHz band.
• Urge operators in the 1390–1395
MHz and 1427–1452 MHz bands to
comply with the non-mandatory
unwanted emission levels specified in
ITU Resolution 750 (except that
Wireless Medical Telemetry Service
devices would be excluded).
• Revise US265 by removing the
phrase ‘‘per 250 kHz,’’ by adding the
advisory language for fixed point-topoint systems, and by prohibiting pointto-multipoint use of the 10.6–10.68 GHz
band. The NPRM also proposed to urge
licensees to employ ATPC and to permit
licensees holding a valid authorization
as of the effective date of the Report and
Order in this proceeding to continue to
operate as authorized. The NPRM
requested comment on whether the
Commission should: (1) Prohibit fixed
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stations with main beam elevation
angles greater than 20° from
transmitting on frequencies in the 10.6–
10.68 GHz band; (2) require fixed
stations (using paired frequencies) to
transmit on frequencies in the 10.6–
10.68 GHz band using the lower
elevation angle; (3) require the use of
ATPC; (4) raise the maximum
equivalent isotropically radiated power
(EIRP) limit from 40 to 48 dBW; and (5)
urge licensees to limit the off-axis EIRP
above 20° to ¥10 dBW.
• Implement the spectrum sharing
criteria adopted at WRC–07 for the 36–
37 GHz band (which is not currently
licensed by the Commission).
• Renumber various footnotes in
accordance with Commission policy, to
replace various placeholder footnotes
with the international footnotes adopted
at WRC–07, remove duplicative rule/
unneeded text, correct grammatical/
typographical errors in the
Commission’s rules, and otherwise
update the Commission’s rules.
3. In addition, the Commission
solicited comment on whether it should:
• Allocate the 135.7–137.8 kHz band
to the amateur radio service on a
secondary basis, with amateur stations
restricted to an EIRP of 1 watt and
required to protect power line carrier
(PLC) operations.
• Remove a lightly-used primary nonFederal AMT allocation in the 2345–
2360 MHz band and an unused primary
radionavigation service (RNS) allocation
from the 24.75–25.05 GHz band. If the
Commission decides to remove the RNS
allocation from the 24.75–25.05 GHz
band, then it would amend NG167 by
employing the international footnote
5.535 text in the 24.75–25.05 GHz band,
remove the Part 87 cross reference from
the Allocation Table, and remove the
24.75–25.05 GHz band from §§ 87.173(b)
and 87.187(x).
Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
4. As required by the Regulatory
Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended
(RFA),1 the Commission has prepared
this present Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) of the
possible significant economic impact on
small entities by the policies and rules
proposed in this NPRM. Written public
comments are requested on this IRFA.
Comments must be identified as
responses to the IRFA and must be filed
by the deadlines specified in the NPRM
for comments. The Commission will
send a copy of this NPRM, including
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) Pub. L. No. 104–121, Title II, 110 Stat.
857 (1996).
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this IRFA, to the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration (SBA).2 In addition, the
NPRM and IRFA (or summaries thereof)
will be published in the Federal
Register.3
A. Need for, and Objectives of, the
Proposed Rules
5. The Commission proposed to
amend parts 1, 2, 74, 78, 87, 90, and 97
of its rules to implement allocation
decisions from the World
Radiocommunication Conference
(Geneva, 2007) (WRC–07) concerning
the radio frequency (RF) spectrum
between 108 MHz and 20.2 GHz and
otherwise make certain updates to its
rules in this frequency range. The rules
proposed in this NPRM affect the
frequency bands and radio services
discussed in section D, below.
B. Legal Basis
6. The proposed action is authorized
under sections 1, 4, 301, 302(a), and
303(b), (c), and (f) of the
Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 154, 301,
302(a), and 303(b), (c), and (f).
C. Description and Estimate of the
Number of Small Entities to Which the
Proposed Rule Will Apply
7. 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 proposed rules, if adopted.4 The
RFA generally defines the term ‘‘small
entity’’ as having the same meaning as
the terms ‘‘small business,’’ ‘‘small
organization,’’ and ‘‘small governmental
jurisdiction.’’ 5 In addition, the term
‘‘small business’’ has the same meaning
as the term ‘‘small business concern’’
under the Small Business Act.6 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
Small Business Administration (SBA).7
Small Businesses, Small
Organizations, and Small Governmental
2 See
5 U.S.C. 603(a).
5 U.S.C. 603(a).
4 5 U.S.C. 603(b)(3).
5 5 U.S.C. 601(6).
6 5 U.S.C. 601(3) (incorporating by reference the
definition of ‘‘small-business concern’’ in the Small
Business Act, 15 U.S.C. 632). Pursuant to 5 U.S.C.
601(3), 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.’’
7 15 U.S.C. 632.
3 See
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Jurisdictions. Our action may, over time,
affect small entities that are not easily
categorized at present. We therefore
describe here, at the outset, three
comprehensive, statutory small entity
size standards.8 First, nationwide, there
are a total of approximately 27.5 million
small businesses, according to the SBA.9
In addition, a ‘‘small organization’’ is
generally ‘‘any not-for-profit enterprise
which is independently owned and
operated and is not dominant in its
field.’’ 10 Nationwide, as of 2007, there
were approximately 1,621,315 small
organizations.11 Finally, the term ‘‘small
governmental jurisdiction’’ is defined
generally as ‘‘governments of cities,
towns, townships, villages, school
districts, or special districts, with a
population of less than fifty
thousand.’’ 12 Census Bureau data for
2011 indicate that there were 89,476
local governmental jurisdictions in the
United States.13 We estimate that, of this
total, as many as 88,506 entities may
qualify as ‘‘small governmental
jurisdictions.’’ 14 Thus, we estimate that
most governmental jurisdictions are
small.
Amateur Radio Service. Because
‘‘small entities,’’ as defined in the RFA,
are not persons eligible for licensing in
the amateur service, this proposed rule
does not apply to ‘‘small entities.’’
Rather, it applies exclusively to
individuals who are the control
operators of amateur radio stations.
Satellite Telecommunications and All
Other Telecommunications. Two
economic census categories address the
satellite industry. The first category has
8 See
5 U.S.C. 601(3)–(6).
SBA, Office of Advocacy, ‘‘Frequently
Asked Questions,’’ web.sba.gov/faqs (last visited
May 6, 2011; figures are from 2009).
10 5 U.S.C. 601(4).
11 Independent Sector, The New Nonprofit
Almanac & Desk Reference (2010).
12 5 U.S.C. 601(5).
13 U.S. Census Bureau, Statistical Abstract of the
United States: 2011, Table 427 (2007).
14 The 2007 U.S. Census data for small
governmental organizations are not presented based
on the size of the population in each such
organization. There were 89,476 small
governmental organizations in 2007. If we assume
that county, municipal, township, and school
district organizations are more likely than larger
governmental organizations to have populations of
50,000 or less, the total of these organizations is
52,125. If we make the same assumption about
special districts and also assume that special
districts are different from county, municipal,
township, and school districts, in 2007 there were
37,381 special districts. Therefore, of the 89,476
small governmental organizations documented in
2007, as many as 89,506 may be considered small
under the applicable standard. This data may
overestimate the number of such organizations that
has a population of 50,000 or less. U.S. CENSUS
BUREAU, STATISTICAL ABSTRACT OF THE
UNITED STATES 2011, Tables 427, 426 (Data cited
therein are from 2007).
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a small business size standard of $15
million or less in average annual
receipts, under SBA rules.15 The second
has a size standard of $25 million or less
in annual receipts.16
The category of Satellite
Telecommunications ‘‘comprises
establishments primarily engaged in
providing telecommunications services
to other establishments in the
telecommunications and broadcasting
industries by forwarding and receiving
communications signals via a system of
satellites or reselling satellite
telecommunications.’’ 17 Census Bureau
data for 2007 show that 512 Satellite
Telecommunications firms operated for
that entire year.18 Of this total, 464 firms
had annual receipts of under $10
million, and 18 firms had receipts of
$10 million to $24,999,999.19
Consequently, the Commission
estimates that the majority of Satellite
Telecommunications firms are small
entities that might be affected by our
action.
The second category, i.e. ‘‘All Other
Telecommunications’’ comprises
‘‘establishments primarily engaged in
providing specialized
telecommunications services, such as
satellite tracking, communications
telemetry, and radar station operation.
This industry also includes
establishments primarily engaged in
providing satellite terminal stations and
associated facilities connected with one
or more terrestrial systems and capable
of transmitting telecommunications to,
and receiving telecommunications from,
satellite systems. Establishments
providing Internet services or voice over
Internet protocol (VoIP) services via
client-supplied telecommunications
connections are also included in this
industry.’’ 20 For this category, Census
Bureau data for 2007 show that there
were a total of 2,383 firms that operated
for the entire year.21 Of this total, 2,347
firms had annual receipts of under $25
million and 12 firms had annual
receipts of $25 million to $49,
15 13 CFR 121.201, North American Industry
Classification System (‘‘NAICS’’) code 517410.
16 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517919.
17 U.S. Census Bureau, 2007 NAICS Definitions,
‘‘517410 Satellite Telecommunications.’’
18 See https://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/
IBQTable?_bm=y&-geo_id=&-_skip=900&-ds_
name=EC0751SSSZ4&-_lang=en.
19 See https://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/
IBQTable?_bm=y&-geo_id=&-_skip=900&-ds_name
=EC0751SSSZ4&-_lang=en.
20 https://www.census.gov/cgi-bin/sssd/naics/
naicsrch?code=517919&search=2007%2
0NAICS%20Search.
21 https://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/IBQTable?_
bm=y&-geo_id=&-_skip=900&-ds_name=EC0751
SSSZ4&-_lang=en.
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999,999.22 Consequently, the
Commission estimates that the majority
of All Other Telecommunications firms
are small entities.
D. Description of Projected Reporting,
Record Keeping, and Other Compliance
Requirements
8. In the following paragraphs, we
describe the proposals and their
expected impact on small entities. First,
we describe the proposed deletion of
unused non-Federal allocations.
Second, we describe all other proposed
changes. We request comment on our
analysis.
9. Deletion of Unused Allocations.
The NPRM proposed to delete the
following unused allocations: (1) the
radiolocation service (RLS) from the
1900–2000 kHz band; (2) the fixedsatellite service (FSS) from the 1390–
1392 MHz and 1430–1432 MHz bands;
and (3) the aeronautical mobile service
(AMS) (telemetry) from the 2310–2320
MHz band. Because there are no
licensees operating stations in the
aforementioned radiocommunication
services and frequency bands, the
proposed deletions will have no impact
on small entities.
10. The NPRM also solicited comment
on deleting the aeronautical mobile
service allocation from the 31–31.3 GHz
band. Because there is no part 87
equipment authorized above 20 GHz, we
believe that it is unlikely that this
service would be used in the foreseeable
future. Therefore, we believe that the
proposed deletions will not affect small
businesses.
11. 135.7–137.8 kHz. The NPRM
sought comment on whether this band
should be allocated to the amateur
service on a secondary basis. The only
non-Federal use of this band is by Part
15 devices, such as Power Line Carrier
(PLC) systems. If the band is allocated
to the amateur service, amateur stations
and PLC systems that operate PLC
systems on electric transmission lines
will most likely require coordination.
We believe that any additional
coordination requirements would have a
de minimis impact on electric power
companies.
12. 156.4875–156.5625 MHz. The
NPRM proposed to allocate the
156.4875–156.5125 and 156.5375–
156.5625 MHz bands to the fixed service
(FS) and land mobile service on a
primary basis for non-Federal use,
subject to not causing harmful
interference to, nor claiming protection
from, the maritime mobile VHF
22 https://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/IBQTable?_
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radiocommunication service. The NPRM
also proposed to reallocate the
156.5125–156.5375 MHz band to the
MMS (distress, urgency, safety and
calling via digital selective calling).
Because all existing MMS licensees
would be protected from any
interference caused by the proposals,
the only possible impact would be to
the 20 call signs authorizing land
mobile service use. Because 18 of these
call signs are held by the State of
Arizona; one is held by the County of
Los Angeles, California (CA); and one is
held by the City of La Mesa, CA, which
has a population of 57,065 (2010
census), none of these licensees are
small governmental jurisdictions.
13. AIS satellite reception. The NPRM
proposed to permit satellites to receive
Automatic Identification System (AIS)
transmissions. Because this use will not
be protected from harmful interference
due to the operation of terrestrial
services, no small entity will be
negatively impacted. We believe that
there may be a positive impact on
Orbcomm Inc., which is a small
business, if this allocation is adopted.
14. 108–117.975 MHz. The NPRM
proposed to allocate the band to the
aeronautical mobile route service
(AM(R)S) on a primary basis and to add
new footnote US197A to the U.S. Table.
US197A states that AM(R)S use of the
108–117.975 MHz band must not: (1)
Cause harmful interference to the
aeronautical radionavigation service
(ARNS) (see Resolution 413); and (2)
constrain the use of the 88–108 MHz
band by FM radio stations operating in
accordance with 47 CFR part 73.
Because all incumbent licensees would
be protected from interference caused
by the new allocation, there can be no
significant economic impact on small
entities.
15. 960–1164 MHz. The NPRM
proposed to allocate the band to the
AM(R)S on a primary basis and to add
RR 5.327A to the U.S. Table. RR 5.327A
states that AM(R)S use of the 960–1164
MHz band is limited to systems that
operate in accordance with Resolution
417, which states that AM(R)S must not
cause harmful interference to the ARNS.
Because all incumbent licensees would
be protected from interference caused
by the new allocation, there can be no
significant economic impact on small
entities.
16. 5091–5150 MHz. The NPRM
proposed to allocate the band to the
AMS on a primary basis and to add RR
5.444B to the U.S. Table. RR 5.444B,
inter alia, restricts AMS use of the
5091–5150 MHz band to: (1) AM(R)S
systems operating in accordance with
international aeronautical standards,
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limited to surface applications at
airports, and in accordance with
Resolution 748, which states that this
AM(R)S use may not cause harmful
interference to the ARNS; (2) AMT
transmissions from aircraft stations in
accordance with Resolution 418, which
requires that AMT operations use the
spectrum sharing criteria set forth in
Annex 1 of that Resolution; and (3)
aeronautical security transmissions in
accordance with Resolution 419, which
states that administrations, in making
assignments, shall ensure that AM(R)S
requirements take precedence over AMS
applications. Currently, non-Federal use
of the 5091–5150 MHz band is limited
to feeder uplinks for non-geostationary
satellite orbit systems in the mobilesatellite service. No harmful
interference is expected to the receivers
on board the space stations.
17. 1390–1395 and 1427–1435 MHz.
The NPRM proposed to encourage
licensees of stations authorized
pursuant to parts 27 and 90 of the
Commission’s rules that transmit in the
1390–1395 MHz and 1427–1435 MHz
band to comply with WRC–07’s nonmandatory maximum values. The
Commission has issued 64 call signs to
1 licensee (TerreStar 1.4 Holdings LLC)
for the 1390–1395 MHz band and 13 call
signs to 2 licensees (TerreStar 1.4
Holdings LLC and Mississippi State
University) for the 1432–1435 MHz
band. The Commission has issued 129
call signs to 47 licensees in the 1427–
1432 MHz band. We believe that many
of the licensees operating in these bands
are small entities and that any costs
and/or administrative burdens
associated with the proposal will not be
significant or otherwise unduly burden
those small entities.
18. 1435–1452 MHz. The NPRM
proposed to encourage operators of
aeronautical mobile telemetry (AMT)
stations that transmit in the 1435–1452
MHz band to comply with WRC–07’s
non-mandatory unwanted emission
level. The NPRM also request comment
on whether AMT operators that can not
meet this unwanted emission level
should be required to seek their
operational requirements in the 1452–
1525 MHz band prior to operating in the
1435–1452 MHz band. As of April 24,
2012, the Commission has issued 23
calls to 13 licensees for stations in the
Aeronautical and Fixed Service to
operate in the 1435–1452 MHz band.
We believe that at most 4 of these
licensees are small businesses and that
any costs and/or administrative burdens
associated with the proposal will not
unduly burden or have a significant
economic impact on those limited
number of small entities.
PO 00000
Frm 00005
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19. 9000–9200 MHz. The NPRM
proposed to raise the secondary Federal
RLS from secondary to primary status.
Because non-Federal RLS use is
authorized on the condition that it not
cause harmful interference to the
secondary Federal RLS, the upgrade of
the Federal RLS can have no significant
economic impact on small entities.
20. 9300–9500 MHz. The NPRM
proposed to raise the secondary Federal
RLS from secondary to primary status
and to also allocate the 9300–9500 MHz
band to the Earth exploration-satellite
service (EESS) (active) and space
research service (SRS) (active). Because
non-Federal RLS use is authorized on
the condition that it not cause harmful
interference to the secondary Federal
RLS, the upgrade of the Federal RLS can
have no significant economic impact on
small entities. We also believe that the
proposed EESS (active) and SRS (active)
allocations will have no significant
economic impact on small entities.
21. 9800–9900 MHz. The NPRM
proposed to allocate the 9300–9500
MHz band to the EESS (active) and SRS
(active) on a secondary basis. Because
non-Federal RLS use is on a secondary
basis to Federal RLS, we do believe that
the proposed additional uses will have
no significant economic impact on small
entities.
22. 10.6–10.68 GHz. The NPRM
proposed to limit the power supplied to
the antenna to ¥3 dBW (instead of ¥3
dBW/250 kHz) and to add advisory
language for fixed point-to-point
systems. The NPRM also solicits
comment on whether more stringent
operating requirements should apply to
future fixed stations operating in this
band. Because most licensed fixed
stations already meet the proposed ¥3
dBW requirement, we do not believe
that this proposal will affect a
substantial number of small entities. We
also do not believe that the advisory
language and more stringent operating
requirements would affect a substantial
number of small entities.
23. GOES Expansion. The NPRM
proposed to allocate the 18–18.1 GHz
band to the meteorological-satellite
service (space-to-Earth) on a primary
basis. The use of this allocation is
expected to be limited to three
locations. This band is allocated to the
non-Federal FS on a primary basis. If
adopted, this proposal would limit
future FS licensing near the receiving
earth stations. We do not believe that
this proposal will affect a substantial
number of small entities.
24. 22.55–23.55 GHz. The NPRM
proposed to adopt the WRC–07’s
mandatory unwanted emission limits
from all new non-geostationary satellite
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orbit systems in the inter-satellite
service transmitting in the 22.55–23.55
GHz band, and requested comment on
how these limits should apply to the
only incumbent licensee’s (Iridium’s)
satellites on a going-forward basis. We
do not believe that this proposal will
affect a substantial number of small
entities.
25. 31–31.3 GHz. The NPRM proposed
to urge licensees of fixed stations
transmitting in the 31–31.3 GHz band to
limit the maximum elevation angle of
the antenna main beam to 20° and to
employ automatic transmitter power
control. The NPRM also requested
comment on whether the Commission
adopt WRC–07’s mandatory unwanted
emission limits for these stations. As of
April 24, 2012, the Commission has
issued 852 call signs to operate in the
31–31.3 GHz band: 109 licenses (777
call signs) in the Local Multipoint
Distribution Service (LMDS); 19
licensees (23 call signs) in the Common
Carrier Fixed Point-to-Point Microwave
Service (CF) to 19 licensees; 9 licensees
(9 call signs) in the Local Television
Transmission Service (CT); 5 licensees
(6 call signs) in the Microwave Public
Safety Pool (MW); and 1 licensee (the
State of Nevada, with 37 call signs) in
the Microwave Industrial/Business Pool
(MG). We believe that many of the
LMDS licensees are small businesses,
that at most 2 of the CF licensees are
small businesses, that at most 3 of the
CT licensees are small businesses, that
at most 1 of the MW licensees are small
governmental jurisdictions, and that the
sole MG licensee is not a small entity.
We do not believe that any costs and/
or administrative burdens associated
with the proposal will unduly burden or
have a significant economic impact on
those limited number of small entities.
26. 36–37, 49.7–40.2, 50.4–50.9, and
51.4–52.6 GHz. The NPRM proposed to
adopt WRC–07’s: 1) Spectrum sharing
criteria for stations in the fixed and
mobile services transmitting in the 36–
37 GHz band; 2) mandatory unwanted
emission limits for earth stations in the
fixed-satellite service transmitting in the
49.7–40.2 and 50.4–50.9 GHz bands;
and 3) mandatory unwanted emission
limits for fixed stations transmitting in
the 51.4–52.6 GHz band. Because the
Commission has not issued licenses for
the 36–37 GHz, 49.7–40.2 GHz, 50.4–
50.9 GHz, and 51.4–52.6 GHz bands,
these proposals will have no significant
economic impact on small entities.
E. Steps Taken To Minimize Significant
Economic Impact on Small Entities, and
Significant Alternatives Considered
27. The RFA requires an agency to
describe any significant alternatives that
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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.23
28. As we have explained in detail in
section D, we do not expect that our
proposals will have a significant
economic impact on small entities.
However, the NPRM requested comment
on interference mitigation techniques,
other than those adopted at WRC–07,
which would lessen the long-term
impact on all licensees in the 10.6–
10.68 GHz, 22.55–23.55 GHz, and 31–
31.3 GHz bands, while fully protecting
passive sensor operations.
F. Federal Rules That May Duplicate,
Overlap, or Conflict With the Proposed
Rule
29. None.
Ordering Clauses
30. Pursuant to sections 1, 4, 301,
302(a), and 303 of the Communications
Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 151,
154, 301, 302(a), and 303, and section
553(b)(B) of the Administrative
Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B), this
Notice of Proposed Rule Making is
hereby adopted.
31. It is further ordered that the
Commission’s Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau, Reference
Information Center, shall send a copy of
this Notice of Proposed Rule Making,
including the Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis, to the Chief
Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration.
List of Subjects in 47 CFR Parts 1, 2, 74,
78, 87, 90, and 97
Communications equipment,
International telecommunications,
Radio, Satellites, Spectrum,
Telecommunications.
Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene H. Dortch,
Secretary.
Proposed Rules
For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, the Federal Communications
Commission proposes to amend 47 CFR
23 See
PO 00000
5 U.S.C. 603(c).
Frm 00006
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76255
parts 1, 2, 74, 78, 87, 90, and 97 as
follows:
PART 1—PRACTICE AND
PROCEDURE
1. The authority citation for part 1
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 79 et seq.; 47 U.S.C.
151, 154(i), 154(j), 155, 157, 225, 227, 303(r),
and 309, and the Middle Class Tax Relief and
Job Creation Act of 2012, Pub. L. No. 112–
96.
2. Section 1.924 is amended by
revising paragraphs (e) and (f) to read as
follows:
§ 1.924
Quiet zones.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) 420–450 MHz band. Applicants for
pulse-ranging radiolocation systems
operating in the 420–450 MHz band
along the shoreline of the conterminous
United States and Alaska, and for
spread spectrum radiolocation systems
operating in the 420–435 MHz sub-band
within the conterminous United States
and Alaska, should not expect to be
accommodated if their area of service is
within:
(1) Arizona, Florida, or New Mexico;
(2) Those portions of California and
Nevada that are south of latitude 37°10′
N;
(3) That portion of Texas that is west
of longitude 104°W; or
(4) The following circular areas:
(i) 322 kilometers (km) of 30°30′ N,
86°30′ W
(ii) 322 km of 28°21′ N, 80°43′ W
(iii) 322 km of 34°09′ N, 119°11′ W
(iv) 240 km of 39°08′ N, 121°26′ W
(v) 200 km of 31°25′ N, 100°24′ W
(vi) 200 km of 32°38′ N, 83°35′ W
(vii) 160 km of 64°17′ N, 149°10′ W
(viii) 160 km of 48°43′ N, 97°54′ W
(ix) 160 km of 41°45′ N, 70°32′ W.
Note to § 1.924(e): The coordinates cited in
this section are specified in terms of the
‘‘North American Datum of 1983 (NAD 83).’’
(f) 17.7–19.7 GHz band. The following
exclusion areas and coordination areas
are established to minimize or avoid
harmful interference to Federal
Government earth stations receiving in
the 17.7–19.7 GHz band:
(1) No application seeking authority
for fixed stations, under parts 74, 78, or
101 of this chapter, supporting the
operations of Multichannel Video
Programming Distributors (MVPD) in
the 17.7–17.8 GHz band or to operate in
the 17.8–19.7 GHz band for any service
will be accepted for filing if the
proposed station is located within 20
km (or within 55 km if the modification
application is for an outdoor low power
operation pursuant to § 101.147(r)(14) of
this chapter) of Denver, CO (39°43′ N,
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104°46′ W) or Washington, DC (38°48′
N, 76°52′ W).
(2) Any application for a new station
license to provide MVPD operations in
the 17.7–17.8 GHz band or to operate in
the 17.8–19.7 GHz band for any service,
or for modification of an existing station
license in these bands which would
change the frequency, power, emission,
modulation, polarization, antenna
height or directivity, or location of such
a station, must be coordinated with the
Federal Government by the Commission
before an authorization will be issued,
if the station or proposed station is
located in whole or in part within any
of the following areas:
(i) Denver, CO area:
(A) Between latitudes 41°30′ N and
38°30′ N and between longitudes
103°10′ W and 106°30′ W.
(B) Between latitudes 38°30′ N and
37°30′ N and between longitudes
105°00′ W and 105°50′ W.
(C) Between latitudes 40°08′ N and
39°56′ N and between longitudes
107°00′ W and 107°15′ W.
(ii) Washington, DC area:
(A) Between latitudes 38°40′ N and
38°10′ N and between longitudes 78°50′
W and 79°20′ W.
(B) Within 178 km of 38°48′ N, 76°52′
W.
(iii) San Miguel, CA area:
(A) Between latitudes 34°39′ N and
34°00′ N and between longitudes
118°52′ W and 119°24′ W.
(B) Within 200 km of 35°44′ N,
120°45′ W.
(iv) Guam area: Within 100 km of
13°35′ N, 144°51′ E.
*
*
*
*
*
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PART 2—FREQUENCY ALLOCATIONS
AND RADIO TREATY MATTERS;
GENERAL RULES AND REGULATIONS
3. The authority citation for part 2
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 302a, 303, and
336, unless otherwise noted.
4. Section 2.1 is amended in
paragraph (c) by revising the definitions
for ‘‘Earth Exploration-Satellite Service
(EESS)’’ and ‘‘Equivalent Isotropically
Radiated Power (e.i.r.p. or EIRP)’’ to
read as follows:
§ 2.1
Terms and definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
Earth Exploration-Satellite Service
(EESS). (1) A radiocommunication
service between earth stations and one
or more space stations, which may
include links between space stations, in
which:
(i) Information relating to the
characteristics of the Earth and its
natural phenomena, including data
relating to the state of the environment,
is obtained from active sensors or
passive sensors on Earth satellites;
(ii) Similar information is collected
from airborne or Earth-based platforms;
(iii) Such information may be
distributed to earth stations within the
system concerned; and
(iv) Platform interrogation may be
included.
(2) This service may also include
feeder links necessary for its operation.
(RR) (FCC)
*
*
*
*
*
Equivalent Isotropically Radiated
Power (e.i.r.p. or EIRP). The product of
PO 00000
Frm 00007
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Sfmt 4702
the power supplied to the antenna and
the antenna gain in a given direction
relative to an isotropic antenna
(absolute or isotropic gain). (RR) (FCC)
*
*
*
*
*
5. Section 2.100 is revised to read as
follows:
§ 2.100
International regulations in force.
The ITU Radio Regulations, Edition of
2008, have been incorporated to the
extent practicable in Subparts A and B
of this part.
6. In § 2.106, amend the Table of
Frequency Allocations as follows:
a. Pages 5, 20, 22–24, 30–33, 37, 40–
41, 46–47, 49, 51–52, 55–56, 58–60, and
62 are revised.
b. In the list of United States (US)
Footnotes, footnotes US52, US79, US85,
US100, US111, US113, US139, US145,
US156, US157, US161, US197A, US227,
US228D, US338A, US475, US476A,
US482, US532, and US550A are added;
footnotes US74, US334, US343, US401,
and US519 are revised; and footnotes
US37, US48, US51, US66, US77, US78,
US106, US203, US226, US228, US263,
US265, US290, US339, US368, US388,
US398, US400, US444, and US444A are
removed.
c. In the list of non-Federal
Government (NG) Footnotes, footnotes
NG22, NG35, NG60, and NG338A are
added; and footnotes NG117, NG120,
and NG144 are removed.
§ 2.106
Table of frequency allocations.
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
*
*
*
*
*
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
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RADIOLOCATION
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1810-1850
AMATEUR
PO 00000
5.98 5.99 5.100 5.101
1850-2000
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical rnobile
1800-3025 kHz (MF/HF)
International Table
Region 2 Table
1800-1850
AMATEUR
Frm 00008
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5.92 5.96 5.103
2000-2025
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile (R)
Region 3 Table
1800-2000
AMATEUR
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical
rnobile
RADIONAVIGATION
Radiolocation
Federal Table
1800-2000
Page 5
United States Table
Non-Federal Table
1800-2000
AMATEUR
FCC Rule Part(s)
Arnateur Radio (97)
1850-2000
AMATEUR
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical rnobile
RADIOLOCATION
RADIONAVIGATION
5.102
2000-2065
FIXED
MOBILE
5.97
Sfmt 4725
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2000-2065
FIXED
MOBILE
2000-2065
MARITIME MOBILE
US340
2065-2107
MARITIME MOBILE 5.105
US340 NG7
2065-2107
MARITIME MOBILE 5.105
5.106
2107-2170
FIXED
MOBILE
US296 US340
2107-2170
FIXED
MOBILE
Maritime (80)
Private Land Mobile (90)
5.92 5.103
2025-2045
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile (R)
Meteorological aids 5.104
5.92 5.103
2045-2160
FIXED
MARITIME MOBILE
LAND MOBILE
5.92
2160-2170
RADIOLOCATION
5.93 5.107
2170-2173.5
MARITIME MOBILE
Maritime (80)
2107-2170
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical
mobile
US340
2170-2173.5
MARITIME MOBILE (telephony)
US340 NG7
2170-2173.5
MARITIME MOBILE
US340
Maritime (80)
Private Land Mobile (90)
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Table of Frequency Allocations
US340
Maritime (80)
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5.175 5.179 5.187
87.5-100
BROADCASTING
5.192 5.194
108-117.975
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION
Fmt 4702
5.1975.197A
117.975-137
AERONAUTICAL MOBILE (R)
75.4-88
75.4-76
FIXED
MOBILE
NG3 NG49 NG56
76-88
BROADCASTING
5.190
100-108
BROADCASTING
Frm 00009
5.1825.1835.188
87-100
FIXED
MOBILE
BROADCASTING
PO 00000
76-88
BROADCASTING
Fixed
Mobile
5.185
88-100
BROADCASTING
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75.4-87
FIXED
MOBILE
88-108
NG5 NG14 NG115 NG149
88-108
BROADCASTING NG2
US93
US93 NG5
108-117.975
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION
Public Mobile (22)
Aviation (87)
Private Land Mobile (90)
Personal Radio (95)
Broadcast Radio (TV)(73)
LPTV, TV Translator!
Booster (74G)
Low Power Auxiliary (74H)
Broadcast Radio (FM)(73)
FM Translator!Booster (74L)
US197A US93
117.975-121.9375
AERONAUTICAL MOBILE (R)
Sfmt 4725
5.111 5.200 US26 US28 US36
121.9375-123.0875
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US30 US31 US33 US80 US102
US213
123.0875-123.5875
AERONAUTICAL MOBILE
27DEP1
US26 US36
128.8125-132.0125
Aviation (87)
121.9375-123.0875
AERONAUTICAL MOBILE
US30 US31 US33 US80 US102
US213
5.200 US32 US33 US112
123.5875-128.8125
AERONAUTICAL MOBILE (R)
128.8125-132.0125
AERONAUTICAL MOBILE (R)
132.0125-136
AERONAUTICAL MOBILE (R)
US26
136-137
5.111 5.200 5.201 5.202
EP27DE12.011
US244
136-137
AERONAUTICAL MOBILE (R)
US244
Page 20
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 248 / Thursday, December 27, 2012 / Proposed Rules
16:35 Dec 26, 2012
75.4-76
FIXED
MOBILE
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with
VerDate Mar<15>2010
144-146
AMATEUR
AMATEUR-SATELLITE
144-148
Jkt 229001
148-149.9
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile (R)
MOBILE-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space)
5.209
146-148
AMATEUR
FIXED
MOBILE
146-148
AMATEUR
5.217
5.217
148-149.9
FIXED
MOBILE
MOBILE-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.209
PO 00000
148-149.9
FIXED
MOBILE
MOBILE-SATELLITE
(Earth-to-space) US319
US320 US323 US325
148-149.9
MOBILE-SATELLITE
(Earth-to-space) US320
US323 US325
Frm 00010
Fmt 4702
5.218 5.219 5.221
5.218 5.219 5.221
149.9-150.05
MOBILE-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.209 5.224A
RADIONAVIGATION-SATELLITE 5.224B
5.220 5.222 5.223
150.05-153
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
RADIO ASTRONOMY
5.223
150.05-150.8
FIXED
MOBILE
Satellite Communications (25)
5.218 5.219 G30
5.218 5.219 US319
149.9-150.05
MOBILE-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) US319 US320
RADIONAVIGATION-SATELLITE
150.05-156.4875
FIXED
MOBILE
US73 G30
150.8-152.855
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\27DEP1.SGM
US73
152.855-156.2475
5.149
153-154
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile (R)
Meteorological aids
154-156.4875
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile (R)
27DEP1
156.2475-156.5125
5.225 5.226
5.226
156.4875-156.5625
MARITIME MOBILE (distress and calling via DSC)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --------------------
US73
150.8-152.855
FIXED
LAND MOBILE NG4 NG51
NG112
Public Mobile (22)
Private Land Mobile (90)
Personal Radio (95)
US73 NG124
152.855-154
LAND MOBILE NG4
Remote Pickup (74D)
Private Land Mobile (90)
5.225 5.226
-- - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Maritime (80)
Private Land Mobile (90)
Personal Radio (95)
5.226 NG22 NG124 NG148
156.2475-156.5125
MARITIME MOBILE NG22
5.226 US52 US227 US266
NG124
Maritime (80)
Aviation (87)
5.226 US52 US227 US266
156.5125-156.5375
MARITIME MOBILE (distress, urgency, safety and calling via DSC)
5.111 5.226 US266
156.5375-156.7625
------------------------ ----------------------------------------------- ----- - - -
-------
5.226 US52 US227 US266
-------------------------------------------
156.5375-156.7625
MARITIME MOBILE
5.226 US52 US227 US266
---------------------------------------
---
--------------
Page 22
-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
76259
5.226
150.05-150.8
NG124
154-156.2475
FIXED
LAND MOBILE NG112
5.111 5.226 5.227
156.5625-156.7625
156.5625-156.7625
FIXED
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile (R) MOBILE
EP27DE12.012
Amateur Radio (97)
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 248 / Thursday, December 27, 2012 / Proposed Rules
16:35 Dec 26, 2012
5.216
146-148
146-148
FIXED
AMATEUR
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile (R)
144-146
AMATEUR
AMATEUR-SATELLITE
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with
Region 1 Table
156.7625-156.8375
MARITIME MOBILE (distress and calling)
Jkt 229001
5.111 5.226
156.8375-174
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical
rnobile
156.8375-174
FIXED
MOBILE
I Region 3 Table
Page 23
United States Table
Non-Federal Table
Federal Table
156.7625-156.8375
MARITIME MOBILE (distress, urgency, safety and calling)
5.111 5.226 US52 US266
156.8375-157.0375
FCC Rule Part(s)
Maritirne (80)
Aviation (87)
156.8375-157.0375
MARITIME MOBILE
PO 00000
5.226 US52 US266
157.0375-157.1875
MARITIME MOBILE US214
5.226 US52 US266
157.0375-157.1875
5.226 US266 G109
157.1875-161.575
5.226 US214 US266
157.1875-157.45
MOBILE except aeronautical rnobile US266
Maritirne (80)
Frm 00011
5.226 NG111
157.45-161.575
FIXED
LAND MOBILE NG28 NG111 NG112
Fmt 4702
161.575-161.625
Sfmt 4725
5.226 US52
161.625-161.9625
E:\FR\FM\27DEP1.SGM
US266
161.9625-161.9875
MARITIME MOBILE (AIS)
27DEP1
5.227 A US228D
161.9875-162.0125
Maritirne (80)
Aviation (87)
Private Land Mobile (90)
Public Mobile (22)
Rernote Pickup (74D)
Maritirne (80)
5.226 NG6 NG70 NG124 NG148 NG155 Private Land Mobile (90)
161.575-161.625
Public Mobile (22)
MARITIME MOBILE
Maritirne (80)
5.226 US52 NG6 NG17
161.625-161.775
Public Mobile (22)
LAND MOBILE NG6
Rernote Pickup (74D)
Low Power Auxiliary (74H)
5.226
161.775-161.9625
MOBILE except aeronautical rnobile US266 Maritirne (80)
NG6
Private Land Mobile (90)
5.226
Maritirne (80)
161.9875-162.0125
MOBILE except aeronautical rnobile
5.226
162.0125-162.0375
MARITIME MOBILE (AIS)
5.227A US228D
162.0375-173.2
FIXED
MOBILE
US8 US11 US13 US73 US300
US312 G5
EP27DE12.013
162.0375-173.2
Rernote Pickup (74D)
Private Land Mobile (90)
US8 US11 USB US73 US300 US312
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 248 / Thursday, December 27, 2012 / Proposed Rules
16:35 Dec 26, 2012
I
International Table
Region 2 Table
76260
VerDate Mar<15>2010
156.7625-267 MHz (VHF)
Table of Frequency Allocations
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with
VerDate Mar<15>2010
173.2-173.4
5.226 5.227A 5.229
174-223
BROADCASTING
Jkt 229001
5.226 5.227A 5.230 5.231 5.232
174-216
174-223
FIXED
BROADCASTING
Fixed
MOBILE
Mobile
BROADCASTING
PO 00000
5.234
216-220
FIXED
MARITIME MOBILE
Radiolocation 5.241
G5
174-216
216-217
Fixed
Land mobile
Frm 00012
US210 US241 G2
217-220
Fixed
Mobile
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4725
US210 US241
220-222
FIXED
LAND MOBILE
E:\FR\FM\27DEP1.SGM
5.235 5.237 5.243
223-230
BROADCASTING
Fixed
Mobile
27DEP1
5.242
220-225
AMATEUR
FIXED
MOBILE
Radiolocation 5.241
5.243 5.246 5.247
230-235
FIXED
MOBILE
5.250
NG5 NG14 NG115 NG149
216-219
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
US210 US241 NG173
219-220
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
Amateur NG152
Broadcast Radio (TV)(73)
LPTV, TV Translator/Booster
(74G)
Low Power Auxiliary (74H)
Maritime (80)
Private Land Mobile (90)
Personal Radio (95)
Maritime (80)
Private Land Mobile (90)
Amateur Radio (97)
US210 US241 NG173
Private Land Mobile (90)
5.250
230-235
FIXED
MOBILE
AERONAUTICAL
RADiONAVIGATION
5.247 5.251 5.252
235-267
FIXED
MOBILE
US241 US242
222-225
174-216
BROADCASTING
Private Land Mobile (90)
225-235
FIXED
MOBILE
EP27DE12.014
225-235
FIXED
MOBILE
G27
235-267
FIXED
MOBILE
5.111 5.256 G27 G100
222-225
AMATEUR
Amateur Radio (97)
225-235
235-267
5.111 5.256
Page 24
76261
5.111 5.252 5.254 5.256 5.256A
5.233 5.238 5.240 5.245
223-230
FIXED
MOBILE
BROADCASTING
AERONAUTICAL
RADiONAVIGATION
Radiolocation
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 248 / Thursday, December 27, 2012 / Proposed Rules
16:35 Dec 26, 2012
173.4-174
FIXED
MOBILE
173.2-173.4
FIXED
Land mobile
173.4-174
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with
76262
VerDate Mar<15>2010
890-902
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical
mobile 5.317A
Radiolocation
890-942
FIXED
MOBILE 5.317A
BROADCASTING
Radiolocation
890-902
US116 US268
894-896
AERONAUTICAL MOBILE
US116 US268
896-901
FIXED
LAND MOBILE
Jkt 229001
US116 US268
901-902
FIXED
MOBILE
PO 00000
5.318 5.325
902-928
FIXED
Amateur
Mobile except aeronautical
mobile 5.325A
Radiolocation
US116 US268 G2
902-928
RADIOLOCATION G59
Frm 00013
5.150 US218 US267 US275
G11
928-932
Fmt 4702
5.150 5.325 5.326
928-942
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical
mobile 5.317A
Radiolocation
5.150 US218 US267 US275
928-929
FIXED
Sfmt 4725
US116 US268 NG35
929-930
FIXED
LAND MOBILE
E:\FR\FM\27DEP1.SGM
US116 US268
932-935
FIXED
US268 G2
935-941
27DEP1
US116 US268 G2
932-935
FIXED
US268 NG35
935-940
FIXED
LAND MOBILE
US116 US268
940-941
FIXED
MOBILE
US116 US268 G2
EP27DE12.015
5.327
Personal Communications (24)
ISM Equipment (18)
Private Land Mobile (90)
Amateur Radio (97)
US116 US268
931-932
FIXED
LAND MOBILE
5.325
Private Land Mobile (90)
US116 US268
902-928
US116 US268
930-931
FIXED
MOBILE
5.323
Public Mobile (22)
US116 US268
Public Mobile (22)
Private Land Mobile (90)
Fixed Microwave (101)
Private Land Mobile (90)
Personal Communications (24)
Public Mobile (22)
Public Mobile (22)
Fixed Microwave (101)
Private Land Mobile (90)
Personal Communications (24)
Page 30
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 248 / Thursday, December 27, 2012 / Proposed Rules
16:35 Dec 26, 2012
890-942
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical
mobile 5.317A
BROADCASTING 5.322
Radiolocation
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Table of Frequency Allocations
Jkt 229001
PO 00000
5,323
960-1164
AERONAUTICAL MOBILE (R) 5,327A
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.328
Region 3 Table
(See previous page)
942-960
FIXED
MOBILE 5,317A
BROADCASTING
5,320
Federal Table
941-944
FIXED
Page 31
United States Table
Non-Federal Table
941-944
FIXED
US268 US301 G2
944-960
US268 US301 NG30 NG35
944-960
FIXED
NG35
960-1164
AERONAUTICAL MOBILE (R) 5,327A
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5,328
FCC Rule Part(s)
Public Mobile (22)
Aural Broadcast Auxiliary (74E)
Fixed Microwave (101)
Public Mobile (22)
Aural Broadcast Auxiliary (74E)
Low Power Auxiliary (74H)
Fixed Microwave (101)
Aviation (87)
5.328A US224
1215-1240
1215-1240
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE
Earth exploration-satellite (active)
(active)
Space research (active)
RADIOLOCATION G56
RADIONAVIGA TlON-SATELLITE
(space-to-Earth )(space-to-space) G132
SPACE RESEARCH (active)
5,330 5,331 5,332
1240-1300
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (active)
RADIOLOCATION
RADIONAVIGA TlON-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) (space-to-space) 5.328B 5.329 5.329A
SPACE RESEARCH (active)
Arnateur
5.332
1240-1300
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE
(active)
RADIOLOCATION G56
SPACE RESEARCH (active)
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION
5,282 5.330 5.331 5,332 5,335 5.335A
1300-1350
RADIOLOCATION
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.337
RADIONAVIGATION-SATELLITE (Earth-lo-space)
5,332 5.335
1300-1350
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION
5.337
Radiolocalion G2
5,282
1300-1350
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION
5.337
5.149 5.337A
1350-1400
FIXED
MOBILE
RADIOLOCA TlON
US342
1350-1390
FIXED
MOBILE
RADIOLOCATION G2
US342
1350-1390
5.334 5.339 US342 US385 G27 G114
5.334 5.339 US342 US385
E:\FR\FM\27DEP1.SGM
27DEP1
EP27DE12.016
1350-1400
RADIOLOCATlON 5.338A
1240-1300
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION
Arnateur
Earth exploration-satellite (active)
Space research (active)
Arnateur Radio (97)
Aviation (87)
76263
Fmt 4702
5.328A
1215-1240
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (active)
RADIOLOCA TlON
RADIONAVIGATION-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) (space-to-space) 5.328B 5,329 5,329A
SPACE RESEARCH (active)
Sfmt 4725
Frm 00014
US224
1164-1215
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5,328
RADIONAVIGATlON-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) (space-to-space)
1164-1215
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.328
RADIONAVIGATION-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) (space-Io-space) 5.328B
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 248 / Thursday, December 27, 2012 / Proposed Rules
16:35 Dec 26, 2012
Region 1 Table
(See previous page)
942-960
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical
rnobile 5.317A
BROADCASTING 5,322
941-1525 MHz (UHF)
International Table
Region 2 Table
(See previous page)
942-960
FIXED
MOBILE 5,317A
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with
76264
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Jkt 229001
5.339 US79 US342 US385
5.339 US79 US342 US385 NG338A
1395-1400
LAND MOBILE (medical telemetry and medical telecommand)
PO 00000
Frm 00015
Fmt 4702
5.149 5.338 5.338A 5.339
5.149 5.334 5.339
1400-1427
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive)
RADIO ASTRONOMY
SPACE RESEARCH (passive)
5.340 5.341
1427-1429
SPACE OPERATION (Earth-to-space)
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
5.341 US246
1427-1429.5
LAND MOBILE (medical telemetry
and medical telecommand) US350
Wireless Communications (27)
Personal Radio (95)
5.339 US79 US342 US385
1400-1427
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive)
RADIO ASTRONOMY US74
SPACE RESEARCH (passive)
Sfmt 4725
5.338A 5.341
1429-1452
1429-1452
FIXED
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile MOBILE 5.343
1427-1429.5
LAND MOBILE (telemetry and telecommand)
Fixed (telemetry)
E:\FR\FM\27DEP1.SGM
27DEP1
5.338A 5.341 5.342
1452-1492
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
BROADCASTING 5.345
BROADCASTING-SATELLITE
5.208B 5.345
5.338A 5.341
1452-1492
FIXED
MOBILE 5.343
BROADCASTING 5.345
BROADCASTING-SATELLITE 5.208B 5.345
5.341 US79
1429.5-1432
5.341 US79 US350
1432-1435
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
Private Land Mobile (90)
Personal Radio (95)
5.341 US79 US350
1429.5-1432
FIXED (telemetry and telecommand)
LAND MOBILE (telemetry and telecommand)
5.341 US79 US350
1432-1435
5.341 5.342
5.341 US83
5.341 US83 NG338A
1435-1525
MOBILE (aeronautical telemetry) US338A
Wireless Communications (27)
5.341 5.344
5.341 US343
EP27DE12.017
1390-1395
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
Aviation (87)
Page 32
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 248 / Thursday, December 27, 2012 / Proposed Rules
16:35 Dec 26, 2012
1390-1395
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Table of Frequency Allocations
1525-1670 MHz (UHF)
Jkt 229001
PO 00000
Frm 00016
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\27DEP1.SGM
Region 3 Table
1492-1518
FIXED
MOBILE
5.341 5,342
1518-1525
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
5,348 5,348A 5,348B 5.351A
5.341 5,344
1518-1525
FIXED
MOBILE 5,343
MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
5.348 5,348A 5.348B 5.351A
5,341
1518-1525
FIXED
MOBILE
MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
5,348 5,348A 5,348B 5.351A
5.341 5,342
1525-1530
SPACE OPERATION (space-to-Earth)
FIXED
MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
5,208B 5.351A
Earth exploration-satellite
Mobile excepl aeronautical mobile 5,349
5,341 5.344
1525-1530
SPACE OPERATION (space-to-Earth)
MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
5.208B 5,351 A
Earth exploration-satellite
Fixed
Mobile 5,343
5,341
1525-1530
SPACE OPERATION (space-Io-Earth)
FIXED
MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
5,208B 5.351A
Earth exploration-satellite
Mobile 5,349
5,341 5,342 5,350 5.351 5.352A
5,354
1530-1535
SPACE OPERATION (space-to-Earth)
MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
5.208B 5.351A 5,353A
Earth exploration-satellite
Fixed
Mobile except aeronautical mobile
Page 33
5.341 5,351 5,354
5,341 5,351 5.352A 5,354
1530-1535
SPACE OPERATION (space-lo-Earth)
MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) 5,208B 5.351A 5,353A
Earth exploration-satellite
Fixed
Mobile 5,343
Federal Table
(see previous page)
United States Table
I Non-Federal Table
1525-1535
MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) US315 US380
5.341 5.351
1535-1559
MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) US308 US309
US315 US380
5,341 5,351 5,353A 5,354 5,355 5,356 5,357 5,357A 5,359 5,362A
1559-1610
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION
RADIONAVIGATION-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) (space-to-space) 5.208B 5,328B 5,329A
5,341 5,351 5,356
1559-1610
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION
RADIONA VIGATION-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
(space-to-space)
5.341 5,362B 5,362C
1610-1610,6
MOBILE-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space)
5.351A
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION
27DEP1
5,341 5,342 5,351 5,354
5.341 5,351 5,354
1535-1559
MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) 5,208B 5,351A
5.341 US85 US208 US260
1610-1610,6
MOBILE-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) US319 US380
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION US260
RADIODETERMINATION-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space)
5,341 5,355 5,359 5,364 5,366
5,367 5,368 5,369 5,371 5,372
1610-1610,6
MOBILE-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space)
5,351A
AERONAUTICAL RADiONAVIGATION
RADIODETERMINATION-SATELLITE
(Earth-to-space)
1610-1610,6
MOBILE-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space)
5.351A
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION
Radiodetermination-satellite
(Earth-lo-space)
5,341 5,364 5,366 5,367 5,368
5,370 5,372
5,341 5,355 5,359 5,364 5,366
5,367 5.368 5,369 5,372
FCC Rule Part(s)
Satellite Communications (25)
Maritime (80)
Satellite Communications (25)
Maritime (80)
Aviation (87)
Aviation (87)
Satellite Communications (25)
Aviation (87)
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 248 / Thursday, December 27, 2012 / Proposed Rules
16:35 Dec 26, 2012
Region 1 Table
1492-1518
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
Intemational Table
Region 2 Table
1492-1518
FIXED
MOBILE 5.343
5,341 5.364 5.366 5,367 5.368 5.372 US208
76265
EP27DE12.018
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with
International Table
Jkt 229001
PO 00000
Frm 00017
5.392
2290-2300
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
SPACE RESEARCH (deep space) (space-to-Earth)
Fmt 4702
2300-2450
FIXED
MOBILE 5.384A
Amateur
Radiolocation
2300-2450
FIXED
MOBILE 5.384A
RADIOLOCATION
Amateur
5.392 US303
2290-2300
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
SPACE RESEARCH (deep space)
(space-to-Earth)
2300-2305
G122
2305-2310
Page 37
FCC Rule Part(s)
US303
2290-2300
SPACE RESEARCH (deep space)
(space-to-Earth)
2300-2305
Amateur
Amateur Radio (97)
E:\FR\FM\27DEP1.SGM
27DEP1
US97 G122
2310-2320
Fixed
Mobile US100
Radiolocation G2
US97
2310-2320
FIXED
MOBILE
BROADCASTING-SATELLITE
RADIOLOCATION
Wireless
Communications (27)
US97 US327
2320-2345
Fixed
Radiolocation G2
5.396 US97 US100 US327
2320-2345
BROADCASTING-SATELLITE
US327
2345-2360
Fixed
Mobile US100
Radiolocation G2
5.396 US327
2345-2360
FIXED
MOBILE US100
BROADCASTING-SATELLITE
RADIOLOCATION
5.396 US327
2360-2390
MOBILE US276
US101
Sfmt 4725
Wireless
Communications (27)
Amateur Radio (97)
US327
2360-2390
MOBILE US276
RADIOLOCATION G2 G120
Fixed
EP27DE12.019
2305-2310
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
RADIOLOCATION
Amateur
US101
Satellite
Communications (25)
Wireless
Communications (27)
Aviation (87)
Aviation (87)
Personal Radio (95)
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 248 / Thursday, December 27, 2012 / Proposed Rules
16:35 Dec 26, 2012
Region 1 Table
Region 2 Table
I Region 3 Table
2200-2290
SPACE OPERATION (space-to-Earth) (space-to-space)
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) (space-lo-space)
FIXED
MOBILE 5.391
SPACE RESEARCH (space-to-Earth) (space-to-space)
United States Table
Non-Federal Table
Federal Table
2200-2290
2200-2290
SPACE OPERATION (space-to-Earth)
(space-to-space)
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE
(space-to-Earth) (space-to-space)
FIXED (line-of-sight only)
MOBILE (line-of-sight only including
aeronautical telemetry, but excluding
flight testing of manned aircraft) 5.391
SPACE RESEARCH (space-to-Earth)
(space-to-space)
76266
VerDate Mar<15>2010
2200-2655 MHz (UHF)
Table of Frequency Allocations
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Jkt 229001
3300-3400
RADIOLOCATION
Amateur
5.149 5.429 5.430
3400-3600
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
Mobile 5.430A
Radiolocation
5.149
3400-3500
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
Amateur
Mobile 5.431A
Radiolocation 5.433
5.149 5.429
3400-3500
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
Amateur
Mobile 5.432B
Radiolocation 5.433
5.282
3500-3700
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
Radiolocation 5.433
Frm 00018
Fmt 4702
5.431
3600-4200
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
Mobile
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\27DEP1.SGM
3700-4200
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
3300-3500
RADIOLOCATION US108 G2
3300-3500
Amateur
Radiolocation US108
Private Land Mobile (90)
Amateur Radio (97)
5.282 5.432 5.432A
3500-3600
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
5.433A
Radiolocation 5.433
3600-3700
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
Radiolocation 5.433
US342
3500-3650
RADIOLOCATION G59
AERONAUTICAL
RADIONAVIGATION
(ground-based) G110
5.282 US342
3500-3600
Radiolocation
Private Land Mobile (90)
5.435
PO 00000
3300-3400
RADIOLOCATION
Amateur
Fixed
Mobile
US109 US349
3700-4200
US245
3650-3700
27DEP1
5.440 US261
4400-4940
FIXED
MOBILE
US113 US245 US342
4940-4990
5.339 US342 US385 G122
Satellite
Communications (25)
Private Land Mobile (90)
Satellite
Communications (25)
Fixed Microwave (101)
Aviation (87)
4400-4500
4500-4800
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
5.441 US245
4800-4940
US113 US342
4940-4990
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
5.339 US342 US385
Public Safety Land Mobile
(90Y)
Page 40
76267
5.439 5.440
4400-4500
FIXED
MOBILE 5.440A
4500-4800
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) 5.441
MOBILE 5.440A
4800-4990
FIXED
MOBILE 5.440A 5.442
Radio astronomy
US109 US349
3700-4200
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
NG180
4200-4400
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION
5.149 5.339 5.443
EP27DE12.020
4200-4400
AERONAUTICAL RADiONAVIGATION 5.438
3600-3650
FIXED-SATELLITE
(space-to-Earth) US245
Radiolocation
3650-3700
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
NG169 NG185
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 248 / Thursday, December 27, 2012 / Proposed Rules
16:35 Dec 26, 2012
3300-3400
RADIOLOCATION
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with
I Region 3 Table
US246
5000-5010
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION US260
RADIONAVIGATION-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space)
5.367
5010-5030
AERONAUTICAL RADiONAVIGA TION
RADIONAVIGATION-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) (space-to-space) 5.328B 5.443B
5.367 US211
5010-5030
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION US260
RADIONAVIGATION-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) (space-lo-space) 5.443B
5.367
5030-5091
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION
5.367 US211
5030-5091
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION US260
5.367 5.444
5091-5150
AERONAUTICAL MOBILE 5.444B
AERONAUTICAL RADiONAVIGATION
5.367 5.444 US211
5091-5150
AERONAUTICAL MOBILE 5.444B US111
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION
US260
5.367 5.444 US211 US344
5150-5250
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION
US260
E:\FR\FM\27DEP1.SGM
5.367 5.444 5.444A
5150-5250
AERONAUTICAL RADiONAVIGATION
FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.447A
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile 5.446A 5.446B
5.367 5.444 5.444A US211 US344
5150-5250
AERONAUTICAL RADiONAVIGATION
US260
FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space)
5.447A US344
5.446 5.446C 5.447 5.447B 5.447C
5250-5255
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (active)
RADIOLOCATION
SPACE RESEARCH 5.447D
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile 5.446A 5.447F
US211 US307 US344
5250-5255
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (active)
RADIOLOCATION G59
SPACE RESEARCH (active) 5.447D
5.447C US211 US307
5250-5255
Earth exploration-satellite (active)
Radiolocation
Space research
5.447E 5.448 5.448A
5255-5350
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (active)
RADIOLOCATION
SPACE RESEARCH (active)
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile 5.446A 5.447F
5.448A
5255-5350
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (active)
RADIOLOCATION G59
SPACE RESEARCH (active)
5255-5350
Earth exploration-satellite (active)
Radiolocation
Space research (active)
5.447E 5.448 5.448A
5350-5460
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (active) 5.448B
SPACE RESEARCH (active) 5.448C
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGA TlON 5.449
RADIOLOCATION 5.448D
5.448A
5350-5460
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (active)
5.448B
SPACE RESEARCH (active)
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.449
RADIOLOCATION G56
5.448A
5350-5460
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION
5.449
Earth exploration-satellite (active) 5.448B
Space research (active)
Radiolocation
US390 G130
US390
Jkt 229001
5.149
5000-5010
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION
RADIONAVIGATION-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space)
Page 41
FCC Rule Part(s)
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4702
27DEP1
EP27DE12.021
5091-5150
AERONAUTICAL MOBILE 5.444B
US111
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION
US260
Aviation (87)
Satellite Communications (25)
Aviation (87)
RF Devices (15)
Satellite Communications (25)
Aviation (87)
RF Devices (15)
Private Land Mobile (90)
Aviation (87)
Private Land Mobile (90)
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 248 / Thursday, December 27, 2012 / Proposed Rules
Federal Table
4990-5000
RADIO ASTRONOMY US74
Space research (passive)
United States Table
Non-Federal Table
Sfmt 4725
16:35 Dec 26, 2012
Region 1 Table
4990-5000
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
RADIO ASTRONOMY
Space research (passive)
4990-5925 MHz (SHF)
International Table
I Region 2 Table
76268
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Table of Frequency Allocations
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with
VerDate Mar<15>2010
8650-8750
RADIOLOCATION
Jkt 229001
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\27DEP1.SGM
8650-9000
Radiolocation
5.473
9000-9200
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.337
RADIOLOCATION
US53
9000-9200
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.337
RADIOLOCATION G2
US53
9000-9200
AERONAUTICAL
RADIONAVIGATION 5.337
Radiolocation
5.471 5.473A
9200-9300
RADIOLOCATION
MARITIME RADIONAVIGATION 5.472
5.473A G19
9200-9300
MARITIME RADIONAVIGATION 5.472
Radiolocation US110 G59
5.473 5.474
9300-9500
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (active)
SPACE RESEARCH (active)
RADIOLOCATION
RADIONAVIGATION 5.475
5.427 5.474 5.475A 5.4758 5.476A
9500-9800
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (active)
SPACE RESEARCH (active)
RADIOLOCATION
RADIONAVIGATION
5.468 5.469
8750-8850
RADIOLOCATION
AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION 5.470
Aviation (87)
Private Land Mobile (90)
5.471
8850-9000
RADIOLOCATION
MARITIME RADIONAVIGATION 5.472
9200-9300
MARITIME RADIONAVIGATION
5.472
Radiolocation US110
Maritime (80)
Private Land Mobile (90)
5.474
9300-9500
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (active)
SPACE RESEARCH (active)
RADIOLOCATION G56
RADIONAVIGATION US475
Meteorological aids
5.474
9300-9500
RADIONAVIGATION US475
Meteorological aids
Earth exploration-satellite (active)
Space research (active)
Radiolocation
Maritime (80)
Aviation (87)
Private Land Mobile (90)
5.427 5.474 5.475A 5.4758 US67 US71 US476A
9500-9800
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (active)
SPACE RESEARCH (active)
RADIOLOCATION
5.427 5.474 US67 US71 US476A
9500-9900
Earth exploration-satellite (active)
Space research (active)
Radiolocation
Private Land Mobile (90)
9800-9900
RADIOLOCATION
Earth exploration-satellite (active)
Space research (active)
5.477 5.478 5.478A 5.4788
9900-10000
RADIOLOCATION
Fixed
9900-10000
RADIOLOCATION
9900-10000
Radiolocation
5.477 5.478 5.479
27DEP1
5.476A
9800-9900
RADIOLOCATION
Earth exploration-satellite (active)
Space research (active)
Fixed
5.479
5.479
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 248 / Thursday, December 27, 2012 / Proposed Rules
16:35 Dec 26, 2012
8650-9000
RADIOLOCATION G59
Page 46
76269
EP27DE12.022
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with
Jkt 229001
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\27DEP1.SGM
27DEP1
5.479
5.479 5.480
5.479
10.45-10.5
RADIOLOCATION
Amateur
Amateur-satellite
5.481
10.5-10.55
10.5-10.55
FIXED
FIXED
MOBILE
MOBILE
Radiolocation
RADIOLOCA TlON
10.55-10.6
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
Radiolocation
10.6-10.68
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive)
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
RADIO ASTRONOMY
SPACE RESEARCH (passive)
Radiolocation
5.149 5.482 5.482A
10.68-10.7
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive)
RADIO ASTRONOMY
SPACE RESEARCH (passive)
5.340 5.483
10.7-11.7
10.7-11.7
FIXED
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-lo-Earth) FIXED-SATELLITE (space-Io-Earth) 5.441 5.484A
5.441 5.484A (Earth-to-space)
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
5.484
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
11.7-12.5
11.7-12.1
11.7-12.2
FIXED 5.486
FIXED
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
MOBILE except aeronautical
5.484A 5.488
mobile
BROADCASTING
Mobile except aeronautical mobile
BROADCASTING
BROADCASTING-SATELLITE 5.492
BROADCASTING-SATELLITE
5.485
5.492
12.1-12.2
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
5.484A 5.488
5.485 5.489
EP27DE12.023
Region 3 Table
10-10.45
FIXED
MOBILE
RADIOLOCATION
Amateur
5.487 5.487A
Page 47
United States Table
Federal Table
Non-Federal Table
10-10.45
10-10.5
RADIOLOCATION US108 G32 Amateur
Radiolocation US108
5.479 US128
10.5-10.55
RADIOLOCATION US59
10.55-10.6
10.6-10.68
EARTH EXPLORATIONSATELLITE (passive)
SPACE RESEARCH (passive)
FCC Rule Part(s)
Private Land Mobile (90)
Amateur Radio (97)
5.479 US128 NG50
10.45-10.5
Amateur
Amateur-satellite
Radiolocation US108
US128 NG50
Private Land Mobile (90)
10.55-10.6
FIXED
Fixed Microwave (101)
10.6-10.68
EARTH EXPLORATIONSATELLITE (passive)
FIXED US482
SPACE RESEARCH (passive)
US130 US131 US482
US130 US131
10.68-10.7
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive)
RADIO ASTRONOMY US74
SPACE RESEARCH (passive)
US131 US246
10.7-11.7
10.7-11.7
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-IoEarth) 5.441 US131 US211
NG104 NG182 NG186
US131 US211
11.7-12.2
11.7-12.2
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-toEarth) 5.485 5.488 NG143
NG183 NG187
NG184
Satellite Communications (25)
Fixed Microwave (101)
Satellite Communications (25)
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 248 / Thursday, December 27, 2012 / Proposed Rules
16:35 Dec 26, 2012
Region 1 Table
10-10.45
FIXED
MOBILE
RADIOLOCATION
Amateur
International Table
Region 2 Table
10-10.45
RADIOLOCATION
Amateur
76270
VerDate Mar<15>2010
10-14 GHz (SHF)
Table of Frequency Allocations
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with
VerDate Mar<15>2010
14-17.7 GHz (SHF)
Table of Frequency Allocations
Region 1 Table
14-14.25
FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.457A 5.4578 5.484A 5.506 5.5068
RADIONAVIGATION 5.504
Mobile-satellite (Earth-to-space) 5.5048 5.504C 5.506A
Space research
Region 3 Table
14.2-14.4
Jkt 229001
PO 00000
5.504A 5.505
14.25-14.3
FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.457A 5.4578 5.484A 5.506 5.5068
RADIONAVIGATION 5.504
Mobile-satellite (Earth-to-space) 5.5048 5.506A 5.508A
Space research
Frm 00022
Fmt 4702
5.504A 5.505 5.508
14.3-14.4
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space)
5.457A 5.4578 5.484A 5.506 5.5068
M081LE except aeronautical rnobile
Mobile-satellite (Earth-to-space) 5.5048
5.506A 5.509A
Radionavigation-satellite
14.3-14.4
FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space)
5.457A 5.484A 5.506 5.5068
Mobile-satellite (Earth-to-space)
5.506A
Radionavigation-satellite
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\27DEP1.SGM
5.504A
5.504A
14.4-14.47
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.457A 5.4578 5.484A 5.506 5.5068
M081LE except aeronautical rnobile
Mobile-satellite (Earth-to-space) 5.5048 5.506A 5.509A
Space research (space-to-Earth)
5.504A
14.47-14.5
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.457A 5.4578 5.484A 5.506 5.5068
M081LE except aeronautical rnobile
Mobile-satellite (Earth-to-space) 5.5048 5.506A 5.509A
Radio astronorny
14.3-14.4
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space)
5.457A 5.484A 5.506 5.5068
M081LE except aeronautical rnobile
Mobile-satellite (Earth-to-space)
5.5048 5.506A 5.509A
Radionavigation-satellite
5.504A
14.4-14.47
Fixed
Mobile
14.47-14.5
Fixed
Mobile
NG184
14.47-14.5
FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space)
NG183 NG187
Mobile-satellite (Earth-to-space)
14.8-15.35
FIXED
M081LE
Space research
US113 US342
14.5-14.8
US310
14.8-15.1365
FCC Rule Part(s)
Satellite Cornrnunications
(25)
76271
EP27DE12.024
US113 US342
14.5-14.7145
FIXED
Mobile
Space research
14.7145-14.8
M081LE
Fixed
Space research
14.8-15.1365
M081LE
SPACE RESEARCH
Fixed
US310
27DEP1
5.149 5.504A
14.5-14.8
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.510
M081LE
Space research
Federal Table
14-14.2
Space research
Page 49
United States Table
Non-Federal Table
14-14.2
FIXED-SATELLITE
(Earth-to-space) NG183 NG187
Mobile-satellite (Earth-to-space)
Space research
14.2-14.47
FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space)
NG183 NG187
Mobile-satellite (Earth-to-space)
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 248 / Thursday, December 27, 2012 / Proposed Rules
16:35 Dec 26, 2012
International Table
Region 2 Table
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with
76272
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17.7-23.6 GHz (SHF)
Table of Frequency Allocations
Jkt 229001
PO 00000
Frm 00023
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\27DEP1.SGM
US334 US519
18.3-18.6
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
NG164
US139
18.6-18.8
EARTH EXPLORATIONSATELLITE (passive)
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-toEarth) US334 US255 G117
SPACE RESEARCH (passive)
Satellite
Cornrnunications (25)
TV Broadcast Auxiliary
(74F)
Cable TV Relay (78)
Fixed Microwave (101)
US334 US139
18.6-18.8
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE
(passive)
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
US255 NG164
SPACE RESEARCH (passive)
US139 US254
18.8-20.2
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-toEarth) US334 G117
FCC Rule Part(s)
US139 US254 US334
18.8-19.3
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-lo-Earth)
NG165
TV Broadcast Auxiliary
(74F)
Cable TV Relay (78)
Fixed Microwave (101)
Satellite
Cornrnunications (25)
5.484A 5.516B
18.6-18.8
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE
(passive)
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
5.516B 5.522B
MOBILE except aeronautical rnobile
SPACE RESEARCH (passive)
27DEP1
5.522A 5.522C
5.522A
18.8-19.3
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) 5.516B 5.523A
MOBILE
18.6-18.8
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE
(passive)
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-lo-Earth)
5.522B
MOBILE except aeronautical rnobile
Space research (passive)
5.522A
19.3-19.7
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) (Earth-to-space) 5.523B 5.523C 5.5230 5.523E
MOBILE
5.524
US401
17.8-18.3
FIXED
US519
18.3-18.6
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-toEarth) US334 G117
5.519
18.1-18.4
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) 5.484A 5.516B (Earth-to-space) 5.520
MOBILE
5.519 5.521
18.4-18.6
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
MOBILE
18.6-18.8
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive)
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
5.522B
MOBILE except aeronautical rnobile
Space research (passive)
Federal Table
17.7-17.8
US401 G117
17.8-18.3
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-toEarth) US334 G117
5.515
17.8-18.1
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
5.484A (Earth-to-space) 5.516
MOBILE
19.7-20.1
19.7-20.1
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
5.484A 5.516B
5.484A 5.516B
Mobile-satellite (space-to-Earth)
MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
EP27DE12.025
Region 3 Table
17.7-18.1
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
5.484A (Earth-lo-space) 5.516
MOBILE
Page 51
United States Table
Non-Federal Table
17.7-17.8
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space)
US271
19.7-20.1
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
5.484A 5.516B
Mobile-satellite (space-to-Earth)
5.524 5.525 5.526 5.527 5.528 5.529 5.524
US139 US334
19.3-19.7
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
NG166
US334
19.7-20.2
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
Salellile
Cornrnunications (25)
TV Broadc't Auxiliary (74F)
Cable TV Relay (78)
Fixed Microwave (101)
Satellite
Cornrnunications (25)
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 248 / Thursday, December 27, 2012 / Proposed Rules
16:35 Dec 26, 2012
International Table
Region 1 Table
Region 2 Table
17.7-18.1
17.7-17.8
FIXED
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
5.517 (Earth-to-space) 5.516
5.484A (Earth-to-space) 5.516
BROADCASTING-SATELLITE
MOBILE
Mobile
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with
VerDate Mar<15>2010
20,1-20.2
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) 5.484A 5,516B
MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
Jkt 229001
PO 00000
5.524
21.2-21.4
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive)
FIXED
MOBILE
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BROADCASTING-SATELLITE
5,208B 5,530
21.4-22
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MOBILE
G117
21.2-21.4
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive)
FIXED
MOBILE
SPACE RESEARCH (passive)
21.4-22
FIXED
MOBILE
BROADCASTING-SATELLITE
5.208B 5.530
US532
21.4-22
FIXED
MOBILE
5,531
E:\FR\FM\27DEP1.SGM
27DEP1
22-22.21
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
US342
22.21-22.5
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive)
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
RADIO ASTRONOMY
SPACE RESEARCH (passive)
5,149 5,532
22,5-22.55
FIXED
MOBILE
US342 US532
22,5-22,55
FIXED
MOBILE
US211
22,55-23,55
FIXED
INTER-SATELLITE US145 US278
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23.55-23,6
FIXED
MOBILE
Satellite
Communications (25)
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Fixed Microwave (101)
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5,149
23,55-23,6
FIXED
MOBILE
Sfmt 4725
22-22.21
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
22,55-23.55
FIXED
INTER-SATELLITE 5.338A
MOBILE
EP27DE12.026
Fixed Microwave (101)
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16:35 Dec 26, 2012
5.525 5.526 5,527 5,528 5.529
US139
US334
20.2-21.2
20.2-21.2
FIXED-SATELLITE
Standard frequency and time
(space-to-Earth)
Signal-satellite (space-to-Earth)
MOBILE-SATELLITE
(space-to-Earth)
Standard frequency and time
signal-satellite (space-to-Earth)
5,524 5,525 5.526 5,527 5,528
20,2-21,2
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
Standard frequency and time signal-satellite (space-to-Earth)
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Table of Frequency Allocations
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Region 1 Table
30-31
FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.338A
MOBILE-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space)
Standard frequency and time signal-satellite (space-to-Earth)
Region 3 Table
Jkt 229001
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5.542
31-31.3
FIXED 5.338A 5.543A
MOBILE
Standard frequency and time signal-satellite (space-to-Earth)
Space research 5.544 5.545
G117
31-31.3
Standard frequency and time
signal-satellite (space-to-Earth)
5.149
31.3-31.5
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive)
RADIO ASTRONOMY
SPACE RESEARCH (passive)
FCC Rule Part(s)
US211 US342
US211 US342
31.3-31.8
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive)
RADIO ASTRONOMY US74
SPACE RESEARCH (passive)
Fmt 4702
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31.5-31.8
EARTH EXPLORATIONSATELLITE (passive)
RADIO ASTRONOMY
SPACE RESEARCH (passive)
Fixed
Mobile excepl aeronautical mobile
31.5-31.8
EARTH EXPLORATIONSATELLITE (passive)
RADIO ASTRONOMY
SPACE RESEARCH (passive)
E:\FR\FM\27DEP1.SGM
5.149 5.546
5.340
31.8-32
FIXED 5.547A
RADIONAVIGATION
SPACE RESEARCH (deep space) (space-la-Earth)
31-31.3
FIXED NG60
MOBILE
Standard frequency and time
signal-satellile (space-la-Earth)
Fixed Microwave (101)
31.5-31.8
EARTH EXPLORATIONSATELLITE (passive)
RADIO ASTRONOMY
SPACE RESEARCH (passive)
Fixed
Mobile excepl aeronaulical mobile
5.149
US246
31.8-32.3
RADIONAVIGATION US69
SPACE RESEARCH (deep space)
(space-to-Earth) US262
31.8-32.3
SPACE RESEARCH (deep space)
(space-la-Earth) US262
27DEP1
5.547 5.547B 5.548
32-32.3
FIXED 5.547A
RADIONAVIGATION
SPACE RESEARCH (deep space) (space-la-Earth)
5.547 5.547C 5.548
32.3-33
FIXED 5.547A
INTER-SATELLITE
RADIONAVIGATION
5.548 US211
32.3-33
INTER-SATELLITE US278
RADIONAVIGATION US69
5.547 5.547D 5.548
33-33.4
FIXED 5.547A
RADIONAVIGATION
5.548
33-33.4
RADIONAVIGATION US69
5.547 5.547E
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Non-Federal Table
Federal Table
30-31
30-31
FIXED-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space)
Standard frequency and time
signal-satellite (space-to-Earth)
MOBILE-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space)
Standard frequency and time
signal-satellite (space-to-Earth)
US360 G117
5.548 US211
Aviation (87)
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33.4-34.2
Radiolocation
5.549
34.2-34.7
RADIOLOCATION
SPACE RESEARCH (deep space) (Earth-to-space)
US360 G117
34.2-34.7
RADIOLOCATION
SPACE RESEARCH (deep space)
(Earth-to-space) US262
US360
34.2-34.7
Radiolocation
Space research (deep space)
(Earth-to-space) US262
5.549
34.7-35.2
RADIOLOCATION
Space research 5.550
US360 G34 G117
34.7-35.5
RADIOLOCATION
US360
34.7-35.5
Radiolocation
5.549
35.5-36
METEOROLOGICAL AIDS
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (active)
RADIOLOCATION
SPACE RESEARCH (active)
US360 G117
35.5-36
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE
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RADIOLOCATION
SPACE RESEARCH (active)
US360
35.5-36
Earth exploration-satellite (active)
Radiolocation
Space research (active)
5.549 5.549A
36-37
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FIXED
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SPACE RESEARCH (passive)
US360 G117
US360
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EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive)
FIXED
MOBILE
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5.149 5.550A
37-37.5
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US263 US342 US550A
37-38
FIXED
MOBILE
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5.549
35.2-35.5
METEOROLOGICAL AIDS
RADIOLOCATION
27DEP1
5.547
37.5-38
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-Io-Earth)
MOBILE
SPACE RESEARCH (space-to-Earth)
Earth exploration-satellite (space-to-Earth)
5.547
38-39.5
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
MOBILE
Earth exploration-satellite (space-to-Earth)
37-37.5
FIXED
MOBILE
37.5-38.6
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
MOBILE
38-38.6
FIXED
MOBILE
38.6-39.5
38.6-39.5
FIXED
FIXED-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
MOBILE NG175
Satellite Communications (25)
Satellile Communications (25)
Fixed Microwave (101)
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MOBILE-SATELLITE (Earth-la-space)
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45.5-46.9
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MOBILE-SATELLITE (Earth-la-space)
RADiONAVIGATION-SATELLITE
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FIXED US379
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SPACE RESEARCH (passive)
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EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE
(passive)
FIXED
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56.9-57
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE
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FIXED
MOBILE 5.558
SPACE RESEARCH (passive)
5.547 5.557
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SPACE RESEARCH (passive)
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(passive)
FIXED
INTER-SATELLITE 5.556A
MOBILE 5.558
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SPACE RESEARCH (passive)
RF Devices (15)
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MOBILE 5.558
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59.3-64
FIXED
MOBILE 5.558
RADIOLOCATION 5.559
5.138
64-65
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5.138 US353
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FIXED
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MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
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MOBILE 5.553 5.558
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MOBILE 5.553 5.558
MOBILE-SATELLITE
RADIONAVIGATION
RADIONAVIGATION-SATELLITE
EP27DE12.031
RF Devices (15)
Satellite Communications (25)
5.554
5.554
RF Devices (15)
ISM Equipment (18)
Satellite Communications (25)
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MOBILE
RADIO ASTRONOMY
US161 US342 US389
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MOBILE
RADIO ASTRONOMY
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EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive)
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SPACE RESEARCH (passive)
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SPACE RESEARCH (passive)
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MOBILE
RADIO ASTRONOMY
RADIOLOCATION
5.149
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EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (active)
RADIOLOCATION
SPACE RESEARCH (aclive)
Radio astronomy
US152 US342
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EARTH EXPLORATIONSATELLITE (active)
RADIOLOCATION
SPACE RESEARCH (active)
Radio astronomy
5.562 5.562A
94.1-95
FIXED
MOBILE
RADIO ASTRONOMY
RADIOLOCATION
5.562 5.562A
94.1-95
FIXED
MOBILE
RADIO ASTRONOMY
RADIOLOCATION
5.149
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FIXED
MOBILE
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RADIOLOCA TlON
RADIONAVIGATION
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5.149 5.554
16:35 Dec 26, 2012
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RADIO ASTRONOMY
Space research (space-to-Earth)
5.554 US342
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FIXED
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MOBILE
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RADIO ASTRONOMY
Space research (space-Io-Earth)
RF Devices (15)
Fixed Microwave (101)
94-94.1
RADIOLOCATION
Radio astronomy
RF Devices (15)
5.562A
RF Devices (15)
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*
*
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 248 / Thursday, December 27, 2012 / Proposed Rules
*
*
*
United States (US) Footnotes
*
*
*
*
*
US52 In the VHF maritime mobile
band (156–162 MHz), the following
provisions shall apply:
(a) Federal stations in the maritime
mobile service may also be authorized
as follows: (1) Vessel traffic services
under the control of the U.S. Coast
Guard on a simplex basis by coast and
ship stations on the frequencies 156.250
MHz (Channel 05), 156.550 MHz
(Channel 11), 156.600 MHz (Channel
12) and 156.700 MHz (Channel 14); (2)
Inter-ship use of the frequency 156.300
MHz (Channel 06) on a simplex basis;
(3) Navigational bridge-to-bridge and
navigational communications on a
simplex basis by coast and ship stations
on the frequency 156.650 MHz (Channel
13) and on the Lower Mississippi River
the frequency 156.375 MHz (Channel
67); (4) Port operations use on a simplex
basis by coast and ship stations on the
frequencies 156.600 MHz and 156.700
MHz; (5) Environmental
communications on the frequency
156.750 MHz (Channel 15) in
accordance with the national plan; and
(6) Duplex port operations use of the
frequencies 157.000 MHz for ship
stations and 161.600 MHz for coast
stations (Channel 20).
(b) The frequency 156.300 MHz may
also be used by Federal and non-Federal
aircraft stations for the purpose of
search and rescue operations and other
safety-related communications.
(c) The frequencies 156.775 MHz
(Channel 75) and 156.825 MHz
(Channel 76) are available on a primary
basis to Federal and non-Federal
stations in the maritime mobile service
for navigation-related port operations or
ship movement only, and all
precautions must be taken to avoid
harmful interference to 156.800 MHz
(Channel 16).
*
*
*
*
*
US74 In the bands 25.55–25.67, 73–
74.6, 406.1–410, 608–614, 1400–1427,
1660.5–1670, 2690–2700, and 4990–
5000 MHz, and in the bands 10.68–10.7,
15.35–15.4, 23.6–24.0, 31.3–31.5, 86–92,
100–102, 109.5–111.8, 114.25–116,
148.5–151.5, 164–167, 200–209, and
250–252 GHz, the radio astronomy
service shall be protected from
unwanted emissions only to the extent
that such radiation exceeds the level
which would be present if the offending
station were operating in compliance
with the technical standards or criteria
applicable to the service in which it
operates. Radio astronomy observations
in these bands are performed at the
locations listed in US385.
US79 In the bands 1390–1400 MHz
and 1427–1432 MHz, the following
provisions shall apply:
(a) Airborne and space-to-Earth
operations are prohibited.
(b) Federal operations (except for
devices authorized by the FCC for the
Wireless Medical Telemetry Service) are
on a non-interference basis to nonFederal operations and shall not
constrain implementation of nonFederal operations.
*
*
*
*
*
US85 Differential-GlobalPositioning-System (DGPS) Stations,
limited to ground-based transmitters,
may be authorized on a primary basis in
the band 1559–1610 MHz for the
specific purpose of transmitting DGPS
information intended for aircraft
navigation.
*
*
*
*
*
US100 The bands 2310–2320 and
2345–2360 MHz are also available for
Federal aeronautical telemetering and
associated telecommand operations for
flight testing of manned or unmanned
aircraft, missiles or major components
thereof on a secondary basis to the
Wireless Communications Service
(WCS). The band 2345–2360 MHz is
also available to non-Federal applicants
on a secondary basis to the WCS for
these same purposes. The following two
frequencies are shared on a co-equal
basis by Federal stations for
telemetering and associated
telecommand operations of expendable
and re-usable launch vehicles whether
or not such operations involve flight
testing: 2312.5 and 2352.5 MHz. Other
Federal mobile telemetering uses may
be provided on a non-interference basis
to the above uses. The broadcastingsatellite service (sound) during
implementation should also take
cognizance of the expendable and
reusable launch vehicle frequencies
2312.5 and 2352.5 MHz, to minimize
the impact on this mobile service use to
the extent possible.
*
*
*
*
*
US111 In the band 5091–5150 MHz,
aeronautical mobile telemetry
operations for flight testing are
conducted at the following locations.
Flight testing at additional locations
may be authorized on a case-by-case
basis.
Location
Test sites
Gulf Area Ranges Complex
(GARC).
Utah Ranges Complex (URC) .....
Western Ranges Complex (WRC)
Eglin AFB, Tyndall AFB, FL; Gulfport ANG Range, MS; Ft. Rucker,
Redstone, NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, AL.
Dugway PG; Utah Test & Training Range (Hill AFB), UT ................
Pacific Missile Range; Vandenberg AFB, China Lake NAWS, Pt.
Mugu NAWS, Edwards AFB, Thermal, Nellis AFB, Ft. Irwin,
NASA Dryden Flight Research Center, Victorville, CA.
Ft. Huachuca, Tucson, Phoenix, Mesa, Yuma, AZ ..........................
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with
Southwest
Ranges
(SRC).
Mid-Atlantic Ranges
(MARC).
New Mexico Ranges
(NMRC).
Colorado
Ranges
(CoRC).
Texas Ranges Complex
Complex
Complex
Complex
Complex
(TRC) ...
Cape Ranges Complex (CRC) ....
Northwest
Range
Complex
(NWRC).
St. Louis .......................................
Wichita .........................................
Marietta ........................................
Glasgow .......................................
Wilmington/Ridley ........................
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:35 Dec 26, 2012
Lat. (N)
30°28′
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110°18′
38°17′
76°24′
32°11′
106°20′
37°26′
105°52′
32°53′
97°02′
28°33′
47°32′
80°34′
122°18′
38°45′
37°40′
33°54′
48°25′
39°49′
27DEP1
113°05′
117°16′
31°33′
Dallas/Ft. Worth, Greenville, Waco, Johnson Space Flight Center/
Ellington Field, TX.
Cape Canaveral, Palm Beach-Dade, FL ..........................................
Seattle, Everett, Spokane, Moses Lake, WA; Klamath Falls, Eugene, OR.
St Louis, MO .....................................................................................
Wichita, KS ........................................................................................
Marietta, GA ......................................................................................
Glasgow, MT .....................................................................................
Wilmington, DE/Ridley, PA ...............................................................
86°31′
40°57′
35°29′
Patuxent River, Aberdeen PG, NASA Langley Research Center,
NASA Wallops Flight Facility, MD.
White Sands Missile Range, Holloman AFB, Albuquerque,
Roswell, NM; Amarillo, TX.
Alamosa, Leadville, CO ....................................................................
Jkt 229001
Long. (W)
90°22′
97°26′
84°31′
106°32′
75°26′
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 248 / Thursday, December 27, 2012 / Proposed Rules
Location
Test sites
San Francisco Bay Area (SFBA)
NASA Ames Research Center, CA ..................................................
*
*
*
*
*
US113 Radio astronomy
observations of the formaldehyde line
Lat. (N)
frequencies 4825–4835 MHz and 14.47–
14.5 GHz may be made at certain radio
37°25′
76281
Long. (W)
122°03′
astronomy observatories as indicated
below:
BANDS TO BE OBSERVED
4 GHz
14 GHz
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Observatory
National Astronomy and Ionosphere Center (NAIC), Arecibo, PR.
National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO), Green Bank, WV.
NRAO, Socorro, NM.
Allen Telescope Array (ATA), Hat Creek, CA.
Owens Valley Radio Observatory (OVRO), Big Pine, CA.
NRAO’s ten Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) stations (see US131).
University of Michigan Radio Astronomy Observatory, Stinchfield Woods, MI.
Pisgah Astronomical Research Institute, Rosman, NC.
X
X
X
X
X
Every practicable effort will be made
to avoid the assignment of frequencies
to stations in the fixed or mobile
services in these bands. Should such
assignments result in harmful
interference to these observations, the
situation will be remedied to the extent
practicable.
*
*
*
*
*
US139 Fixed stations authorized in
the band 18.3–19.3 GHz that remain coprimary under the provisions of 47 CFR
74.502(c), 74.602(g), 78.18(a)(4), and
101.147(r) may continue operations
consistent with the provisions of those
sections.
*
*
*
*
*
US145 The following unwanted
emission power limits from nongeostationary satellite orbit systems in
the inter-satellite service (NGSO ISS)
transmitting in the band 22.55–23.55
GHz shall apply in any 200 MHz of the
passive band 23.6–24 GHz:
(a) Non-Federal licensees holding a
valid authorization on [insert effective
date of R&O] to operate in this band may
continue to operate as authorized,
subject to proper license renewal.
(b) For all other NGSO ISS systems,
based on the date that complete advance
publication information is received by
the ITU’s Radiocommunication Bureau,
the following limits apply:
(1) For information received before
January 1, 2020: –36 dBW.
(2) For information received on or
after January 1, 2020: –46 dBW.
US156 In the bands 49.7–50.2 GHz
and 50.4–50.9 GHz, for earth stations in
the fixed-satellite service (Earth-tospace), the unwanted emission power in
the band 50.2–50.4 GHz shall not
exceed –20 dBW/200 MHz (measured at
the input of the antenna), except that
the maximum unwanted emission
power may be increased to –10 dBW/
200 MHz for earth stations having an
antenna gain greater than or equal to 57
dBi. These limits apply under clear-sky
conditions. During fading conditions,
the limits may be exceeded by earth
stations when using uplink power
control.
US157 In the band 51.4–52.6 GHz,
for stations in the fixed service, the
unwanted emission power in the band
52.6–54.25 GHz shall not exceed –33
dBW/100 MHz (measured at the input of
antenna).
US161 In the bands 81–86 GHz, 92–
94 GHz, and 94.1–95 GHz and within
the coordination distances indicated
below, assignments to allocated services
shall be coordinated with the following
radio astronomy observatories. New
observatories shall not receive
protection from fixed stations that are
licensed to operate in the one hundred
most populous urbanized areas as
defined by the U.S. Census Bureau for
the year 2000.
(a) Within 25 km of the National
Radio Astronomy Observatory’s
(NRAO’s) Very Long Baseline Array
(VLBA) Stations:
VLBA station
AZ .....................
CA .....................
HI ......................
IA ......................
NH ....................
NM ....................
NM ....................
TX .....................
VI ......................
WA ....................
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with
State
Lat. (N)
Kitt Peak .......................................................................................................................
Owens Valley ................................................................................................................
Mauna Kea ...................................................................................................................
North Liberty .................................................................................................................
Hancock ........................................................................................................................
Los Alamos ...................................................................................................................
Pie Town .......................................................................................................................
Fort Davis .....................................................................................................................
Saint Croix ....................................................................................................................
Brewster ........................................................................................................................
31°57′23″
37°13′54″
19°48′05″
41°46′17″
42°56′01″
35°46′30″
34°18′04″
30°38′06″
17°45′24″
48°07′52″
Long. (W)
111°36′45″
118°16′37″
155°27′20″
091°34′27″
071°59′12″
106°14′44″
108°07′09″
103°56′41″
064°35′01″
119°41′00″
(b) Within 150 km of the following
observatories:
State
Telescope and site
AZ .....................
Heinrich Hertz Submillimeter Observatory, Mt. Graham ..............................................
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32°42′06″
27DEP1
Long. (W)
109°53′28″
76282
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 248 / Thursday, December 27, 2012 / Proposed Rules
State
Telescope and site
Lat. (N)
AZ .....................
CA .....................
CA .....................
HI ......................
MA ....................
NM ....................
WV ....................
University of Arizona 12-m Telescope, Kitt Peak .........................................................
Caltech Telescope, Owens Valley ...............................................................................
Combined Array for Research in Millimeter-wave Astronomy (CARMA) .....................
James Clerk Maxwell Telescope, Mauna Kea .............................................................
Haystack Observatory, Westford ..................................................................................
NRAO’s Very Large Array, Socorro .............................................................................
NRAO’s Robert C. Byrd Telescope, Green Bank ........................................................
31°57′12″
37°13′54″
37°16′43″
19°49′33″
42°37′24″
34°04′44″
38°25′59″
Long. (W)
111°36′53″
118°17′36″
118°08′32″
155°28′47″
071°29′18″
107°37′06″
079°50′23″
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with
Note: Satisfactory completion of the coordination procedure utilizing the automated mechanism, see 47 CFR 101.1523, will be deemed to establish sufficient separation from radio astronomy observatories, regardless of whether the distances set forth above are met.
US197A The band 108–117.975
MHz is also allocated on a primary basis
to the aeronautical mobile (R) service
(AM(R)S), limited to systems operating
in accordance with recognized
international aeronautical standards.
Such use shall be in accordance with
Resolution 413 (Rev. WRC–07). AM(R)S
use of the band 108–112 MHz shall be
limited to systems composed of groundbased transmitters and associated
receivers that provide navigational
information in support of air navigation
functions in accordance with recognized
international aeronautical standards.
AM(R)S use of the band 108–117.975
MHz shall not constrain the use of the
band 88–108 MHz by stations in the
broadcasting service operating in
accordance with 47 CFR part 73.
*
*
*
*
*
US227 The bands 156.4875–
156.5125 MHz and 156.5375–156.5625
MHz are also allocated to the fixed and
land mobile services on a primary basis
for non-Federal use in VHF Public Coast
Station Areas 10–42. The use of these
bands by the fixed and land mobile
services shall not cause harmful
interference to, nor claim protection
from, the maritime mobile VHF
radiocommunication service.
US228D The use of the bands
161.9625–161.9875 MHz (AIS 1 with
center frequency 161.975 MHz) and
162.0125–162.0375 MHz (AIS 2 with
center frequency 162.025 MHz) by the
maritime mobile service is restricted to
Automatic Identification Systems (AIS),
except that non-Federal stations in the
band 161.9625–161.9875 MHz may
continue to operate on a primary basis
according to the following schedule: (a)
In VHF Public Coast Service Areas
(VPCSAs) 1–9, site-based stations
licensed prior to November 13, 2006
may continue to operate until expiration
of the license term for licenses in active
status as of November 13, 2006; and (b)
In VPCSAs 10–42, site-based stations
licensed prior to March 2, 2009 may
continue to operate until March 2, 2024.
See 47 CFR 80.371(c)(1)(ii) for the
definition of VPCSAs.
*
*
*
*
*
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Jkt 229001
US334 In the band 17.8–20.2 GHz,
Federal space stations in both
geostationary (GSO) and nongeostationary satellite orbits (NGSO)
and associated earth stations in the
fixed-satellite service (FSS) (space-toEarth) may be authorized on a primary
basis. For a Federal GSO FSS network
to operate on a primary basis, the space
station shall be located outside the arc,
measured from east to west, 70–120°
West longitude. Coordination between
Federal FSS systems and non-Federal
space and terrestrial systems operating
in accordance with the United States
Table of Frequency Allocations is
required.
(a) In the sub-bands 17.8–18.3 GHz
and 19.3–19.7 GHz, Federal earth
stations shall be authorized on a
primary basis only in the following
areas: Denver, Colorado; Washington,
DC; San Miguel, California; and Guam.
Prior to the commencement of nonFederal terrestrial operations in these
areas, the FCC shall coordinate all
applications for new stations and
modifications to existing stations with
NTIA as specified in 47 CFR 1.924(f),
74.32, and 78.19(f).
(b) In the sub-band 17.8–19.7 GHz, the
power flux-density (pfd) at the surface
of the Earth produced by emissions from
a Federal GSO space station or from a
Federal space station in a NGSO
constellation of 50 or fewer satellites,
for all conditions and for all methods of
modulation, shall not exceed the
following values in any 1 MHz band:
(1) ¥115 dB(W/m2) for angles of
arrival above the horizontal plane (d)
between 0° and 5°,
(2) ¥115 + 0.5(d ¥ 5) dB(W/m2) for
d between 5° and 25°, and
(3) ¥105 dB(W/m2) for d between 25°
and 90°.
(c) In the sub-band 17.8–19.3 GHz, the
pfd at the surface of the Earth produced
by emissions from a Federal space
station in an NGSO constellation of 51
or more satellites, for all conditions and
for all methods of modulation, shall not
exceed the following values in any 1
MHz band:
(1) ¥115¥X dB(W/m2) for d between 0°
and 5°,
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(2) ¥115¥X + ((10 + X)/20)(d ¥ 5)
dB(W/m2) for d between 5° and 25°,
and
(3) ¥105 dB(W/m2) for d between 25°
and 90°; where X is defined as a
function of the number of satellites,
n, in an NGSO constellation as
follows:
For n ≤ 288, X = (5/119) (n ¥ 50) dB;
and
For n > 288, X = (1/69) (n + 402) dB.
*
*
*
*
*
US338A In the band 1435–1452
MHz, operators of aeronautical
telemetry stations are encouraged to
take all reasonable steps to ensure that
unwanted emission power does not
exceed ¥28 dBW/27 MHz in the band
1400–1427 MHz.
*
*
*
*
*
US343 In the mobile service, the
frequencies between 1435 and 1525
MHz will be assigned for aeronautical
telemetry and associated telecommand
operations for flight testing of manned
or unmanned aircraft and missiles, or
their major components. Permissible
usage includes telemetry associated
with launching and reentry into the
Earth’s atmosphere as well as any
incidental orbiting prior to reentry of
manned objects undergoing flight tests.
The following frequencies are shared on
a co-equal basis with flight telemetering
mobile stations: 1444.5, 1453.5, 1501.5,
1515.5, and 1524.5 MHz.
*
*
*
*
*
US401 In the band 17.7–17.8 GHz,
Federal earth stations in the fixedsatellite service (space-to-Earth) may be
authorized in the Denver, Colorado;
Washington, DC; San Miguel, California;
and Guam areas on a primary basis.
Prior to commencement of operations in
these areas, the FCC shall coordinate
fixed service applications supporting
Multichannel Video Programming
Distributors (MVPD) with NTIA.
*
*
*
*
*
US475 The use of the band 9300–
9500 MHz by the aeronautical
radionavigation service is limited to
airborne radars and associated airborne
beacons. In addition, ground-based
radar beacons in the aeronautical
E:\FR\FM\27DEP1.SGM
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tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 248 / Thursday, December 27, 2012 / Proposed Rules
radionavigation service are permitted in
the band 9300–9320 MHz on the
condition that harmful interference is
not caused to the maritime
radionavigation service.
US476A In the band 9300–9500
MHz, Federal stations in the Earth
exploration-satellite service (active) and
space research service (active) shall not
cause harmful interference to, nor claim
protection from, stations of the
radionavigation and Federal
radiolocation services.
US482 In the band 10.6–10.68 GHz,
the following provisions and urgings
apply:
(a) Non-Federal use of the fixed
service shall be restricted to point-topoint systems, with each station
supplying not more than ¥3 dBW of
transmitter power to the antenna and
producing not more than 40 dBW of
EIRP. However, licensees holding a
valid authorization on [insert effective
date of R&O] to operate in this band may
continue to operate as authorized,
subject to proper license renewal.
(b) In order to minimize interference
to the Earth exploration-satellite service
(passive) receiving in this band,
licensees of stations in the fixed service
are urged to: (1) Limit the maximum
transmitter power supplied to the
antenna to ¥15 dBW; (2) limit the
maximum elevation angle of the
antenna main beam to 20°; and (3)
employ automatic transmitter power
control (ATPC). The maximum
transmitter power supplied to the
antenna of stations using ATPC may be
increased by a value corresponding to
the ATPC range, up to a maximum of
¥3 dBW.
US519 The band 18–18.3 GHz is
also allocated to the meteorologicalsatellite service (space-to-Earth) on a
primary basis. Its use is limited to
geostationary satellites and shall be in
accordance with the provisions of
Article 21, Table 21–4 of the ITU Radio
Regulations.
US532 In the bands 21.2–21.4 GHz,
22.21–22.5 GHz, and 56.26–58.2 GHz,
the space research and Earth
exploration-satellite services shall not
receive protection from the fixed and
mobile services operating in accordance
with the Table of Frequency
Allocations.
US550A In the band 36–37 GHz, the
following provisions shall apply:
(a) For stations in the mobile service,
the transmitter power supplied to the
antenna shall not exceed ¥10 dBW,
except that the maximum transmitter
power may be increased to ¥3 dBW for
stations used for public safety and
disaster management.
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16:35 Dec 26, 2012
Jkt 229001
(b) For stations in the fixed service,
the elevation angle of the antenna main
beam shall not exceed 20° and the
transmitter power supplied to the
antenna shall not exceed:
(1) ¥5 dBW for hub stations of pointto-multipoint systems; or
(2) ¥10 dBW for all other stations,
except that the maximum transmitter
power of stations using automatic
transmitter power control (ATPC) may
be increased by a value corresponding
to the ATPC range, up to a maximum of
¥7 dBW.
Non-Federal Government (NG)
Footnotes
*
*
*
*
*
NG22 The frequencies 156.050 and
156.175 MHz may be assigned to
stations in the maritime mobile service
for commercial and port operations in
the New Orleans Vessel Traffic Service
(VTS) area and the frequency 156.250
MHz may be assigned to stations in the
maritime mobile service for port
operations in the New Orleans and
Houston VTS areas.
*
*
*
*
*
NG35 Frequencies in the bands 928–
929 MHz, 932–932.5 MHz, 941–941.5
MHz, and 952–960 MHz may be
assigned for multiple address systems
and associated mobile operations on a
primary basis.
*
*
*
*
*
NG60 In the band 31–31.3 GHz,
licensees of stations in the fixed service
are urged to limit the maximum
elevation angle of the antenna main
beam to 20° and to employ automatic
transmitter power control.
*
*
*
*
*
NG338A In the bands 1390–1395
MHz and 1427–1435 MHz bands,
licensees are encouraged to take all
reasonable steps to ensure that
unwanted emission power does not
exceed the following levels in the band
1400–1427 MHz:
(a) For stations of point-to-point
systems in the fixed service: ¥45 dBW/
27 MHz.
(b) For stations in the mobile service
(except for devices authorized by the
FCC for the Wireless Medical Telemetry
Service): ¥60 dBW/27 MHz.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 74—EXPERIMENTAL RADIO,
AUXILIARY, SPECIAL BROADCAST
AND OTHER PROGRAM
DISTRIBUTIONAL SERVICES
76283
8. Section 74.32 is revised to read as
follows:
§ 74.32 Operation in the 17.7–17.8 GHz and
17.8–19.7 GHz bands.
The following exclusion areas and
coordination areas are established to
minimize or avoid harmful interference
to Federal Government earth stations
receiving in the 17.7–19.7 GHz band:
(a) No application seeking authority
for fixed stations supporting the
operations of Multichannel Video
Programming Distributors (MVPD) in
the 17.7–17.8 GHz band or to operate in
the 17.8–19.7 GHz band for any service
will be accepted for filing if the
proposed station is located within 20
km of Denver, CO (39°43′ N, 104°46′ W)
or Washington, DC (38°48′ N, 76°52′ W).
(b) Any application for a new station
license to provide MVPD operations in
the 17.7–17.8 GHz band or to operate in
the 17.8–19.7 GHz band for any service,
or for modification of an existing station
license in these bands which would
change the frequency, power, emission,
modulation, polarization, antenna
height or directivity, or location of such
a station, must be coordinated with the
Federal Government by the Commission
before an authorization will be issued,
if the station or proposed station is
located in whole or in part within any
of the following areas:
(1) Denver, CO area:
(i) Between latitudes 41°30′ N and
38°30′ N and between longitudes
103°10′ W and 106°30′ W.
(ii) Between latitudes 38°30′ N and
37°30′ N and between longitudes
105°00′ W and 105°50′ W.
(iii) Between latitudes 40°08′ N and
39°56′ N and between longitudes
107°00′ W and 107°15′ W.
(2) Washington, DC area:
(i) Between latitudes 38°40′ N and
38°10′ N and between longitudes 78°50′
W and 79°20′ W.
(ii) Within 178 km of 38°48′ N, 76°52′
W.
(3) San Miguel, CA area:
(i) Between latitudes 34°39′ N and
34°00′ N and between longitudes
118°52′ W and 119°24′ W.
(ii) Within 200 km of 35°44′ N,
120°45′ W.
(4) Guam area: Within 100 km of
13°35′ N, 144°51′ E.
Note to § 74.32: The coordinates cited in
this section are specified in terms of the
‘‘North American Datum of 1983 (NAD 83).’’
PART 78—CABLE TELEVISION RELAY
SERVICE
7. The authority citation for part 74
continues to read as follows:
9. The authority citation for part 78
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 302a, 303, 307,
336(f), 336(h) and 554.
Authority: Secs. 2, 3, 4, 301, 303, 307, 308,
309, 48 Stat., as amended, 1064, 1065, 1066,
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76284
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 248 / Thursday, December 27, 2012 / Proposed Rules
1081, 1082, 1083, 1084, 1085; 47 U.S.C. 152,
153, 154, 301, 303, 307, 308, 309.
10. Section 78.19 is amended by
revising paragraph (f) to read as follows:
§ 78.19
Interference.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) 17.7–19.7 GHz band. The following
exclusion areas and coordination areas
are established to minimize or avoid
harmful interference to Federal
Government earth stations receiving in
the 17.7–19.7 GHz band:
(1) No application seeking authority
to operate in the 17.7–19.7 GHz band
will be accepted for filing if the
proposed station is located within 50
km of Denver, CO (39°43′ N, 104°46′ W)
or Washington, DC (38°48′N, 76°52′ W).
(2) Any application seeking authority
for a new fixed station license
supporting the operations of
Multichannel Video Programming
Distributors (MVPD) in the 17.7–17.8
GHz band or to operate in the 17.8–19.7
GHz band for any service, or for
modification of an existing station
license in these bands which would
change the frequency, power, emission,
modulation, polarization, antenna
height or directivity, or location of such
a station, must be coordinated with the
Federal Government by the Commission
before an authorization will be issued,
if the station or proposed station is
located in whole or in part within any
of the following areas:
(i) Denver, CO area:
(A) Between latitudes 41°30′ N and
38°30′ N and between longitudes
103°10′ W and 106°30′ W.
(B) Between latitudes 38°30′ N and
37°30′ N and between longitudes
105°00′ W and 105°50′ W.
(C) Between latitudes 40°08′ N and
39°56′ N and between longitudes
107°00′ W and 107°15′ W.
(ii) Washington, DC area:
(A) Between latitudes 38°40′ N and
38°10′ N and between longitudes 78°50′
W and 79°20′ W.
(B) Within 178 km of 38°48′ N, 76°52′
W.
(iii) San Miguel, CA area:
(A) Between latitudes 34°39′ N and
34°00′ N and between longitudes
118°52′ W and 119°24′ W.
(B) Within 200 km of 35°44′ N,
120°45′ W.
(iv) Guam area: Within 100 km of
13°35′ N, 144°51′ E.
Note to § 78.19(f): The coordinates cited in
this section are specified in terms of the
‘‘North American Datum of 1983 (NAD 83).’’
*
*
*
*
11. The authority citation for Part 87
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 303 and 307(e),
unless otherwise noted.
12. Section 87.5 is amended by
adding in alphabetical order a definition
for ‘‘flight telemetering mobile station’’
to read as follows:
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Flight telemetering mobile station. A
telemetering mobile station used for
transmitting data from an airborne
vehicle, excluding data related to
airborne testing of the vehicle itself (or
major components thereof).
*
*
*
*
*
13. Section 87.133 is amended by
revising paragraph (f) to read as follows:
§ 87.133
Frequency stability.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) The carrier frequency tolerance of
all transmitters operating in the 1435–
1525 MHz and 2345–2395 MHz bands is
0.002 percent. The carrier frequency
tolerance of all transmitters operating in
the 5091–5150 MHz band is 0.005
percent.
*
*
*
*
*
14. Section 87.137 is amended by
revising note 8 to the table of assignable
emissions in paragraph (a) to read as
follows:
§ 87.137
Types of emission.
(a) * * *
Notes:
*
*
*
*
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with
*
8 The
authorized bandwidth is equal to the
necessary bandwidth for frequency or
digitally modulated transmitters used in
aeronautical telemetering and associated
aeronautical telemetry or telecommand
stations operating in the 1435–1525 MHz,
2345–2395 MHz, and 5091–5150 MHz bands.
The necessary bandwidth must be computed
in accordance with part 2 of this chapter.
*
*
*
*
*
15. Section 87.139 is amended by
revising paragraph (a) introductory text,
paragraph (d), and paragraphs (e)
Frequency or frequency band
Subpart
*
*
*
5030–5091 MHz ........................................................
5031.000 MHz ...........................................................
5091–5150 MHz ........................................................
Q .......................
Q .......................
J ........................
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§ 87.139
*
PART 87—AVIATION SERVICES
§ 87.5
PO 00000
Emission limitations.
(a) Except for ELTs and when using
single sideband (R3E, H3E, J3E), or
frequency modulation (F9) or digital
modulation (F9Y) for telemetry or
telecommand in the 1435–1525 MHz,
2345–2395 MHz, and 5091–5150 MHz
bands or digital modulation (G7D) for
differential GPS, the mean power of any
emission must be attenuated below the
mean power of the transmitter (pY) as
follows:
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Except for telemetry in the 1435–
1525 MHz band, when the frequency is
removed from the assigned frequency by
more than 250 percent of the authorized
bandwidth for aircraft stations above 30
MHz and all ground stations the
attenuation must be at least 43 + 10
log10pY dB.
(e) When using frequency modulation
or digital modulation for telemetry or
telecommand in the 1435–1525 MHz,
2345–2395 MHz, or 5091–5150 MHz
bands with an authorized bandwidth
equal to or less than 1 MHz the
emissions must be attenuated as
follows:.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) When using frequency modulation
or digital modulation for telemetry or
telecommand in the 1435–1525 MHz,
2345–2395 MHz, or 5091–5150 MHz
bands with an authorized bandwidth
greater than 1 MHz, the emissions must
be attenuated as follows:
*
*
*
*
*
16. Section 87.173 is amended by
revising the frequency table in
paragraph (b) as follows:
a. The entry for the 2310–2320 MHz
band is removed.
b. The entry for the 5000–5250 MHz
band is removed.
c. An entry for the 5030–5091 MHz
band is added.
d. Entries for the 5091–5150 MHz and
24450–24650 MHz bands are added.
The additions read as follows:
§ 87.173
*
Frequencies.
*
*
*
*
(b) Frequency table:
Class of station
*
Frm 00035
introductory text and (f) introductory
text to read as follows:
Fmt 4702
MA, RLW ..........
RLT ...................
MA, FAT ...........
Sfmt 4702
Remarks
*
*
Microwave landing systems.
Aeronautical telemetry.
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*
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 248 / Thursday, December 27, 2012 / Proposed Rules
Frequency or frequency band
Subpart
*
*
*
24450–24650 MHz ....................................................
F, Q ..................
*
*
*
*
*
*
17. Section 87.187 is amended by
revising paragraph (p) to read as
follows:
§ 87.187
Frequencies.
*
*
*
*
*
(p) The 1435–1525 MHz and 2360–
2395 MHz bands are available on a
primary basis and the 2345–2360 MHz
band is available on a secondary basis
for telemetry and telecommand
associated with the flight testing of
aircraft, missiles, or related major
components. This includes launching
into space, reentry into the Earth’s
atmosphere and incidental orbiting
prior to reentry. In the 1435–1525 MHz
band, the following frequencies are
shared on a co-equal basis with flight
telemetering mobile stations: 1444.5,
1453.5, 1501.5, 1515.5, and 1524.5 MHz.
In the 2360–2395 MHz band, the
following frequencies may be assigned
for telemetry and associated
telecommand operations of expendable
and re-usable launch vehicles, whether
or not such operations involve flight
testing: 2364.5, 2370.5 and 2382.5 MHz.
See § 87.303(d).
Note to paragraph (p): Aeronautical
telemetry operations must protect
Miscellaneous Wireless Communications
Services operating in the 2345–2360 MHz
band.
*
*
*
*
*
18. Section 87.303 is amended by
revising paragraph (d) to read as
follows:
§ 87.303
Frequencies.
*
*
*
*
(d) Aeronautical mobile telemetry
(AMT) operations are conducted in the
1435–1525 MHz, 2345–2395 MHz, and
5091–5150 MHz bands on a co-equal
basis with U.S. Government stations.
(1) Frequencies in the 1435–1525
MHz and 2360–2395 MHz bands are
assigned in the mobile service primarily
for aeronautical telemetry and
associated telecommand operations for
flight testing of aircraft and missiles, or
their major components. The 2345–2360
MHz band is also available for these
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with
*
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*
*
*
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Class of station
Remarks
*
*
*
Aeronautical radionavigation.
*
*
MA, RL .............
*
purposes on a secondary basis.
Permissible uses of these bands include
telemetry and associated telecommand
operations associated with the
launching and reentry into the Earth’s
atmosphere, as well as any incidental
orbiting prior to reentry, of objects
undergoing flight tests. In the 1435–
1525 MHz band, the following
frequencies are shared on a co-equal
basis with flight telemetering mobile
stations: 1444.5, 1453.5, 1501.5, 1515.5,
and 1524.5 MHz. In the 2360–2395 MHz
band, the following frequencies may be
assigned for telemetry and associated
telecommand operations of expendable
and re-usable launch vehicles, whether
or not such operations involve flight
testing: 2364.5, 2370.5 and 2382.5 MHz.
All other mobile telemetry uses of the
2360–2395 MHz band shall be on a noninterfering and unprotected basis to the
above uses.
(2) Frequencies in the 5091–5150
MHz band are assigned in the
aeronautical mobile service on a
primary basis for flight testing of
aircraft. AMT use of these frequencies is
restricted to aircraft stations
transmitting to aeronautical stations
(AMT ground stations) in the flight test
areas listed in 47 CFR 2.106, footnote
US111.
(3) The authorized bandwidths for
stations operating in the 1435–1525
MHz, 2345–2395 MHz, and 5091–5150
MHz bands are normally 1, 3 or 5 MHz.
Applications for greater bandwidths
will be considered in accordance with
the provisions of § 87.135. Each
assignment will be centered on a
frequency between 1435.5 MHz and
1524.5 MHz, between 2345.5 MHz and
2394.5 MHz, or between 5091.5 MHz
and 5149.5 MHz, with 1 MHz channel
spacing.
*
*
*
*
*
19. Section 87.305 is amended by
revising paragraph (a)(1) to read as
follows:
§ 87.305
Frequency coordination.
(a)(1) Each application for a new
station license, renewal or modification
of an existing license concerning flight
PO 00000
Frm 00036
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
*
test frequencies, except as provided in
paragraph (b) of this section, must be
accompanied by a statement from a
frequency advisory committee. The
committee must comment on the
frequencies requested or the proposed
changes in the authorized station and
the probable interference to existing
stations. The committee must consider
all stations operating on the frequencies
requested or assigned within 320 km
(200 mi) of the proposed area of
operation and all prior coordination and
assignments on the proposed
frequency(ies). The committee must also
recommend frequencies resulting in the
minimum interference. The Committee
must coordinate in writing all requests
for frequencies or proposed operating
changes in the 1435–1525 MHz, 2345–
2395 MHz, and 5091–5150 MHz bands
with the responsible Government Area
Frequency Coordinators listed in the
NTIA ‘‘Manual of Regulations and
Procedures for Federal Radio Frequency
Management.’’ In addition, committee
recommendations may include
comments on other technical factors and
may contain recommended restrictions
which it believes should appear on the
license.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 90—PRIVATE LAND MOBILE
RADIO SERVICES
20. The authority citation for part 90
continues to read as follows:
Authority: Sections 4(i), 11, 303(g), 303(r),
and 332(c)(7) of the Communications Act of
1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 154(i), 161,
303(g), 303(r), and 332(c)(7), and Title VI of
the Middle Class Tax Relief and Job Creation
Act of 2012, Pub. L. 112–96, 126 Stat. 156.
21. Section 90.103 is amended by
revising the Kilohertz portion of the
Radiolocation Service Frequency Table
in paragraph (b) and by removing and
reserving paragraphs (c)(25) through
(28) to read as follows:
§ 90.103
*
Radiolocation Service.
*
*
(b) * * *
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*
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 248 / Thursday, December 27, 2012 / Proposed Rules
RADIOLOCATION SERVICE FREQUENCY TABLE
Frequency or band
Class of station(s)
Limitation
Kilohertz
70 to 90 ....................................................................................
90 to 110 ..................................................................................
110 to 130 ................................................................................
1705 to 1715 ............................................................................
1715 to 1750 ............................................................................
1750 to 1800 ............................................................................
3230 to 3400 ............................................................................
Radiolocation land or mobile ..................................................
Radiolocation land ...................................................................
Radiolocation land or mobile ..................................................
......do ......................................................................................
......do ......................................................................................
......do ......................................................................................
......do ......................................................................................
4, 5,
5,
5,
6,
1
2
1
6
6
6
8
Megahertz
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
PART 97—AMATEUR RADIO SERVICE
22. The authority citation for part 97
continues to read as follows:
*
*
Authority: 48 Stat. 1066, 1082, as
amended; 47 U.S.C. 154, 303. Interpret or
apply 48 Stat. 1064–1068, 1081–1105, as
amended; 47 U.S.C. 151–155, 301–609,
unless otherwise noted.
*
*
paragraphs (b), (c), and (d) to read as
follows:
§ 97.301
23. Section 97.301 is amended by
revising the kHz portion of the tables in
*
Authorized frequency bands.
*
*
(b) * * *
*
*
Sharing requirements
see § 97.303
(Paragraph)
Wavelength band
ITU Region 1
ITU Region 2
ITU Region 3
MF
kHz
kHz
kHz
160 m .................................
1810–1850 .........................
1800–2000 .........................
1800–2000 .........................
*
*
*
*
*
(a), (g)
*
*
(c) * * *
Sharing requirements
see § 97.303
(Paragraph)
Wavelength band
ITU Region 1
ITU Region 2
ITU Region 3
MF
kHz
kHz
kHz
160 m .................................
1810–1850 .........................
1800–2000 .........................
1800–2000 .........................
*
*
*
*
*
(a), (g)
*
*
(d) * * *
Sharing requirements
see § 97.303
(Paragraph)
Wavelength band
ITU Region 1
ITU Region 2
ITU Region 3
MF
kHz
kHz
kHz
160 m .................................
1810–1850 .........................
1800–2000 .........................
1800–2000 .........................
*
*
*
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with
*
*
*
*
*
24. Section 97.303 is amended by
revising paragraphs (c) and (g) to read as
follows:
§ 97.303
*
*
Frequency sharing requirements.
*
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*
*
16:35 Dec 26, 2012
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*
*
(c) Amateur stations transmitting in
the 76–77.5 GHz segment, the 78–81
GHz segment, the 136–141 GHz
segment, or the 241–248 GHz segment
must not cause harmful interference to,
and must accept interference from,
stations authorized by the United States
PO 00000
Frm 00037
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
*
(a), (g)
*
Government, the FCC, or other nations
in the radiolocation service.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) Amateur stations transmitting in
the 160 m band must not cause harmful
interference to, and must accept
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tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with
interference from, stations authorized by
other nations as follows:
(1) In Region 1: The radiolocation
service in the 1800–1810 kHz segment
and the fixed and mobile except
aeronautical mobile services in the
1850–2000 kHz segment. In the
countries listed in footnote 5.93 (of 47
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CFR 2.106), the fixed and land mobile
services in the 1800–1810 kHz segment,
and in the countries listed in footnotes
5.98 and 5.99, the fixed and mobile
except aeronautical mobile services in
the 1810–1830 kHz segment.
(2) In Region 2: The fixed, mobile
except aeronautical mobile,
PO 00000
Frm 00038
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 9990
76287
radiolocation, and radionavigation
services in the 1850–2000 kHz segment.
(3) In Region 3: The fixed, mobile
except aeronautical mobile, and
radionavigation services.
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2012–31049 Filed 12–26–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 248 (Thursday, December 27, 2012)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 76250-76287]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-31049]
========================================================================
Proposed Rules
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains notices to the public of
the proposed issuance of rules and regulations. The purpose of these
notices is to give interested persons an opportunity to participate in
the rule making prior to the adoption of the final rules.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 248 / Thursday, December 27, 2012 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 76250]]
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
47 CFR Parts 1, 2, 74, 87, 90, and 97
[ET Docket No. 12-338; FCC 12-140]
WRC-07 Implementation
AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document proposes to amend the Commission's rules to
implement allocation decisions from the World Radiocommunication
Conference (Geneva, 2007) (WRC-07), make other allocation changes that
are not related to WRC-07, and make certain updates to its service
rules. The proposed actions are designed to conform the Commission's
rules to the WRC-07 Final Acts and to provide significant benefits to
the American public.
DATES: Comments must be filed on or before February 25, 2013, and reply
comments must be filed on or before March 27, 2013.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tom Mooring, Office of Engineering and
Technology, (202) 418-2450, email: tom.mooring@fcc.gov, TTY (202) 418-
2989.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by ET Docket No. 12-338,
by any of the following methods:
[ssquf] Federal Communications Commission's Web Site: https://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/ecfs2/. Follow the instructions for submitting
comments.
[ssquf] Mail: Tom Mooring, Office of Engineering and Technology,
Room 7-A123, Federal Communications Commission, 445 12th Street SW.,
Washington, DC 20554.
[ssquf] People with Disabilities: Contact the FCC to request
reasonable accommodations (accessible format documents, sign language
interpreters, CART, etc.) by email: FCC504@fcc.gov or phone: 202-418-
0530 or TTY: 202-418-0432.
For detailed instructions for submitting comments and additional
information on the rulemaking process, see the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section of this document.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Commission's Notice
of Proposed Rule Making, ET Docket No. 12-338, FCC 12-140, adopted
November 15, 2012, and released November 19, 2012. The full text of
this document is available for inspection and copying during normal
business hours in the FCC Reference Center (Room CY-A257), 445 12th
Street SW., Washington, DC 20554. The complete text of this document
also may be purchased from the Commission's copy contractor, Best Copy
and Printing, Inc., 445 12th Street SW., Room, CY-B402, Washington, DC
20554. The full text may also be downloaded at: www.fcc.gov. Pursuant
to Sec. Sec. 1.415 and 1.419 of the Commission's rules, 47 CFR 1.415,
1.419, interested parties may file comments and reply comments on or
before the dates indicated on the first page of this document. Comments
may be filed using the Commission's Electronic Comment Filing System
(ECFS). See Electronic Filing of Documents in Rulemaking Proceedings,
63 FR 24121 (1998).
[ssquf] Electronic Filers: Comments may be filed electronically
using the Internet by accessing the ECFS: https://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/ecfs2/.
[ssquf] Paper Filers: Parties who choose to file by paper must file
an original and one copy of each filing. If more than one docket or
rulemaking number appears in the caption of this proceeding, filers
must submit two additional copies for each additional docket or
rulemaking number. Filings can be sent by hand or messenger delivery,
by commercial overnight courier, or by first-class or overnight U.S.
Postal Service mail. All filings must be addressed to the Commission's
Secretary, Office of the Secretary, Federal Communications Commission.
[ssquf] All hand-delivered or messenger-delivered paper filings for
the Commission's Secretary must be delivered to FCC Headquarters at 445
12th St. SW., Room TW-A325, Washington, DC 20554. The filing hours are
8:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. All hand deliveries must be held together with
rubber bands or fasteners. Any envelopes and boxes must be disposed of
before entering the building.
[ssquf] Commercial overnight mail (other than U.S. Postal Service
Express Mail and Priority Mail) must be sent to 9300 East Hampton
Drive, Capitol Heights, MD 20743.
[ssquf] U.S. Postal Service first-class, Express, and Priority mail
must be addressed to 445 12th Street SW., Washington, DC 20554.
People with Disabilities: To request materials in accessible
formats for people with disabilities (braille, large print, electronic
files, audio format), send an email to fcc504@fcc.gov or call the
Consumer & Governmental Affairs Bureau at 202-418-0530 (voice), 202-
418-0432 (tty).
Summary of Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
1. In the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM), the Commission
proposed to amend parts 1, 2, 74, 78, 87, 90, and 97 of its rules to
implement allocation decisions from the World Radiocommunication
Conference (Geneva, 2007) (WRC-07) concerning portions of the radio
frequency (RF) spectrum between 108 MHz and 20.2 GHz and to make
certain updates to its rules in this frequency range. The NPRM follows
the Commission's July 2010 WRC-07 Table Clean-up Order, which made
certain non-substantive, editorial revisions to the Table of Frequency
Allocations (Allocation Table) and to other related rules. The
Commission also addressed the recommendations for implementation of the
WRC-07 Final Acts that the National Telecommunications and Information
Administration (NTIA) submitted to the Commission in August 2009. As
part of its comprehensive review of the Allocation Table, the
Commission also proposed to make allocation changes that are not
related to the WRC-07 Final Acts and update certain service rules, and
requested comment on other allocation issues that concern portions of
the RF spectrum between 137.5 kHz and 54.25 GHz.
2. Specifically, the Commission proposed to:
Raise the secondary amateur service allocation in the
1900-2000 kHz band to primary status, remove the Federal and non-
Federal radiolocation service (RLS) allocations from this band, and
remove this band from Sec. Sec. 90.103, 97.301, and 97.303.
Allocate the 108-117.975 MHz band to the aeronautical
mobile route
[[Page 76251]]
(R) service (AM(R)S) on a primary basis for Federal/non-Federal shared
use, limited to systems operating in accordance with recognized
international aeronautical standards and Resolution 413 (Rev.WRC-07),
and in the 108-112 MHz sub-band, to systems composed of ground-based
transmitters and associated receivers that provide navigational
information in support of air navigation functions. Further, the
Commission proposed to prohibit the proposed AMR(R)S use from
constraining the use of the 88-108 MHz band by stations in the
broadcasting service (FM radio stations) operating in accordance with
47 CFR part 73.
Allocate the 156.4875-156.5125 MHz and 156.5375-156.5625
MHz bands to the fixed and land mobile services on a primary basis for
non-Federal use, subject to not causing harmful interference to, nor
claiming protection from, the maritime mobile VHF radiocommunication
service, and with the licensing of this spectrum restricted to the area
consisting of VHF Public Coast Station Areas 10-42. The NPRM also
requested comment on whether additional areas can be licensed while
fully protecting VHF Channel 70 reception.
Allocate the 156.5125-156.5375 MHz band to the maritime
mobile service (MMS) on a primary basis for Federal and non-Federal
use, restricted to the following types of operations: Distress,
urgency, safety, and calling via Digital Selective Calling (DSC)
techniques.
Make the frequencies 156.525 MHz and 156.8 MHz available
for search and rescue (SAR) operations concerning manned space
vehicles.
Make the frequency 156.3 MHz available for use by aircraft
stations for the purpose of SAR operations and other safety-related
communications, permit Federal ship and coast stations to operate on
certain navigation frequencies (156.775 MHz and 156.825 MHz) on a
primary basis, and simplify the U.S. Table by combining these proposed
provisions with existing provisions in a new U.S. footnote (US52).
Allocate the 161.9625-161.9875 MHz (AIS 1) and 162.0125-
162.0375 MHz (AIS 2) bands to the mobile-satellite service (MSS) on a
secondary basis for Federal/non-Federal shared use for the reception of
automatic identification system (AIS) emissions from stations operating
in the maritime mobile service. The NPRM also solicited comment on
whether the Commission should implement the WRC-12 allocation decisions
with regard to the AIS 1 and AIS 2 bands, i.e., whether the Commission
should allocate these bands to the aeronautical mobile (off-route)
service (AM(OR)S) and the MSS (Earth-to-space) on a primary basis,
restrict the use of these bands by the AM(OR)S to AIS emissions from
SAR aircraft, and require that these operations not constrain the
operation of allocated services in adjacent bands.
Amend the quiet zone rules in Sec. 1.924(f) to reflect
the areas listed in paragraph (a) of US270, limit its applicability to
RLS systems, and move the revised text from paragraph (f) to paragraph
(e).
Amend NG120 by revising ``band 928-960 MHz'' and ``mobile
operations'' to ``bands 928-929 MHz, 932-932.5 MHz, 941-941.5 MHz, and
952-960 MHz'' and ``associated mobile operations,'' respectively, by
deleting the phrase ``as specified in 47 CFR part 101.''
Allocate the 960-1164 MHz band to the AM(R)S on a primary
basis for Federal/non-Federal use to the 960-1164 MHz band and require
that any AM(R)S systems operating in the 960-1164 MHz band not cause
harmful interference to, claim protection from, or impose constraints
on aeronautical radionavigation service (ARNS) systems operating in
that band.
Remove the conditional secondary non-Federal fixed-
satellite service (FSS) allocation from the 1390-1392 MHz and 1430-1432
MHz bands.
Delete the unused non-Federal aeronautical mobile
telemetry (AMT) allocation in the 2310-2320 MHz band from US339 and
remove non-Federal access to two unused frequencies (2312.5 MHz and
2352.5 MHz) that are available for telemetry or telecommand operations
of expendable and reusable launch vehicles.
Update US203 to list the radio astronomy stations that
observe in the 4800-4940 MHz and 14.47-14.5 GHz bands.
Allocate the 5091-5150 MHz band to the aeronautical mobile
service on a primary basis for Federal/non-Federal shared use,
restricted to surface applications at airports, AMT transmissions, and
aeronautical security transmissions. The NPRM proposed to restrict AMT
use of the 5091-5150 MHz band to the 52 flight test areas listed in new
footnote US111, except that additional locations may be authorized on a
case-by-case basis. The NPRM requested comment on whether aeronautical
security transmissions should be excluded from the list of permitted
uses. The NPRM proposed to remove the precedence that the Microwave
Landing System (MLS) currently has over other uses of the 5091-5150 MHz
band and to extend the date after which no new assignments may be made
to earth stations providing feeder links for non-geostationary MSS
systems to January 1, 2016.
Amend part 87 of the Commission's rules to bring the
proposed AMT allocation in the 5091-5150 MHz band into immediate
effect, remove all references to the 1525-1535 MHz and 2310-2345 MHz
bands from part 87, and list the 2390-2395 MHz band in all appropriate
rule sections.
Raise the secondary Federal RLS allocation in the 9000-
9200 MHz and 9300-9500 MHz bands to primary status, allocate the 9300-
9500 MHz band to the Earth exploration-satellite service (EESS)
(active) and the space research service (SRS) (active) on a primary
basis for Federal use, allocate the 9800-9900 MHz band to the EESS
(active) and SRS (active) on a secondary basis for Federal use, require
that the use of these proposed allocations not cause harmful
interference to existing primary operations, and limit active sensor
use of the 9300-9500 MHz band to systems requiring more than 300 MHz of
bandwidth.
Allocate the 9300-9500 MHz and 9800-9900 MHz bands to the
EESS (active) and the SRS (active) on a secondary basis for non-Federal
use. The NPRM solicited comment on whether there is a non-Federal
requirement for primary EESS (active) and SRS (active) allocations in
the 9300-9500 MHz band.
Amend US401 and Sec. Sec. 1.924, 74.32, and 78.19 of the
Commission's rules by adding coordination areas in San Miguel,
California and Guam for terrestrial operations in the 17.7-19.7 GHz
band, consistent with a request by NTIA. The NPRM also proposed to
amend US334 to limit primary Federal earth stations in the 17.8-18.3
GHz and 19.3-19.7 GHz sub-bands to the Denver, Colorado; Washington,
DC; San Miguel, California; and Guam areas.
Amend Sec. Sec. 1.924, 74.32, and 78.19 to bring better
consistency between these rules and to update these rules, e.g., to
remove the Morrison, Colorado location from Sec. 78.19. The NPRM
sought comment on whether the coordination requirements for
Multichannel Video Programming Distributors (MVPD) operations in Sec.
74.32, and references in Sec. 1.924 to MVPD operations pursuant to
parts 74 and 78, should be removed from the Commission's rules.
Allocate the 18-18.1 GHz band to the meteorological-
satellite service for space-to-Earth transmission on a primary basis.
Update the list of radio astronomy stations in US388 that
observe in the
[[Page 76252]]
81-86 GHz, 92-94 GHz, and 94.1-95 GHz bands by removing the Five
Colleges Radio Observatory and by adding the Heinrich Hertz
Submillimeter Observatory, which is located at Mount Graham, Arizona.
The NPRM proposed to require coordination within 150 kilometers of the
new observatory at Mount Graham.
Implement WRC-07's mandatory unwanted emission limits in
the 22.55-23.55 GHz band for all new NGSO inter-satellite service
systems, and requested comment on how these limits should apply to the
incumbent licensees system on a going-forward basis.
Implement WRC-07's mandatory unwanted emission limits for
non-Federal FSS earth stations that transmit in the 49.7-50.2 GHz and
50.4-50.9 GHz bands. The NPRM sought comment on how adoption of these
mandatory unwanted emission limits for earth stations transmitting in
the 49.7-50.2 GHz band will affect the implementation of the
Commission's band plan for the 36-51.4 GHz band (V-band) and on whether
and how these provisions should apply to existing licensees in these
bands.
Urge licensees of fixed stations in the 31-31.3 GHz band
to limit the maximum elevation angle of the antenna main beam to
20[deg] and to employ automatic transmitter power control (ATPC). The
NPRM solicits comment on whether the Commission should adopt WRC-07's
mandatory unwanted emission limit for the 31-31.3 GHz band or whether
an alternative emission limit would be sufficient. The NRPM also
requested comment on whether the aeronautical mobile service allocation
should be removed from the 31-31.3 GHz band.
Implement WRC-07's mandatory unwanted emission limits for
future non-Federal fixed stations that transmit in the 51.4-52.6 GHz
band.
Urge operators in the 1390-1395 MHz and 1427-1452 MHz
bands to comply with the non-mandatory unwanted emission levels
specified in ITU Resolution 750 (except that Wireless Medical Telemetry
Service devices would be excluded).
Revise US265 by removing the phrase ``per 250 kHz,'' by
adding the advisory language for fixed point-to-point systems, and by
prohibiting point-to-multipoint use of the 10.6-10.68 GHz band. The
NPRM also proposed to urge licensees to employ ATPC and to permit
licensees holding a valid authorization as of the effective date of the
Report and Order in this proceeding to continue to operate as
authorized. The NPRM requested comment on whether the Commission
should: (1) Prohibit fixed stations with main beam elevation angles
greater than 20[deg] from transmitting on frequencies in the 10.6-10.68
GHz band; (2) require fixed stations (using paired frequencies) to
transmit on frequencies in the 10.6-10.68 GHz band using the lower
elevation angle; (3) require the use of ATPC; (4) raise the maximum
equivalent isotropically radiated power (EIRP) limit from 40 to 48 dBW;
and (5) urge licensees to limit the off-axis EIRP above 20[deg] to -10
dBW.
Implement the spectrum sharing criteria adopted at WRC-07
for the 36-37 GHz band (which is not currently licensed by the
Commission).
Renumber various footnotes in accordance with Commission
policy, to replace various placeholder footnotes with the international
footnotes adopted at WRC-07, remove duplicative rule/unneeded text,
correct grammatical/typographical errors in the Commission's rules, and
otherwise update the Commission's rules.
3. In addition, the Commission solicited comment on whether it
should:
Allocate the 135.7-137.8 kHz band to the amateur radio
service on a secondary basis, with amateur stations restricted to an
EIRP of 1 watt and required to protect power line carrier (PLC)
operations.
Remove a lightly-used primary non-Federal AMT allocation
in the 2345-2360 MHz band and an unused primary radionavigation service
(RNS) allocation from the 24.75-25.05 GHz band. If the Commission
decides to remove the RNS allocation from the 24.75-25.05 GHz band,
then it would amend NG167 by employing the international footnote 5.535
text in the 24.75-25.05 GHz band, remove the Part 87 cross reference
from the Allocation Table, and remove the 24.75-25.05 GHz band from
Sec. Sec. 87.173(b) and 87.187(x).
Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
4. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as
amended (RFA),\1\ the Commission has prepared this present Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) of the possible significant
economic impact on small entities by the policies and rules proposed in
this NPRM. Written public comments are requested on this IRFA. Comments
must be identified as responses to the IRFA and must be filed by the
deadlines specified in the NPRM for comments. The Commission will send
a copy of this NPRM, including this IRFA, to the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy of the Small Business Administration (SBA).\2\ In addition,
the NPRM and IRFA (or summaries thereof) will be published in the
Federal Register.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\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) Pub. L. No. 104-121, Title II, 110 Stat. 857 (1996).
\2\ See 5 U.S.C. 603(a).
\3\ See 5 U.S.C. 603(a).
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A. Need for, and Objectives of, the Proposed Rules
5. The Commission proposed to amend parts 1, 2, 74, 78, 87, 90, and
97 of its rules to implement allocation decisions from the World
Radiocommunication Conference (Geneva, 2007) (WRC-07) concerning the
radio frequency (RF) spectrum between 108 MHz and 20.2 GHz and
otherwise make certain updates to its rules in this frequency range.
The rules proposed in this NPRM affect the frequency bands and radio
services discussed in section D, below.
B. Legal Basis
6. The proposed action is authorized under sections 1, 4, 301,
302(a), and 303(b), (c), and (f) of the Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 154, 301, 302(a), and 303(b), (c), and (f).
C. Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities to Which
the Proposed Rule Will Apply
7. 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 proposed rules, if adopted.\4\ The RFA generally
defines the term ``small entity'' as having the same meaning as the
terms ``small business,'' ``small organization,'' and ``small
governmental jurisdiction.'' \5\ In addition, the term ``small
business'' has the same meaning as the term ``small business concern''
under the Small Business Act.\6\ 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 Small Business Administration (SBA).\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ 5 U.S.C. 603(b)(3).
\5\ 5 U.S.C. 601(6).
\6\ 5 U.S.C. 601(3) (incorporating by reference the definition
of ``small-business concern'' in the Small Business Act, 15 U.S.C.
632). Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 601(3), 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.''
\7\ 15 U.S.C. 632.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Small Businesses, Small Organizations, and Small Governmental
[[Page 76253]]
Jurisdictions. Our action may, over time, affect small entities that
are not easily categorized at present. We therefore describe here, at
the outset, three comprehensive, statutory small entity size
standards.\8\ First, nationwide, there are a total of approximately
27.5 million small businesses, according to the SBA.\9\ In addition, a
``small organization'' is generally ``any not-for-profit enterprise
which is independently owned and operated and is not dominant in its
field.'' \10\ Nationwide, as of 2007, there were approximately
1,621,315 small organizations.\11\ Finally, the term ``small
governmental jurisdiction'' is defined generally as ``governments of
cities, towns, townships, villages, school districts, or special
districts, with a population of less than fifty thousand.'' \12\ Census
Bureau data for 2011 indicate that there were 89,476 local governmental
jurisdictions in the United States.\13\ We estimate that, of this
total, as many as 88,506 entities may qualify as ``small governmental
jurisdictions.'' \14\ Thus, we estimate that most governmental
jurisdictions are small.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ See 5 U.S.C. 601(3)-(6).
\9\ See SBA, Office of Advocacy, ``Frequently Asked Questions,''
web.sba.gov/faqs (last visited May 6, 2011; figures are from 2009).
\10\ 5 U.S.C. 601(4).
\11\ Independent Sector, The New Nonprofit Almanac & Desk
Reference (2010).
\12\ 5 U.S.C. 601(5).
\13\ U.S. Census Bureau, Statistical Abstract of the United
States: 2011, Table 427 (2007).
\14\ The 2007 U.S. Census data for small governmental
organizations are not presented based on the size of the population
in each such organization. There were 89,476 small governmental
organizations in 2007. If we assume that county, municipal,
township, and school district organizations are more likely than
larger governmental organizations to have populations of 50,000 or
less, the total of these organizations is 52,125. If we make the
same assumption about special districts and also assume that special
districts are different from county, municipal, township, and school
districts, in 2007 there were 37,381 special districts. Therefore,
of the 89,476 small governmental organizations documented in 2007,
as many as 89,506 may be considered small under the applicable
standard. This data may overestimate the number of such
organizations that has a population of 50,000 or less. U.S. CENSUS
BUREAU, STATISTICAL ABSTRACT OF THE UNITED STATES 2011, Tables 427,
426 (Data cited therein are from 2007).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Amateur Radio Service. Because ``small entities,'' as defined in
the RFA, are not persons eligible for licensing in the amateur service,
this proposed rule does not apply to ``small entities.'' Rather, it
applies exclusively to individuals who are the control operators of
amateur radio stations.
Satellite Telecommunications and All Other Telecommunications. Two
economic census categories address the satellite industry. The first
category has a small business size standard of $15 million or less in
average annual receipts, under SBA rules.\15\ The second has a size
standard of $25 million or less in annual receipts.\16\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ 13 CFR 121.201, North American Industry Classification
System (``NAICS'') code 517410.
\16\ 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517919.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The category of Satellite Telecommunications ``comprises
establishments primarily engaged in providing telecommunications
services to other establishments in the telecommunications and
broadcasting industries by forwarding and receiving communications
signals via a system of satellites or reselling satellite
telecommunications.'' \17\ Census Bureau data for 2007 show that 512
Satellite Telecommunications firms operated for that entire year.\18\
Of this total, 464 firms had annual receipts of under $10 million, and
18 firms had receipts of $10 million to $24,999,999.\19\ Consequently,
the Commission estimates that the majority of Satellite
Telecommunications firms are small entities that might be affected by
our action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ U.S. Census Bureau, 2007 NAICS Definitions, ``517410
Satellite Telecommunications.''
\18\ See https://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/IBQTable?_bm=y&-geo_id=&-_skip=900&-ds_name=EC0751SSSZ4&-_lang=en.
\19\ See https://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/IBQTable?_bm=y&-geo_id=&-_skip=900&-ds_name=EC0751SSSZ4&-_lang=en.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The second category, i.e. ``All Other Telecommunications''
comprises ``establishments primarily engaged in providing specialized
telecommunications services, such as satellite tracking, communications
telemetry, and radar station operation. This industry also includes
establishments primarily engaged in providing satellite terminal
stations and associated facilities connected with one or more
terrestrial systems and capable of transmitting telecommunications to,
and receiving telecommunications from, satellite systems.
Establishments providing Internet services or voice over Internet
protocol (VoIP) services via client-supplied telecommunications
connections are also included in this industry.'' \20\ For this
category, Census Bureau data for 2007 show that there were a total of
2,383 firms that operated for the entire year.\21\ Of this total, 2,347
firms had annual receipts of under $25 million and 12 firms had annual
receipts of $25 million to $49, 999,999.\22\ Consequently, the
Commission estimates that the majority of All Other Telecommunications
firms are small entities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ https://www.census.gov/cgi-bin/sssd/naics/naicsrch?code=517919&search=2007%20NAICS%20Search.
\21\ https://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/IBQTable?_bm=y&-geo_id=&-_skip=900&-ds_name=EC0751SSSZ4&-_lang=en.
\22\ https://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/IBQTable?_bm=y&-geo_id=&-_skip=900&-ds_name=EC0751SSSZ4&-_lang=en.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
D. Description of Projected Reporting, Record Keeping, and Other
Compliance Requirements
8. In the following paragraphs, we describe the proposals and their
expected impact on small entities. First, we describe the proposed
deletion of unused non-Federal allocations. Second, we describe all
other proposed changes. We request comment on our analysis.
9. Deletion of Unused Allocations. The NPRM proposed to delete the
following unused allocations: (1) the radiolocation service (RLS) from
the 1900-2000 kHz band; (2) the fixed-satellite service (FSS) from the
1390-1392 MHz and 1430-1432 MHz bands; and (3) the aeronautical mobile
service (AMS) (telemetry) from the 2310-2320 MHz band. Because there
are no licensees operating stations in the aforementioned
radiocommunication services and frequency bands, the proposed deletions
will have no impact on small entities.
10. The NPRM also solicited comment on deleting the aeronautical
mobile service allocation from the 31-31.3 GHz band. Because there is
no part 87 equipment authorized above 20 GHz, we believe that it is
unlikely that this service would be used in the foreseeable future.
Therefore, we believe that the proposed deletions will not affect small
businesses.
11. 135.7-137.8 kHz. The NPRM sought comment on whether this band
should be allocated to the amateur service on a secondary basis. The
only non-Federal use of this band is by Part 15 devices, such as Power
Line Carrier (PLC) systems. If the band is allocated to the amateur
service, amateur stations and PLC systems that operate PLC systems on
electric transmission lines will most likely require coordination. We
believe that any additional coordination requirements would have a de
minimis impact on electric power companies.
12. 156.4875-156.5625 MHz. The NPRM proposed to allocate the
156.4875-156.5125 and 156.5375-156.5625 MHz bands to the fixed service
(FS) and land mobile service on a primary basis for non-Federal use,
subject to not causing harmful interference to, nor claiming protection
from, the maritime mobile VHF
[[Page 76254]]
radiocommunication service. The NPRM also proposed to reallocate the
156.5125-156.5375 MHz band to the MMS (distress, urgency, safety and
calling via digital selective calling). Because all existing MMS
licensees would be protected from any interference caused by the
proposals, the only possible impact would be to the 20 call signs
authorizing land mobile service use. Because 18 of these call signs are
held by the State of Arizona; one is held by the County of Los Angeles,
California (CA); and one is held by the City of La Mesa, CA, which has
a population of 57,065 (2010 census), none of these licensees are small
governmental jurisdictions.
13. AIS satellite reception. The NPRM proposed to permit satellites
to receive Automatic Identification System (AIS) transmissions. Because
this use will not be protected from harmful interference due to the
operation of terrestrial services, no small entity will be negatively
impacted. We believe that there may be a positive impact on Orbcomm
Inc., which is a small business, if this allocation is adopted.
14. 108-117.975 MHz. The NPRM proposed to allocate the band to the
aeronautical mobile route service (AM(R)S) on a primary basis and to
add new footnote US197A to the U.S. Table. US197A states that AM(R)S
use of the 108-117.975 MHz band must not: (1) Cause harmful
interference to the aeronautical radionavigation service (ARNS) (see
Resolution 413); and (2) constrain the use of the 88-108 MHz band by FM
radio stations operating in accordance with 47 CFR part 73. Because all
incumbent licensees would be protected from interference caused by the
new allocation, there can be no significant economic impact on small
entities.
15. 960-1164 MHz. The NPRM proposed to allocate the band to the
AM(R)S on a primary basis and to add RR 5.327A to the U.S. Table. RR
5.327A states that AM(R)S use of the 960-1164 MHz band is limited to
systems that operate in accordance with Resolution 417, which states
that AM(R)S must not cause harmful interference to the ARNS. Because
all incumbent licensees would be protected from interference caused by
the new allocation, there can be no significant economic impact on
small entities.
16. 5091-5150 MHz. The NPRM proposed to allocate the band to the
AMS on a primary basis and to add RR 5.444B to the U.S. Table. RR
5.444B, inter alia, restricts AMS use of the 5091-5150 MHz band to: (1)
AM(R)S systems operating in accordance with international aeronautical
standards, limited to surface applications at airports, and in
accordance with Resolution 748, which states that this AM(R)S use may
not cause harmful interference to the ARNS; (2) AMT transmissions from
aircraft stations in accordance with Resolution 418, which requires
that AMT operations use the spectrum sharing criteria set forth in
Annex 1 of that Resolution; and (3) aeronautical security transmissions
in accordance with Resolution 419, which states that administrations,
in making assignments, shall ensure that AM(R)S requirements take
precedence over AMS applications. Currently, non-Federal use of the
5091-5150 MHz band is limited to feeder uplinks for non-geostationary
satellite orbit systems in the mobile-satellite service. No harmful
interference is expected to the receivers on board the space stations.
17. 1390-1395 and 1427-1435 MHz. The NPRM proposed to encourage
licensees of stations authorized pursuant to parts 27 and 90 of the
Commission's rules that transmit in the 1390-1395 MHz and 1427-1435 MHz
band to comply with WRC-07's non-mandatory maximum values. The
Commission has issued 64 call signs to 1 licensee (TerreStar 1.4
Holdings LLC) for the 1390-1395 MHz band and 13 call signs to 2
licensees (TerreStar 1.4 Holdings LLC and Mississippi State University)
for the 1432-1435 MHz band. The Commission has issued 129 call signs to
47 licensees in the 1427-1432 MHz band. We believe that many of the
licensees operating in these bands are small entities and that any
costs and/or administrative burdens associated with the proposal will
not be significant or otherwise unduly burden those small entities.
18. 1435-1452 MHz. The NPRM proposed to encourage operators of
aeronautical mobile telemetry (AMT) stations that transmit in the 1435-
1452 MHz band to comply with WRC-07's non-mandatory unwanted emission
level. The NPRM also request comment on whether AMT operators that can
not meet this unwanted emission level should be required to seek their
operational requirements in the 1452-1525 MHz band prior to operating
in the 1435-1452 MHz band. As of April 24, 2012, the Commission has
issued 23 calls to 13 licensees for stations in the Aeronautical and
Fixed Service to operate in the 1435-1452 MHz band. We believe that at
most 4 of these licensees are small businesses and that any costs and/
or administrative burdens associated with the proposal will not unduly
burden or have a significant economic impact on those limited number of
small entities.
19. 9000-9200 MHz. The NPRM proposed to raise the secondary Federal
RLS from secondary to primary status. Because non-Federal RLS use is
authorized on the condition that it not cause harmful interference to
the secondary Federal RLS, the upgrade of the Federal RLS can have no
significant economic impact on small entities.
20. 9300-9500 MHz. The NPRM proposed to raise the secondary Federal
RLS from secondary to primary status and to also allocate the 9300-9500
MHz band to the Earth exploration-satellite service (EESS) (active) and
space research service (SRS) (active). Because non-Federal RLS use is
authorized on the condition that it not cause harmful interference to
the secondary Federal RLS, the upgrade of the Federal RLS can have no
significant economic impact on small entities. We also believe that the
proposed EESS (active) and SRS (active) allocations will have no
significant economic impact on small entities.
21. 9800-9900 MHz. The NPRM proposed to allocate the 9300-9500 MHz
band to the EESS (active) and SRS (active) on a secondary basis.
Because non-Federal RLS use is on a secondary basis to Federal RLS, we
do believe that the proposed additional uses will have no significant
economic impact on small entities.
22. 10.6-10.68 GHz. The NPRM proposed to limit the power supplied
to the antenna to -3 dBW (instead of -3 dBW/250 kHz) and to add
advisory language for fixed point-to-point systems. The NPRM also
solicits comment on whether more stringent operating requirements
should apply to future fixed stations operating in this band. Because
most licensed fixed stations already meet the proposed -3 dBW
requirement, we do not believe that this proposal will affect a
substantial number of small entities. We also do not believe that the
advisory language and more stringent operating requirements would
affect a substantial number of small entities.
23. GOES Expansion. The NPRM proposed to allocate the 18-18.1 GHz
band to the meteorological-satellite service (space-to-Earth) on a
primary basis. The use of this allocation is expected to be limited to
three locations. This band is allocated to the non-Federal FS on a
primary basis. If adopted, this proposal would limit future FS
licensing near the receiving earth stations. We do not believe that
this proposal will affect a substantial number of small entities.
24. 22.55-23.55 GHz. The NPRM proposed to adopt the WRC-07's
mandatory unwanted emission limits from all new non-geostationary
satellite
[[Page 76255]]
orbit systems in the inter-satellite service transmitting in the 22.55-
23.55 GHz band, and requested comment on how these limits should apply
to the only incumbent licensee's (Iridium's) satellites on a going-
forward basis. We do not believe that this proposal will affect a
substantial number of small entities.
25. 31-31.3 GHz. The NPRM proposed to urge licensees of fixed
stations transmitting in the 31-31.3 GHz band to limit the maximum
elevation angle of the antenna main beam to 20[deg] and to employ
automatic transmitter power control. The NPRM also requested comment on
whether the Commission adopt WRC-07's mandatory unwanted emission
limits for these stations. As of April 24, 2012, the Commission has
issued 852 call signs to operate in the 31-31.3 GHz band: 109 licenses
(777 call signs) in the Local Multipoint Distribution Service (LMDS);
19 licensees (23 call signs) in the Common Carrier Fixed Point-to-Point
Microwave Service (CF) to 19 licensees; 9 licensees (9 call signs) in
the Local Television Transmission Service (CT); 5 licensees (6 call
signs) in the Microwave Public Safety Pool (MW); and 1 licensee (the
State of Nevada, with 37 call signs) in the Microwave Industrial/
Business Pool (MG). We believe that many of the LMDS licensees are
small businesses, that at most 2 of the CF licensees are small
businesses, that at most 3 of the CT licensees are small businesses,
that at most 1 of the MW licensees are small governmental
jurisdictions, and that the sole MG licensee is not a small entity. We
do not believe that any costs and/or administrative burdens associated
with the proposal will unduly burden or have a significant economic
impact on those limited number of small entities.
26. 36-37, 49.7-40.2, 50.4-50.9, and 51.4-52.6 GHz. The NPRM
proposed to adopt WRC-07's: 1) Spectrum sharing criteria for stations
in the fixed and mobile services transmitting in the 36-37 GHz band; 2)
mandatory unwanted emission limits for earth stations in the fixed-
satellite service transmitting in the 49.7-40.2 and 50.4-50.9 GHz
bands; and 3) mandatory unwanted emission limits for fixed stations
transmitting in the 51.4-52.6 GHz band. Because the Commission has not
issued licenses for the 36-37 GHz, 49.7-40.2 GHz, 50.4-50.9 GHz, and
51.4-52.6 GHz bands, these proposals will have no significant economic
impact on small entities.
E. Steps Taken To Minimize Significant Economic Impact on Small
Entities, and Significant Alternatives Considered
27. 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.\23\
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\23\ See 5 U.S.C. 603(c).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
28. As we have explained in detail in section D, we do not expect
that our proposals will have a significant economic impact on small
entities. However, the NPRM requested comment on interference
mitigation techniques, other than those adopted at WRC-07, which would
lessen the long-term impact on all licensees in the 10.6-10.68 GHz,
22.55-23.55 GHz, and 31-31.3 GHz bands, while fully protecting passive
sensor operations.
F. Federal Rules That May Duplicate, Overlap, or Conflict With the
Proposed Rule
29. None.
Ordering Clauses
30. Pursuant to sections 1, 4, 301, 302(a), and 303 of the
Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 154, 301,
302(a), and 303, and section 553(b)(B) of the Administrative Procedure
Act, 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B), this Notice of Proposed Rule Making is hereby
adopted.
31. It is further ordered that the Commission's Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau, Reference Information Center, shall send a
copy of this Notice of Proposed Rule Making, including the Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of
the Small Business Administration.
List of Subjects in 47 CFR Parts 1, 2, 74, 78, 87, 90, and 97
Communications equipment, International telecommunications, Radio,
Satellites, Spectrum, Telecommunications.
Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene H. Dortch,
Secretary.
Proposed Rules
For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Federal
Communications Commission proposes to amend 47 CFR parts 1, 2, 74, 78,
87, 90, and 97 as follows:
PART 1--PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE
1. The authority citation for part 1 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 79 et seq.; 47 U.S.C. 151, 154(i), 154(j),
155, 157, 225, 227, 303(r), and 309, and the Middle Class Tax Relief
and Job Creation Act of 2012, Pub. L. No. 112-96.
2. Section 1.924 is amended by revising paragraphs (e) and (f) to
read as follows:
Sec. 1.924 Quiet zones.
* * * * *
(e) 420-450 MHz band. Applicants for pulse-ranging radiolocation
systems operating in the 420-450 MHz band along the shoreline of the
conterminous United States and Alaska, and for spread spectrum
radiolocation systems operating in the 420-435 MHz sub-band within the
conterminous United States and Alaska, should not expect to be
accommodated if their area of service is within:
(1) Arizona, Florida, or New Mexico;
(2) Those portions of California and Nevada that are south of
latitude 37[deg]10' N;
(3) That portion of Texas that is west of longitude 104[deg]W; or
(4) The following circular areas:
(i) 322 kilometers (km) of 30[deg]30' N, 86[deg]30' W
(ii) 322 km of 28[deg]21' N, 80[deg]43' W
(iii) 322 km of 34[deg]09' N, 119[deg]11' W
(iv) 240 km of 39[deg]08' N, 121[deg]26' W
(v) 200 km of 31[deg]25' N, 100[deg]24' W
(vi) 200 km of 32[deg]38' N, 83[deg]35' W
(vii) 160 km of 64[deg]17' N, 149[deg]10' W
(viii) 160 km of 48[deg]43' N, 97[deg]54' W
(ix) 160 km of 41[deg]45' N, 70[deg]32' W.
Note to Sec. 1.924(e): The coordinates cited in this section
are specified in terms of the ``North American Datum of 1983 (NAD
83).''
(f) 17.7-19.7 GHz band. The following exclusion areas and
coordination areas are established to minimize or avoid harmful
interference to Federal Government earth stations receiving in the
17.7-19.7 GHz band:
(1) No application seeking authority for fixed stations, under
parts 74, 78, or 101 of this chapter, supporting the operations of
Multichannel Video Programming Distributors (MVPD) in the 17.7-17.8 GHz
band or to operate in the 17.8-19.7 GHz band for any service will be
accepted for filing if the proposed station is located within 20 km (or
within 55 km if the modification application is for an outdoor low
power operation pursuant to Sec. 101.147(r)(14) of this chapter) of
Denver, CO (39[deg]43' N,
[[Page 76256]]
104[deg]46' W) or Washington, DC (38[deg]48' N, 76[deg]52' W).
(2) Any application for a new station license to provide MVPD
operations in the 17.7-17.8 GHz band or to operate in the 17.8-19.7 GHz
band for any service, or for modification of an existing station
license in these bands which would change the frequency, power,
emission, modulation, polarization, antenna height or directivity, or
location of such a station, must be coordinated with the Federal
Government by the Commission before an authorization will be issued, if
the station or proposed station is located in whole or in part within
any of the following areas:
(i) Denver, CO area:
(A) Between latitudes 41[deg]30' N and 38[deg]30' N and between
longitudes 103[deg]10' W and 106[deg]30' W.
(B) Between latitudes 38[deg]30' N and 37[deg]30' N and between
longitudes 105[deg]00' W and 105[deg]50' W.
(C) Between latitudes 40[deg]08' N and 39[deg]56' N and between
longitudes 107[deg]00' W and 107[deg]15' W.
(ii) Washington, DC area:
(A) Between latitudes 38[deg]40' N and 38[deg]10' N and between
longitudes 78[deg]50' W and 79[deg]20' W.
(B) Within 178 km of 38[deg]48' N, 76[deg]52' W.
(iii) San Miguel, CA area:
(A) Between latitudes 34[deg]39' N and 34[deg]00' N and between
longitudes 118[deg]52' W and 119[deg]24' W.
(B) Within 200 km of 35[deg]44' N, 120[deg]45' W.
(iv) Guam area: Within 100 km of 13[deg]35' N, 144[deg]51' E.
* * * * *
PART 2--FREQUENCY ALLOCATIONS AND RADIO TREATY MATTERS; GENERAL
RULES AND REGULATIONS
3. The authority citation for part 2 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 302a, 303, and 336, unless otherwise
noted.
4. Section 2.1 is amended in paragraph (c) by revising the
definitions for ``Earth Exploration-Satellite Service (EESS)'' and
``Equivalent Isotropically Radiated Power (e.i.r.p. or EIRP)'' to read
as follows:
Sec. 2.1 Terms and definitions.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
Earth Exploration-Satellite Service (EESS). (1) A
radiocommunication service between earth stations and one or more space
stations, which may include links between space stations, in which:
(i) Information relating to the characteristics of the Earth and
its natural phenomena, including data relating to the state of the
environment, is obtained from active sensors or passive sensors on
Earth satellites;
(ii) Similar information is collected from airborne or Earth-based
platforms;
(iii) Such information may be distributed to earth stations within
the system concerned; and
(iv) Platform interrogation may be included.
(2) This service may also include feeder links necessary for its
operation. (RR) (FCC)
* * * * *
Equivalent Isotropically Radiated Power (e.i.r.p. or EIRP). The
product of the power supplied to the antenna and the antenna gain in a
given direction relative to an isotropic antenna (absolute or isotropic
gain). (RR) (FCC)
* * * * *
5. Section 2.100 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 2.100 International regulations in force.
The ITU Radio Regulations, Edition of 2008, have been incorporated
to the extent practicable in Subparts A and B of this part.
6. In Sec. 2.106, amend the Table of Frequency Allocations as
follows:
a. Pages 5, 20, 22-24, 30-33, 37, 40-41, 46-47, 49, 51-52, 55-56,
58-60, and 62 are revised.
b. In the list of United States (US) Footnotes, footnotes US52,
US79, US85, US100, US111, US113, US139, US145, US156, US157, US161,
US197A, US227, US228D, US338A, US475, US476A, US482, US532, and US550A
are added; footnotes US74, US334, US343, US401, and US519 are revised;
and footnotes US37, US48, US51, US66, US77, US78, US106, US203, US226,
US228, US263, US265, US290, US339, US368, US388, US398, US400, US444,
and US444A are removed.
c. In the list of non-Federal Government (NG) Footnotes, footnotes
NG22, NG35, NG60, and NG338A are added; and footnotes NG117, NG120, and
NG144 are removed.
Sec. 2.106 Table of frequency allocations.
The revisions and additions read as follows:
* * * * *
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* * * * *
United States (US) Footnotes
* * * * *
US52 In the VHF maritime mobile band (156-162 MHz), the following
provisions shall apply:
(a) Federal stations in the maritime mobile service may also be
authorized as follows: (1) Vessel traffic services under the control of
the U.S. Coast Guard on a simplex basis by coast and ship stations on
the frequencies 156.250 MHz (Channel 05), 156.550 MHz (Channel 11),
156.600 MHz (Channel 12) and 156.700 MHz (Channel 14); (2) Inter-ship
use of the frequency 156.300 MHz (Channel 06) on a simplex basis; (3)
Navigational bridge-to-bridge and navigational communications on a
simplex basis by coast and ship stations on the frequency 156.650 MHz
(Channel 13) and on the Lower Mississippi River the frequency 156.375
MHz (Channel 67); (4) Port operations use on a simplex basis by coast
and ship stations on the frequencies 156.600 MHz and 156.700 MHz; (5)
Environmental communications on the frequency 156.750 MHz (Channel 15)
in accordance with the national plan; and (6) Duplex port operations
use of the frequencies 157.000 MHz for ship stations and 161.600 MHz
for coast stations (Channel 20).
(b) The frequency 156.300 MHz may also be used by Federal and non-
Federal aircraft stations for the purpose of search and rescue
operations and other safety-related communications.
(c) The frequencies 156.775 MHz (Channel 75) and 156.825 MHz
(Channel 76) are available on a primary basis to Federal and non-
Federal stations in the maritime mobile service for navigation-related
port operations or ship movement only, and all precautions must be
taken to avoid harmful interference to 156.800 MHz (Channel 16).
* * * * *
US74 In the bands 25.55-25.67, 73-74.6, 406.1-410, 608-614, 1400-
1427, 1660.5-1670, 2690-2700, and 4990-5000 MHz, and in the bands
10.68-10.7, 15.35-15.4, 23.6-24.0, 31.3-31.5, 86-92, 100-102, 109.5-
111.8, 114.25-116, 148.5-151.5, 164-167, 200-209, and 250-252 GHz, the
radio astronomy service shall be protected from unwanted emissions only
to the extent that such radiation exceeds the level which would be
present if the offending station were operating in compliance with the
technical standards or criteria applicable to the service in which it
operates. Radio astronomy observations in these bands are performed at
the locations listed in US385.
US79 In the bands 1390-1400 MHz and 1427-1432 MHz, the following
provisions shall apply:
(a) Airborne and space-to-Earth operations are prohibited.
(b) Federal operations (except for devices authorized by the FCC
for the Wireless Medical Telemetry Service) are on a non-interference
basis to non-Federal operations and shall not constrain implementation
of non-Federal operations.
* * * * *
US85 Differential-Global-Positioning-System (DGPS) Stations,
limited to ground-based transmitters, may be authorized on a primary
basis in the band 1559-1610 MHz for the specific purpose of
transmitting DGPS information intended for aircraft navigation.
* * * * *
US100 The bands 2310-2320 and 2345-2360 MHz are also available for
Federal aeronautical telemetering and associated telecommand operations
for flight testing of manned or unmanned aircraft, missiles or major
components thereof on a secondary basis to the Wireless Communications
Service (WCS). The band 2345-2360 MHz is also available to non-Federal
applicants on a secondary basis to the WCS for these same purposes. The
following two frequencies are shared on a co-equal basis by Federal
stations for telemetering and associated telecommand operations of
expendable and re-usable launch vehicles whether or not such operations
involve flight testing: 2312.5 and 2352.5 MHz. Other Federal mobile
telemetering uses may be provided on a non-interference basis to the
above uses. The broadcasting-satellite service (sound) during
implementation should also take cognizance of the expendable and
reusable launch vehicle frequencies 2312.5 and 2352.5 MHz, to minimize
the impact on this mobile service use to the extent possible.
* * * * *
US111 In the band 5091-5150 MHz, aeronautical mobile telemetry
operations for flight testing are conducted at the following locations.
Flight testing at additional locations may be authorized on a case-by-
case basis.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Location Test sites Lat. (N) Long. (W)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gulf Area Ranges Complex (GARC)......... Eglin AFB, Tyndall AFB, FL; 30[deg]28' 86[deg]31'
Gulfport ANG Range, MS; Ft.
Rucker, Redstone, NASA Marshall
Space Flight Center, AL.
Utah Ranges Complex (URC)............... Dugway PG; Utah Test & Training 40[deg]57' 113[deg]05'
Range (Hill AFB), UT.
Western Ranges Complex (WRC)............ Pacific Missile Range; 35[deg]29' 117[deg]16'
Vandenberg AFB, China Lake
NAWS, Pt. Mugu NAWS, Edwards
AFB, Thermal, Nellis AFB, Ft.
Irwin, NASA Dryden Flight
Research Center, Victorville,
CA.
Southwest Ranges Complex (SRC).......... Ft. Huachuca, Tucson, Phoenix, 31[deg]33' 110[deg]18'
Mesa, Yuma, AZ.
Mid-Atlantic Ranges Complex (MARC)...... Patuxent River, Aberdeen PG, 38[deg]17' 76[deg]24'
NASA Langley Research Center,
NASA Wallops Flight Facility,
MD.
New Mexico Ranges Complex (NMRC)........ White Sands Missile Range, 32[deg]11' 106[deg]20'
Holloman AFB, Albuquerque,
Roswell, NM; Amarillo, TX.
Colorado Ranges Complex (CoRC).......... Alamosa, Leadville, CO.......... 37[deg]26' 105[deg]52'
Texas Ranges Complex (TRC).............. Dallas/Ft. Worth, Greenville, 32[deg]53' 97[deg]02'
Waco, Johnson Space Flight
Center/Ellington Field, TX.
Cape Ranges Complex (CRC)............... Cape Canaveral, Palm Beach-Dade, 28[deg]33' 80[deg]34'
FL.
Northwest Range Complex (NWRC).......... Seattle, Everett, Spokane, Moses 47[deg]32' 122[deg]18'
Lake, WA; Klamath Falls,
Eugene, OR.
St. Louis............................... St Louis, MO.................... 38[deg]45' 90[deg]22'
Wichita................................. Wichita, KS..................... 37[deg]40' 97[deg]26'
Marietta................................ Marietta, GA.................... 33[deg]54' 84[deg]31'
Glasgow................................. Glasgow, MT..................... 48[deg]25' 106[deg]32'
Wilmington/Ridley....................... Wilmington, DE/Ridley, PA....... 39[deg]49' 75[deg]26'
[[Page 76281]]
San Francisco Bay Area (SFBA)........... NASA Ames Research Center, CA... 37[deg]25' 122[deg]03'
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
US113 Radio astronomy observations of the formaldehyde line
frequencies 4825-4835 MHz and 14.47-14.5 GHz may be made at certain
radio astronomy observatories as indicated below:
Bands To Be Observed
------------------------------------------------------------------------
4 GHz 14 GHz Observatory
------------------------------------------------------------------------
X National Astronomy and
Ionosphere Center (NAIC),
Arecibo, PR.
X X National Radio Astronomy
Observatory (NRAO), Green Bank,
WV.
X X NRAO, Socorro, NM.
X Allen Telescope Array (ATA), Hat
Creek, CA.
X X Owens Valley Radio Observatory
(OVRO), Big Pine, CA.
X X NRAO's ten Very Long Baseline
Array (VLBA) stations (see
US131).
X X University of Michigan Radio
Astronomy Observatory,
Stinchfield Woods, MI.
X Pisgah Astronomical Research
Institute, Rosman, NC.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Every practicable effort will be made to avoid the assignment of
frequencies to stations in the fixed or mobile services in these bands.
Should such assignments result in harmful interference to these
observations, the situation will be remedied to the extent practicable.
* * * * *
US139 Fixed stations authorized in the band 18.3-19.3 GHz that
remain co-primary under the provisions of 47 CFR 74.502(c), 74.602(g),
78.18(a)(4), and 101.147(r) may continue operations consistent with the
provisions of those sections.
* * * * *
US145 The following unwanted emission power limits from non-
geostationary satellite orbit systems in the inter-satellite service
(NGSO ISS) transmitting in the band 22.55-23.55 GHz shall apply in any
200 MHz of the passive band 23.6-24 GHz:
(a) Non-Federal licensees holding a valid authorization on [insert
effective date of R&O] to operate in this band may continue to operate
as authorized, subject to proper license renewal.
(b) For all other NGSO ISS systems, based on the date that complete
advance publication information is received by the ITU's
Radiocommunication Bureau, the following limits apply:
(1) For information received before January 1, 2020: -36 dBW.
(2) For information received on or after January 1, 2020: -46 dBW.
US156 In the bands 49.7-50.2 GHz and 50.4-50.9 GHz, for earth
stations in the fixed-satellite service (Earth-to-space), the unwanted
emission power in the band 50.2-50.4 GHz shall not exceed -20 dBW/200
MHz (measured at the input of the antenna), except that the maximum
unwanted emission power may be increased to -10 dBW/200 MHz for earth
stations having an antenna gain greater than or equal to 57 dBi. These
limits apply under clear-sky conditions. During fading conditions, the
limits may be exceeded by earth stations when using uplink power
control.
US157 In the band 51.4-52.6 GHz, for stations in the fixed service,
the unwanted emission power in the band 52.6-54.25 GHz shall not exceed
-33 dBW/100 MHz (measured at the input of antenna).
US161 In the bands 81-86 GHz, 92-94 GHz, and 94.1-95 GHz and within
the coordination distances indicated below, assignments to allocated
services shall be coordinated with the following radio astronomy
observatories. New observatories shall not receive protection from
fixed stations that are licensed to operate in the one hundred most
populous urbanized areas as defined by the U.S. Census Bureau for the
year 2000.
(a) Within 25 km of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory's
(NRAO's) Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) Stations:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State VLBA station Lat. (N) Long. (W)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AZ..................................... Kitt Peak........................ 31[deg]57'23'' 111[deg]36'45''
CA..................................... Owens Valley..................... 37[deg]13'54'' 118[deg]16'37''
HI..................................... Mauna Kea........................ 19[deg]48'05'' 155[deg]27'20''
IA..................................... North Liberty.................... 41[deg]46'17'' 091[deg]34'27''
NH..................................... Hancock.......................... 42[deg]56'01'' 071[deg]59'12''
NM..................................... Los Alamos....................... 35[deg]46'30'' 106[deg]14'44''
NM..................................... Pie Town......................... 34[deg]18'04'' 108[deg]07'09''
TX..................................... Fort Davis....................... 30[deg]38'06'' 103[deg]56'41''
VI..................................... Saint Croix...................... 17[deg]45'24'' 064[deg]35'01''
WA..................................... Brewster......................... 48[deg]07'52'' 119[deg]41'00''
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Within 150 km of the following observatories:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Telescope and site Lat. (N) Long. (W)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AZ..................................... Heinrich Hertz Submillimeter 32[deg]42'06'' 109[deg]53'28''
Observatory, Mt. Graham.
[[Page 76282]]
AZ..................................... University of Arizona 12-m 31[deg]57'12'' 111[deg]36'53''
Telescope, Kitt Peak.
CA..................................... Caltech Telescope, Owens Valley.. 37[deg]13'54'' 118[deg]17'36''
CA..................................... Combined Array for Research in 37[deg]16'43'' 118[deg]08'32''
Millimeter-wave Astronomy
(CARMA).
HI..................................... James Clerk Maxwell Telescope, 19[deg]49'33'' 155[deg]28'47''
Mauna Kea.
MA..................................... Haystack Observatory, Westford... 42[deg]37'24'' 071[deg]29'18''
NM..................................... NRAO's Very Large Array, Socorro. 34[deg]04'44'' 107[deg]37'06''
WV..................................... NRAO's Robert C. Byrd Telescope, 38[deg]25'59'' 079[deg]50'23''
Green Bank.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: Satisfactory completion of the coordination procedure utilizing the automated mechanism, see 47 CFR
101.1523, will be deemed to establish sufficient separation from radio astronomy observatories, regardless of
whether the distances set forth above are met.
US197A The band 108-117.975 MHz is also allocated on a primary
basis to the aeronautical mobile (R) service (AM(R)S), limited to
systems operating in accordance with recognized international
aeronautical standards. Such use shall be in accordance with Resolution
413 (Rev. WRC-07). AM(R)S use of the band 108-112 MHz shall be limited
to systems composed of ground-based transmitters and associated
receivers that provide navigational information in support of air
navigation functions in accordance with recognized international
aeronautical standards. AM(R)S use of the band 108-117.975 MHz shall
not constrain the use of the band 88-108 MHz by stations in the
broadcasting service operating in accordance with 47 CFR part 73.
* * * * *
US227 The bands 156.4875-156.5125 MHz and 156.5375-156.5625 MHz are
also allocated to the fixed and land mobile services on a primary basis
for non-Federal use in VHF Public Coast Station Areas 10-42. The use of
these bands by the fixed and land mobile services shall not cause
harmful interference to, nor claim protection from, the maritime mobile
VHF radiocommunication service.
US228D The use of the bands 161.9625-161.9875 MHz (AIS 1 with
center frequency 161.975 MHz) and 162.0125-162.0375 MHz (AIS 2 with
center frequency 162.025 MHz) by the maritime mobile service is
restricted to Automatic Identification Systems (AIS), except that non-
Federal stations in the band 161.9625-161.9875 MHz may continue to
operate on a primary basis according to the following schedule: (a) In
VHF Public Coast Service Areas (VPCSAs) 1-9, site-based stations
licensed prior to November 13, 2006 may continue to operate until
expiration of the license term for licenses in active status as of
November 13, 2006; and (b) In VPCSAs 10-42, site-based stations
licensed prior to March 2, 2009 may continue to operate until March 2,
2024. See 47 CFR 80.371(c)(1)(ii) for the definition of VPCSAs.
* * * * *
US334 In the band 17.8-20.2 GHz, Federal space stations in both
geostationary (GSO) and non-geostationary satellite orbits (NGSO) and
associated earth stations in the fixed-satellite service (FSS) (space-
to-Earth) may be authorized on a primary basis. For a Federal GSO FSS
network to operate on a primary basis, the space station shall be
located outside the arc, measured from east to west, 70-120[deg] West
longitude. Coordination between Federal FSS systems and non-Federal
space and terrestrial systems operating in accordance with the United
States Table of Frequency Allocations is required.
(a) In the sub-bands 17.8-18.3 GHz and 19.3-19.7 GHz, Federal earth
stations shall be authorized on a primary basis only in the following
areas: Denver, Colorado; Washington, DC; San Miguel, California; and
Guam. Prior to the commencement of non-Federal terrestrial operations
in these areas, the FCC shall coordinate all applications for new
stations and modifications to existing stations with NTIA as specified
in 47 CFR 1.924(f), 74.32, and 78.19(f).
(b) In the sub-band 17.8-19.7 GHz, the power flux-density (pfd) at
the surface of the Earth produced by emissions from a Federal GSO space
station or from a Federal space station in a NGSO constellation of 50
or fewer satellites, for all conditions and for all methods of
modulation, shall not exceed the following values in any 1 MHz band:
(1) -115 dB(W/m\2\) for angles of arrival above the horizontal
plane ([delta]) between 0[deg] and 5[deg],
(2) -115 + 0.5([delta] - 5) dB(W/m\2\) for [delta] between 5[deg]
and 25[deg], and
(3) -105 dB(W/m\2\) for [delta] between 25[deg] and 90[deg].
(c) In the sub-band 17.8-19.3 GHz, the pfd at the surface of the
Earth produced by emissions from a Federal space station in an NGSO
constellation of 51 or more satellites, for all conditions and for all
methods of modulation, shall not exceed the following values in any 1
MHz band:
(1) -115-X dB(W/m\2\) for [delta] between 0[deg] and 5[deg],
(2) -115-X + ((10 + X)/20)([delta] - 5) dB(W/m\2\) for [delta] between
5[deg] and 25[deg], and
(3) -105 dB(W/m\2\) for [delta] between 25[deg] and 90[deg]; where X is
defined as a function of the number of satellites, n, in an NGSO
constellation as follows:
For n <= 288, X = (5/119) (n - 50) dB; and
For n > 288, X = (1/69) (n + 402) dB.
* * * * *
US338A In the band 1435-1452 MHz, operators of aeronautical
telemetry stations are encouraged to take all reasonable steps to
ensure that unwanted emission power does not exceed -28 dBW/27 MHz in
the band 1400-1427 MHz.
* * * * *
US343 In the mobile service, the frequencies between 1435 and 1525
MHz will be assigned for aeronautical telemetry and associated
telecommand operations for flight testing of manned or unmanned
aircraft and missiles, or their major components. Permissible usage
includes telemetry associated with launching and reentry into the
Earth's atmosphere as well as any incidental orbiting prior to reentry
of manned objects undergoing flight tests. The following frequencies
are shared on a co-equal basis with flight telemetering mobile
stations: 1444.5, 1453.5, 1501.5, 1515.5, and 1524.5 MHz.
* * * * *
US401 In the band 17.7-17.8 GHz, Federal earth stations in the
fixed-satellite service (space-to-Earth) may be authorized in the
Denver, Colorado; Washington, DC; San Miguel, California; and Guam
areas on a primary basis. Prior to commencement of operations in these
areas, the FCC shall coordinate fixed service applications supporting
Multichannel Video Programming Distributors (MVPD) with NTIA.
* * * * *
US475 The use of the band 9300-9500 MHz by the aeronautical
radionavigation service is limited to airborne radars and associated
airborne beacons. In addition, ground-based radar beacons in the
aeronautical
[[Page 76283]]
radionavigation service are permitted in the band 9300-9320 MHz on the
condition that harmful interference is not caused to the maritime
radionavigation service.
US476A In the band 9300-9500 MHz, Federal stations in the Earth
exploration-satellite service (active) and space research service
(active) shall not cause harmful interference to, nor claim protection
from, stations of the radionavigation and Federal radiolocation
services.
US482 In the band 10.6-10.68 GHz, the following provisions and
urgings apply:
(a) Non-Federal use of the fixed service shall be restricted to
point-to-point systems, with each station supplying not more than -3
dBW of transmitter power to the antenna and producing not more than 40
dBW of EIRP. However, licensees holding a valid authorization on
[insert effective date of R&O] to operate in this band may continue to
operate as authorized, subject to proper license renewal.
(b) In order to minimize interference to the Earth exploration-
satellite service (passive) receiving in this band, licensees of
stations in the fixed service are urged to: (1) Limit the maximum
transmitter power supplied to the antenna to -15 dBW; (2) limit the
maximum elevation angle of the antenna main beam to 20[deg]; and (3)
employ automatic transmitter power control (ATPC). The maximum
transmitter power supplied to the antenna of stations using ATPC may be
increased by a value corresponding to the ATPC range, up to a maximum
of -3 dBW.
US519 The band 18-18.3 GHz is also allocated to the meteorological-
satellite service (space-to-Earth) on a primary basis. Its use is
limited to geostationary satellites and shall be in accordance with the
provisions of Article 21, Table 21-4 of the ITU Radio Regulations.
US532 In the bands 21.2-21.4 GHz, 22.21-22.5 GHz, and 56.26-58.2
GHz, the space research and Earth exploration-satellite services shall
not receive protection from the fixed and mobile services operating in
accordance with the Table of Frequency Allocations.
US550A In the band 36-37 GHz, the following provisions shall apply:
(a) For stations in the mobile service, the transmitter power
supplied to the antenna shall not exceed -10 dBW, except that the
maximum transmitter power may be increased to -3 dBW for stations used
for public safety and disaster management.
(b) For stations in the fixed service, the elevation angle of the
antenna main beam shall not exceed 20[deg] and the transmitter power
supplied to the antenna shall not exceed:
(1) -5 dBW for hub stations of point-to-multipoint systems; or
(2) -10 dBW for all other stations, except that the maximum
transmitter power of stations using automatic transmitter power control
(ATPC) may be increased by a value corresponding to the ATPC range, up
to a maximum of -7 dBW.
Non-Federal Government (NG) Footnotes
* * * * *
NG22 The frequencies 156.050 and 156.175 MHz may be assigned to
stations in the maritime mobile service for commercial and port
operations in the New Orleans Vessel Traffic Service (VTS) area and the
frequency 156.250 MHz may be assigned to stations in the maritime
mobile service for port operations in the New Orleans and Houston VTS
areas.
* * * * *
NG35 Frequencies in the bands 928-929 MHz, 932-932.5 MHz, 941-941.5
MHz, and 952-960 MHz may be assigned for multiple address systems and
associated mobile operations on a primary basis.
* * * * *
NG60 In the band 31-31.3 GHz, licensees of stations in the fixed
service are urged to limit the maximum elevation angle of the antenna
main beam to 20[deg] and to employ automatic transmitter power control.
* * * * *
NG338A In the bands 1390-1395 MHz and 1427-1435 MHz bands,
licensees are encouraged to take all reasonable steps to ensure that
unwanted emission power does not exceed the following levels in the
band 1400-1427 MHz:
(a) For stations of point-to-point systems in the fixed service: -
45 dBW/27 MHz.
(b) For stations in the mobile service (except for devices
authorized by the FCC for the Wireless Medical Telemetry Service): -60
dBW/27 MHz.
* * * * *
PART 74--EXPERIMENTAL RADIO, AUXILIARY, SPECIAL BROADCAST AND OTHER
PROGRAM DISTRIBUTIONAL SERVICES
7. The authority citation for part 74 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 302a, 303, 307, 336(f), 336(h) and
554.
8. Section 74.32 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 74.32 Operation in the 17.7-17.8 GHz and 17.8-19.7 GHz bands.
The following exclusion areas and coordination areas are
established to minimize or avoid harmful interference to Federal
Government earth stations receiving in the 17.7-19.7 GHz band:
(a) No application seeking authority for fixed stations supporting
the operations of Multichannel Video Programming Distributors (MVPD) in
the 17.7-17.8 GHz band or to operate in the 17.8-19.7 GHz band for any
service will be accepted for filing if the proposed station is located
within 20 km of Denver, CO (39[deg]43' N, 104[deg]46' W) or Washington,
DC (38[deg]48' N, 76[deg]52' W).
(b) Any application for a new station license to provide MVPD
operations in the 17.7-17.8 GHz band or to operate in the 17.8-19.7 GHz
band for any service, or for modification of an existing station
license in these bands which would change the frequency, power,
emission, modulation, polarization, antenna height or directivity, or
location of such a station, must be coordinated with the Federal
Government by the Commission before an authorization will be issued, if
the station or proposed station is located in whole or in part within
any of the following areas:
(1) Denver, CO area:
(i) Between latitudes 41[deg]30' N and 38[deg]30' N and between
longitudes 103[deg]10' W and 106[deg]30' W.
(ii) Between latitudes 38[deg]30' N and 37[deg]30' N and between
longitudes 105[deg]00' W and 105[deg]50' W.
(iii) Between latitudes 40[deg]08' N and 39[deg]56' N and between
longitudes 107[deg]00' W and 107[deg]15' W.
(2) Washington, DC area:
(i) Between latitudes 38[deg]40' N and 38[deg]10' N and between
longitudes 78[deg]50' W and 79[deg]20' W.
(ii) Within 178 km of 38[deg]48' N, 76[deg]52' W.
(3) San Miguel, CA area:
(i) Between latitudes 34[deg]39' N and 34[deg]00' N and between
longitudes 118[deg]52' W and 119[deg]24' W.
(ii) Within 200 km of 35[deg]44' N, 120[deg]45' W.
(4) Guam area: Within 100 km of 13[deg]35' N, 144[deg]51' E.
Note to Sec. 74.32: The coordinates cited in this section are
specified in terms of the ``North American Datum of 1983 (NAD 83).''
PART 78--CABLE TELEVISION RELAY SERVICE
9. The authority citation for part 78 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 2, 3, 4, 301, 303, 307, 308, 309, 48 Stat., as
amended, 1064, 1065, 1066,
[[Page 76284]]
1081, 1082, 1083, 1084, 1085; 47 U.S.C. 152, 153, 154, 301, 303,
307, 308, 309.
10. Section 78.19 is amended by revising paragraph (f) to read as
follows:
Sec. 78.19 Interference.
* * * * *
(f) 17.7-19.7 GHz band. The following exclusion areas and
coordination areas are established to minimize or avoid harmful
interference to Federal Government earth stations receiving in the
17.7-19.7 GHz band:
(1) No application seeking authority to operate in the 17.7-19.7
GHz band will be accepted for filing if the proposed station is located
within 50 km of Denver, CO (39[deg]43' N, 104[deg]46' W) or Washington,
DC (38[deg]48'N, 76[deg]52' W).
(2) Any application seeking authority for a new fixed station
license supporting the operations of Multichannel Video Programming
Distributors (MVPD) in the 17.7-17.8 GHz band or to operate in the
17.8-19.7 GHz band for any service, or for modification of an existing
station license in these bands which would change the frequency, power,
emission, modulation, polarization, antenna height or directivity, or
location of such a station, must be coordinated with the Federal
Government by the Commission before an authorization will be issued, if
the station or proposed station is located in whole or in part within
any of the following areas:
(i) Denver, CO area:
(A) Between latitudes 41[deg]30' N and 38[deg]30' N and between
longitudes 103[deg]10' W and 106[deg]30' W.
(B) Between latitudes 38[deg]30' N and 37[deg]30' N and between
longitudes 105[deg]00' W and 105[deg]50' W.
(C) Between latitudes 40[deg]08' N and 39[deg]56' N and between
longitudes 107[deg]00' W and 107[deg]15' W.
(ii) Washington, DC area:
(A) Between latitudes 38[deg]40' N and 38[deg]10' N and between
longitudes 78[deg]50' W and 79[deg]20' W.
(B) Within 178 km of 38[deg]48' N, 76[deg]52' W.
(iii) San Miguel, CA area:
(A) Between latitudes 34[deg]39' N and 34[deg]00' N and between
longitudes 118[deg]52' W and 119[deg]24' W.
(B) Within 200 km of 35[deg]44' N, 120[deg]45' W.
(iv) Guam area: Within 100 km of 13[deg]35' N, 144[deg]51' E.
Note to Sec. 78.19(f): The coordinates cited in this section
are specified in terms of the ``North American Datum of 1983 (NAD
83).''
* * * * *
PART 87--AVIATION SERVICES
11. The authority citation for Part 87 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 303 and 307(e), unless otherwise
noted.
12. Section 87.5 is amended by adding in alphabetical order a
definition for ``flight telemetering mobile station'' to read as
follows:
Sec. 87.5 Definitions.
* * * * *
Flight telemetering mobile station. A telemetering mobile station
used for transmitting data from an airborne vehicle, excluding data
related to airborne testing of the vehicle itself (or major components
thereof).
* * * * *
13. Section 87.133 is amended by revising paragraph (f) to read as
follows:
Sec. 87.133 Frequency stability.
* * * * *
(f) The carrier frequency tolerance of all transmitters operating
in the 1435-1525 MHz and 2345-2395 MHz bands is 0.002 percent. The
carrier frequency tolerance of all transmitters operating in the 5091-
5150 MHz band is 0.005 percent.
* * * * *
14. Section 87.137 is amended by revising note 8 to the table of
assignable emissions in paragraph (a) to read as follows:
Sec. 87.137 Types of emission.
(a) * * *
Notes:
* * * * *
\8\ The authorized bandwidth is equal to the necessary bandwidth
for frequency or digitally modulated transmitters used in
aeronautical telemetering and associated aeronautical telemetry or
telecommand stations operating in the 1435-1525 MHz, 2345-2395 MHz,
and 5091-5150 MHz bands. The necessary bandwidth must be computed in
accordance with part 2 of this chapter.
* * * * *
15. Section 87.139 is amended by revising paragraph (a)
introductory text, paragraph (d), and paragraphs (e) introductory text
and (f) introductory text to read as follows:
Sec. 87.139 Emission limitations.
(a) Except for ELTs and when using single sideband (R3E, H3E, J3E),
or frequency modulation (F9) or digital modulation (F9Y) for telemetry
or telecommand in the 1435-1525 MHz, 2345-2395 MHz, and 5091-5150 MHz
bands or digital modulation (G7D) for differential GPS, the mean power
of any emission must be attenuated below the mean power of the
transmitter (pY) as follows:
* * * * *
(d) Except for telemetry in the 1435-1525 MHz band, when the
frequency is removed from the assigned frequency by more than 250
percent of the authorized bandwidth for aircraft stations above 30 MHz
and all ground stations the attenuation must be at least 43 + 10
log10pY dB.
(e) When using frequency modulation or digital modulation for
telemetry or telecommand in the 1435-1525 MHz, 2345-2395 MHz, or 5091-
5150 MHz bands with an authorized bandwidth equal to or less than 1 MHz
the emissions must be attenuated as follows:.
* * * * *
(f) When using frequency modulation or digital modulation for
telemetry or telecommand in the 1435-1525 MHz, 2345-2395 MHz, or 5091-
5150 MHz bands with an authorized bandwidth greater than 1 MHz, the
emissions must be attenuated as follows:
* * * * *
16. Section 87.173 is amended by revising the frequency table in
paragraph (b) as follows:
a. The entry for the 2310-2320 MHz band is removed.
b. The entry for the 5000-5250 MHz band is removed.
c. An entry for the 5030-5091 MHz band is added.
d. Entries for the 5091-5150 MHz and 24450-24650 MHz bands are
added.
The additions read as follows:
Sec. 87.173 Frequencies.
* * * * *
(b) Frequency table:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Frequency or frequency band Subpart Class of station Remarks
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
5030-5091 MHz..................... Q......................... MA, RLW................... Microwave landing
systems.
5031.000 MHz...................... Q......................... RLT....................... ....................
5091-5150 MHz..................... J......................... MA, FAT................... Aeronautical
telemetry.
[[Page 76285]]
* * * * * * *
24450-24650 MHz................... F, Q...................... MA, RL.................... Aeronautical
radionavigation.
* * * * * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
17. Section 87.187 is amended by revising paragraph (p) to read as
follows:
Sec. 87.187 Frequencies.
* * * * *
(p) The 1435-1525 MHz and 2360-2395 MHz bands are available on a
primary basis and the 2345-2360 MHz band is available on a secondary
basis for telemetry and telecommand associated with the flight testing
of aircraft, missiles, or related major components. This includes
launching into space, reentry into the Earth's atmosphere and
incidental orbiting prior to reentry. In the 1435-1525 MHz band, the
following frequencies are shared on a co-equal basis with flight
telemetering mobile stations: 1444.5, 1453.5, 1501.5, 1515.5, and
1524.5 MHz. In the 2360-2395 MHz band, the following frequencies may be
assigned for telemetry and associated telecommand operations of
expendable and re-usable launch vehicles, whether or not such
operations involve flight testing: 2364.5, 2370.5 and 2382.5 MHz. See
Sec. 87.303(d).
Note to paragraph (p): Aeronautical telemetry operations must
protect Miscellaneous Wireless Communications Services operating in
the 2345-2360 MHz band.
* * * * *
18. Section 87.303 is amended by revising paragraph (d) to read as
follows:
Sec. 87.303 Frequencies.
* * * * *
(d) Aeronautical mobile telemetry (AMT) operations are conducted in
the 1435-1525 MHz, 2345-2395 MHz, and 5091-5150 MHz bands on a co-equal
basis with U.S. Government stations.
(1) Frequencies in the 1435-1525 MHz and 2360-2395 MHz bands are
assigned in the mobile service primarily for aeronautical telemetry and
associated telecommand operations for flight testing of aircraft and
missiles, or their major components. The 2345-2360 MHz band is also
available for these purposes on a secondary basis. Permissible uses of
these bands include telemetry and associated telecommand operations
associated with the launching and reentry into the Earth's atmosphere,
as well as any incidental orbiting prior to reentry, of objects
undergoing flight tests. In the 1435-1525 MHz band, the following
frequencies are shared on a co-equal basis with flight telemetering
mobile stations: 1444.5, 1453.5, 1501.5, 1515.5, and 1524.5 MHz. In the
2360-2395 MHz band, the following frequencies may be assigned for
telemetry and associated telecommand operations of expendable and re-
usable launch vehicles, whether or not such operations involve flight
testing: 2364.5, 2370.5 and 2382.5 MHz. All other mobile telemetry uses
of the 2360-2395 MHz band shall be on a non-interfering and unprotected
basis to the above uses.
(2) Frequencies in the 5091-5150 MHz band are assigned in the
aeronautical mobile service on a primary basis for flight testing of
aircraft. AMT use of these frequencies is restricted to aircraft
stations transmitting to aeronautical stations (AMT ground stations) in
the flight test areas listed in 47 CFR 2.106, footnote US111.
(3) The authorized bandwidths for stations operating in the 1435-
1525 MHz, 2345-2395 MHz, and 5091-5150 MHz bands are normally 1, 3 or 5
MHz. Applications for greater bandwidths will be considered in
accordance with the provisions of Sec. 87.135. Each assignment will be
centered on a frequency between 1435.5 MHz and 1524.5 MHz, between
2345.5 MHz and 2394.5 MHz, or between 5091.5 MHz and 5149.5 MHz, with 1
MHz channel spacing.
* * * * *
19. Section 87.305 is amended by revising paragraph (a)(1) to read
as follows:
Sec. 87.305 Frequency coordination.
(a)(1) Each application for a new station license, renewal or
modification of an existing license concerning flight test frequencies,
except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, must be
accompanied by a statement from a frequency advisory committee. The
committee must comment on the frequencies requested or the proposed
changes in the authorized station and the probable interference to
existing stations. The committee must consider all stations operating
on the frequencies requested or assigned within 320 km (200 mi) of the
proposed area of operation and all prior coordination and assignments
on the proposed frequency(ies). The committee must also recommend
frequencies resulting in the minimum interference. The Committee must
coordinate in writing all requests for frequencies or proposed
operating changes in the 1435-1525 MHz, 2345-2395 MHz, and 5091-5150
MHz bands with the responsible Government Area Frequency Coordinators
listed in the NTIA ``Manual of Regulations and Procedures for Federal
Radio Frequency Management.'' In addition, committee recommendations
may include comments on other technical factors and may contain
recommended restrictions which it believes should appear on the
license.
* * * * *
PART 90--PRIVATE LAND MOBILE RADIO SERVICES
20. The authority citation for part 90 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: Sections 4(i), 11, 303(g), 303(r), and 332(c)(7) of
the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 154(i), 161,
303(g), 303(r), and 332(c)(7), and Title VI of the Middle Class Tax
Relief and Job Creation Act of 2012, Pub. L. 112-96, 126 Stat. 156.
21. Section 90.103 is amended by revising the Kilohertz portion of
the Radiolocation Service Frequency Table in paragraph (b) and by
removing and reserving paragraphs (c)(25) through (28) to read as
follows:
Sec. 90.103 Radiolocation Service.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
[[Page 76286]]
Radiolocation Service Frequency Table
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Frequency or band Class of station(s) Limitation
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Kilohertz
------------------------------------------------------------------------
70 to 90........................ Radiolocation land 1
or mobile.
90 to 110....................... Radiolocation land. 2
110 to 130...................... Radiolocation land 1
or mobile.
1705 to 1715.................... ......do........... 4, 5, 6
1715 to 1750.................... ......do........... 5, 6
1750 to 1800.................... ......do........... 5, 6
3230 to 3400.................... ......do........... 6, 8
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Megahertz
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
PART 97--AMATEUR RADIO SERVICE
22. The authority citation for part 97 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 48 Stat. 1066, 1082, as amended; 47 U.S.C. 154, 303.
Interpret or apply 48 Stat. 1064-1068, 1081-1105, as amended; 47
U.S.C. 151-155, 301-609, unless otherwise noted.
23. Section 97.301 is amended by revising the kHz portion of the
tables in paragraphs (b), (c), and (d) to read as follows:
Sec. 97.301 Authorized frequency bands.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sharing requirements see Sec.
Wavelength band ITU Region 1 ITU Region 2 ITU Region 3 97.303 (Paragraph)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MF kHz kHz kHz ..............................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
160 m........................ 1810-1850...... 1800-2000...... 1800-2000...... (a), (g)
* * * * * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(c) * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sharing requirements see Sec.
Wavelength band ITU Region 1 ITU Region 2 ITU Region 3 97.303 (Paragraph)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MF kHz kHz kHz ..............................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
160 m........................ 1810-1850...... 1800-2000...... 1800-2000...... (a), (g)
* * * * * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(d) * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sharing requirements see Sec.
Wavelength band ITU Region 1 ITU Region 2 ITU Region 3 97.303 (Paragraph)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MF kHz kHz kHz ..............................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
160 m........................ 1810-1850...... 1800-2000...... 1800-2000...... (a), (g)
* * * * * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
24. Section 97.303 is amended by revising paragraphs (c) and (g) to
read as follows:
Sec. 97.303 Frequency sharing requirements.
* * * * *
(c) Amateur stations transmitting in the 76-77.5 GHz segment, the
78-81 GHz segment, the 136-141 GHz segment, or the 241-248 GHz segment
must not cause harmful interference to, and must accept interference
from, stations authorized by the United States Government, the FCC, or
other nations in the radiolocation service.
* * * * *
(g) Amateur stations transmitting in the 160 m band must not cause
harmful interference to, and must accept
[[Page 76287]]
interference from, stations authorized by other nations as follows:
(1) In Region 1: The radiolocation service in the 1800-1810 kHz
segment and the fixed and mobile except aeronautical mobile services in
the 1850-2000 kHz segment. In the countries listed in footnote 5.93 (of
47 CFR 2.106), the fixed and land mobile services in the 1800-1810 kHz
segment, and in the countries listed in footnotes 5.98 and 5.99, the
fixed and mobile except aeronautical mobile services in the 1810-1830
kHz segment.
(2) In Region 2: The fixed, mobile except aeronautical mobile,
radiolocation, and radionavigation services in the 1850-2000 kHz
segment.
(3) In Region 3: The fixed, mobile except aeronautical mobile, and
radionavigation services.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2012-31049 Filed 12-26-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712-01-P