Spectrum Monitoring Pilot Program, 50399-50401 [2013-20148]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 160 / Monday, August 19, 2013 / Notices
Dated: August 14, 2013.
Karl B. Nebbia,
Associate Administrator, Office of Spectrum
Management.
[FR Doc. 2013–20149 Filed 8–16–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–60–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Telecommunications and
Information Administration
[Docket Number 130809703–3703–01]
RIN 0660–XC007
Spectrum Monitoring Pilot Program
National Telecommunications
and Information Administration, U.S.
Department of Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of inquiry.
AGENCY:
In his June 2013 Executive
Memorandum on Expanding America’s
Leadership in Wireless Innovation,
President Obama directed the National
Telecommunications and Information
Administration (NTIA) to design and
conduct a pilot program to monitor
spectrum usage in real time in selected
communities throughout the country.
NTIA’s budget request to Congress for
fiscal year (FY) 2014 seeks an initial
$7.5 million research and development
investment for a two-year pilot program
to determine the benefits of an
automated spectrum measurement and
data collection system to better analyze
actual spectrum usage. NTIA issues this
Notice of Inquiry (NOI) to seek public
comment on this proposed spectrum
monitoring pilot program that, if
funded, would develop and deploy a
prototype system to monitor spectrum
usage in up to ten metropolitan areas
throughout the United States. The NOI
requests input from all interested
stakeholders on the measurement
system’s design, features, deployment
options, operational parameters,
expected utility, potential benefits, and
other issues. Subject to the availability
of funds, NTIA will design, develop,
validate, and field this prototype system
and evaluate whether a more
comprehensive monitoring program
would create additional opportunities
for more efficient spectrum access
through, for example, increased and
more dynamic sharing. NTIA intends to
use the input received in response to
this NOI to help design and implement
the spectrum monitoring program.
DATES: Submit comments on or before
October 3, 2013.
ADDRESSES: The public is invited to
submit written comments in paper or
electronic form. Written comments may
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
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be submitted by email to
measurementNOI@ntia.doc.gov.
Comments submitted should be
machine searchable and should not be
copy-protected. Written comments also
may be submitted by mail to: National
Telecommunications and Information
Administration, U.S. Department of
Commerce, 1401 Constitution Avenue
NW., HCHB Room 6725, Attn: Ed
Drocella, Office of Spectrum
Management, Washington, DC 20230.
Each commenter should include the
name of the person or organization
filing the comment as well as a page
number on each page of the submission.
All comments received will be made a
part of the public record in this docket
and will be posted to NTIA’s Web site
(https://www.ntia.doc.gov) without
change. All personally identifiable
information (e.g., name, address)
voluntarily submitted by the commenter
may be publicly accessible. Do not
submit confidential business
information or otherwise sensitive or
protected information.
Ed
Drocella, Office of Spectrum
Management, National
Telecommunications and Information
Administration, U.S. Department of
Commerce, 1401 Constitution Avenue
NW., HCHB Room 6725, Washington,
DC 20230; (202) 482–2608; or
edrocella@ntia.doc.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
The
continued growth in demand for
spectrum for commercial wireless
services, unlicensed devices, and
government operations—whether at the
federal, state, local, tribal, or territorial
level—focuses attention on the ability of
spectrum policy-makers, researchers,
and industry stakeholders to identify
relocation or spectrum sharing
opportunities and approaches. While
clearing spectrum bands of incumbent
users to make way for new wireless
services has been a viable approach for
many years, opportunities to find
spectrum to which to relocate federal
operations are dwindling rapidly,
getting more expensive, and taking
longer to implement. Technologies that
enable a variety of different networks
and users to share the same spectrum
bands in the same geographic areas
promise greater utilization and
efficiency as relocation options become
more challenging. However, assessing
these opportunities requires better data
gathering and analysis techniques
which focus on the nature and extent of
actual spectrum usage. Spectrum
utilization and occupancy
measurements offer the possibility to
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
50399
collect data and conduct analysis,
which are more reflective of actual use.
The June 2013 Executive
Memorandum directs NTIA to design
and conduct a pilot program to monitor
spectrum usage in real time in selected
communities throughout the country.1
In addition, NTIA’s FY 2014 budget
request to Congress seeks an initial $7.5
million research and development
investment for a two-year pilot program
to determine the benefits of an
automated spectrum measurement and
data collection system to better analyze
spectrum usage.2 Under the proposal in
the budget request, NTIA would design,
develop, validate, and field a prototype
spectrum monitoring system. The input
submitted in response to this NOI will
be used by NTIA to help design the pilot
program, if funded.
NTIA is considering that the initial
system for the pilot program include a
small network of radiofrequency sensors
installed at selected sites in up to ten
major metropolitan areas to collect data
across particular bands of interest. The
measurement equipment would
automatically feed data to a centralized
database for storing, retrieving, and
analyzing spectrum usage and
occupancy information. Spectrum
policy-makers, researchers, and other
stakeholders would have access to the
data and analysis to corroborate other
quantitative assessments and investigate
the feasibility of supporting new and
innovative spectrum access capabilities,
such as more dynamic spectrum sharing
approaches in key federal or non-federal
bands. If the pilot phase successfully
demonstrates the value of this
monitoring capability, NTIA would look
to promote more widespread
deployment.
NTIA’s Office of Spectrum
Management (OSM) and the Institute for
1 Memorandum for Heads of Executive
Departments and Agencies, Expanding America’s
Leadership in Wireless Innovation (June 14, 2013),
78 FR 37431, 37433 at § 3(c) (June 20, 2013),
available at https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-pressoffice/2013/06/14/presidential-memorandumexpanding-americas-leadership-wireless-innovatio
(June 2013 Executive Memorandum). The President
also directed NTIA to develop a plan that requires
applicable federal agencies to make quantitative
assessments of the actual usage of spectrum in
certain spectrum bands below 6 GHz that have the
greatest potential to be shared with nonfederal
users. Id. at § 3(a). Similarly, the memorandum calls
on NTIA to take such actions as are necessary to
require that each federal agency’s regular reviews of
its frequency assignments include a quantitative
assessment of its actual usage of spectrum under
such assignments. Id. at § 3(d).
2 See U.S. Department of Commerce, National
Telecommunications and Information
Administration, FY 2014 Budget as Presented to
Congress at 4, 103–108 (April 2013), available at
https://www.osec.doc.gov/bmi/budget/FY14CJ/
NTIA_FY_2014_CJ_Final_508_Compliant.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\19AUN1.SGM
19AUN1
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50400
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 160 / Monday, August 19, 2013 / Notices
Telecommunication Science (ITS) in
Boulder, Colorado, will design and
conduct the pilot program in
collaboration with other federal and
non-federal spectrum stakeholders and
researchers. In accordance with the June
2013 Executive Memorandum, NTIA
will also consult with each federal
agency to determine the correct
technical parameters to monitor usage
and to ensure that the program will not
reveal sensitive or classified
information. Based on the input
received from the agencies and in
response to this NOI, as well as NTIA’s
spectrum management objectives and
other relevant factors, OSM would
identify metropolitan areas and
coverage criteria, monitoring
requirements, and measurement
parameters.
The system would be designed and
intended to interoperate with other
third-party measurement units and
spectrum databases to enable academic
and industry researchers, commercial
and government spectrum managers,
and independent database managers to
implement and deploy their own data
collection and dissemination systems.
To encourage and facilitate similar,
interoperable measurement efforts
throughout the country, NTIA would
make available to these interested
parties criteria, requirements,
parameters, designs, interfaces,
software, data sets, and other
information generated at each phase of
the project.
The prototype monitoring unit would
be designed to run continuously at
remote sites with system control and
data uploads performed over the
Internet. Standardized data sets would
be accumulated and analyzed within the
unit and uploaded to a centralized
database. Based on the fully developed
and tested prototype unit and subject to
available funds, ten or more identical
spectrum measurement units would be
built and deployed in up to ten major
metropolitan areas throughout the
United States. Once deployed, they
would continuously monitor the
spectrum and collect data in predetermined frequency bands and upload
them to the database.
If successful, this initiative will
present a number of benefits for NTIA,
other federal agencies, academia, and
industry. For example, by improving the
reliability of agency-reported spectrum
usage data, NTIA and other interested
parties could verify other quantitative
usage assessments, evaluate the
potential for more relocation and
sharing opportunities, assess the
feasibility of dynamic frequency access
approaches in particular bands, and
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17:51 Aug 16, 2013
Jkt 229001
conduct research into other spectrum
access and management methods.
Federal agencies could use the spectrum
usage data to support regular frequency
assignment reviews and to identify and
characterize incumbent systems in
bands available for sharing and assess
the impact of sharing on their missions.
The measurement data could also assist
the agencies in determining the
technical and operational feasibility of
relocating to other bands. Industry
stakeholders could use the data to assess
the feasibility of spectrum sharing by
evaluating spectrum availability and
developing commercially viable
spectrum sharing technologies and
approaches.
At the conclusion of the initial twoyear pilot phase, NTIA would seek
additional input from the spectrum
community and assess whether to
recommend the continuation and
expansion of the spectrum measurement
program in collaboration with the new
Center for Advanced Communications
in Boulder, Colorado.3 NTIA will
evaluate the benefits demonstrated by
the pilot, the ability to support spectrum
decision-making, and will determine
whether the concept can and should be
expanded to include other sites, bands,
and participants.
Request for Comments
NTIA requests public comment on all
aspects of the proposed pilot program
summarized above and its FY14 budget
request, including but not limited to the
measurement system’s design, features,
deployment, operation, utility, and
benefits. NTIA also seeks input on the
pilot program’s objectives and approach,
as well as methods for evaluating the
pilot program itself. NTIA seeks input
on other possible approaches to
developing and fielding such a system
along with their estimated costs,
potential impediments, and likely
advantages.
NTIA solicits information regarding
how academic, government and private
sector researchers may participate in
and support the pilot program through,
for example, exchanges of experiences
and expert advice, workshops, plugfests, code-a-thons, or other events.
NTIA further seeks comment on how
3 NTIA and the National Institute for Standards
and Technology (NIST) recently announced a
cooperative effort launch the Center for Advanced
Communications to address current and long-term
communications technology challenges related to
spectrum sharing, public safety communications,
standards coordination, electromagnetics, and
quantum electronics. See Press Release, NIST and
NTIA Announce Plans to Establish New Center for
Advanced Communications (June 14, 2013),
available at https://www.nist.gov/public_affairs/
releases/nist-ntia-mou-061413.cfm.
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
researchers can assist and participate in
the continuation and expansion of the
system into a wide-spread network of
spectrum measurement facilities and
cooperative data repositories.
More specifically, NTIA invites
comment on the following questions:
1. How should a measurement system
be designed to measure a variety of
emissions, including weak or
intermittent signals, airborne platforms,
and radar systems, while keeping
incremental costs in check?
2. What types of measurement/
monitoring techniques should be used
for the different types of radio services?
3. What frequency bands should
initially be measured during the pilot
phase of the program?
4. How should measurement and
monitoring parameters (e.g., resolution
and video bandwidths, sampling rate,
dwell time, detector selection, antennas,
pre-selector filtering, dynamic range) be
specified?
5. Which geographic locations within
major metropolitan areas or other
communities throughout the country
would provide the greatest value for the
pilot?
6. How should individual
measurement units be deployed in each
community?
7. How could the long- or short-term
placement of multiple fixed units
within the same general geographic area
improve the accuracy and reliability of
the data collected in each community
and at what incremental cost?
8. How could mobile or portable units
be utilized to supplement data collected
at fixed sites within a community and
at what incremental cost?
9. How long should measurement data
be collected to provide statistically
relevant results, particularly for
intermittent operations, at each
geographic location?
10. How should the measurement
system design take into account
variations in population densities,
buildings, terrain and other factors
within or surrounding selected
measurement locations (i.e., in urban,
suburban, and rural parts of a
metropolitan area)?
11. What steps can be taken to
eliminate or minimize the possibility of
‘‘hidden nodes’’ when conducting
measurements?
12. What kind of spectrum utilization
and occupancy information (e.g., precise
received field strength levels, time-ofday occupancy percentages, times that
signals are measured above specified
thresholds) would be most useful to
spectrum stakeholders?
E:\FR\FM\19AUN1.SGM
19AUN1
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 160 / Monday, August 19, 2013 / Notices
13. What detection thresholds should
be used to measure and characterize the
usage patterns of incumbent systems?
14. What data and information would
be useful in evaluating potential sharing
compatibility with wireless broadband
devices?
15. How can the gathered data and
analysis better inform spectrum policy
decisions, enhance research and
development of advanced wireless
technologies and services?
16. What data formats and evaluation
tools should be employed?
17. How can the large amounts of
measurement data be effectively
managed, stored, and distributed?
18. What steps can be taken to ensure
that sensitive or classified information
will not be revealed to unauthorized
parties?
Dated: August 14, 2013.
Karl B. Nebbia,
Associate Administrator, Office of Spectrum
Management.
[FR Doc. 2013–20148 Filed 8–16–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–60–P
CORPORATION FOR NATIONAL AND
COMMUNITY SERVICE
Proposed Information Collection;
Comment Request
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Corporation for National and
Community Service.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
The Corporation for National
and Community Service (CNCS), as part
of its continuing effort to reduce
paperwork and respondent burden,
conducts a pre-clearance consultation
program to provide the general public
and federal agencies with an
opportunity to comment on proposed
and/or continuing collections of
information in accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA95) (44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(A)). This
program helps to ensure that requested
data can be provided in the desired
format, reporting burden (time and
financial resources) is minimized,
collection instruments are clearly
understood, and the impact of collection
requirement on respondents can be
properly assessed. Individuals who use
a telecommunications device for the
deaf (TTY–TDD) may call (202) 565–
2799 between 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m.
eastern time, Monday through Friday.
Currently, CNCS is soliciting
comments concerning AmeriCorps
Application Instructions: State
Commissions; State and National
Competitive; Professional Corps; Indian
Tribes; States and Territories without
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SUMMARY:
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17:51 Aug 16, 2013
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Commissions; and State and National
Planning. Applicants will respond to
the questions included in this ICR in
order to apply for funding through these
grant competitions.
Copies of the information collection
request can be obtained by contacting
the office listed in the addresses section
of this notice.
DATES: Written comments must be
submitted to the individual and office
listed in the ADDRESSES section by
October 18, 2013.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by the title of the information
collection activity, by any of the
following methods:
(1) By mail sent to: Corporation for
National and Community Service;
Attention Jennifer Bastress-Tahmasebi,
Deputy Director, AmeriCorps State and
National, Room 9501; 1201 New York
Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20525.
(2) By hand delivery or by courier to
the CNCS mailroom at Room 8100 at the
mail address given in paragraph (1)
above, between 9:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.
Monday through Friday, except Federal
holidays.
(3) Electronically through the CNCS
email address system:
jbastresstahmasebi@cns.gov or
www.regulations.gov.
Jennifer Bastress-Tahmasebi, (202) 606–
6667, or by email at
jbastresstahmasebi@cns.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: CNCS is
particularly interested in comments
that:
• Evaluate whether the proposed
collection of information is necessary
for the proper performance of the
functions of the agency, including
whether the information will have
practical utility;
• Evaluate the accuracy of the
agency’s estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
• Enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and
• Minimize the burden of the
collection of information on those who
are expected to respond, including the
use of appropriate automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other
technological collection techniques or
other forms of information technology
(e.g., permitting electronic submissions
of responses).
Background
These application instructions will be
used by applicants for funding through
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50401
AmeriCorps State and National grant
competitions.
Current Action: CNCS seeks to renew
and revise the current AmeriCorps State
and National Application Instructions.
The Application Instructions are being
revised to align with the revised NOFO.
The Application Instructions will be
used in the same manner as the existing
Application Instructions. CNCS also
seeks to continue using the current
Application Instructions until the
revised Application Instructions are
approved by OMB. The current
Application Instructions are due to
expire on October 31, 2015.
Type of Review: Renewal.
Agency: Corporation for National and
Community Service.
Title: AmeriCorps Application
Instructions: State Commissions; State
and National Competitive; Professional
Corps; Indian Tribes; States and
Territories without Commissions; and
State and National Planning.
OMB Number: 3045–0047.
Agency Number: None.
Affected Public: Nonprofit
organizations, State, Local and Tribal.
Total Respondents: 654.
Frequency: Annually.
Average Time per Response: 24 hours.
Estimated Total Burden Hours: 15,696
hours.
Total Burden Cost (capital/startup):
None.
Total Burden Cost (operating/
maintenance): None.
Comments submitted in response to
this notice will be summarized and/or
included in the request for Office of
Management and Budget approval of the
information collection request; they will
also become a matter of public record.
Dated: August 13, 2013.
Jennifer Bastress-Tahmasebi,
Deputy Director, AmeriCorps State and
National.
[FR Doc. 2013–20042 Filed 8–16–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6050–28–P
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
National Advisory Committee on
Institutional Quality and Integrity
(NACIQI)
National Advisory Committee
on Institutional Quality and Integrity,
Office of Postsecondary Education, U.S.
Department of Education.
ADDRESSES: U.S. Department of
Education, Office of Postsecondary
Education, 1990 K Street NW., Room
8072, Washington, DC 20006.
ACTION: Announcement of an open
meeting of the National Advisory
AGENCY:
E:\FR\FM\19AUN1.SGM
19AUN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 160 (Monday, August 19, 2013)]
[Notices]
[Pages 50399-50401]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-20148]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Telecommunications and Information Administration
[Docket Number 130809703-3703-01]
RIN 0660-XC007
Spectrum Monitoring Pilot Program
AGENCY: National Telecommunications and Information Administration,
U.S. Department of Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of inquiry.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In his June 2013 Executive Memorandum on Expanding America's
Leadership in Wireless Innovation, President Obama directed the
National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) to
design and conduct a pilot program to monitor spectrum usage in real
time in selected communities throughout the country. NTIA's budget
request to Congress for fiscal year (FY) 2014 seeks an initial $7.5
million research and development investment for a two-year pilot
program to determine the benefits of an automated spectrum measurement
and data collection system to better analyze actual spectrum usage.
NTIA issues this Notice of Inquiry (NOI) to seek public comment on this
proposed spectrum monitoring pilot program that, if funded, would
develop and deploy a prototype system to monitor spectrum usage in up
to ten metropolitan areas throughout the United States. The NOI
requests input from all interested stakeholders on the measurement
system's design, features, deployment options, operational parameters,
expected utility, potential benefits, and other issues. Subject to the
availability of funds, NTIA will design, develop, validate, and field
this prototype system and evaluate whether a more comprehensive
monitoring program would create additional opportunities for more
efficient spectrum access through, for example, increased and more
dynamic sharing. NTIA intends to use the input received in response to
this NOI to help design and implement the spectrum monitoring program.
DATES: Submit comments on or before October 3, 2013.
ADDRESSES: The public is invited to submit written comments in paper or
electronic form. Written comments may be submitted by email to
measurementNOI@ntia.doc.gov. Comments submitted should be machine
searchable and should not be copy-protected. Written comments also may
be submitted by mail to: National Telecommunications and Information
Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce, 1401 Constitution Avenue
NW., HCHB Room 6725, Attn: Ed Drocella, Office of Spectrum Management,
Washington, DC 20230. Each commenter should include the name of the
person or organization filing the comment as well as a page number on
each page of the submission. All comments received will be made a part
of the public record in this docket and will be posted to NTIA's Web
site (https://www.ntia.doc.gov) without change. All personally
identifiable information (e.g., name, address) voluntarily submitted by
the commenter may be publicly accessible. Do not submit confidential
business information or otherwise sensitive or protected information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ed Drocella, Office of Spectrum
Management, National Telecommunications and Information Administration,
U.S. Department of Commerce, 1401 Constitution Avenue NW., HCHB Room
6725, Washington, DC 20230; (202) 482-2608; or edrocella@ntia.doc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The continued growth in demand for spectrum
for commercial wireless services, unlicensed devices, and government
operations--whether at the federal, state, local, tribal, or
territorial level--focuses attention on the ability of spectrum policy-
makers, researchers, and industry stakeholders to identify relocation
or spectrum sharing opportunities and approaches. While clearing
spectrum bands of incumbent users to make way for new wireless services
has been a viable approach for many years, opportunities to find
spectrum to which to relocate federal operations are dwindling rapidly,
getting more expensive, and taking longer to implement. Technologies
that enable a variety of different networks and users to share the same
spectrum bands in the same geographic areas promise greater utilization
and efficiency as relocation options become more challenging. However,
assessing these opportunities requires better data gathering and
analysis techniques which focus on the nature and extent of actual
spectrum usage. Spectrum utilization and occupancy measurements offer
the possibility to collect data and conduct analysis, which are more
reflective of actual use.
The June 2013 Executive Memorandum directs NTIA to design and
conduct a pilot program to monitor spectrum usage in real time in
selected communities throughout the country.\1\ In addition, NTIA's FY
2014 budget request to Congress seeks an initial $7.5 million research
and development investment for a two-year pilot program to determine
the benefits of an automated spectrum measurement and data collection
system to better analyze spectrum usage.\2\ Under the proposal in the
budget request, NTIA would design, develop, validate, and field a
prototype spectrum monitoring system. The input submitted in response
to this NOI will be used by NTIA to help design the pilot program, if
funded.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Memorandum for Heads of Executive Departments and Agencies,
Expanding America's Leadership in Wireless Innovation (June 14,
2013), 78 FR 37431, 37433 at Sec. 3(c) (June 20, 2013), available
at https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2013/06/14/presidential-memorandum-expanding-americas-leadership-wireless-innovatio (June 2013 Executive Memorandum). The President also
directed NTIA to develop a plan that requires applicable federal
agencies to make quantitative assessments of the actual usage of
spectrum in certain spectrum bands below 6 GHz that have the
greatest potential to be shared with nonfederal users. Id. at Sec.
3(a). Similarly, the memorandum calls on NTIA to take such actions
as are necessary to require that each federal agency's regular
reviews of its frequency assignments include a quantitative
assessment of its actual usage of spectrum under such assignments.
Id. at Sec. 3(d).
\2\ See U.S. Department of Commerce, National Telecommunications
and Information Administration, FY 2014 Budget as Presented to
Congress at 4, 103-108 (April 2013), available at https://www.osec.doc.gov/bmi/budget/FY14CJ/NTIA_FY_2014_CJ_Final_508_Compliant.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NTIA is considering that the initial system for the pilot program
include a small network of radiofrequency sensors installed at selected
sites in up to ten major metropolitan areas to collect data across
particular bands of interest. The measurement equipment would
automatically feed data to a centralized database for storing,
retrieving, and analyzing spectrum usage and occupancy information.
Spectrum policy-makers, researchers, and other stakeholders would have
access to the data and analysis to corroborate other quantitative
assessments and investigate the feasibility of supporting new and
innovative spectrum access capabilities, such as more dynamic spectrum
sharing approaches in key federal or non-federal bands. If the pilot
phase successfully demonstrates the value of this monitoring
capability, NTIA would look to promote more widespread deployment.
NTIA's Office of Spectrum Management (OSM) and the Institute for
[[Page 50400]]
Telecommunication Science (ITS) in Boulder, Colorado, will design and
conduct the pilot program in collaboration with other federal and non-
federal spectrum stakeholders and researchers. In accordance with the
June 2013 Executive Memorandum, NTIA will also consult with each
federal agency to determine the correct technical parameters to monitor
usage and to ensure that the program will not reveal sensitive or
classified information. Based on the input received from the agencies
and in response to this NOI, as well as NTIA's spectrum management
objectives and other relevant factors, OSM would identify metropolitan
areas and coverage criteria, monitoring requirements, and measurement
parameters.
The system would be designed and intended to interoperate with
other third-party measurement units and spectrum databases to enable
academic and industry researchers, commercial and government spectrum
managers, and independent database managers to implement and deploy
their own data collection and dissemination systems. To encourage and
facilitate similar, interoperable measurement efforts throughout the
country, NTIA would make available to these interested parties
criteria, requirements, parameters, designs, interfaces, software, data
sets, and other information generated at each phase of the project.
The prototype monitoring unit would be designed to run continuously
at remote sites with system control and data uploads performed over the
Internet. Standardized data sets would be accumulated and analyzed
within the unit and uploaded to a centralized database. Based on the
fully developed and tested prototype unit and subject to available
funds, ten or more identical spectrum measurement units would be built
and deployed in up to ten major metropolitan areas throughout the
United States. Once deployed, they would continuously monitor the
spectrum and collect data in pre-determined frequency bands and upload
them to the database.
If successful, this initiative will present a number of benefits
for NTIA, other federal agencies, academia, and industry. For example,
by improving the reliability of agency-reported spectrum usage data,
NTIA and other interested parties could verify other quantitative usage
assessments, evaluate the potential for more relocation and sharing
opportunities, assess the feasibility of dynamic frequency access
approaches in particular bands, and conduct research into other
spectrum access and management methods. Federal agencies could use the
spectrum usage data to support regular frequency assignment reviews and
to identify and characterize incumbent systems in bands available for
sharing and assess the impact of sharing on their missions. The
measurement data could also assist the agencies in determining the
technical and operational feasibility of relocating to other bands.
Industry stakeholders could use the data to assess the feasibility of
spectrum sharing by evaluating spectrum availability and developing
commercially viable spectrum sharing technologies and approaches.
At the conclusion of the initial two-year pilot phase, NTIA would
seek additional input from the spectrum community and assess whether to
recommend the continuation and expansion of the spectrum measurement
program in collaboration with the new Center for Advanced
Communications in Boulder, Colorado.\3\ NTIA will evaluate the benefits
demonstrated by the pilot, the ability to support spectrum decision-
making, and will determine whether the concept can and should be
expanded to include other sites, bands, and participants.
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\3\ NTIA and the National Institute for Standards and Technology
(NIST) recently announced a cooperative effort launch the Center for
Advanced Communications to address current and long-term
communications technology challenges related to spectrum sharing,
public safety communications, standards coordination,
electromagnetics, and quantum electronics. See Press Release, NIST
and NTIA Announce Plans to Establish New Center for Advanced
Communications (June 14, 2013), available at https://www.nist.gov/public_affairs/releases/nist-ntia-mou-061413.cfm.
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Request for Comments
NTIA requests public comment on all aspects of the proposed pilot
program summarized above and its FY14 budget request, including but not
limited to the measurement system's design, features, deployment,
operation, utility, and benefits. NTIA also seeks input on the pilot
program's objectives and approach, as well as methods for evaluating
the pilot program itself. NTIA seeks input on other possible approaches
to developing and fielding such a system along with their estimated
costs, potential impediments, and likely advantages.
NTIA solicits information regarding how academic, government and
private sector researchers may participate in and support the pilot
program through, for example, exchanges of experiences and expert
advice, workshops, plug-fests, code-a-thons, or other events. NTIA
further seeks comment on how researchers can assist and participate in
the continuation and expansion of the system into a wide-spread network
of spectrum measurement facilities and cooperative data repositories.
More specifically, NTIA invites comment on the following questions:
1. How should a measurement system be designed to measure a variety
of emissions, including weak or intermittent signals, airborne
platforms, and radar systems, while keeping incremental costs in check?
2. What types of measurement/monitoring techniques should be used
for the different types of radio services?
3. What frequency bands should initially be measured during the
pilot phase of the program?
4. How should measurement and monitoring parameters (e.g.,
resolution and video bandwidths, sampling rate, dwell time, detector
selection, antennas, pre-selector filtering, dynamic range) be
specified?
5. Which geographic locations within major metropolitan areas or
other communities throughout the country would provide the greatest
value for the pilot?
6. How should individual measurement units be deployed in each
community?
7. How could the long- or short-term placement of multiple fixed
units within the same general geographic area improve the accuracy and
reliability of the data collected in each community and at what
incremental cost?
8. How could mobile or portable units be utilized to supplement
data collected at fixed sites within a community and at what
incremental cost?
9. How long should measurement data be collected to provide
statistically relevant results, particularly for intermittent
operations, at each geographic location?
10. How should the measurement system design take into account
variations in population densities, buildings, terrain and other
factors within or surrounding selected measurement locations (i.e., in
urban, suburban, and rural parts of a metropolitan area)?
11. What steps can be taken to eliminate or minimize the
possibility of ``hidden nodes'' when conducting measurements?
12. What kind of spectrum utilization and occupancy information
(e.g., precise received field strength levels, time-of-day occupancy
percentages, times that signals are measured above specified
thresholds) would be most useful to spectrum stakeholders?
[[Page 50401]]
13. What detection thresholds should be used to measure and
characterize the usage patterns of incumbent systems?
14. What data and information would be useful in evaluating
potential sharing compatibility with wireless broadband devices?
15. How can the gathered data and analysis better inform spectrum
policy decisions, enhance research and development of advanced wireless
technologies and services?
16. What data formats and evaluation tools should be employed?
17. How can the large amounts of measurement data be effectively
managed, stored, and distributed?
18. What steps can be taken to ensure that sensitive or classified
information will not be revealed to unauthorized parties?
Dated: August 14, 2013.
Karl B. Nebbia,
Associate Administrator, Office of Spectrum Management.
[FR Doc. 2013-20148 Filed 8-16-13; 8:45 am]
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