Connect America Fund; Universal Service Reform-Mobility Fund, 42473-42486 [2017-17824]
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Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 173 / Friday, September 8, 2017 / Rules and Regulations
[FR Doc. 2017–18768 Filed 9–7–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 54
[WC Docket No. 10–90, WT Docket No. 10–
208; FCC 17–102]
Connect America Fund; Universal
Service Reform—Mobility Fund
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule; petition for
reconsideration.
AGENCY:
In this Order on
Reconsideration and Second Report and
Order, the Commission adopts the
parameters for the Mobility Fund Phase
II challenge process, which will enable
the Commission to resolve eligible-area
disputes expeditiously. The challenge
process will begin with a new, one-time
collection of standardized, up-to-date
4G LTE coverage data from mobile
wireless providers. Interested parties
will then have an opportunity to contest
an initial determination that an area is
ineligible for MF–II support, and
providers will then have an opportunity
to response to challenges.
DATES: The Commission adopted this
Order on Reconsideration and Second
Report and Order on August 3, 2017,
and the parameters set forth therein for
the Mobility Fund Phase II challenge
process, along with all associated
requirements also set forth therein, go
into effect October 10, 2017, except for
the new or modified information
collection requirements in the challenge
process that require approval by the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB). The Commission will publish a
document in the Federal Register
announcing approval of those
information collection requirements and
the date they will become operative.
ADDRESSES: Federal Communications
Commission, 445 12th Street SW.,
Washington, DC 20554.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Wireless Telecommunications Bureau,
Auction and Spectrum Access Division,
Jonathan McCormack or Audra HaleMaddox, at (202) 418–0660. For further
information concerning the Paperwork
Reduction Act information collection
requirements contained in this
document, contact Cathy Williams at
(202) 418–2918 or via the Internet at
PRA@fcc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a
summary of the Order on
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SUMMARY:
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Reconsideration and Second Report and
Order (MF–II Challenge Process Order),
WC Docket No. 10–90, WT Docket No.
10–208, FCC 17–102, adopted on
August 3, 2017 and released on August
4, 2017. The complete text of this
document is available for public
inspection and copying from 8:00 a.m.
to 4:30 p.m. Eastern Time (ET) Monday
through Thursday or from 8:00 a.m. to
11:30 a.m. ET on Fridays in the FCC
Reference Information Center, 445 12th
Street SW., Room CY–A257,
Washington, DC 20554. The complete
text is also available on the
Commission’s Web site at https://
transition.fcc.gov/Daily_Releases/Daily_
Business/2017/db0804/FCC-17102A1.pdf. Alternative formats are
available to persons with disabilities by
sending an email to FCC504@fcc.gov or
by calling the Consumer &
Governmental Affairs Bureau at (202)
418–0530 (voice), (202) 418–0432
(TTY).
I. Introduction
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
42473
II. Background
As required by the Regulatory
Flexibility Act of 1980, the Commission
has prepared a Final Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) of the
possible significant economic impact on
small entities of the policies and rules
adopted in this document. The FRFA is
set forth in an appendix to the MF–II
Challenge Process Order, and is
summarized below. The Commission’s
Consumer and Governmental Affairs
Bureau, Reference Information Center,
will send a copy of this MF–II Challenge
Process Order, including the FRFA, to
the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration (SBA).
Paperwork Reduction Act
The MF–II Challenge Process Order
contains new and modified information
collection requirements subject to the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA), Public Law 104–13. It will be
submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) for review under
section 3507(d) of the PRA. OMB, the
general public, and other Federal
agencies will be invited to comment on
the new and modified information
collection requirements contained in
this proceeding.
Congressional Review Act
The Commission will send a copy of
this MF–II Challenge Process Order in a
report to Congress and the Government
Accountability Office pursuant to the
Congressional Review Act (CRA), see 5
U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
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1. In the MF–II Challenge Process
Order, the Commission takes the next
step to extend mobile opportunities to
rural America by fulfilling its
commitment to design a robust
challenge process that will direct
Mobility Fund Phase II (MF–II) support
to primarily rural areas that lack
unsubsidized 4G Long Term Evolution
(LTE) service. The MF–II challenge
process the Commission establishes will
be administratively efficient, fiscally
responsible, and will enable it to resolve
eligible area disputes quickly and
expeditiously. This challenge process
will begin with a new, one-time
collection of standardized, up-to-date
4G LTE coverage data from mobile
wireless providers. Interested parties
will then have an opportunity to contest
an initial determination that an area is
ineligible for MF–II support, and
providers will then have an opportunity
to respond to challenges.
2. In February 2017, the Commission
adopted rules to move forward
expeditiously to an MF–II auction. The
Commission established a budget of
$4.53 billion over a term of ten years to
provide ongoing support for the
provision of service in areas that lack
adequate mobile voice and broadband
coverage absent subsidies. The
Commission further decided that
geographic areas lacking unsubsidized,
qualified 4G LTE service would be
deemed ‘‘eligible areas’’ for MF–II
support, and that it would use a
competitive bidding process
(specifically, a reverse auction) to
distribute funding to providers to serve
those areas. For the purposes of MF–II,
the Commission defined ‘‘qualified 4G
LTE service’’ as mobile wireless service
provided using 4G LTE technology with
download speeds of at least 5 Mbps. The
Commission also decided that, prior to
an MF–II auction, it would compile a
list of areas that were presumptively
eligible for MF–II support based on
information derived from the Form 477
data submissions and high-cost support
disbursement data available from the
Universal Service Administrative
Company (USAC), and it would provide
a limited timeframe for challenges to
those initial determinations during the
pre-auction process.
3. In order to make more informed
decisions on the challenge process, the
Commission deferred deciding the
specific parameters of the challenge
process and instead sought additional
comment. Among other things, the
Commission sought comment in the
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Mobility Fund II FNPRM, 82 FR 13413,
March 13, 2017, on two potential
options—called ‘‘Option A’’ and
‘‘Option B’’—for a process to challenge
the eligibility of areas for MF–II support.
‘‘Option A’’ and ‘‘Option B’’ varied in
terms of the initial burdens for filing a
challenge and the parameters for
evidence submitted during the
challenge. The Commission also
solicited comment on any additional
options and parameters for the MF–II
challenge process and made clear that it
was not proposing to adopt either
‘‘Option A’’ or ‘‘Option B’’ wholesale,
intending instead to adopt the most
effective approach and parameters to
assemble a ‘‘best in class’’ structure for
the challenge process. Seven petitions
were filed seeking reconsideration of the
Mobility Fund II Report & Order, 82 FR
15422, March 28, 2017, five of which
directly bear upon the framework and
design of the MF–II challenge process.
The Commission addresses in the MF–
II Challenge Process Order the portions
of the five petitions asking for
reconsideration of the framework and
design of the challenge process. At this
time, the Commission defers addressing
the petitions, or portions thereof,
requesting reconsideration of aspects of
the Mobility Fund II Report & Order
outside of the challenge process.
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III. Order on Reconsideration
4. As necessary starting points for the
challenge process, the Commission first
resolves certain issues raised in
petitions for reconsideration of the
Mobility Fund II Report & Order.
Specifically, the Commission
reconsiders its decision to use Form 477
data as the basis for determining
deployment of qualifying 4G LTE for the
map of areas presumptively eligible for
MF–II support, and instead grants, in
part, a petition for reconsideration
seeking a new, one-time collection of
data to determine the deployment of
qualified 4G LTE for the purposes of the
MF–II challenge process. The
Commission denies petitions to
reconsider its adoption of a 5 Mbps
download speed benchmark to identify
areas eligible for MF–II support. The
Commission also denies petitions for
reconsideration that propose including
technology choice or collocation as
elements in such an eligibility
determination.
A. Source of Coverage Data
5. The Commission reconsiders its
decision to use Form 477 data as the
basis for determining deployment of
qualified 4G LTE for the map of areas
presumptively eligible for MF–II. At the
time of the Mobility Fund II Report &
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Order, the Commission noted that,
despite criticism of using Form 477
data, none of the commenters had
identified a better available coverage
data source to move forward
expeditiously to implement MF–II.
6. A trade association now seeks
reconsideration of the Commission’s
decision to use Form 477 data to
determine what areas are covered by
qualified 4G LTE for purposes of
identifying areas presumptively eligible
for MF–II support. The trade association
instead offers an industry consensus
proposal asking that the Commission
undertakes a new, one-time data
collection with specified data
parameters tailored to MF–II, thus
addressing the lack of a better-tailored
data source than Form 477.
7. After consideration of petitioner’s
industry consensus proposal, as well as
the record gathered in response to this
issue, the Commission reconsiders its
decision to use Form 477 data as the
basis for determining deployment of
qualified 4G LTE for the map of areas
presumptively eligible for MF–II
support. The Commission instead
grants, in part, petitioner’s petition for
reconsideration proposing a new, onetime collection of data to determine the
deployment of qualified 4G LTE for the
purposes of MF–II.
8. The Commission observes at the
outset that the mobile deployment data
collected on Form 477 represent a
dramatic improvement over the
deployment data previously available
on a national scale. On reconsideration,
the Commission acknowledges the
concerns of commenters, and finds that
the use of Form 477 data as the baseline,
as currently filed, is likely to result in
a significantly longer MF–II challenge
process than if the Commission
collected data consistent with the
petitioner’s consensus proposal as the
baseline for establishing which areas are
presumptively eligible for support.
9. Given the negative impact that
using Form 477 data could have in
prolonging the MF–II challenge process,
and after considering the possibility of
quickly acquiring a better-tailored data
source than Form 477, the Commission
is persuaded by the weight of the record
to adopt petitioner’s consensus proposal
to undertake a new, one-time data
collection of 4G LTE coverage maps
based on the specific parameters the
Commission adopts in the MF–II
Challenge Process Order. For purposes
of implementing MF–II expeditiously,
this collection will provide the
Commission and interested parties with
the best available starting point for the
challenge process. When combined with
the high-cost subsidy disbursement data
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available from USAC, the new data will
form the basis of the map of areas
presumptively eligible for MF–II
support.
10. To reduce the burden on these
providers, the Commission requires
only those providers that have
previously reported 4G LTE coverage in
Form 477 and have qualified 4G LTE
coverage based on the data specification
described below to submit MF–II
coverage data. Form 477 filers that do
not provide qualified 4G LTE service at
the speed benchmark and parameters for
MF–II eligibility are not required to
submit coverage data as part of the MF–
II challenge process collection. Filers
that provide service at the benchmark
and parameters for MF–II eligibility
must submit coverage data. The
Commission will use these new
coverage data, in conjunction with
subsidy data from USAC, to create the
map of areas presumptively eligible for
MF–II support.
11. In reaching its decision to
undertake this effort, the Commission
finds that on balance the new coverage
data it is collecting should reduce the
need for challengers to perform more indepth testing in certain areas or to file
extensive challenges to large geographic
areas. Thus, it should reduce the burden
on challengers and providers that
respond to challenges and allow the
Commission to commence the MF–II
auction more quickly. In addition,
current 4G LTE providers have the best
information concerning their coverage
footprints based on their propagation
models, spectrum, and network
infrastructure, and thus are in the best
position to provide the Wireless
Telecommunications Bureau and the
Wireline Competition Bureau (the
Bureaus) with data already in their
possession, tailored to the purposes of
MF–II. This approach also allows the
Commission to simplify the challenge
process by allowing only challenges that
qualified LTE coverage is overstated and
not also challenges that such coverage is
understated. This approach also permits
the Commission to establish various
bright line rules for evaluation of the
new coverage submissions and of
certain challenges that should expedite
the final resolution of areas eligible for
MF–II support.
12. The Commission also wishes to
make clear that only the extent of
qualified 4G LTE coverage can be
challenged in the challenge process; its
decision in the Mobility Fund II Report
& Order to rely on USAC high-cost
support data for determinations of
which areas with 4G LTE coverage are
unsubsidized remains unchanged, and
subsidy data or determinations are not
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subject to challenge. In sum, the
required data should allow the
Commission to achieve its policy goal of
proceeding expeditiously to an MF–II
auction. Compliance with the required
data collection adopted in the MF–II
Challenge Process Order is mandatory,
and failure to comply may lead to
enforcement action, including forfeiture
penalties, pursuant to the
Communications Act and other
applicable law.
B. 5 Mbps Download Speed Benchmark
for Identifying Areas Eligible for MF–II
Support
13. The Commission affirms that it
will use a 5 Mbps download speed
benchmark to determine what coverage
counts as qualified 4G LTE for the
purpose of identifying areas eligible for
MF–II support. Using a download speed
benchmark of 5 Mbps supports the
Commission’s primary policy goal of
directing its limited MF–II funds to
address 4G LTE coverage gaps and
expanding 4G LTE coverage to areas that
the private sector will not serve without
government subsidies.
14. Four petitioners seek
reconsideration of some aspect of the
Commission’s decision to use a 5 Mbps
download speed as the benchmark to
determine what coverage counts as
qualified 4G LTE for the purpose of
identifying areas eligible for MF–II
support.
15. Despite the fact that providers
have used different standards and
methodologies to report coverage in
their Form 477 data, the nationwide
carriers are all generally reporting
minimum advertised download speeds
of 5 Mbps for their 4G LTE network
coverage. Carriers’ advertised speeds
demonstrate that a consumer can
reasonably expect to receive 4G LTE
service at a download speed of 5 Mbps
in both rural and urban areas. The
Commission previously noted that
‘‘commenters generally did not discuss
the technical requirements of 4G LTE
service’’ but did cite multiple comments
on the performance requirement for
MF–II recipients. Commenters
consistently cited 5 Mbps download as
consistent with 4G LTE service but
differed on whether a 10/1 Mbps
requirement was too aggressive.
Similarly, the 2016 Broadband Progress
Report found that, even in urban areas,
119.3 million Americans (45 percent)
still lack access to 4G LTE with a
minimum advertised speed of 10/1
Mbps. Thus, establishing a download
speed of 10 Mbps for identifying areas
eligible for MF–II support would not
reflect the typical consumer experience
in urban and rural areas and would
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direct the Commission’s limited funds
to areas that are already being served at
speeds that are reasonably comparable
to what is available in urban areas. The
Commission’s analysis of available data
and the record reflects that consumers
in urban areas generally have access to
4G LTE service at a download speed of
5 Mbps. Therefore, this benchmark,
coupled with the parameters the
Commission adopts in the MF–II
Challenge Process Order, serves as a
reasonable basis for its analysis of what
areas are currently lacking unsubsidized
service at an equivalent level.
16. The purpose of the eligibility
benchmark is to determine at the outset
of MF–II which areas lack service
reasonably comparable to current
service because they are uneconomic to
serve and require subsidies to achieve
4G LTE service. In contrast, the
performance benchmark for an MF–II
recipient ensures that the Commission’s
limited universal service funds are used
in a fiscally responsible manner to
assure that service in eligible areas is
reasonably comparable to urban
offerings in the future. Setting the
eligibility benchmark the same as the
performance benchmark would have the
counterproductive effect of directing
subsidies to areas that are already
receiving high levels of service, and
consequently providers in those areas
could potentially achieve the
performance objective in the first year of
a ten-year support program. Different
eligibility and buildout requirements are
consistent with past Commission
decisions in the universal service
context, and they serve ‘‘our objective of
ensuring that we target our finite budget
to where it is most needed.’’ To
accomplish this objective, the
Commission must exercise its discretion
to balance competing universal service
principles of promoting nationwide
deployment of high-speed mobile
broadband and spending limited
universal service funds in a costeffective manner.
17. The Commission also rejects
petitioners’ assertions that it did not
provide sufficient analysis to justify
using the 5 Mbps download speeds as
the eligibility benchmark in light of its
expectation that areas found to be
ineligible for MF–II support are likely to
see improvements in the coming years.
The Commission’s objective in MF–II, in
accordance with the USF/ICC
Transformation Order, 76 FR 73829,
November 29, 2011, is to subsidize
reasonably comparable service in
unserved areas, not to subsidize
competition. The Commission
anticipates that to the extent an area is
served by an unsubsidized provider
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offering qualified 4G LTE service such
that the area is not eligible for MF–II
support, that unsubsidized service
provider will have incentives to
continue to invest in its network to
maintain and expand its current market
position. In addition, the Commission
anticipates that as the infrastructure to
support high levels of service develops
over the ten-year term of MF–II support,
the incremental costs of upgrades to
service in ineligible areas will become
lower, further facilitating improvements
in those areas. Even if incentives to
invest in unsubsidized areas were
lower, with all things being equal, these
lower upgrade costs would help offset
that effect, and would incentivize
service providers to increase their speed
offerings in those areas. Furthermore,
the Commission notes that the cost of
upgrading service is significantly lower
than the cost of building a new network
in unserved areas or filling in coverage
gaps in areas with significant coverage,
and thus the Commission anticipates
that incentives will continue to
encourage upgrades to existing network
deployments in unsubsidized areas.
Accordingly, the Commission expects
reasonable service improvements in
ineligible areas because private actors
have already demonstrated in the
marketplace that they have an incentive
to invest in those areas without federal
support.
18. Lastly, the Commission declines
to adopt an upload speed benchmark to
identify areas eligible for MF–II support.
Given the nature of mobile wireless
deployment and the interplay between
download and upload speeds when
designing and optimizing an LTE
network, there is no single upload edge
speed that corresponds to a 5 Mbps
download speed. One party, however,
has submitted recent LTE speed
measurement results showing that with
1 Mbps as the 10th percentile of the
upload speed distribution, the standard
national compliance, at the non-MSA
(metropolitan statistical area) and MSA
level, only ranges from approximately 5
percent to 12 percent. This suggests that
a cell edge 1 Mbps upload speed
standard requirement would exceed the
upload speeds of most current LTE
service areas. Thus, including a 1 Mbps
upload speed benchmark could make
eligible for support most areas with
current LTE service at download speeds
of 5 Mbps. Finally, the Commission also
finds that the additional upload speed
standard would add unnecessary
complexity to the already complex
challenge process. The Commission
concludes that including a 1 Mbps
upload speed benchmark for
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determining areas eligible for MF–II
support would be contrary to its policy
goal of directing its limited MF–II
resources to areas of the country that
lack sufficient services because such a
benchmark would expand the areas
eligible for support to include areas that
already have 4G LTE service, without
any countervailing benefit to
consumers.
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C. Considering Incompatible
Technologies in Determining Eligible
Areas
19. The Commission affirms the
conclusion it reached in the Mobility
Fund II Report & Order that areas with
unsubsidized, qualified 4G LTE service
are not at risk of losing service and
therefore should be ineligible to receive
support, regardless of whether the areas
have networks that are compatible with
both GSM and CDMA. The Commission
further affirms its earlier finding that it
should not condition limited MF–II
support on a requirement that newly
deployed 4G LTE networks be
backwards compatible with GSM and
CDMA network technologies that are
being phased out by the marketplace.
20. Two petitioners now seek
reconsideration of this issue; they argue
that areas that do not have both GSM
and CDMA coverage by unsubsidized
providers should be eligible for MF–II
support. The Commission denies the
petitions for reconsideration of this
issue. Efficiently distributing MF–II
funds and expanding coverage are the
Commission’s priorities, and it must
balance these policy goals against an
issue that even one petitioner notes ‘‘is
one that time and ubiquitous VoLTE
deployment will eventually solve.’’ In
the face of a diminishing technological
issue, the Commission directs MF–II
support in a fiscally-responsible manner
by focusing on areas that lack
unsubsidized, qualified 4G LTE
coverage without considering whether
older technologies are compatible. The
Commission’s gradual phase down of
legacy support will provide consumers
and carriers with time to complete the
transition to newer technologies.
D. Considering Collocation in
Determining Eligible Areas
21. The Commission also denies a
petitioner’s request that it reconsider the
basis on which it determines whether
qualified 4G LTE deployed in an area is
subsidized or unsubsidized. Consistent
with the Commission’s earlier
conclusion, the Commission affirms that
it will determine whether a provider
that deploys qualified 4G LTE in an area
is subsidized or unsubsidized based
only on whether it receives high-cost
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support for that area using USAC highcost disbursement data, as described in
the MF–II Challenge Process Order, and
not based on whether that provider
collocates equipment on a tower of
another provider receiving universal
service support. In addition, the
Commission will not consider
government subsidies other than legacy
mobile wireless CETC high-cost support
and MF–I support in determining
whether a provider’s qualified 4G LTE
is subsidized.
22. The Commission also notes that
the Commission has not collected and
does not intend to collect the tower-bytower data that would be necessary to
conduct the analysis proposed by the
petitioner because the possible benefits
of collecting that data appear small
compared to the significant costs of
collection and analysis. As part of their
Form 477 data filings, mobile wireless
carriers submit maps that depict
coverage without distinguishing
between carrier-owned and collocated
facilities. As discussed in the MF–II
Challenge Process Order, based on a
new, one-time filing of coverage maps
provided under standardized
parameters, the Commission will
determine 4G LTE coverage and
establish the areas presumptively
eligible for MF–II support. Determining
whether coverage depicted in the
standardized coverage maps is provided
through collocation on an area-by-area
basis would be inconsistent with the
Commission’s decision to base MF–II
eligibility strictly on the absence of
unsubsidized, qualified 4G LTE, and
doing so would impose a significant
burden on both carriers and the
Commission.
IV. Second Report and Order
23. Consistent with the Commission’s
overarching objective to transition
quickly away from the legacy CETC
support system, it adopts a streamlined
challenge process that will efficiently
resolve disputes about areas deemed
presumptively ineligible for MF–II
support. Based on the Commission’s
review of the record and its
comprehensive evaluation of the
advantages and disadvantages of the
various proposals, the Commission
concludes that the approach it adopts
will both promote fairness and
minimize burdens on interested parties.
24. Under the adopted approach, the
Commission will begin with a new, onetime collection of 4G LTE coverage data,
which will be used to establish the map
of areas presumptively eligible for MF–
II support. Specifically, the Commission
will require providers to file
propagation maps and model details
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with the Commission indicating their
current 4G LTE coverage, as defined by
download speeds of 5 Mbps at the cell
edge with 80 percent probability and a
30 percent cell loading factor.
25. An interested party (the
challenger) will have 150 days to
initiate a challenge of one or more of the
areas initially deemed ineligible in the
Commission’s map of areas
presumptively eligible for MF–II
support (the challenge window). Prior to
the close of the challenge window, a
challenger may use USAC’s online
challenge portal (the USAC portal) to (1)
access confidential provider-specific
information for areas it wishes to
challenge; (2) identify the area(s) it
wants to challenge; (3) submit evidence
supporting the challenge; and (4) certify
its challenge for the specified area(s).
After agreeing to treat the data as
confidential, challengers will be able to
access via the USAC portal (a) the
underlying provider-specific coverage
maps submitted as part of the new data
collection; (b) the list of pre-approved
provider-specified handsets with which
to conduct speed measurements; and (c)
any other propagation model details
collected as part of the new data
collection. To certify a challenge, a
challenger will be required to identify
the area(s) within each state that it
wishes to challenge and submit actual
outdoor speed test data collected using
standardized parameters. Challengers
will submit their challenges via the
USAC portal. The Commission directs
the Bureaus to work with USAC to
establish the USAC portal through
which a challenger will be able to access
the confidential provider-specific
information that is pertinent to the
challenge, as well as submit its
challenge, including all supporting
evidence and required certifications.
26. Once a challenger submits its
evidence in the USAC portal, the system
will conduct an automatic validation to
determine whether the challenger
provided sufficient evidence to justify
proceeding with each submitted
challenge. In the event the data fail
automatic validation for an area, the
system will flag the problem for the
challenger. If the failure occurs while
the challenge window is still open, the
challenger may submit additional or
modified data, or modify its challenged
area contours, as required, to resolve the
problem. Once the challenge window
closes, however, the challenger will
have no further opportunity to correct
existing, or provide additional, data in
support of its challenge. Only those
challenges to areas that are certified by
a challenger at the close of the window
will proceed.
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27. A challenged party will have an
opportunity to submit additional data
via the USAC portal in response to a
certified challenge (the response
window). If a challenged party does not
oppose the challenge, it does not need
to submit any information. After the
response window closes, Commission
staff will adjudicate certified challenges
and responses.
28. The Commission finds that, in
conjunction with the new data
collection, this framework for the MF–
II challenge process appropriately
balances the need for accuracy against
the burdens imposed on interested
parties. The Commission anticipates
that using standardized new coverage
data as the basis for its initial eligibility
map will improve the accuracy and
reliability of the information available to
potential challengers, which should
result in fewer, more targeted challenges
and should reduce the administrative
burdens on Commission staff,
challengers, providers, and other
stakeholders. Requiring challengers to
submit proof of lack of unsubsidized,
qualified 4G LTE coverage should deter
frivolous challenges based on anecdotal
evidence and, thereby, expedite the
challenge process. Moreover, allowing,
but not requiring, challenged parties to
submit data in response to a challenge
will both promote fairness and
minimize burdens on interested parties.
29. The Commission directs the
Bureaus to issue a public notice or order
(following the Bureaus’ issuance of a
notice and opportunity for comment)
detailing instructions, deadlines, and
requirements for filing a valid challenge,
including file formats, parameters, and
other specifications for conducting
speed tests.
A. Parameters for Generating Initial
Eligible Areas Map
30. In the new, one-time MF–II data
collection, the Commission will require
providers to file propagation maps and
model details with the Commission
indicating their current 4G LTE
coverage, as defined by download
speeds of 5 Mbps at the cell edge with
80 percent probability and a 30 percent
cell loading factor. The Commission
finds that a download speed of 5 Mbps
with 80 percent cell edge probability,
which is equivalent to approximately 92
percent cell area probability, and a 30
percent cell loading factor, strikes a
reasonable balance between expanding
LTE into unserved areas and enhancing
existing suboptimal LTE service areas,
which promotes the optimal use of
limited public funds.
31. The Commission acknowledges
that the 80 percent cell edge probability
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and 30 percent cell loading factor
parameters required for the data
collection are lower than those
proposed in the industry consensus
proposal. Adopting the higher cell edge
probability and cell loading factor
parameters in the industry consensus
proposal, however, would increase the
likelihood that MF–II funds would be
directed to areas that already meet the
MF–II performance requirement of a 10
Mbps median download speed. One
wireless provider submitted recent LTE
speed measurement data analysis based
upon nationwide wireless provider
performance in specific states. The
analysis showed that in some cases less
than 2 percent of the data points
achieved a 5 Mbps download speed 90
percent of the time. Indeed, the
Commission estimates that the cell area
median download speed in the cell
areas associated with the industry
consensus proposal’s proposed
parameters would be significantly in
excess of 10 Mbps and therefore higher
than the MF–II performance
requirement. In fact, the Commission
estimates that areas larger than industry
consensus proposal’s proposed cell
areas would have median download
speeds in excess of 10 Mbps. The
Commission’s analysis shows that the
80 percent cell edge probability it
adopts corresponds with a 92 percent
cell area probability, which means users
would have a greater than 90 percent
chance of achieving a download speed
of at least 5 Mbps across the entire
coverage area of a cell. In addition, these
parameters exceed the parameters that
wireless operators typically use when
deploying networks into previouslyunserved areas (greenfield builds) of 75
percent cell edge probability and 90
percent cell area probability. In light of
the difficulties of precisely determining
the coverage areas where service with a
minimum download speed of 5 Mbps is
available, the Commission finds that a
cell edge probability of 80 percent and
a cell area probability of 92 percent
appropriately balance the concern of
misrepresenting coverage with its
priority of directing its limited universal
service funds on areas most in need of
support. Further, adoption of the
industry consensus proposal’s proposed
parameters would likely result in MF–
II support being used to upgrade or
over-build current 4G LTE networks
rather than to expand 4G LTE coverage
to unserved areas.
32. In addition, the Commission
believes that a 30 percent cell loading
factor in rural areas is more appropriate
for MF–II purposes than the industry
consensus proposal’s proposed 50
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percent cell loading factor, which is
more typical in non-rural areas where
there is more uniform traffic. Typical
cell site density in rural areas is much
lower than in urban areas, resulting in
an overall lower interference
environment. Additionally, when
compared to urban and suburban areas,
rural areas typically have lower
amounts of uniform traffic among cells
because of the varied population
distribution across cells, lower numbers
of simultaneous users, and lower overall
demands on the network over time. As
such, cell loading is typically lower in
rural areas than in urban and suburban
areas. The lower cell edge probability
and cell loading factor parameters for
the data collection will likely decrease
the eligible areas and target the limited
MF–II funds to more areas that are
currently unserved or served by 4G LTE
networks with a median download
speed below 10 Mbps. If the
Commission was to adopt a lower cell
edge probability, it would unnecessarily
risk focusing funds on the costliest to
serve areas, thus decreasing the square
miles receiving support in the auction
and consequently reducing the cost
effectiveness of the MF–II program. A
lower cell edge probability requirement
would likely decrease the eligible areas
with marginal LTE coverage. Thus,
using its predictive judgment, the
Commission finds that these parameters
meet its standards for the availability of
coverage and are best suited to
advancing its goals for MF–II.
33. The Commission recognizes that
some may have concerns about the
effect of the parameters it adopts on the
availability of certain mobile
applications, for instance telemedicine
and precision agriculture, in rural areas.
The Commission believes those
concerns are misplaced. Remote
monitoring and diagnosing of medical
conditions and precision agriculture,
which uses satellite GPS positioning
and remote sensors in farming
operations, are typically lowerbandwidth, machine-to-machine
applications and should not
significantly increase the overall cell
loading or require speeds greater than 5
Mbps. Further, the Commission believes
that focusing its limited funds on
expanding service to the areas that
currently lack 4G LTE service is the best
way to increase the availability of these
services in rural areas. Applying a
higher cell loading factor more typical
of an urban or suburban area or
increasing the cell edge probability even
further is more likely to direct funds to
more areas that already have coverage
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that can support telemedicine and
precision agriculture applications.
34. As one party proposed, filers shall
report an outdoor level of coverage. The
coverage boundaries shall have a
resolution of 100 meters (approximately
three arc-seconds) or better, and shall
likewise use an appropriate clutter
factor and terrain model with a
resolution of 100 meters or better. In
addition, filers shall use the optimized
RF propagation models and parameters
used in their normal course of business.
The Commission directs the Bureaus to
specify what other propagation model
details and parameters must be filed
alongside such propagation maps in a
subsequent public notice. In addition to
submitting propagation maps and model
details of 4G LTE coverage, providers
shall report the signal strength (RSRP)
and clutter factor categories used to
generate their coverage maps. If the
signal strength in the coverage maps
varies regionally, then such variations
must be reported. The providers must
report the loss value associated with
each clutter factor category used in their
coverage maps. Additionally, providers
shall submit a list of at least three
readily-available handsets that
challengers can use to conduct speed
tests, as well as a certification, under
penalty of perjury, by a qualified
engineer that the propagation maps and
model details reflect the filer’s coverage
as of the generation date of the map in
accordance with all other parameters.
The Commission clarifies that the
handsets identified by providers must
include at least one compatible with
industry-standard drive test software.
The Bureaus will issue further guidance
or requirements on the handsets that
may be used for speed tests in a
subsequent public notice.
35. The Commission finds that
requiring a specific signal strength
benchmark, as sought by several
commenters, is not necessary for these
propagation maps because the cell edge
speed threshold requirement subsumes
a specific signal strength value
depending on specific operating signal
bandwidth and the network deployment
configurations. A 10 MHz bandwidth
has double the noise power of the 5
MHz bandwidth; thus, it requires higher
signal strengths for the same signal
quality (SNR) requirement. The thermal
noise power equation indicates that
noise power is directly proportional to
the bandwidth. The Commission’s
analysis comparing results of theoretical
propagation models and actual speed
test data indicates that the signal
strength parameter in propagation
models may not be closely correlated
with actual on-the-ground data in a
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particular geographic area. As a result,
and in light of the differing technical
characteristics of service providers’ LTE
deployments, the Commission decides
to benchmark download speed, which is
what the customer receives, rather than
signal strength, to determine whether a
particular geographic area is eligible or
not for MF–II support. With this in
mind, the Commission sets the
download speed at 5 Mbps at 80 percent
probability, and will evaluate challenges
on the basis of measured download
speeds. In other words, the topography
of an area as well as summer foliage
may lead to differences between
expected signal strength and the actual
experienced speed of consumers. Thus,
the Commission’s cell edge speed
threshold requirement should result in
more accurate data in America’s deserts,
prairies, rolling hills, mountains, and
forests than an across-the-board signal
strength parameter. The Commission is
mindful, however, of the concerns of
some providers regarding signal
strengths, and the Commission will, as
noted above, require providers to report
signal strength with their coverage
maps. The signal strength information
will be available to challengers. When
issuing filing instructions, the
Commission directs the Bureaus to
explain what additional parameters
(such as signal strength and clutter
categories) and information must be
included with coverage map filings, and
subsequently disclosed to challengers in
the challenge process.
36. In a public notice to be released
later in the MF–II process, the
Commission directs the Bureaus to
provide instructions for how to file the
data submission, including a data
specification, formatting information,
and any other technical parameters that
may be necessary for such filings. In
order to provide ample time for carriers
to generate data in accordance with
these parameters, the Commission
directs the Bureaus to set the deadline
for carriers to submit data for the onetime data collection at least 90 days
after the release of the filing instructions
public notice.
B. Interested Parties Eligible To
Participate
37. Based on the Commission’s
experience in the challenge processes
for MF–I and CAF–II, and after carefully
weighing the record on this issue, the
Commission concludes that government
entities (state, local, and Tribal) and all
service providers required to file Form
477 data with the Commission are best
suited to participate as challengers in
the MF–II challenge process. Allowing
these interested parties to participate in
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the challenge process satisfies the
Commission’s policy goal of
administrative efficiency because they
are most likely to be able to acquire the
requisite data sufficient to support a
valid challenge and, in many cases, are
already familiar with filing data with
USAC. Many Form 477 filers have a preexisting relationship (i.e., an account)
with USAC because they are required to
make filings on a regular basis with
USAC. To the extent that any Form 477
filer or government entity eligible to
participate does not have an account
with which to authenticate against the
USAC single sign-on system by the time
the USAC portal opens, such interested
parties will be required to request an
account. The Commission directs the
Bureaus to detail this process along with
other instructions to file a valid
challenge in a subsequent public notice.
38. As a practical matter, the
Commission does not expect that an
individual consumer would have the
time, ability, or resources to file a valid
challenge. Instead, the Commission
anticipates that an individual consumer
will be best served by participating in
the MF–II challenge process through his
or her state, local, or Tribal government
entity. This expectation is supported by
past practice before the agency, as
individual consumers did not file
challenges in either the MF–I or CAF
proceedings. If, however, a consumer,
organization, or business believes that
its interests cannot be met through its
state, local, or Tribal government entity,
and it wishes to participate in the
process as a challenger, it is free to file
a waiver with the Commission for good
cause shown, either on its own or with
the assistance of an organization.
Waivers may be submitted by email to
auction904@fcc.gov or delivered in hard
copy to Margaret W. Wiener, Chief,
Auctions and Spectrum Access
Division, Wireless Telecommunications
Bureau, FCC, 445 12th Street SW., Room
6–C217, Washington, DC 20554. The
Commission anticipates granting
waivers in cases in which an individual,
organization, or business demonstrates a
bona fide interest in the challenge
process and a plausible ability to submit
a valid challenge. And the Commission
encourages state commissions, statelevel broadband deployment offices,
county and municipal executives and
councils, Tribal governments, and other
governmental entities to participate
robustly in the challenge process to
ensure that the Commission’s
information about where service is or is
not available is as accurate as possible.
39. Moreover, given the
improvements the Commission expects
to see in the standardized information
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that will be collected for MF–II
purposes, it anticipates that there
should be less concern associated with
eligible area determinations, which, in
turn, should reduce the likelihood that
individual consumers should have to
bear the burden of seeking to participate
in the process. As the Commission
explained in the Mobility Fund II
FNPRM, ‘‘the challenge process must
not impede the implementation of MF–
II support.’’ The Commission’s decision
therefore fosters its commitment to
designing a challenge process that is as
efficient and open as possible.
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C. Types of Challenges
40. Because the Commission is
undertaking a new collection of
standardized, more reliable, and more
recent 4G LTE coverage data, it will
only permit challenges for areas that the
Bureaus identify as ineligible for MF–II
support. The Commission anticipates
that a party that submits a challenge for
an eligible area will likely be the
unsubsidized service provider that
submitted and certified the data used to
make the initial eligibility
determination for the challenged area.
As such, the challenge would consist of
nothing more than an update to or
correction of the coverage data
submitted by the unsubsidized service
provider during the new data collection
in compliance with the Commission’s
new requirements. Since, under the
framework the Commission adopts,
service providers will be required to
update their coverage data shortly
before the start of the challenge process,
permitting such ‘‘corrections’’ within
the challenge process would be
administratively inefficient and
unnecessarily delay the deployment of
MF–II support. The Commission is
confident that the new data collection
will give providers ample opportunity
to correct and/or update the coverage
data previously provided via Form 477.
Therefore, the Commission will not
permit challenges for areas that the
Bureaus identify as eligible for MF–II
support.
D. Restricting De Minimis Challenges
41. As part of the framework the
Commission adopts for the MF–II
challenge process, it will limit
challenges to de minimis geographic
areas to increase the efficiency of the
challenge process and reduce the
administrative complications of
resolving challenges for very small
coverage gaps. Challengers will not be
required to match up challenged areas
to census blocks or census block groups
(CBGs). The Commission believes this
change will ease the filing burden on
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challengers because the data required
will align more closely with data
already collected and maintained in the
normal course of business. Consistent
with this approach, the Commission
will not link de minimis challenges to
CBGs, because a significant portion of
CBGs are small enough (less than 1
square kilometer) that establishing a
minimum area for challenges as a
portion of a CBG would make the de
minimis challenge area so small as to be
inconsequential for improving
efficiency in the challenge process.
Accordingly, the Commission will
require only that any challenged area be
of a minimum size of at least one square
kilometer. Ineligible areas of less than
one square kilometer can be subject to
challenge insofar as they are part of a
challenge where the total size of areas
being challenged exceeds the de
minimis size requirement. This
minimum size requirement will prevent
challenges solely regarding minor,
patchy areas often at the edge of a
covered area, which aligns with the
overall goal of using MF–II funds to
expand service to unserved areas.
E. Data Required for Submission of
Challenge
42. The Commission finds that a
challenger must submit detailed proof of
lack of unsubsidized, qualified 4G LTE
coverage in support of its challenge. For
each state, a challenger must identify
the specific area(s) it wants to challenge
and submit actual outdoor speed test
data that satisfy the parameters the
Commission adopts in the MF–II
Challenge Process Order, as well as any
other parameters that the Commission
or Bureaus may implement. If the
challenged area(s) extend across state
borders, a challenger will need to
initiate separate challenges for each
state into which the challenged area(s)
extend. The speed test data must be
collected using the latest devices
specifically authorized by the providers
that submitted 4G LTE coverage data in
response to the new, one-time data
collection discussed above (i.e.,
provider-specified handsets). The
Commission finds that such ‘‘on the
ground’’ data collected using
standardized parameters are a reliable
form of evidence because they simulate
consumers’ actual experience.
43. These requirements strengthen the
Commission’s ability to design an
administratively efficient challenge
process that does not impede
implementation of MF–II. The
Commission finds that requiring
challengers to submit detailed proof of
lack of unsubsidized, qualified 4G LTE
coverage instead of ‘‘anecdotal
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evidence’’ is fair, minimizes the burden
on providers and Commission staff, and
should help deter excessive and
unfounded challenges that could delay
the deployment of MF–II support. The
Commission agrees with several
commenters that requiring actual speed
test data will not impose an excessive
burden on challengers, including small
carriers. The Commission expects that
challenged areas will be sufficiently
circumscribed that challengers will not
need to collect speed test data over
unnecessarily large areas. Further, the
Commission expects that small carriers
are likely to already own drive test
equipment. To the extent they do not,
the Commission’s decision to allow
application-based tests provides a less
expensive and more mobile means of
collecting data. Thus, the Commission
declines to allow a challenger to initiate
the challenge process with an
unsubstantiated good-faith assertion of
lack of unsubsidized, qualified 4G LTE
coverage.
1. Standard Parameters
44. Although the Commission agrees
with commenters that some flexibility
with testing standards is warranted, it
finds it necessary to adopt clear
guidance and parameters on speed test
data to ensure that the evidence
submitted by challengers is reliable,
accurately reflects consumer experience
in the challenged area, and can be
analyzed quickly and efficiently. As a
preliminary matter, the Commission
will allow challengers to submit speed
data from hardware- or software-based
drive tests or application-based tests
that cover the challenged area. To
minimize the burdens on challengers,
the Commission will not require that an
independent third party conduct the
speed tests. The Commission will
require that all speed tests be conducted
pursuant to standard parameters using
Commission-approved testing methods
on pre-approved handset models.
Accordingly, the Commission expects
that it would be difficult to manipulate
the data collected regardless of whether
a challenger uses drive-based or
application-based tests as both types of
tests can automatically generate data
reports that can conform to the
specifications for the data submission.
The Commission will, however, require
that the speed test data be substantiated
by the certification of a qualified
engineer or official under penalty of
perjury. For challengers that are
governmental entities and do not have
a qualified engineer available to certify,
the Commission will allow certification
by a government official authorized to
act on behalf of the organization and
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with actual knowledge of the accuracy
of the underlying data.
45. A challenger must provide proof
of lack of unsubsidized, qualified 4G
LTE coverage in the form of measured
download throughput test data for each
of the unsubsidized providers claiming
qualified 4G LTE coverage in the
challenged area. As part of the new MF–
II data collection, the Commission will
require service providers with qualified
4G LTE coverage to identify at least
three readily available handset models
appropriate for testing those providers’
coverage. The Commission will require
providers to specify at least one handset
that is compatible with industrystandard drive test software. The
Commission directs the Bureaus to
propose and adopt further guidance on
the types of devices that may be used for
speed tests in the subsequent public
notices. Challengers electing to use
application-based tests and softwarebased drive tests must use the
applicable handsets specified by each
unsubsidized service provider with
coverage in the challenged area. In
addition, to accurately reflect consumer
experience in the challenged area, the
challenger must purchase an
appropriate service plan from each
unsubsidized service provider in the
challenged area. An appropriate service
plan would allow for speed tests of full
network performance, e.g., an unlimited
high-speed data plan. If there are
multiple unsubsidized service providers
in the challenged area, the challenger
must purchase service plans that are
comparable (i.e., similar with respect to
services provided).
46. All speed tests must be conducted
between the hours of 06:00 a.m. and
12:00 a.m. local time, when consumers
are most likely to use mobile broadband
data. To ensure that the speed test data
reflect consumer experience throughout
the entire challenged area, a challenger
must take speed measurements that are
no more than a fixed distance apart from
one another within the challenged area,
and which substantially cover the entire
area. The Commission directs the
Bureaus to adopt the specific value for
the maximum distance between speed
tests after seeking comment in a
subsequent public notice. This value
will be no greater than one mile. This
requirement serves as an upper bound,
and a challenger will be free to submit
measurements taken more frequently.
While the Commission declines to adopt
the specific parameter here, it is
convinced that a value within this range
will strike the correct balance between
the benefits of increased accuracy, and
the harms of burdens on small carriers
and to the efficient administration of
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challenges. The Commission also agrees
with one commenter that the data
should reflect recent performance.
However, given upcoming, expected
deployment of new 4G LTE service in
conjunction with the Commission’s
decision to perform a new data
collection, the Commission is concerned
that speed measurements taken before
the submission of updated coverage
maps may not reflect the current
consumer experience. Thus, the
Commission will only accept data that
were collected after the publication of
the initial eligibility map and within six
months of the scheduled close of the
challenge window.
47. The Commission directs the
Bureaus to seek comment on and to
implement any additional parameters
and/or to require the submission of
additional types of relevant data, such
as signal strength tests, and then to
implement any such parameters or
requirements as appropriate to ensure
that speed tests accurately reflect
consumer experience in the challenged
area, by issuing an order or public
notice providing detailed instructions,
guidance, and specifications for
conducting speed tests.
2. Validation of Challenger’s Data
48. The Commission adopts a general
framework for automatic system
validation of a challenger’s evidence,
and it directs the Bureaus to work with
USAC to implement specific parameters
for the validation process. Using an
automated process is the most efficient
way to evaluate the data submitted by
a challenger because it ensures that the
objective validation criteria are applied
consistently across every challenge.
49. Under this approach, at the outset
the USAC system will superimpose each
identified challenged area on the initial
eligibility map and will remove any
portions that overlap eligible areas. If a
challenged area meets the de minimis
area threshold, that challenge will
proceed. If it does not meet the
threshold, the system will flag the
failure and will not accept that
challenge for submission unless and
until the challenger submits during the
challenge window new data that meet
the threshold.
50. Next, the USAC system will
analyze the geographic coordinates of
the points at which the challenger
conducted the speed tests and will
validate that the data associated with
each speed test point meet the
specifications for speed tests. To be
counted towards a valid challenge, the
speed test must record a download
speed less than 5 Mbps (counted speed
tests) and meet all other standard
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parameters. In order to implement the
requirement that the tests substantially
cover the entire challenged area and that
each point is no more than a fixed
distance apart, the system will create a
buffer (i.e., draw a circle of fixed size)
around each counted speed test point
and calculate the area of these buffered
points (speed test buffer area). The
system will apply a buffer with a radius
equal to half of the maximum distance
parameter, and will trim any portion of
the buffer that is outside of the
challenged area. In addition, where a
challenged area overlaps the submitted
coverage map of more than one
incumbent provider, the system will
require counted speed tests for each
provider in order to calculate the speed
test buffer area. For each challenged
area, if the speed test buffer area covers
at least 75 percent of the challenged
area, the challenge will pass validation,
and once certified, these challenged
area(s) will be presented to the
incumbent provider(s) for a response.
The area of a circle with diameter
superimposed on a square with width is
approximately 78.5 percent, therefore
setting the validation threshold at 75
percent area coverage ensures that speed
measurements conducted no more than
a fixed distance apart from one another
in a challenged area are sufficient to
establish coverage of the entire area,
when each measurement point is
buffered by a radius of half of the fixed
distance parameter. If the speed test
buffer area does not cover at least 75
percent of the challenged area, the
challenge for that area will fail
validation unless the challenger submits
new evidence or modifies its challenge
during the challenge window such that
it meets the 75 percent threshold.
51. The USAC system will require
speed tests to substantially cover the
entire challenged area (i.e., 75 percent)
regardless of any characteristics of the
area, including whether any part of the
area is inaccessible due to terrain,
private property, or other reason. The
Commission declines to provide any
special accommodations for a challenger
to indicate that it was unable to access
any part of the challenged area.
Challengers have the burden of proving
that an area deemed ineligible is, in fact,
not covered by at least one carrier
providing qualified, unsubsidized 4G
LTE service. Providing special
accommodations that would relieve
challengers of the need to furnish actual
evidence would be inconsistent with
this decision, would be difficult to
administer, and would increase the
likelihood of gamesmanship, none of
which further the Commission’s goal of
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conducting a fair and efficient challenge
process in a timely manner. The
Commission notes that while the system
will not provide any special
accommodations, challengers may still
include areas with inaccessible land in
their challenges so long as the submitted
speed measurements otherwise meet the
validation threshold showing that 75
percent of the area has insufficient
coverage. Moreover, this decision is
confined only to the challenge process;
a bidder in the MF–II auction may still
bid for support to serve eligible areas
that include land that may be
inaccessible. A bidder that ultimately
wins support to serve an area with
inaccessible lands will remain
responsible for demonstrating its
performance in serving that area.
52. Each challenged area that meets
the de minimis threshold will be
considered individually. Challenged
areas that meet the validations,
including the 75 percent speed test
buffer area overlap, will proceed once
certified by the challenger. The USAC
system will determine which portions of
a challenged area overlap which 4G LTE
providers, and respondents will see
only those challenged areas and speed
test buffer areas that overlap their 4G
LTE coverage.
F. Opportunity To Respond to
Challenges
53. The Commission will provide
challenged parties a limited opportunity
to submit additional data in response to
a challenge. The Commission finds that
this approach promotes its goals of a fair
and fiscally responsible MF–II program
while minimizing the burdens on
challenged parties. Giving challenged
parties an opportunity to contest a
challenge and submit more detailed
coverage data to supplement the
information provided during the initial
data collection will help to ensure that
only areas truly lacking unsubsidized,
qualified 4G LTE coverage will receive
MF–II support.
54. After the challenge window
closes, the response window will open.
Using the USAC portal, challenged
parties will have 30 days after the
opening of the response window to: (1)
Access and review the data submitted
by the challenger with respect to the
challenged area; and (2) submit
additional data/information to oppose
the challenge (i.e., demonstrate that the
challenger’s speed test data are invalid
or do not accurately reflect network
performance). If a respondent chooses to
respond, it need only conduct speed
tests of its own network (or gather its
own geolocated, device-specific data
from network monitoring software) in
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the disputed areas, which should
require less time to complete than a
challenger testing multiple networks in
multiple areas for data to substantiate a
valid challenge. Hence, the Commission
agrees with commenters that propose
that the response window does not need
to be open for the same amount of time
as the challenge window. If a challenged
party does not oppose the challenge, it
does not need to submit any additional
data. A challenged party will not,
however, have a further opportunity to
submit any additional data for the
Commission’s consideration after the
response window closes.
55. The Commission declines to
require a specific level of response from
challenged parties. The Commission
will accept certain technical
information that is probative regarding
the validity of a challenger’s speed tests
including speed test data and other
device-specific data collected from
transmitter monitoring software. If a
challenged party chooses to submit its
own speed test data, the data must
conform to the same standards and
requirements the Commission adopts in
the MF–II Challenge Process Order for
challengers, except that it will only
accept data from challenged parties that
were collected after the publication of
the initial eligibility map and within six
months of the scheduled close of the
response window. Any evidence
submitted by a challenged party in
response to a challenge must be certified
by a qualified engineer or official under
penalty of perjury. Since the
Commission is not requiring a specific
level of response from challenged
parties, the response data will not be
subject to USAC’s automatic system
validation process.
56. Although the Commission is
willing to accept certain technical data
that are probative regarding the validity
of a challenger’s speed tests, the data
must be reliable and credible to be
useful during the adjudication process.
Specifically, technical data other than
speed tests submitted by a challenged
party, including data from transmitter
monitoring software, should include
geolocated, device-specific throughput
measurements or other device-specific
information (rather than generalized key
performance indicator statistics for a
cell-site) in order to be useful to help
refute a challenge. The Commission
agrees with commenters that ‘‘on the
ground’’ data collected using
standardized parameters are a reliable
form of evidence because they simulate
what consumers actually experience.
Thus, the Commission expects that
speed test data would be particularly
persuasive evidence for challenged
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parties to submit to refute a challenge,
especially since it will be easier for the
Bureaus to compare equivalent data.
While the system will not validate a
challenged party’s response data, to be
probative in order to refute a challenge,
speed tests must record a download
speed of at least 5 Mbps and meet all
other standard parameters.
57. The Commission directs the
Bureaus to issue an order or public
notice implementing any additional
requirements that may be necessary or
appropriate for data submitted by a
challenged party in response to a
challenge. Such order or notice will
contain any further detailed
instructions, guidance, and
specifications for responding to a
challenge.
G. Adjudication of Challenges
58. Consistent with the standard of
review adopted in the Connect America
Fund Report & Order, 78 FR 38227, June
26, 2013, and the CAF II Challenge
Process Order, 78 FR 32991, June 3,
2013, the Commission adopts a
preponderance of the evidence standard
to evaluate the merits of any challenges.
Additionally, the Commission adopts its
proposal that the challenger shall bear
the burden of persuasion. If, upon
review of all the evidence submitted in
the challenge, it appears that the
challenger has not submitted sufficient
evidence to demonstrate that it is more
likely than not that the challenged area
does not have qualified LTE coverage,
the challenge will fail under this
standard. Following the close of the
response window, the Bureaus will
adjudicate certified challenges based
upon this standard and the evidence
submitted by the challenger and
challenged party(ies) to determine
whether adjustments to the initial
eligibility map are appropriate. The
Bureaus will weigh the evidence
submitted by challengers and
challenged parties based on its
reliability, giving more credence to data
that were collected pursuant to the
parameters established in the MF–II
Challenge Process Order and any
additional standards that the
Commission or Bureaus may adopt. The
Commission retains discretion to
discount the weight of a challenger’s
evidence if a challenge appears
designed to undermine the goals of MF–
II. Particularly in light of the steps the
Commission has taken to address
questions about the reliability of Form
477 data in response to the comments,
the Commission concludes that it is
appropriate that the burden rest on the
challenger. The Commission finds that
placing the burden of proof on the
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challenger both incentivizes challengers
to present a full evidentiary record as
well as discourages frivolous filings,
thus supporting its goal of
administrative efficiency and allowing
for disbursement of support to unserved
areas without unreasonable delay.
59. With respect to the evidentiary
standard, comments submitted in the
record support a preponderance of the
evidence standard, and no commenters
supported the higher standard of clear
and convincing evidence. The
preponderance of the evidence standard
of review is consistent with the CAF
challenge processes, as well as with a
wide body of Commission precedent. A
more demanding standard would
impose an evidentiary burden that is in
tension with the Commission’s overall
goal of making the most accurate
determinations based on the evidence of
record. The Commission finds that
applying a preponderance of the
evidence standard strikes the
appropriate balance, potentially
reducing the number of disputed areas
and ensuring that the Commission has
the data necessary to evaluate the merits
of any challenges, while not unduly
burdening smaller providers.
V. Procedural Matters
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A. Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis
60. The MF–II Challenge Process
Order contains new information
collection requirements subject to the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA), Public Law 104–13. It will be
submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) for review under
section 3507(d) of the PRA. OMB, the
general public, and other Federal
agencies are invited to comment on the
new information collection
requirements contained in this
proceeding. In addition, the
Commission notes that pursuant to the
Small Business Paperwork Relief Act of
2002, it previously sought specific
comment on how the Commission might
further reduce the information
collection burden for small business
concerns with fewer than 25 employees.
The Commission describes impacts that
might affect small businesses, which
include most businesses with fewer
than 25 employees, in the Final
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA)
in Appendix A of the MF–II Challenge
Process Order.
B. Congressional Review Act
61. The Commission will send a copy
of the MF–II Challenge Process Order to
Congress and the Government
Accountability Office pursuant to the
Congressional Review Act.
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C. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
62. As required by the Regulatory
Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended
(RFA), an Initial Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis (IRFA) was incorporated in the
Further Notice section of the Mobility
Fund II FNPRM adopted in February
2017. The Commission sought written
public comment on the proposals in the
Mobility Fund II FNPRM including
comment on the IRFA. The Commission
received three comments in response to
the IRFA. The Commission also
included a Final Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis (FRFA) in the Report and
Order section of the February 2017
Mobility Fund II Report and Order.
Seven petitions for reconsideration, one
comment in support of a petition for
reconsideration, two oppositions to the
petitions, and six replies to the
oppositions were received by the
Commission in response to the Mobility
Fund II Report and Order. This FRFA
addresses the comments on the IRFA
and analyzes the modifications adopted
in response to the petitions, comments,
and responsive filings to the Mobility
Fund II Report and Order. This FRFA
conforms to the RFA.
1. Need for, and Objectives of, This
Order on Reconsideration and Second
Report and Order
63. Rural and high-cost areas of the
United States trail significantly behind
urban areas in the growth of 4G LTE
service. The Mobility Fund Phase II
(MF–II) will use a market-based, multiround reverse auction and allow the
Commission to redirect its limited
resources to those areas of the country
lacking unsubsidized, qualified 4G LTE
service.
64. In the MF–II Challenge Process
Order, the Commission adopts
procedures for a challenge process to
supplement its coverage maps by
providing an opportunity for interested
parties to provide up-to-date LTE
coverage data to determine a map of
areas presumptively eligible for MF–II
support. Interested parties will have the
ability to contest this initial
determination that an area is ineligible
for MF–II support because an
unsubsidized service provider
submitted data that demonstrates it is
providing qualified 4G LTE service
there. The challenge process adopted in
the MF–II Challenge Process Order
enables the Commission to resolve
eligible-area disputes in an
administratively efficient and fiscally
responsible manner.
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2. Summary of Significant Issues Raised
by Public Comments in Response to the
IRFA
65. The Commission received one
comment, one reply comment, and one
written ex parte submission bearing on
the IRFA. CCA and RWA believe that a
challenge process without a required
data collection would better fulfill the
directive of the RFA. NTCA similarly
expressed concern that requiring all
providers, including small entities, to
file new Form 477 data to determine
eligibility for MF–II support by area
would be unnecessary and contrary to
the directive of the RFA.
66. The Commission is sensitive to
the burden on small entities and other
providers associated with the new data
collection. However, the benefits of
standardized, reliable data on which to
base eligibility determinations outweigh
the costs associated with their
collection. Moreover, the use of newly
collected data enables the Commission
to adopt a streamlined challenge process
that will reduce the burden on
challengers and providers that respond
to challenges. Fewer small providers
will be forced to bring a challenge, and
challenges will be more directed, more
accurate, and less onerous because the
Commission will have the best-available
starting point of standardized data. The
Commission also eases the burden of the
new data collection on small entities by
limiting the one-time data collection to
providers who have previously reported
4G LTE coverage in Form 477 and have
qualified 4G LTE coverage. The limited
scope of the collection addresses the
concerns of some of the smaller
providers who objected to the potential
burden of a universal new filing. The
Commission has eased the burden of the
collection by only requiring a filing
from those who have easy access to the
necessary data. Additional steps taken
to minimize the burden of the challenge
process on small entities are discussed
below.
3. Response to Comments by the Chief
Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration
67. Pursuant to the Small Business
Jobs Act of 2010, which amended the
RFA, the Commission is required to
respond to any comments filed by the
Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration (SBA) in
response to the proposed rule(s) and to
provide a detailed statement of any
change made to the proposed rule(s) as
a result of those comments.
68. The Chief Counsel did not file any
comments in response to the proposed
procedures in this proceeding.
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4. Description and Estimate of the
Number of Small Entities to Which the
Proposed Rules Will Apply
69. The RFA directs agencies to
provide a description of, and where
feasible, an estimate of the number of
small entities that may be affected by
the rules adopted herein. The RFA
generally defines the term ‘‘small
entity’’ as having the same meaning as
the terms ‘‘small business,’’ ‘‘small
organization,’’ and ‘‘small governmental
jurisdiction.’’ In addition, the term
‘‘small business’’ has the same meaning
as the term ‘‘small-business concern’’
under the Small Business Act. A ‘‘smallbusiness concern’’ is one which: (1) Is
independently owned and operated; (2)
is not dominant in its field of operation;
and (3) satisfies any additional criteria
established by the SBA.
70. Small Entities, Small
Organizations, Small Governmental
Jurisdictions. The Commission’s actions,
over time, may affect small entities that
are not easily categorized at present.
The Commission therefore describes
here, at the outset, three broad groups of
small entities that could be directly
affected herein. First, while there are
industry-specific size standards for
small businesses that are used in the
regulatory flexibility analysis, according
to data from the SBA’s Office of
Advocacy, in general a small business is
an independent business having fewer
than 500 employees. These types of
small businesses represent 99.9 percent
of all businesses in the United States
which translates to 28.8 million
businesses. Next, the type of small
entity described as a ‘‘small
organization’’ is generally ‘‘any not-forprofit enterprise which is independently
owned and operated and is not
dominant in its field.’’ Nationwide, as of
2007, there were approximately
1,621,215 small organizations. 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.’’ U.S. Census
Bureau data for 2012 indicate that there
were 89,476 local governmental
jurisdictions in the United States. The
Commission estimates that, of this total,
as many as 88,715 entities may qualify
as ‘‘small governmental jurisdictions.’’
Thus, the Commission estimates that
most governmental jurisdictions are
small.
71. Wireless Telecommunications
Carriers (except Satellite). This industry
comprises establishments engaged in
operating and maintaining switching
and transmission facilities to provide
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communications via the airwaves.
Establishments in this industry have
spectrum licenses and provide services
using that spectrum, such as cellular
services, paging services, wireless
internet access, and wireless video
services. The appropriate size standard
under SBA rules is that such a business
is small if it has 1,500 or fewer
employees. For this industry, U.S.
Census data for 2012 show that there
were 967 firms that operated for the
entire year. Of this total, 955 firms had
employment of 999 or fewer employees
and 12 had employment of 1000
employees or more. Thus under this
category and the associated size
standard, the Commission estimates that
the majority of wireless
telecommunications carriers (except
satellite) are small entities.
72. The Commission’s own data—
available in its Universal Licensing
System—indicate that, as of October 25,
2016, there are 280 Cellular licensees
that will be affected by its actions. The
Commission does not know how many
of these licensees are small, as the
Commission does not collect that
information for these types of entities.
Similarly, according to internally
developed Commission data, 413
carriers reported that they were engaged
in the provision of wireless telephony,
including cellular service, Personal
Communications Service, and
Specialized Mobile Radio Telephony
services. Of this total, an estimated 261
have 1,500 or fewer employees, and 152
have more than 1,500 employees. Thus,
using available data, the Commission
estimates that the majority of wireless
firms can be considered small.
73. Wired Telecommunications
Carriers. The U.S. Census Bureau
defines this industry as ‘‘establishments
primarily engaged in operating and/or
providing access to transmission
facilities and infrastructure that they
own and/or lease for the transmission of
voice, data, text, sound, and video using
wired communications networks.
Transmission facilities may be based on
a single technology or a combination of
technologies. Establishments in this
industry use the wired
telecommunications network facilities
that they operate to provide a variety of
services, such as wired telephony
services, including VoIP services, wired
(cable) audio and video programming
distribution, and wired broadband
internet services. By exception,
establishments providing satellite
television distribution services using
facilities and infrastructure that they
operate are included in this industry.’’
The SBA has developed a small
business size standard for Wired
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Telecommunications Carriers, which
consists of all such companies having
1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census
data for 2012 show that there were 3,117
firms that operated that year. Of this
total, 3,083 operated with fewer than
1,000 employees. Thus, under this size
standard, the majority of firms in this
industry can be considered small.
5. Description of Projected Reporting,
Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance
Requirements
74. In the MF–II Challenge Process
Order, the Commission adopts
parameters both for establishing an
eligible area baseline prior to the MF–
II challenge process and for a
streamlined challenge process. The
process will efficiently resolve disputes
about areas shown as eligible for MF–II
support on the initial eligibility map
that will be generated based on the new
collection of 4G LTE coverage data. The
Commission summarizes the reporting
and other obligations of the MF–II
challenge process in the accompanying
MF–II Challenge Process Order.
Additional information on these
requirements can be found in the MF–
II Challenge Process Order at paragraphs
27–63.
75. To establish the map of areas
presumptively eligible for MF–II
support, all current Form 477 filers that
have previously reported qualified 4G
LTE coverage and have qualified 4G
LTE coverage based on the data
specification set forth in the MF–II
Challenge Process Order will be
required to submit to the Commission a
one-time new data filing detailing 4G
LTE coverage. Providers will be
required to file propagation maps and
model details indicating current 4G LTE
coverage, as defined by download
speeds of 5 Mbps at the cell edge with
80 percent probability and a 30 percent
cell loading factor. Filers should report
an outdoor level of coverage. The
coverage boundaries shall have a
resolution of 100 meters (approximately
three arc-seconds) or better and shall
likewise use an appropriate clutter
factor and terrain model with a
resolution of 100 meters or better.
Providers shall report the signal strength
(RSRP) and clutter factor categories used
to generate their coverage maps. If the
signal strength in the coverage maps
varies regionally, then such variations
must be reported. The providers must
report the loss value associated with
each clutter factor category used in their
coverage maps. In addition, filers
should use the optimized RF
propagation models and parameters that
they have used in their normal course
of business, subject to further
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requirements set forth in subsequent
public notices. Carriers will be required
to submit data for the one-time
collection at least 90 days after the
release of the filing instructions public
notice.
76. In conjunction with submitting
propagation maps, model details, and
signal strength of 4G LTE coverage,
providers will submit a list of at least
three readily-available handset models
appropriate for challengers wishing to
conduct a speed test of the providers’
coverage in a particular area, and a
certification, under penalty of perjury,
by a qualified engineer or government
official that the propagation map and
model details reflect the filer’s coverage
as of the generation date of the map in
accordance with all other parameters.
For challengers that are governmental
entities and do not have a qualified
engineer available to certify, the
Commission will allow certification by
a government official authorized to act
on behalf of the organization and with
actual knowledge of the accuracy of the
underlying data.
77. To initiate a challenge, a
challenger must, within the 150-day
challenge window: (1) Access
confidential, provider-specific
information for areas it wishes to
challenge; (2) identify the areas(s) it
wishes to challenge; (3) submit evidence
supporting the challenge; and (4) certify
its challenge for the specified area(s).
Only service providers required to file
Form 477 data and government entities
(state, local, and Tribal) have standing
to initiate a challenge. Challengers other
than government entities and service
providers required to file Form 477 data
with the Commission, who are not
already represented by another
interested party, may file a waiver
request with the Commission to
participate in the MF–II challenge
process for good cause shown. Only
challenges for areas that the Bureaus
identify as presumptively ineligible for
MF–II support will be permitted.
78. Challengers must submit their
challenges to areas identified as
ineligible for support via an online
challenge portal to be operated by the
Universal Service Administrative
Company (USAC). A challenger will be
required to identify the area(s) that it
wishes to challenge for each state. The
Commission will require that any
challenge be of a minimum size of at
least one square kilometer.
79. Challengers will also be required
to submit actual outdoor speed test data
that satisfy the parameters outlined
below and any others the Commission
or Bureaus may implement. Speed test
data must be collected using provider-
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specified handsets, and substantiated by
the certification of a qualified engineer
or, in the case of a government entity,
a government official under penalty of
perjury.
80. A challenger must provide
detailed proof of lack of unsubsidized,
qualified 4G LTE coverage in support of
its challenge with speed test data for
each of the providers claiming qualified
4G LTE coverage in the challenged area.
The Commission will allow challengers
to submit speed data from hardware or
software-based drive tests or
application-based tests that spatially
cover the challenged area. All speed
tests must be conducted between the
hours of 06:00 a.m. and 12:00 a.m. local
time, when consumers are likely to use
mobile broadband data. A challenger
must take speed measurements that are
no more than a fixed distance apart from
one another within the challenged area,
and which substantially cover the entire
challenged area. This fixed distance
parameter will be a value no greater
than one mile, and will be set by the
Bureaus in a subsequent public notice.
The Commission will only accept data
that were collected after the publication
of the initial eligibility map and within
six months of the scheduled close of the
challenge window.
81. Challengers electing to use
application-based tests must use the
applicable handsets specified by each
service provider servicing any portion of
the challenged area. The challenger
must purchase a service plan from each
unsubsidized service provider in the
challenged area. If there are multiple
unsubsidized service providers in the
challenge area, the challenger must
purchase service plans that are
comparable (i.e., similar with respect to
cost and services provided).
82. Once a challenger has submitted
its evidence in the USAC MF–II portal,
the system will automatically conduct a
validation to determine whether the
evidence is sufficient to justify
proceeding with the challenge. The
USAC system will superimpose each
challenger’s identified challenged area
on the initial eligibility map and will
remove any portions that overlap
eligible areas. A challenged ineligible
area must meet the de minimis area
threshold to move forward in the
challenge process. If the challenged area
does not meet the threshold, the system
will flag the failure and will not accept
the challenge for submission unless and
until the challenger submits during the
challenge window new data that meet
the threshold. Then, the USAC system
will analyze the geographic coordinates
of the points at which the challenger
conducted the speed tests to validate
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whether the speed test data show
measurements of download speed less
than 5 Mbps (counted speed tests) and
meet all other standard parameters. In
order to implement the requirements
that each point is no more than a fixed
distance apart and that the
measurements substantially cover the
entire challenged area, the system will
create a buffer around each counted
speed test point and calculate the area
of these buffered points (speed test
buffer area). The system will apply a
buffer with a radius equal to half of the
maximum distance parameter and will
trim any portions of the buffers that are
outside the challenged area. Where a
challenged area overlaps the submitted
coverage map of more than one
incumbent provider, the system will
require counted speed tests for each
provider in order to calculate the speed
test buffer area. If the speed test buffer
area within each challenged area covers
at least 75 percent of the challenged
area, the challenge will pass validation,
and once certified, the challenged
area(s) will be presented to the
incumbent provider(s) for a response. If
the speed test buffer area does not cover
at least 75 percent of the challenged
area, the challenge for that area will fail
validation unless the challenger submits
new evidence or modifies its challenge
during the challenge window such that
the challenge for that area meets the 75
percent threshold. Each challenged area
that meets the de minimis threshold will
be considered individually. The USAC
system will determine which portions of
a challenged area overlap which 4G LTE
providers, and respondents will see
only those challenged areas and speed
test buffer areas that overlap their 4G
LTE coverage.
83. Once the challenge window
closes, challenged parties will have a
limited opportunity to submit
additional data in response to a
challenge. Using the USAC portal, a
challenged party will have 30 days after
the opening of the response window to:
(1) Access and review the data
submitted by the challenger with
respect to the challenged area; and (2)
submit additional data/information to
oppose the challenge. The Commission
will accept certain technical
information that is probative to the
validity of a challenger’s speed tests,
including, but not limited to speed test
data and device-specific data collected
from transmitter monitoring software. If
a respondent chooses to respond, it
need only conduct speed tests of its own
network (or gather its own geolocated,
device-specific data from network
monitoring software) in the disputed
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areas. If a challenged party chooses to
submit its own speed test data, the data
must conform to the same standards and
requirements the Commission adopts for
challengers. Any evidence submitted by
a challenged party in response to a
challenge must be certified under
penalty of perjury. Response data will
not be subject to the USAC’s automatic
system validation process. A challenged
party may choose not to oppose the
challenge in which case no additional
information will be required. A
challenger bears the burden of
persuasion and the merits of any
challenge will be evaluated under a
preponderance of the evidence
standard.
6. Steps Taken To Minimize Significant
Economic Impact on Small Entities,
Significant Alternatives Considered
84. The RFA requires an agency to
describe any significant alternatives that
it has considered in reaching its
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 and reporting requirements
under the rule for such 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.’’
85. The Commission has considered
the economic impact on small entities
in reaching its final conclusions and
taking action through this proceeding.
In the Mobility Fund II FNPRM, the
Commission sought comment on the
parameters for the challenge process for
MF–II. The Commission acknowledged
that any challenge process would
necessarily involve tradeoffs between
the burden on interested parties and the
Commission and the timeliness and
accuracy of final determinations. The
Commission sought specific comment
on the ways it could reduce the burden
on smaller providers.
86. In the MF–II Challenge Process
Order, the Commission amends its
decision to use a parties’ most recent
Form 477 data and will instead
supplement its coverage maps by
providing an opportunity for interested
parties to provide up-to-date LTE
coverage data to determine an initial
map of potentially eligible areas for MF–
II support. This amended data baseline,
in response to concerns regarding the
lack of standardization and reliability of
Form 477 data for the purpose of
determining coverage meeting the MF–
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II eligibility benchmark, is intended to
provide the Commission and interested
parties with the best available starting
point of standardized coverage data. In
building on this baseline, the
procedures the Commission adopts in
the MF–II Challenge Process Order will
provide greater certainty and
transparency for entities participating in
the MF–II challenge process, including
small entities. In the Mobility Fund II
FNPRM, the Commission sought
comment on two options, ‘‘Option A’’
and ‘‘Option B’’ for the challenge
process, and invited alternative options
for the challenge process.
87. ‘‘Option A’’ allowed a challenge to
be made on a good-faith belief, based on
actual knowledge or past data
collection, that 4G LTE coverage was
not available in an area as depicted by
Form 477 filings. Carriers and state and
local governments would be eligible to
participate. The Commission sought
comment on what evidence, if any,
should be required in support of a
challenge, whether or not it should
require a challenged area to reach a
minimum size threshold, whether
challenges should be allowed for areas
marked as eligible, and how and when
challenged providers could respond and
with what evidence of coverage.
88. ‘‘Option B’’ gave challenging
parties 60 days following the
Commission’s release of a list of eligible
areas to submit evidence, which would
include speed test data and shapefile
maps and be filed in the public record,
contesting the eligibility status of an
area. Service providers and
governmental entities located in or near
the relevant areas would be eligible to
participate. Challenged providers would
then have 30 days to respond with their
own speed tests and shapefile maps.
The Commission sought comment on
what requirements should be imposed
for speed tests and on the burden of
requiring such a level of response from
challenged providers.
89. The Commission explained that it
intended to assemble a ‘‘best in class
structure’’ from the proposed options
and made it clear the Commission did
not intend to adopt either option
wholesale. The Commission believes the
challenge process procedures adopted
today are the ‘‘best in class’’ and will
both promote fairness and minimize
burdens on small entities and other
interested parties.
90. Given the concerns voiced in the
comments regarding the lack of
standardization and the reliability of
using Form 477 data for MF–II
purposes, a collection of new data will
ultimately lead to a less onerous and
more efficient challenge process for
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42485
small entities and other MF–II
participants. The challenge process will
be streamlined using universal,
standardized coverage data. These data
are already in the possession of current
providers who are therefore in the best
position to provide data to the Bureaus.
Current providers of unsubsidized,
qualified 4G LTE coverage, including
small businesses, will benefit by filing
their coverage data under the
standardized parameters adopted in the
MF–II Challenge Process Order because
they can establish their coverage areas
as initially ineligible to competitors
seeking subsidies in the MF–II auction.
91. Use of newly collected data
enables the Commission to adopt a
streamlined challenge process that will
ease the burden of submission and
resolution of challenges to the map of
presumptively eligible areas. Because
the map of presumptively eligible areas
will be established using current,
standardized data, challengers will be
able to target fewer areas to challenge
and reduce the need for more in-depth
testing in certain areas. This in turn
should reduce the burden on
challengers and providers that respond
to challenges. The Commission also
limited the new, one-time data
collection to providers who have
previously reported 4G LTE coverage in
Form 477 and have qualified 4G LTE
coverage. The limited scope for the
collection eases the burden by only
requiring a filing from those who have
easy access to the necessary data.
92. The Commission has taken a
number of steps to reduce the burden on
small entities and other parties
participating in the challenge process
while also collecting the information
required to target areas without
qualified 4G LTE coverage. For example,
the Commission limits the types of
challenges and will only accept
challenges for areas identified by the
Bureaus as ineligible for MF–II support.
Because the data for the map of
presumptively eligible areas are
supplied by service providers, the
Commission believes a challenge to an
eligible area would likely be a
correction by the service provider who
supplied the initial data. The
Commission will not require challengers
to match up their challenged areas to
census blocks or census block groups as
proposed in the Mobility Fund II
FNPRM. The Commission will allow
challenges from government entities
(state, local, and Tribal) and all service
providers required to file Form 477 data
with the Commission, limiting the
process to those parties with an
adequate interest who are likely to have
the knowledge and expertise to make
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the requisite submission. The
Commission does not include
consumers as challengers in the MF–II
process and believe consumers are best
suited to participate in the MF–II
challenge process through a state, local,
or Tribal government entity. If a
consumer, organization, or business
believes that its interests cannot be met
through its state, local, or Tribal
government entity, and it wishes to
participate in the process as a
challenger, it is free to file a waiver with
the Commission for good cause shown,
either on its own or with the assistance
of an organization. These limits promote
an efficient challenge process and
prevent unnecessary delay of the
deployment of MF–II support.
93. The Commission also requires that
challenges be a minimum size of at least
one square kilometer. By including a
minimum size requirement for
challenges, the Commission believe
small businesses and all interested
parties will benefit from a streamlined
challenge process. The Commission
rejected smaller alternatives to the size
of the minimum challenge area. Making
the minimum zone smaller than one
square kilometer would make the area
so small as to be inconsequential for
improving efficiency for the challenge
process. Ineligible areas of less than one
square kilometer can be subject to
challenge insofar as they are part of a
challenge where the total size of the
areas being challenged exceeds the de
minimis size requirement. The
minimum size requirement for a partial
area challenge will prevent challenges
solely regarding minor, patchy areas
often at the edge of a covered area.
94. The MF–II Challenge Process
Order adopts specific types of data
needed to support a challenge,
including actual outdoor download
speed test data. The MF–II Challenge
Process Order also adopts parameters
around the type and number of handsets
tested, service plan types, hours during
which the tests must be completed,
frequency of tests, and timing of tests in
relation to the submission of the
challenge. Standardizing the datacollection parameters will lead to a
more efficient and accurate process,
deter excessive and unfounded
challenges, and minimize the burden on
small business challengers as well as
other parties utilizing the challenge
process. In requiring the submission of
standardized data, the Commission
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:18 Sep 07, 2017
Jkt 241001
allows challengers to use drive-based or
application-based tests to generate the
necessary data reports. In addition, the
Commission is not requiring that an
independent third party conduct the
speed tests. Given the parameters for
speed test data, along with the required
certification, the Commission believes
the flexibility afforded by allowing
different testing methods limits the
burden on small businesses. The MF–II
Challenge Process Order also adopts an
automatic system of validation of a
challenger’s evidence. This automatic
validation system ensures that the
evidence is reliable and accurately
reflects consumer experience in the
challenged area, and can be analyzed
quickly and efficiently. Challenged
parties are also given a limited
opportunity to respond to challenges. If
a challenged party does not oppose the
challenge, it does not need to submit
any additional data. To reduce the
burden on challenged parties, the
Commission declines to require a
specific level of response from
challenged parties.
95. The Commission will send a copy
of the MF–II Challenge Process Order,
including this FRFA, in a report to be
sent to Congress and the Government
Accountability Office pursuant to the
Congressional Review Act. In addition,
the Commission will send a copy of the
MF–II Challenge Process Order,
including this FRFA, to the Chief
Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration.
VI. Ordering Clauses
96. The Commission orders the
following, pursuant to the authority
contained in sections 1, 2, 4(i), 5, 10,
201–206, 214, 219–220, 251, 254, 256,
303(r), 332, 403, 405, and 503 of the
Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, and section 706 of the
Telecommunications Act of 1996, 47
U.S.C. 151, 152, 154(i), 155, 160, 201–
206, 214, 219–220, 251, 254, 256, 303(r),
332, 403, 405, 503, 1302, and sections
1.1 and 1.429 of the Commission’s rules,
47 CFR 1.1 and 1.429:
• The Order on Reconsideration and
Second Report and Order is adopted. It
is the Commission’s intention in
adopting these procedures that if any of
the procedures that the Commission
retains, modifies, or adopts herein, or
the application thereof to any person or
circumstance, are held to be unlawful,
the remaining portions of the
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Fmt 4700
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procedures not deemed unlawful, and
the application of such procedures to
other persons or circumstances, shall
remain in effect to the fullest extent
permitted by law.
• The parameters set forth in the
Order on Reconsideration and Second
Report and Order for the Mobility Fund
Phase II challenge process, along with
all associated requirements also set forth
therein, go into effect October 10, 2017,
except for the new or modified
information collection requirements in
the challenge process that require
approval by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB). The Commission
will publish a document in the Federal
Register announcing the approval of
those information collection
requirements and the date they will
become operative.
• The Petition for Reconsideration
and Comments filed by CTIA on April
26, 2017, is granted in part to the extent
described herein.
• The Petition for Reconsideration
and/or Clarification filed by the Rural
Wireless Association, Inc. on April 12,
2017, is denied as described herein.
• The Petition for Reconsideration
filed by Panhandle Telephone
Cooperative, Inc. and Pine Belt Cellular,
Inc. on April 27, 2017, is denied as
described herein.
• The Petition for Reconsideration
and Clarification filed by Rural Wireless
Carriers (i.e., United States Cellular
Corporation, East Kentucky Network,
LLC d/b/a Appalachian Wireless,
Cellular Network Partnership d/b/a
Pioneer Cellular, NE Colorado Cellular,
Inc. d/b/a Viaero Wireless, Nex-Tech
Wireless, LLC, and Smith Bagley, Inc.)
on April 27, 2017, is denied as
described herein.
• The Petition for Reconsideration
and/or Clarification filed by the
Blooston Rural Carriers on April 27,
2017, is denied as described herein.
• The Commission’s Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau, Reference
Information Center, shall send a copy of
the Order on Reconsideration and
Second Report and Order, including the
Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, to
the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration.
Federal Communications Commission.
Katura Jackson,
Federal Register Liaison Officer.
[FR Doc. 2017–17824 Filed 9–7–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
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[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 173 (Friday, September 8, 2017)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 42473-42486]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2017-17824]
=======================================================================
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FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 54
[WC Docket No. 10-90, WT Docket No. 10-208; FCC 17-102]
Connect America Fund; Universal Service Reform--Mobility Fund
AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
ACTION: Final rule; petition for reconsideration.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In this Order on Reconsideration and Second Report and Order,
the Commission adopts the parameters for the Mobility Fund Phase II
challenge process, which will enable the Commission to resolve
eligible-area disputes expeditiously. The challenge process will begin
with a new, one-time collection of standardized, up-to-date 4G LTE
coverage data from mobile wireless providers. Interested parties will
then have an opportunity to contest an initial determination that an
area is ineligible for MF-II support, and providers will then have an
opportunity to response to challenges.
DATES: The Commission adopted this Order on Reconsideration and Second
Report and Order on August 3, 2017, and the parameters set forth
therein for the Mobility Fund Phase II challenge process, along with
all associated requirements also set forth therein, go into effect
October 10, 2017, except for the new or modified information collection
requirements in the challenge process that require approval by the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB). The Commission will publish a
document in the Federal Register announcing approval of those
information collection requirements and the date they will become
operative.
ADDRESSES: Federal Communications Commission, 445 12th Street SW.,
Washington, DC 20554.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Wireless Telecommunications Bureau,
Auction and Spectrum Access Division, Jonathan McCormack or Audra Hale-
Maddox, at (202) 418-0660. For further information concerning the
Paperwork Reduction Act information collection requirements contained
in this document, contact Cathy Williams at (202) 418-2918 or via the
Internet at PRA@fcc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Order on
Reconsideration and Second Report and Order (MF-II Challenge Process
Order), WC Docket No. 10-90, WT Docket No. 10-208, FCC 17-102, adopted
on August 3, 2017 and released on August 4, 2017. The complete text of
this document is available for public inspection and copying from 8:00
a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Eastern Time (ET) Monday through Thursday or from
8:00 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. ET on Fridays in the FCC Reference Information
Center, 445 12th Street SW., Room CY-A257, Washington, DC 20554. The
complete text is also available on the Commission's Web site at https://transition.fcc.gov/Daily_Releases/Daily_Business/2017/db0804/FCC-17-102A1.pdf. Alternative formats are available to persons with
disabilities by sending an email to FCC504@fcc.gov or by calling the
Consumer & Governmental Affairs Bureau at (202) 418-0530 (voice), (202)
418-0432 (TTY).
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, the
Commission has prepared a Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA)
of the possible significant economic impact on small entities of the
policies and rules adopted in this document. The FRFA is set forth in
an appendix to the MF-II Challenge Process Order, and is summarized
below. The Commission's Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau,
Reference Information Center, will send a copy of this MF-II Challenge
Process Order, including the FRFA, to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of
the Small Business Administration (SBA).
Paperwork Reduction Act
The MF-II Challenge Process Order contains new and modified
information collection requirements subject to the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (PRA), Public Law 104-13. It will be submitted to the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review under section 3507(d)
of the PRA. OMB, the general public, and other Federal agencies will be
invited to comment on the new and modified information collection
requirements contained in this proceeding.
Congressional Review Act
The Commission will send a copy of this MF-II Challenge Process
Order in a report to Congress and the Government Accountability Office
pursuant to the Congressional Review Act (CRA), see 5 U.S.C.
801(a)(1)(A).
I. Introduction
1. In the MF-II Challenge Process Order, the Commission takes the
next step to extend mobile opportunities to rural America by fulfilling
its commitment to design a robust challenge process that will direct
Mobility Fund Phase II (MF-II) support to primarily rural areas that
lack unsubsidized 4G Long Term Evolution (LTE) service. The MF-II
challenge process the Commission establishes will be administratively
efficient, fiscally responsible, and will enable it to resolve eligible
area disputes quickly and expeditiously. This challenge process will
begin with a new, one-time collection of standardized, up-to-date 4G
LTE coverage data from mobile wireless providers. Interested parties
will then have an opportunity to contest an initial determination that
an area is ineligible for MF-II support, and providers will then have
an opportunity to respond to challenges.
II. Background
2. In February 2017, the Commission adopted rules to move forward
expeditiously to an MF-II auction. The Commission established a budget
of $4.53 billion over a term of ten years to provide ongoing support
for the provision of service in areas that lack adequate mobile voice
and broadband coverage absent subsidies. The Commission further decided
that geographic areas lacking unsubsidized, qualified 4G LTE service
would be deemed ``eligible areas'' for MF-II support, and that it would
use a competitive bidding process (specifically, a reverse auction) to
distribute funding to providers to serve those areas. For the purposes
of MF-II, the Commission defined ``qualified 4G LTE service'' as mobile
wireless service provided using 4G LTE technology with download speeds
of at least 5 Mbps. The Commission also decided that, prior to an MF-II
auction, it would compile a list of areas that were presumptively
eligible for MF-II support based on information derived from the Form
477 data submissions and high-cost support disbursement data available
from the Universal Service Administrative Company (USAC), and it would
provide a limited timeframe for challenges to those initial
determinations during the pre-auction process.
3. In order to make more informed decisions on the challenge
process, the Commission deferred deciding the specific parameters of
the challenge process and instead sought additional comment. Among
other things, the Commission sought comment in the
[[Page 42474]]
Mobility Fund II FNPRM, 82 FR 13413, March 13, 2017, on two potential
options--called ``Option A'' and ``Option B''--for a process to
challenge the eligibility of areas for MF-II support. ``Option A'' and
``Option B'' varied in terms of the initial burdens for filing a
challenge and the parameters for evidence submitted during the
challenge. The Commission also solicited comment on any additional
options and parameters for the MF-II challenge process and made clear
that it was not proposing to adopt either ``Option A'' or ``Option B''
wholesale, intending instead to adopt the most effective approach and
parameters to assemble a ``best in class'' structure for the challenge
process. Seven petitions were filed seeking reconsideration of the
Mobility Fund II Report & Order, 82 FR 15422, March 28, 2017, five of
which directly bear upon the framework and design of the MF-II
challenge process. The Commission addresses in the MF-II Challenge
Process Order the portions of the five petitions asking for
reconsideration of the framework and design of the challenge process.
At this time, the Commission defers addressing the petitions, or
portions thereof, requesting reconsideration of aspects of the Mobility
Fund II Report & Order outside of the challenge process.
III. Order on Reconsideration
4. As necessary starting points for the challenge process, the
Commission first resolves certain issues raised in petitions for
reconsideration of the Mobility Fund II Report & Order. Specifically,
the Commission reconsiders its decision to use Form 477 data as the
basis for determining deployment of qualifying 4G LTE for the map of
areas presumptively eligible for MF-II support, and instead grants, in
part, a petition for reconsideration seeking a new, one-time collection
of data to determine the deployment of qualified 4G LTE for the
purposes of the MF-II challenge process. The Commission denies
petitions to reconsider its adoption of a 5 Mbps download speed
benchmark to identify areas eligible for MF-II support. The Commission
also denies petitions for reconsideration that propose including
technology choice or collocation as elements in such an eligibility
determination.
A. Source of Coverage Data
5. The Commission reconsiders its decision to use Form 477 data as
the basis for determining deployment of qualified 4G LTE for the map of
areas presumptively eligible for MF-II. At the time of the Mobility
Fund II Report & Order, the Commission noted that, despite criticism of
using Form 477 data, none of the commenters had identified a better
available coverage data source to move forward expeditiously to
implement MF-II.
6. A trade association now seeks reconsideration of the
Commission's decision to use Form 477 data to determine what areas are
covered by qualified 4G LTE for purposes of identifying areas
presumptively eligible for MF-II support. The trade association instead
offers an industry consensus proposal asking that the Commission
undertakes a new, one-time data collection with specified data
parameters tailored to MF-II, thus addressing the lack of a better-
tailored data source than Form 477.
7. After consideration of petitioner's industry consensus proposal,
as well as the record gathered in response to this issue, the
Commission reconsiders its decision to use Form 477 data as the basis
for determining deployment of qualified 4G LTE for the map of areas
presumptively eligible for MF-II support. The Commission instead
grants, in part, petitioner's petition for reconsideration proposing a
new, one-time collection of data to determine the deployment of
qualified 4G LTE for the purposes of MF-II.
8. The Commission observes at the outset that the mobile deployment
data collected on Form 477 represent a dramatic improvement over the
deployment data previously available on a national scale. On
reconsideration, the Commission acknowledges the concerns of
commenters, and finds that the use of Form 477 data as the baseline, as
currently filed, is likely to result in a significantly longer MF-II
challenge process than if the Commission collected data consistent with
the petitioner's consensus proposal as the baseline for establishing
which areas are presumptively eligible for support.
9. Given the negative impact that using Form 477 data could have in
prolonging the MF-II challenge process, and after considering the
possibility of quickly acquiring a better-tailored data source than
Form 477, the Commission is persuaded by the weight of the record to
adopt petitioner's consensus proposal to undertake a new, one-time data
collection of 4G LTE coverage maps based on the specific parameters the
Commission adopts in the MF-II Challenge Process Order. For purposes of
implementing MF-II expeditiously, this collection will provide the
Commission and interested parties with the best available starting
point for the challenge process. When combined with the high-cost
subsidy disbursement data available from USAC, the new data will form
the basis of the map of areas presumptively eligible for MF-II support.
10. To reduce the burden on these providers, the Commission
requires only those providers that have previously reported 4G LTE
coverage in Form 477 and have qualified 4G LTE coverage based on the
data specification described below to submit MF-II coverage data. Form
477 filers that do not provide qualified 4G LTE service at the speed
benchmark and parameters for MF-II eligibility are not required to
submit coverage data as part of the MF-II challenge process collection.
Filers that provide service at the benchmark and parameters for MF-II
eligibility must submit coverage data. The Commission will use these
new coverage data, in conjunction with subsidy data from USAC, to
create the map of areas presumptively eligible for MF-II support.
11. In reaching its decision to undertake this effort, the
Commission finds that on balance the new coverage data it is collecting
should reduce the need for challengers to perform more in-depth testing
in certain areas or to file extensive challenges to large geographic
areas. Thus, it should reduce the burden on challengers and providers
that respond to challenges and allow the Commission to commence the MF-
II auction more quickly. In addition, current 4G LTE providers have the
best information concerning their coverage footprints based on their
propagation models, spectrum, and network infrastructure, and thus are
in the best position to provide the Wireless Telecommunications Bureau
and the Wireline Competition Bureau (the Bureaus) with data already in
their possession, tailored to the purposes of MF-II. This approach also
allows the Commission to simplify the challenge process by allowing
only challenges that qualified LTE coverage is overstated and not also
challenges that such coverage is understated. This approach also
permits the Commission to establish various bright line rules for
evaluation of the new coverage submissions and of certain challenges
that should expedite the final resolution of areas eligible for MF-II
support.
12. The Commission also wishes to make clear that only the extent
of qualified 4G LTE coverage can be challenged in the challenge
process; its decision in the Mobility Fund II Report & Order to rely on
USAC high-cost support data for determinations of which areas with 4G
LTE coverage are unsubsidized remains unchanged, and subsidy data or
determinations are not
[[Page 42475]]
subject to challenge. In sum, the required data should allow the
Commission to achieve its policy goal of proceeding expeditiously to an
MF-II auction. Compliance with the required data collection adopted in
the MF-II Challenge Process Order is mandatory, and failure to comply
may lead to enforcement action, including forfeiture penalties,
pursuant to the Communications Act and other applicable law.
B. 5 Mbps Download Speed Benchmark for Identifying Areas Eligible for
MF-II Support
13. The Commission affirms that it will use a 5 Mbps download speed
benchmark to determine what coverage counts as qualified 4G LTE for the
purpose of identifying areas eligible for MF-II support. Using a
download speed benchmark of 5 Mbps supports the Commission's primary
policy goal of directing its limited MF-II funds to address 4G LTE
coverage gaps and expanding 4G LTE coverage to areas that the private
sector will not serve without government subsidies.
14. Four petitioners seek reconsideration of some aspect of the
Commission's decision to use a 5 Mbps download speed as the benchmark
to determine what coverage counts as qualified 4G LTE for the purpose
of identifying areas eligible for MF-II support.
15. Despite the fact that providers have used different standards
and methodologies to report coverage in their Form 477 data, the
nationwide carriers are all generally reporting minimum advertised
download speeds of 5 Mbps for their 4G LTE network coverage. Carriers'
advertised speeds demonstrate that a consumer can reasonably expect to
receive 4G LTE service at a download speed of 5 Mbps in both rural and
urban areas. The Commission previously noted that ``commenters
generally did not discuss the technical requirements of 4G LTE
service'' but did cite multiple comments on the performance requirement
for MF-II recipients. Commenters consistently cited 5 Mbps download as
consistent with 4G LTE service but differed on whether a 10/1 Mbps
requirement was too aggressive. Similarly, the 2016 Broadband Progress
Report found that, even in urban areas, 119.3 million Americans (45
percent) still lack access to 4G LTE with a minimum advertised speed of
10/1 Mbps. Thus, establishing a download speed of 10 Mbps for
identifying areas eligible for MF-II support would not reflect the
typical consumer experience in urban and rural areas and would direct
the Commission's limited funds to areas that are already being served
at speeds that are reasonably comparable to what is available in urban
areas. The Commission's analysis of available data and the record
reflects that consumers in urban areas generally have access to 4G LTE
service at a download speed of 5 Mbps. Therefore, this benchmark,
coupled with the parameters the Commission adopts in the MF-II
Challenge Process Order, serves as a reasonable basis for its analysis
of what areas are currently lacking unsubsidized service at an
equivalent level.
16. The purpose of the eligibility benchmark is to determine at the
outset of MF-II which areas lack service reasonably comparable to
current service because they are uneconomic to serve and require
subsidies to achieve 4G LTE service. In contrast, the performance
benchmark for an MF-II recipient ensures that the Commission's limited
universal service funds are used in a fiscally responsible manner to
assure that service in eligible areas is reasonably comparable to urban
offerings in the future. Setting the eligibility benchmark the same as
the performance benchmark would have the counterproductive effect of
directing subsidies to areas that are already receiving high levels of
service, and consequently providers in those areas could potentially
achieve the performance objective in the first year of a ten-year
support program. Different eligibility and buildout requirements are
consistent with past Commission decisions in the universal service
context, and they serve ``our objective of ensuring that we target our
finite budget to where it is most needed.'' To accomplish this
objective, the Commission must exercise its discretion to balance
competing universal service principles of promoting nationwide
deployment of high-speed mobile broadband and spending limited
universal service funds in a cost-effective manner.
17. The Commission also rejects petitioners' assertions that it did
not provide sufficient analysis to justify using the 5 Mbps download
speeds as the eligibility benchmark in light of its expectation that
areas found to be ineligible for MF-II support are likely to see
improvements in the coming years. The Commission's objective in MF-II,
in accordance with the USF/ICC Transformation Order, 76 FR 73829,
November 29, 2011, is to subsidize reasonably comparable service in
unserved areas, not to subsidize competition. The Commission
anticipates that to the extent an area is served by an unsubsidized
provider offering qualified 4G LTE service such that the area is not
eligible for MF-II support, that unsubsidized service provider will
have incentives to continue to invest in its network to maintain and
expand its current market position. In addition, the Commission
anticipates that as the infrastructure to support high levels of
service develops over the ten-year term of MF-II support, the
incremental costs of upgrades to service in ineligible areas will
become lower, further facilitating improvements in those areas. Even if
incentives to invest in unsubsidized areas were lower, with all things
being equal, these lower upgrade costs would help offset that effect,
and would incentivize service providers to increase their speed
offerings in those areas. Furthermore, the Commission notes that the
cost of upgrading service is significantly lower than the cost of
building a new network in unserved areas or filling in coverage gaps in
areas with significant coverage, and thus the Commission anticipates
that incentives will continue to encourage upgrades to existing network
deployments in unsubsidized areas. Accordingly, the Commission expects
reasonable service improvements in ineligible areas because private
actors have already demonstrated in the marketplace that they have an
incentive to invest in those areas without federal support.
18. Lastly, the Commission declines to adopt an upload speed
benchmark to identify areas eligible for MF-II support. Given the
nature of mobile wireless deployment and the interplay between download
and upload speeds when designing and optimizing an LTE network, there
is no single upload edge speed that corresponds to a 5 Mbps download
speed. One party, however, has submitted recent LTE speed measurement
results showing that with 1 Mbps as the 10th percentile of the upload
speed distribution, the standard national compliance, at the non-MSA
(metropolitan statistical area) and MSA level, only ranges from
approximately 5 percent to 12 percent. This suggests that a cell edge 1
Mbps upload speed standard requirement would exceed the upload speeds
of most current LTE service areas. Thus, including a 1 Mbps upload
speed benchmark could make eligible for support most areas with current
LTE service at download speeds of 5 Mbps. Finally, the Commission also
finds that the additional upload speed standard would add unnecessary
complexity to the already complex challenge process. The Commission
concludes that including a 1 Mbps upload speed benchmark for
[[Page 42476]]
determining areas eligible for MF-II support would be contrary to its
policy goal of directing its limited MF-II resources to areas of the
country that lack sufficient services because such a benchmark would
expand the areas eligible for support to include areas that already
have 4G LTE service, without any countervailing benefit to consumers.
C. Considering Incompatible Technologies in Determining Eligible Areas
19. The Commission affirms the conclusion it reached in the
Mobility Fund II Report & Order that areas with unsubsidized, qualified
4G LTE service are not at risk of losing service and therefore should
be ineligible to receive support, regardless of whether the areas have
networks that are compatible with both GSM and CDMA. The Commission
further affirms its earlier finding that it should not condition
limited MF-II support on a requirement that newly deployed 4G LTE
networks be backwards compatible with GSM and CDMA network technologies
that are being phased out by the marketplace.
20. Two petitioners now seek reconsideration of this issue; they
argue that areas that do not have both GSM and CDMA coverage by
unsubsidized providers should be eligible for MF-II support. The
Commission denies the petitions for reconsideration of this issue.
Efficiently distributing MF-II funds and expanding coverage are the
Commission's priorities, and it must balance these policy goals against
an issue that even one petitioner notes ``is one that time and
ubiquitous VoLTE deployment will eventually solve.'' In the face of a
diminishing technological issue, the Commission directs MF-II support
in a fiscally-responsible manner by focusing on areas that lack
unsubsidized, qualified 4G LTE coverage without considering whether
older technologies are compatible. The Commission's gradual phase down
of legacy support will provide consumers and carriers with time to
complete the transition to newer technologies.
D. Considering Collocation in Determining Eligible Areas
21. The Commission also denies a petitioner's request that it
reconsider the basis on which it determines whether qualified 4G LTE
deployed in an area is subsidized or unsubsidized. Consistent with the
Commission's earlier conclusion, the Commission affirms that it will
determine whether a provider that deploys qualified 4G LTE in an area
is subsidized or unsubsidized based only on whether it receives high-
cost support for that area using USAC high-cost disbursement data, as
described in the MF-II Challenge Process Order, and not based on
whether that provider collocates equipment on a tower of another
provider receiving universal service support. In addition, the
Commission will not consider government subsidies other than legacy
mobile wireless CETC high-cost support and MF-I support in determining
whether a provider's qualified 4G LTE is subsidized.
22. The Commission also notes that the Commission has not collected
and does not intend to collect the tower-by-tower data that would be
necessary to conduct the analysis proposed by the petitioner because
the possible benefits of collecting that data appear small compared to
the significant costs of collection and analysis. As part of their Form
477 data filings, mobile wireless carriers submit maps that depict
coverage without distinguishing between carrier-owned and collocated
facilities. As discussed in the MF-II Challenge Process Order, based on
a new, one-time filing of coverage maps provided under standardized
parameters, the Commission will determine 4G LTE coverage and establish
the areas presumptively eligible for MF-II support. Determining whether
coverage depicted in the standardized coverage maps is provided through
collocation on an area-by-area basis would be inconsistent with the
Commission's decision to base MF-II eligibility strictly on the absence
of unsubsidized, qualified 4G LTE, and doing so would impose a
significant burden on both carriers and the Commission.
IV. Second Report and Order
23. Consistent with the Commission's overarching objective to
transition quickly away from the legacy CETC support system, it adopts
a streamlined challenge process that will efficiently resolve disputes
about areas deemed presumptively ineligible for MF-II support. Based on
the Commission's review of the record and its comprehensive evaluation
of the advantages and disadvantages of the various proposals, the
Commission concludes that the approach it adopts will both promote
fairness and minimize burdens on interested parties.
24. Under the adopted approach, the Commission will begin with a
new, one-time collection of 4G LTE coverage data, which will be used to
establish the map of areas presumptively eligible for MF-II support.
Specifically, the Commission will require providers to file propagation
maps and model details with the Commission indicating their current 4G
LTE coverage, as defined by download speeds of 5 Mbps at the cell edge
with 80 percent probability and a 30 percent cell loading factor.
25. An interested party (the challenger) will have 150 days to
initiate a challenge of one or more of the areas initially deemed
ineligible in the Commission's map of areas presumptively eligible for
MF-II support (the challenge window). Prior to the close of the
challenge window, a challenger may use USAC's online challenge portal
(the USAC portal) to (1) access confidential provider-specific
information for areas it wishes to challenge; (2) identify the area(s)
it wants to challenge; (3) submit evidence supporting the challenge;
and (4) certify its challenge for the specified area(s). After agreeing
to treat the data as confidential, challengers will be able to access
via the USAC portal (a) the underlying provider-specific coverage maps
submitted as part of the new data collection; (b) the list of pre-
approved provider-specified handsets with which to conduct speed
measurements; and (c) any other propagation model details collected as
part of the new data collection. To certify a challenge, a challenger
will be required to identify the area(s) within each state that it
wishes to challenge and submit actual outdoor speed test data collected
using standardized parameters. Challengers will submit their challenges
via the USAC portal. The Commission directs the Bureaus to work with
USAC to establish the USAC portal through which a challenger will be
able to access the confidential provider-specific information that is
pertinent to the challenge, as well as submit its challenge, including
all supporting evidence and required certifications.
26. Once a challenger submits its evidence in the USAC portal, the
system will conduct an automatic validation to determine whether the
challenger provided sufficient evidence to justify proceeding with each
submitted challenge. In the event the data fail automatic validation
for an area, the system will flag the problem for the challenger. If
the failure occurs while the challenge window is still open, the
challenger may submit additional or modified data, or modify its
challenged area contours, as required, to resolve the problem. Once the
challenge window closes, however, the challenger will have no further
opportunity to correct existing, or provide additional, data in support
of its challenge. Only those challenges to areas that are certified by
a challenger at the close of the window will proceed.
[[Page 42477]]
27. A challenged party will have an opportunity to submit
additional data via the USAC portal in response to a certified
challenge (the response window). If a challenged party does not oppose
the challenge, it does not need to submit any information. After the
response window closes, Commission staff will adjudicate certified
challenges and responses.
28. The Commission finds that, in conjunction with the new data
collection, this framework for the MF-II challenge process
appropriately balances the need for accuracy against the burdens
imposed on interested parties. The Commission anticipates that using
standardized new coverage data as the basis for its initial eligibility
map will improve the accuracy and reliability of the information
available to potential challengers, which should result in fewer, more
targeted challenges and should reduce the administrative burdens on
Commission staff, challengers, providers, and other stakeholders.
Requiring challengers to submit proof of lack of unsubsidized,
qualified 4G LTE coverage should deter frivolous challenges based on
anecdotal evidence and, thereby, expedite the challenge process.
Moreover, allowing, but not requiring, challenged parties to submit
data in response to a challenge will both promote fairness and minimize
burdens on interested parties.
29. The Commission directs the Bureaus to issue a public notice or
order (following the Bureaus' issuance of a notice and opportunity for
comment) detailing instructions, deadlines, and requirements for filing
a valid challenge, including file formats, parameters, and other
specifications for conducting speed tests.
A. Parameters for Generating Initial Eligible Areas Map
30. In the new, one-time MF-II data collection, the Commission will
require providers to file propagation maps and model details with the
Commission indicating their current 4G LTE coverage, as defined by
download speeds of 5 Mbps at the cell edge with 80 percent probability
and a 30 percent cell loading factor. The Commission finds that a
download speed of 5 Mbps with 80 percent cell edge probability, which
is equivalent to approximately 92 percent cell area probability, and a
30 percent cell loading factor, strikes a reasonable balance between
expanding LTE into unserved areas and enhancing existing suboptimal LTE
service areas, which promotes the optimal use of limited public funds.
31. The Commission acknowledges that the 80 percent cell edge
probability and 30 percent cell loading factor parameters required for
the data collection are lower than those proposed in the industry
consensus proposal. Adopting the higher cell edge probability and cell
loading factor parameters in the industry consensus proposal, however,
would increase the likelihood that MF-II funds would be directed to
areas that already meet the MF-II performance requirement of a 10 Mbps
median download speed. One wireless provider submitted recent LTE speed
measurement data analysis based upon nationwide wireless provider
performance in specific states. The analysis showed that in some cases
less than 2 percent of the data points achieved a 5 Mbps download speed
90 percent of the time. Indeed, the Commission estimates that the cell
area median download speed in the cell areas associated with the
industry consensus proposal's proposed parameters would be
significantly in excess of 10 Mbps and therefore higher than the MF-II
performance requirement. In fact, the Commission estimates that areas
larger than industry consensus proposal's proposed cell areas would
have median download speeds in excess of 10 Mbps. The Commission's
analysis shows that the 80 percent cell edge probability it adopts
corresponds with a 92 percent cell area probability, which means users
would have a greater than 90 percent chance of achieving a download
speed of at least 5 Mbps across the entire coverage area of a cell. In
addition, these parameters exceed the parameters that wireless
operators typically use when deploying networks into previously-
unserved areas (greenfield builds) of 75 percent cell edge probability
and 90 percent cell area probability. In light of the difficulties of
precisely determining the coverage areas where service with a minimum
download speed of 5 Mbps is available, the Commission finds that a cell
edge probability of 80 percent and a cell area probability of 92
percent appropriately balance the concern of misrepresenting coverage
with its priority of directing its limited universal service funds on
areas most in need of support. Further, adoption of the industry
consensus proposal's proposed parameters would likely result in MF-II
support being used to upgrade or over-build current 4G LTE networks
rather than to expand 4G LTE coverage to unserved areas.
32. In addition, the Commission believes that a 30 percent cell
loading factor in rural areas is more appropriate for MF-II purposes
than the industry consensus proposal's proposed 50 percent cell loading
factor, which is more typical in non-rural areas where there is more
uniform traffic. Typical cell site density in rural areas is much lower
than in urban areas, resulting in an overall lower interference
environment. Additionally, when compared to urban and suburban areas,
rural areas typically have lower amounts of uniform traffic among cells
because of the varied population distribution across cells, lower
numbers of simultaneous users, and lower overall demands on the network
over time. As such, cell loading is typically lower in rural areas than
in urban and suburban areas. The lower cell edge probability and cell
loading factor parameters for the data collection will likely decrease
the eligible areas and target the limited MF-II funds to more areas
that are currently unserved or served by 4G LTE networks with a median
download speed below 10 Mbps. If the Commission was to adopt a lower
cell edge probability, it would unnecessarily risk focusing funds on
the costliest to serve areas, thus decreasing the square miles
receiving support in the auction and consequently reducing the cost
effectiveness of the MF-II program. A lower cell edge probability
requirement would likely decrease the eligible areas with marginal LTE
coverage. Thus, using its predictive judgment, the Commission finds
that these parameters meet its standards for the availability of
coverage and are best suited to advancing its goals for MF-II.
33. The Commission recognizes that some may have concerns about the
effect of the parameters it adopts on the availability of certain
mobile applications, for instance telemedicine and precision
agriculture, in rural areas. The Commission believes those concerns are
misplaced. Remote monitoring and diagnosing of medical conditions and
precision agriculture, which uses satellite GPS positioning and remote
sensors in farming operations, are typically lower-bandwidth, machine-
to-machine applications and should not significantly increase the
overall cell loading or require speeds greater than 5 Mbps. Further,
the Commission believes that focusing its limited funds on expanding
service to the areas that currently lack 4G LTE service is the best way
to increase the availability of these services in rural areas. Applying
a higher cell loading factor more typical of an urban or suburban area
or increasing the cell edge probability even further is more likely to
direct funds to more areas that already have coverage
[[Page 42478]]
that can support telemedicine and precision agriculture applications.
34. As one party proposed, filers shall report an outdoor level of
coverage. The coverage boundaries shall have a resolution of 100 meters
(approximately three arc-seconds) or better, and shall likewise use an
appropriate clutter factor and terrain model with a resolution of 100
meters or better. In addition, filers shall use the optimized RF
propagation models and parameters used in their normal course of
business. The Commission directs the Bureaus to specify what other
propagation model details and parameters must be filed alongside such
propagation maps in a subsequent public notice. In addition to
submitting propagation maps and model details of 4G LTE coverage,
providers shall report the signal strength (RSRP) and clutter factor
categories used to generate their coverage maps. If the signal strength
in the coverage maps varies regionally, then such variations must be
reported. The providers must report the loss value associated with each
clutter factor category used in their coverage maps. Additionally,
providers shall submit a list of at least three readily-available
handsets that challengers can use to conduct speed tests, as well as a
certification, under penalty of perjury, by a qualified engineer that
the propagation maps and model details reflect the filer's coverage as
of the generation date of the map in accordance with all other
parameters. The Commission clarifies that the handsets identified by
providers must include at least one compatible with industry-standard
drive test software. The Bureaus will issue further guidance or
requirements on the handsets that may be used for speed tests in a
subsequent public notice.
35. The Commission finds that requiring a specific signal strength
benchmark, as sought by several commenters, is not necessary for these
propagation maps because the cell edge speed threshold requirement
subsumes a specific signal strength value depending on specific
operating signal bandwidth and the network deployment configurations. A
10 MHz bandwidth has double the noise power of the 5 MHz bandwidth;
thus, it requires higher signal strengths for the same signal quality
(SNR) requirement. The thermal noise power equation indicates that
noise power is directly proportional to the bandwidth. The Commission's
analysis comparing results of theoretical propagation models and actual
speed test data indicates that the signal strength parameter in
propagation models may not be closely correlated with actual on-the-
ground data in a particular geographic area. As a result, and in light
of the differing technical characteristics of service providers' LTE
deployments, the Commission decides to benchmark download speed, which
is what the customer receives, rather than signal strength, to
determine whether a particular geographic area is eligible or not for
MF-II support. With this in mind, the Commission sets the download
speed at 5 Mbps at 80 percent probability, and will evaluate challenges
on the basis of measured download speeds. In other words, the
topography of an area as well as summer foliage may lead to differences
between expected signal strength and the actual experienced speed of
consumers. Thus, the Commission's cell edge speed threshold requirement
should result in more accurate data in America's deserts, prairies,
rolling hills, mountains, and forests than an across-the-board signal
strength parameter. The Commission is mindful, however, of the concerns
of some providers regarding signal strengths, and the Commission will,
as noted above, require providers to report signal strength with their
coverage maps. The signal strength information will be available to
challengers. When issuing filing instructions, the Commission directs
the Bureaus to explain what additional parameters (such as signal
strength and clutter categories) and information must be included with
coverage map filings, and subsequently disclosed to challengers in the
challenge process.
36. In a public notice to be released later in the MF-II process,
the Commission directs the Bureaus to provide instructions for how to
file the data submission, including a data specification, formatting
information, and any other technical parameters that may be necessary
for such filings. In order to provide ample time for carriers to
generate data in accordance with these parameters, the Commission
directs the Bureaus to set the deadline for carriers to submit data for
the one-time data collection at least 90 days after the release of the
filing instructions public notice.
B. Interested Parties Eligible To Participate
37. Based on the Commission's experience in the challenge processes
for MF-I and CAF-II, and after carefully weighing the record on this
issue, the Commission concludes that government entities (state, local,
and Tribal) and all service providers required to file Form 477 data
with the Commission are best suited to participate as challengers in
the MF-II challenge process. Allowing these interested parties to
participate in the challenge process satisfies the Commission's policy
goal of administrative efficiency because they are most likely to be
able to acquire the requisite data sufficient to support a valid
challenge and, in many cases, are already familiar with filing data
with USAC. Many Form 477 filers have a pre-existing relationship (i.e.,
an account) with USAC because they are required to make filings on a
regular basis with USAC. To the extent that any Form 477 filer or
government entity eligible to participate does not have an account with
which to authenticate against the USAC single sign-on system by the
time the USAC portal opens, such interested parties will be required to
request an account. The Commission directs the Bureaus to detail this
process along with other instructions to file a valid challenge in a
subsequent public notice.
38. As a practical matter, the Commission does not expect that an
individual consumer would have the time, ability, or resources to file
a valid challenge. Instead, the Commission anticipates that an
individual consumer will be best served by participating in the MF-II
challenge process through his or her state, local, or Tribal government
entity. This expectation is supported by past practice before the
agency, as individual consumers did not file challenges in either the
MF-I or CAF proceedings. If, however, a consumer, organization, or
business believes that its interests cannot be met through its state,
local, or Tribal government entity, and it wishes to participate in the
process as a challenger, it is free to file a waiver with the
Commission for good cause shown, either on its own or with the
assistance of an organization. Waivers may be submitted by email to
auction904@fcc.gov or delivered in hard copy to Margaret W. Wiener,
Chief, Auctions and Spectrum Access Division, Wireless
Telecommunications Bureau, FCC, 445 12th Street SW., Room 6-C217,
Washington, DC 20554. The Commission anticipates granting waivers in
cases in which an individual, organization, or business demonstrates a
bona fide interest in the challenge process and a plausible ability to
submit a valid challenge. And the Commission encourages state
commissions, state-level broadband deployment offices, county and
municipal executives and councils, Tribal governments, and other
governmental entities to participate robustly in the challenge process
to ensure that the Commission's information about where service is or
is not available is as accurate as possible.
39. Moreover, given the improvements the Commission expects to see
in the standardized information
[[Page 42479]]
that will be collected for MF-II purposes, it anticipates that there
should be less concern associated with eligible area determinations,
which, in turn, should reduce the likelihood that individual consumers
should have to bear the burden of seeking to participate in the
process. As the Commission explained in the Mobility Fund II FNPRM,
``the challenge process must not impede the implementation of MF-II
support.'' The Commission's decision therefore fosters its commitment
to designing a challenge process that is as efficient and open as
possible.
C. Types of Challenges
40. Because the Commission is undertaking a new collection of
standardized, more reliable, and more recent 4G LTE coverage data, it
will only permit challenges for areas that the Bureaus identify as
ineligible for MF-II support. The Commission anticipates that a party
that submits a challenge for an eligible area will likely be the
unsubsidized service provider that submitted and certified the data
used to make the initial eligibility determination for the challenged
area. As such, the challenge would consist of nothing more than an
update to or correction of the coverage data submitted by the
unsubsidized service provider during the new data collection in
compliance with the Commission's new requirements. Since, under the
framework the Commission adopts, service providers will be required to
update their coverage data shortly before the start of the challenge
process, permitting such ``corrections'' within the challenge process
would be administratively inefficient and unnecessarily delay the
deployment of MF-II support. The Commission is confident that the new
data collection will give providers ample opportunity to correct and/or
update the coverage data previously provided via Form 477. Therefore,
the Commission will not permit challenges for areas that the Bureaus
identify as eligible for MF-II support.
D. Restricting De Minimis Challenges
41. As part of the framework the Commission adopts for the MF-II
challenge process, it will limit challenges to de minimis geographic
areas to increase the efficiency of the challenge process and reduce
the administrative complications of resolving challenges for very small
coverage gaps. Challengers will not be required to match up challenged
areas to census blocks or census block groups (CBGs). The Commission
believes this change will ease the filing burden on challengers because
the data required will align more closely with data already collected
and maintained in the normal course of business. Consistent with this
approach, the Commission will not link de minimis challenges to CBGs,
because a significant portion of CBGs are small enough (less than 1
square kilometer) that establishing a minimum area for challenges as a
portion of a CBG would make the de minimis challenge area so small as
to be inconsequential for improving efficiency in the challenge
process. Accordingly, the Commission will require only that any
challenged area be of a minimum size of at least one square kilometer.
Ineligible areas of less than one square kilometer can be subject to
challenge insofar as they are part of a challenge where the total size
of areas being challenged exceeds the de minimis size requirement. This
minimum size requirement will prevent challenges solely regarding
minor, patchy areas often at the edge of a covered area, which aligns
with the overall goal of using MF-II funds to expand service to
unserved areas.
E. Data Required for Submission of Challenge
42. The Commission finds that a challenger must submit detailed
proof of lack of unsubsidized, qualified 4G LTE coverage in support of
its challenge. For each state, a challenger must identify the specific
area(s) it wants to challenge and submit actual outdoor speed test data
that satisfy the parameters the Commission adopts in the MF-II
Challenge Process Order, as well as any other parameters that the
Commission or Bureaus may implement. If the challenged area(s) extend
across state borders, a challenger will need to initiate separate
challenges for each state into which the challenged area(s) extend. The
speed test data must be collected using the latest devices specifically
authorized by the providers that submitted 4G LTE coverage data in
response to the new, one-time data collection discussed above (i.e.,
provider-specified handsets). The Commission finds that such ``on the
ground'' data collected using standardized parameters are a reliable
form of evidence because they simulate consumers' actual experience.
43. These requirements strengthen the Commission's ability to
design an administratively efficient challenge process that does not
impede implementation of MF-II. The Commission finds that requiring
challengers to submit detailed proof of lack of unsubsidized, qualified
4G LTE coverage instead of ``anecdotal evidence'' is fair, minimizes
the burden on providers and Commission staff, and should help deter
excessive and unfounded challenges that could delay the deployment of
MF-II support. The Commission agrees with several commenters that
requiring actual speed test data will not impose an excessive burden on
challengers, including small carriers. The Commission expects that
challenged areas will be sufficiently circumscribed that challengers
will not need to collect speed test data over unnecessarily large
areas. Further, the Commission expects that small carriers are likely
to already own drive test equipment. To the extent they do not, the
Commission's decision to allow application-based tests provides a less
expensive and more mobile means of collecting data. Thus, the
Commission declines to allow a challenger to initiate the challenge
process with an unsubstantiated good-faith assertion of lack of
unsubsidized, qualified 4G LTE coverage.
1. Standard Parameters
44. Although the Commission agrees with commenters that some
flexibility with testing standards is warranted, it finds it necessary
to adopt clear guidance and parameters on speed test data to ensure
that the evidence submitted by challengers is reliable, accurately
reflects consumer experience in the challenged area, and can be
analyzed quickly and efficiently. As a preliminary matter, the
Commission will allow challengers to submit speed data from hardware-
or software-based drive tests or application-based tests that cover the
challenged area. To minimize the burdens on challengers, the Commission
will not require that an independent third party conduct the speed
tests. The Commission will require that all speed tests be conducted
pursuant to standard parameters using Commission-approved testing
methods on pre-approved handset models. Accordingly, the Commission
expects that it would be difficult to manipulate the data collected
regardless of whether a challenger uses drive-based or application-
based tests as both types of tests can automatically generate data
reports that can conform to the specifications for the data submission.
The Commission will, however, require that the speed test data be
substantiated by the certification of a qualified engineer or official
under penalty of perjury. For challengers that are governmental
entities and do not have a qualified engineer available to certify, the
Commission will allow certification by a government official authorized
to act on behalf of the organization and
[[Page 42480]]
with actual knowledge of the accuracy of the underlying data.
45. A challenger must provide proof of lack of unsubsidized,
qualified 4G LTE coverage in the form of measured download throughput
test data for each of the unsubsidized providers claiming qualified 4G
LTE coverage in the challenged area. As part of the new MF-II data
collection, the Commission will require service providers with
qualified 4G LTE coverage to identify at least three readily available
handset models appropriate for testing those providers' coverage. The
Commission will require providers to specify at least one handset that
is compatible with industry-standard drive test software. The
Commission directs the Bureaus to propose and adopt further guidance on
the types of devices that may be used for speed tests in the subsequent
public notices. Challengers electing to use application-based tests and
software-based drive tests must use the applicable handsets specified
by each unsubsidized service provider with coverage in the challenged
area. In addition, to accurately reflect consumer experience in the
challenged area, the challenger must purchase an appropriate service
plan from each unsubsidized service provider in the challenged area. An
appropriate service plan would allow for speed tests of full network
performance, e.g., an unlimited high-speed data plan. If there are
multiple unsubsidized service providers in the challenged area, the
challenger must purchase service plans that are comparable (i.e.,
similar with respect to services provided).
46. All speed tests must be conducted between the hours of 06:00
a.m. and 12:00 a.m. local time, when consumers are most likely to use
mobile broadband data. To ensure that the speed test data reflect
consumer experience throughout the entire challenged area, a challenger
must take speed measurements that are no more than a fixed distance
apart from one another within the challenged area, and which
substantially cover the entire area. The Commission directs the Bureaus
to adopt the specific value for the maximum distance between speed
tests after seeking comment in a subsequent public notice. This value
will be no greater than one mile. This requirement serves as an upper
bound, and a challenger will be free to submit measurements taken more
frequently. While the Commission declines to adopt the specific
parameter here, it is convinced that a value within this range will
strike the correct balance between the benefits of increased accuracy,
and the harms of burdens on small carriers and to the efficient
administration of challenges. The Commission also agrees with one
commenter that the data should reflect recent performance. However,
given upcoming, expected deployment of new 4G LTE service in
conjunction with the Commission's decision to perform a new data
collection, the Commission is concerned that speed measurements taken
before the submission of updated coverage maps may not reflect the
current consumer experience. Thus, the Commission will only accept data
that were collected after the publication of the initial eligibility
map and within six months of the scheduled close of the challenge
window.
47. The Commission directs the Bureaus to seek comment on and to
implement any additional parameters and/or to require the submission of
additional types of relevant data, such as signal strength tests, and
then to implement any such parameters or requirements as appropriate to
ensure that speed tests accurately reflect consumer experience in the
challenged area, by issuing an order or public notice providing
detailed instructions, guidance, and specifications for conducting
speed tests.
2. Validation of Challenger's Data
48. The Commission adopts a general framework for automatic system
validation of a challenger's evidence, and it directs the Bureaus to
work with USAC to implement specific parameters for the validation
process. Using an automated process is the most efficient way to
evaluate the data submitted by a challenger because it ensures that the
objective validation criteria are applied consistently across every
challenge.
49. Under this approach, at the outset the USAC system will
superimpose each identified challenged area on the initial eligibility
map and will remove any portions that overlap eligible areas. If a
challenged area meets the de minimis area threshold, that challenge
will proceed. If it does not meet the threshold, the system will flag
the failure and will not accept that challenge for submission unless
and until the challenger submits during the challenge window new data
that meet the threshold.
50. Next, the USAC system will analyze the geographic coordinates
of the points at which the challenger conducted the speed tests and
will validate that the data associated with each speed test point meet
the specifications for speed tests. To be counted towards a valid
challenge, the speed test must record a download speed less than 5 Mbps
(counted speed tests) and meet all other standard parameters. In order
to implement the requirement that the tests substantially cover the
entire challenged area and that each point is no more than a fixed
distance apart, the system will create a buffer (i.e., draw a circle of
fixed size) around each counted speed test point and calculate the area
of these buffered points (speed test buffer area). The system will
apply a buffer with a radius equal to half of the maximum distance
parameter, and will trim any portion of the buffer that is outside of
the challenged area. In addition, where a challenged area overlaps the
submitted coverage map of more than one incumbent provider, the system
will require counted speed tests for each provider in order to
calculate the speed test buffer area. For each challenged area, if the
speed test buffer area covers at least 75 percent of the challenged
area, the challenge will pass validation, and once certified, these
challenged area(s) will be presented to the incumbent provider(s) for a
response. The area of a circle with diameter superimposed on a square
with width is approximately 78.5 percent, therefore setting the
validation threshold at 75 percent area coverage ensures that speed
measurements conducted no more than a fixed distance apart from one
another in a challenged area are sufficient to establish coverage of
the entire area, when each measurement point is buffered by a radius of
half of the fixed distance parameter. If the speed test buffer area
does not cover at least 75 percent of the challenged area, the
challenge for that area will fail validation unless the challenger
submits new evidence or modifies its challenge during the challenge
window such that it meets the 75 percent threshold.
51. The USAC system will require speed tests to substantially cover
the entire challenged area (i.e., 75 percent) regardless of any
characteristics of the area, including whether any part of the area is
inaccessible due to terrain, private property, or other reason. The
Commission declines to provide any special accommodations for a
challenger to indicate that it was unable to access any part of the
challenged area. Challengers have the burden of proving that an area
deemed ineligible is, in fact, not covered by at least one carrier
providing qualified, unsubsidized 4G LTE service. Providing special
accommodations that would relieve challengers of the need to furnish
actual evidence would be inconsistent with this decision, would be
difficult to administer, and would increase the likelihood of
gamesmanship, none of which further the Commission's goal of
[[Page 42481]]
conducting a fair and efficient challenge process in a timely manner.
The Commission notes that while the system will not provide any special
accommodations, challengers may still include areas with inaccessible
land in their challenges so long as the submitted speed measurements
otherwise meet the validation threshold showing that 75 percent of the
area has insufficient coverage. Moreover, this decision is confined
only to the challenge process; a bidder in the MF-II auction may still
bid for support to serve eligible areas that include land that may be
inaccessible. A bidder that ultimately wins support to serve an area
with inaccessible lands will remain responsible for demonstrating its
performance in serving that area.
52. Each challenged area that meets the de minimis threshold will
be considered individually. Challenged areas that meet the validations,
including the 75 percent speed test buffer area overlap, will proceed
once certified by the challenger. The USAC system will determine which
portions of a challenged area overlap which 4G LTE providers, and
respondents will see only those challenged areas and speed test buffer
areas that overlap their 4G LTE coverage.
F. Opportunity To Respond to Challenges
53. The Commission will provide challenged parties a limited
opportunity to submit additional data in response to a challenge. The
Commission finds that this approach promotes its goals of a fair and
fiscally responsible MF-II program while minimizing the burdens on
challenged parties. Giving challenged parties an opportunity to contest
a challenge and submit more detailed coverage data to supplement the
information provided during the initial data collection will help to
ensure that only areas truly lacking unsubsidized, qualified 4G LTE
coverage will receive MF-II support.
54. After the challenge window closes, the response window will
open. Using the USAC portal, challenged parties will have 30 days after
the opening of the response window to: (1) Access and review the data
submitted by the challenger with respect to the challenged area; and
(2) submit additional data/information to oppose the challenge (i.e.,
demonstrate that the challenger's speed test data are invalid or do not
accurately reflect network performance). If a respondent chooses to
respond, it need only conduct speed tests of its own network (or gather
its own geolocated, device-specific data from network monitoring
software) in the disputed areas, which should require less time to
complete than a challenger testing multiple networks in multiple areas
for data to substantiate a valid challenge. Hence, the Commission
agrees with commenters that propose that the response window does not
need to be open for the same amount of time as the challenge window. If
a challenged party does not oppose the challenge, it does not need to
submit any additional data. A challenged party will not, however, have
a further opportunity to submit any additional data for the
Commission's consideration after the response window closes.
55. The Commission declines to require a specific level of response
from challenged parties. The Commission will accept certain technical
information that is probative regarding the validity of a challenger's
speed tests including speed test data and other device-specific data
collected from transmitter monitoring software. If a challenged party
chooses to submit its own speed test data, the data must conform to the
same standards and requirements the Commission adopts in the MF-II
Challenge Process Order for challengers, except that it will only
accept data from challenged parties that were collected after the
publication of the initial eligibility map and within six months of the
scheduled close of the response window. Any evidence submitted by a
challenged party in response to a challenge must be certified by a
qualified engineer or official under penalty of perjury. Since the
Commission is not requiring a specific level of response from
challenged parties, the response data will not be subject to USAC's
automatic system validation process.
56. Although the Commission is willing to accept certain technical
data that are probative regarding the validity of a challenger's speed
tests, the data must be reliable and credible to be useful during the
adjudication process. Specifically, technical data other than speed
tests submitted by a challenged party, including data from transmitter
monitoring software, should include geolocated, device-specific
throughput measurements or other device-specific information (rather
than generalized key performance indicator statistics for a cell-site)
in order to be useful to help refute a challenge. The Commission agrees
with commenters that ``on the ground'' data collected using
standardized parameters are a reliable form of evidence because they
simulate what consumers actually experience. Thus, the Commission
expects that speed test data would be particularly persuasive evidence
for challenged parties to submit to refute a challenge, especially
since it will be easier for the Bureaus to compare equivalent data.
While the system will not validate a challenged party's response data,
to be probative in order to refute a challenge, speed tests must record
a download speed of at least 5 Mbps and meet all other standard
parameters.
57. The Commission directs the Bureaus to issue an order or public
notice implementing any additional requirements that may be necessary
or appropriate for data submitted by a challenged party in response to
a challenge. Such order or notice will contain any further detailed
instructions, guidance, and specifications for responding to a
challenge.
G. Adjudication of Challenges
58. Consistent with the standard of review adopted in the Connect
America Fund Report & Order, 78 FR 38227, June 26, 2013, and the CAF II
Challenge Process Order, 78 FR 32991, June 3, 2013, the Commission
adopts a preponderance of the evidence standard to evaluate the merits
of any challenges. Additionally, the Commission adopts its proposal
that the challenger shall bear the burden of persuasion. If, upon
review of all the evidence submitted in the challenge, it appears that
the challenger has not submitted sufficient evidence to demonstrate
that it is more likely than not that the challenged area does not have
qualified LTE coverage, the challenge will fail under this standard.
Following the close of the response window, the Bureaus will adjudicate
certified challenges based upon this standard and the evidence
submitted by the challenger and challenged party(ies) to determine
whether adjustments to the initial eligibility map are appropriate. The
Bureaus will weigh the evidence submitted by challengers and challenged
parties based on its reliability, giving more credence to data that
were collected pursuant to the parameters established in the MF-II
Challenge Process Order and any additional standards that the
Commission or Bureaus may adopt. The Commission retains discretion to
discount the weight of a challenger's evidence if a challenge appears
designed to undermine the goals of MF-II. Particularly in light of the
steps the Commission has taken to address questions about the
reliability of Form 477 data in response to the comments, the
Commission concludes that it is appropriate that the burden rest on the
challenger. The Commission finds that placing the burden of proof on
the
[[Page 42482]]
challenger both incentivizes challengers to present a full evidentiary
record as well as discourages frivolous filings, thus supporting its
goal of administrative efficiency and allowing for disbursement of
support to unserved areas without unreasonable delay.
59. With respect to the evidentiary standard, comments submitted in
the record support a preponderance of the evidence standard, and no
commenters supported the higher standard of clear and convincing
evidence. The preponderance of the evidence standard of review is
consistent with the CAF challenge processes, as well as with a wide
body of Commission precedent. A more demanding standard would impose an
evidentiary burden that is in tension with the Commission's overall
goal of making the most accurate determinations based on the evidence
of record. The Commission finds that applying a preponderance of the
evidence standard strikes the appropriate balance, potentially reducing
the number of disputed areas and ensuring that the Commission has the
data necessary to evaluate the merits of any challenges, while not
unduly burdening smaller providers.
V. Procedural Matters
A. Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis
60. The MF-II Challenge Process Order contains new information
collection requirements subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA), Public Law 104-13. It will be submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for review under section 3507(d) of the
PRA. OMB, the general public, and other Federal agencies are invited to
comment on the new information collection requirements contained in
this proceeding. In addition, the Commission notes that pursuant to the
Small Business Paperwork Relief Act of 2002, it previously sought
specific comment on how the Commission might further reduce the
information collection burden for small business concerns with fewer
than 25 employees. The Commission describes impacts that might affect
small businesses, which include most businesses with fewer than 25
employees, in the Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) in
Appendix A of the MF-II Challenge Process Order.
B. Congressional Review Act
61. The Commission will send a copy of the MF-II Challenge Process
Order to Congress and the Government Accountability Office pursuant to
the Congressional Review Act.
C. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
62. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as
amended (RFA), an Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) was
incorporated in the Further Notice section of the Mobility Fund II
FNPRM adopted in February 2017. The Commission sought written public
comment on the proposals in the Mobility Fund II FNPRM including
comment on the IRFA. The Commission received three comments in response
to the IRFA. The Commission also included a Final Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) in the Report and Order section of the
February 2017 Mobility Fund II Report and Order. Seven petitions for
reconsideration, one comment in support of a petition for
reconsideration, two oppositions to the petitions, and six replies to
the oppositions were received by the Commission in response to the
Mobility Fund II Report and Order. This FRFA addresses the comments on
the IRFA and analyzes the modifications adopted in response to the
petitions, comments, and responsive filings to the Mobility Fund II
Report and Order. This FRFA conforms to the RFA.
1. Need for, and Objectives of, This Order on Reconsideration and
Second Report and Order
63. Rural and high-cost areas of the United States trail
significantly behind urban areas in the growth of 4G LTE service. The
Mobility Fund Phase II (MF-II) will use a market-based, multi-round
reverse auction and allow the Commission to redirect its limited
resources to those areas of the country lacking unsubsidized, qualified
4G LTE service.
64. In the MF-II Challenge Process Order, the Commission adopts
procedures for a challenge process to supplement its coverage maps by
providing an opportunity for interested parties to provide up-to-date
LTE coverage data to determine a map of areas presumptively eligible
for MF-II support. Interested parties will have the ability to contest
this initial determination that an area is ineligible for MF-II support
because an unsubsidized service provider submitted data that
demonstrates it is providing qualified 4G LTE service there. The
challenge process adopted in the MF-II Challenge Process Order enables
the Commission to resolve eligible-area disputes in an administratively
efficient and fiscally responsible manner.
2. Summary of Significant Issues Raised by Public Comments in Response
to the IRFA
65. The Commission received one comment, one reply comment, and one
written ex parte submission bearing on the IRFA. CCA and RWA believe
that a challenge process without a required data collection would
better fulfill the directive of the RFA. NTCA similarly expressed
concern that requiring all providers, including small entities, to file
new Form 477 data to determine eligibility for MF-II support by area
would be unnecessary and contrary to the directive of the RFA.
66. The Commission is sensitive to the burden on small entities and
other providers associated with the new data collection. However, the
benefits of standardized, reliable data on which to base eligibility
determinations outweigh the costs associated with their collection.
Moreover, the use of newly collected data enables the Commission to
adopt a streamlined challenge process that will reduce the burden on
challengers and providers that respond to challenges. Fewer small
providers will be forced to bring a challenge, and challenges will be
more directed, more accurate, and less onerous because the Commission
will have the best-available starting point of standardized data. The
Commission also eases the burden of the new data collection on small
entities by limiting the one-time data collection to providers who have
previously reported 4G LTE coverage in Form 477 and have qualified 4G
LTE coverage. The limited scope of the collection addresses the
concerns of some of the smaller providers who objected to the potential
burden of a universal new filing. The Commission has eased the burden
of the collection by only requiring a filing from those who have easy
access to the necessary data. Additional steps taken to minimize the
burden of the challenge process on small entities are discussed below.
3. Response to Comments by the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration
67. Pursuant to the Small Business Jobs Act of 2010, which amended
the RFA, the Commission is required to respond to any comments filed by
the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration
(SBA) in response to the proposed rule(s) and to provide a detailed
statement of any change made to the proposed rule(s) as a result of
those comments.
68. The Chief Counsel did not file any comments in response to the
proposed procedures in this proceeding.
[[Page 42483]]
4. Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities to Which
the Proposed Rules Will Apply
69. The RFA directs agencies to provide a description of, and where
feasible, an estimate of the number of small entities that may be
affected by the rules adopted herein. The RFA generally defines the
term ``small entity'' as having the same meaning as the terms ``small
business,'' ``small organization,'' and ``small governmental
jurisdiction.'' In addition, the term ``small business'' has the same
meaning as the term ``small-business concern'' under the Small Business
Act. A ``small-business concern'' is one which: (1) Is independently
owned and operated; (2) is not dominant in its field of operation; and
(3) satisfies any additional criteria established by the SBA.
70. Small Entities, Small Organizations, Small Governmental
Jurisdictions. The Commission's actions, over time, may affect small
entities that are not easily categorized at present. The Commission
therefore describes here, at the outset, three broad groups of small
entities that could be directly affected herein. First, while there are
industry-specific size standards for small businesses that are used in
the regulatory flexibility analysis, according to data from the SBA's
Office of Advocacy, in general a small business is an independent
business having fewer than 500 employees. These types of small
businesses represent 99.9 percent of all businesses in the United
States which translates to 28.8 million businesses. Next, the type of
small entity described as a ``small organization'' is generally ``any
not-for-profit enterprise which is independently owned and operated and
is not dominant in its field.'' Nationwide, as of 2007, there were
approximately 1,621,215 small organizations. 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.'' U.S. Census
Bureau data for 2012 indicate that there were 89,476 local governmental
jurisdictions in the United States. The Commission estimates that, of
this total, as many as 88,715 entities may qualify as ``small
governmental jurisdictions.'' Thus, the Commission estimates that most
governmental jurisdictions are small.
71. Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite). This
industry comprises establishments engaged in operating and maintaining
switching and transmission facilities to provide communications via the
airwaves. Establishments in this industry have spectrum licenses and
provide services using that spectrum, such as cellular services, paging
services, wireless internet access, and wireless video services. The
appropriate size standard under SBA rules is that such a business is
small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. For this industry, U.S.
Census data for 2012 show that there were 967 firms that operated for
the entire year. Of this total, 955 firms had employment of 999 or
fewer employees and 12 had employment of 1000 employees or more. Thus
under this category and the associated size standard, the Commission
estimates that the majority of wireless telecommunications carriers
(except satellite) are small entities.
72. The Commission's own data--available in its Universal Licensing
System--indicate that, as of October 25, 2016, there are 280 Cellular
licensees that will be affected by its actions. The Commission does not
know how many of these licensees are small, as the Commission does not
collect that information for these types of entities. Similarly,
according to internally developed Commission data, 413 carriers
reported that they were engaged in the provision of wireless telephony,
including cellular service, Personal Communications Service, and
Specialized Mobile Radio Telephony services. Of this total, an
estimated 261 have 1,500 or fewer employees, and 152 have more than
1,500 employees. Thus, using available data, the Commission estimates
that the majority of wireless firms can be considered small.
73. Wired Telecommunications Carriers. The U.S. Census Bureau
defines this industry as ``establishments primarily engaged in
operating and/or providing access to transmission facilities and
infrastructure that they own and/or lease for the transmission of
voice, data, text, sound, and video using wired communications
networks. Transmission facilities may be based on a single technology
or a combination of technologies. Establishments in this industry use
the wired telecommunications network facilities that they operate to
provide a variety of services, such as wired telephony services,
including VoIP services, wired (cable) audio and video programming
distribution, and wired broadband internet services. By exception,
establishments providing satellite television distribution services
using facilities and infrastructure that they operate are included in
this industry.'' The SBA has developed a small business size standard
for Wired Telecommunications Carriers, which consists of all such
companies having 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census data for 2012
show that there were 3,117 firms that operated that year. Of this
total, 3,083 operated with fewer than 1,000 employees. Thus, under this
size standard, the majority of firms in this industry can be considered
small.
5. Description of Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other
Compliance Requirements
74. In the MF-II Challenge Process Order, the Commission adopts
parameters both for establishing an eligible area baseline prior to the
MF-II challenge process and for a streamlined challenge process. The
process will efficiently resolve disputes about areas shown as eligible
for MF-II support on the initial eligibility map that will be generated
based on the new collection of 4G LTE coverage data. The Commission
summarizes the reporting and other obligations of the MF-II challenge
process in the accompanying MF-II Challenge Process Order. Additional
information on these requirements can be found in the MF-II Challenge
Process Order at paragraphs 27-63.
75. To establish the map of areas presumptively eligible for MF-II
support, all current Form 477 filers that have previously reported
qualified 4G LTE coverage and have qualified 4G LTE coverage based on
the data specification set forth in the MF-II Challenge Process Order
will be required to submit to the Commission a one-time new data filing
detailing 4G LTE coverage. Providers will be required to file
propagation maps and model details indicating current 4G LTE coverage,
as defined by download speeds of 5 Mbps at the cell edge with 80
percent probability and a 30 percent cell loading factor. Filers should
report an outdoor level of coverage. The coverage boundaries shall have
a resolution of 100 meters (approximately three arc-seconds) or better
and shall likewise use an appropriate clutter factor and terrain model
with a resolution of 100 meters or better. Providers shall report the
signal strength (RSRP) and clutter factor categories used to generate
their coverage maps. If the signal strength in the coverage maps varies
regionally, then such variations must be reported. The providers must
report the loss value associated with each clutter factor category used
in their coverage maps. In addition, filers should use the optimized RF
propagation models and parameters that they have used in their normal
course of business, subject to further
[[Page 42484]]
requirements set forth in subsequent public notices. Carriers will be
required to submit data for the one-time collection at least 90 days
after the release of the filing instructions public notice.
76. In conjunction with submitting propagation maps, model details,
and signal strength of 4G LTE coverage, providers will submit a list of
at least three readily-available handset models appropriate for
challengers wishing to conduct a speed test of the providers' coverage
in a particular area, and a certification, under penalty of perjury, by
a qualified engineer or government official that the propagation map
and model details reflect the filer's coverage as of the generation
date of the map in accordance with all other parameters. For
challengers that are governmental entities and do not have a qualified
engineer available to certify, the Commission will allow certification
by a government official authorized to act on behalf of the
organization and with actual knowledge of the accuracy of the
underlying data.
77. To initiate a challenge, a challenger must, within the 150-day
challenge window: (1) Access confidential, provider-specific
information for areas it wishes to challenge; (2) identify the areas(s)
it wishes to challenge; (3) submit evidence supporting the challenge;
and (4) certify its challenge for the specified area(s). Only service
providers required to file Form 477 data and government entities
(state, local, and Tribal) have standing to initiate a challenge.
Challengers other than government entities and service providers
required to file Form 477 data with the Commission, who are not already
represented by another interested party, may file a waiver request with
the Commission to participate in the MF-II challenge process for good
cause shown. Only challenges for areas that the Bureaus identify as
presumptively ineligible for MF-II support will be permitted.
78. Challengers must submit their challenges to areas identified as
ineligible for support via an online challenge portal to be operated by
the Universal Service Administrative Company (USAC). A challenger will
be required to identify the area(s) that it wishes to challenge for
each state. The Commission will require that any challenge be of a
minimum size of at least one square kilometer.
79. Challengers will also be required to submit actual outdoor
speed test data that satisfy the parameters outlined below and any
others the Commission or Bureaus may implement. Speed test data must be
collected using provider-specified handsets, and substantiated by the
certification of a qualified engineer or, in the case of a government
entity, a government official under penalty of perjury.
80. A challenger must provide detailed proof of lack of
unsubsidized, qualified 4G LTE coverage in support of its challenge
with speed test data for each of the providers claiming qualified 4G
LTE coverage in the challenged area. The Commission will allow
challengers to submit speed data from hardware or software-based drive
tests or application-based tests that spatially cover the challenged
area. All speed tests must be conducted between the hours of 06:00 a.m.
and 12:00 a.m. local time, when consumers are likely to use mobile
broadband data. A challenger must take speed measurements that are no
more than a fixed distance apart from one another within the challenged
area, and which substantially cover the entire challenged area. This
fixed distance parameter will be a value no greater than one mile, and
will be set by the Bureaus in a subsequent public notice. The
Commission will only accept data that were collected after the
publication of the initial eligibility map and within six months of the
scheduled close of the challenge window.
81. Challengers electing to use application-based tests must use
the applicable handsets specified by each service provider servicing
any portion of the challenged area. The challenger must purchase a
service plan from each unsubsidized service provider in the challenged
area. If there are multiple unsubsidized service providers in the
challenge area, the challenger must purchase service plans that are
comparable (i.e., similar with respect to cost and services provided).
82. Once a challenger has submitted its evidence in the USAC MF-II
portal, the system will automatically conduct a validation to determine
whether the evidence is sufficient to justify proceeding with the
challenge. The USAC system will superimpose each challenger's
identified challenged area on the initial eligibility map and will
remove any portions that overlap eligible areas. A challenged
ineligible area must meet the de minimis area threshold to move forward
in the challenge process. If the challenged area does not meet the
threshold, the system will flag the failure and will not accept the
challenge for submission unless and until the challenger submits during
the challenge window new data that meet the threshold. Then, the USAC
system will analyze the geographic coordinates of the points at which
the challenger conducted the speed tests to validate whether the speed
test data show measurements of download speed less than 5 Mbps (counted
speed tests) and meet all other standard parameters. In order to
implement the requirements that each point is no more than a fixed
distance apart and that the measurements substantially cover the entire
challenged area, the system will create a buffer around each counted
speed test point and calculate the area of these buffered points (speed
test buffer area). The system will apply a buffer with a radius equal
to half of the maximum distance parameter and will trim any portions of
the buffers that are outside the challenged area. Where a challenged
area overlaps the submitted coverage map of more than one incumbent
provider, the system will require counted speed tests for each provider
in order to calculate the speed test buffer area. If the speed test
buffer area within each challenged area covers at least 75 percent of
the challenged area, the challenge will pass validation, and once
certified, the challenged area(s) will be presented to the incumbent
provider(s) for a response. If the speed test buffer area does not
cover at least 75 percent of the challenged area, the challenge for
that area will fail validation unless the challenger submits new
evidence or modifies its challenge during the challenge window such
that the challenge for that area meets the 75 percent threshold. Each
challenged area that meets the de minimis threshold will be considered
individually. The USAC system will determine which portions of a
challenged area overlap which 4G LTE providers, and respondents will
see only those challenged areas and speed test buffer areas that
overlap their 4G LTE coverage.
83. Once the challenge window closes, challenged parties will have
a limited opportunity to submit additional data in response to a
challenge. Using the USAC portal, a challenged party will have 30 days
after the opening of the response window to: (1) Access and review the
data submitted by the challenger with respect to the challenged area;
and (2) submit additional data/information to oppose the challenge. The
Commission will accept certain technical information that is probative
to the validity of a challenger's speed tests, including, but not
limited to speed test data and device-specific data collected from
transmitter monitoring software. If a respondent chooses to respond, it
need only conduct speed tests of its own network (or gather its own
geolocated, device-specific data from network monitoring software) in
the disputed
[[Page 42485]]
areas. If a challenged party chooses to submit its own speed test data,
the data must conform to the same standards and requirements the
Commission adopts for challengers. Any evidence submitted by a
challenged party in response to a challenge must be certified under
penalty of perjury. Response data will not be subject to the USAC's
automatic system validation process. A challenged party may choose not
to oppose the challenge in which case no additional information will be
required. A challenger bears the burden of persuasion and the merits of
any challenge will be evaluated under a preponderance of the evidence
standard.
6. Steps Taken To Minimize Significant Economic Impact on Small
Entities, Significant Alternatives Considered
84. The RFA requires an agency to describe any significant
alternatives that it has considered in reaching its 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 and reporting requirements under the rule for such 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.''
85. The Commission has considered the economic impact on small
entities in reaching its final conclusions and taking action through
this proceeding. In the Mobility Fund II FNPRM, the Commission sought
comment on the parameters for the challenge process for MF-II. The
Commission acknowledged that any challenge process would necessarily
involve tradeoffs between the burden on interested parties and the
Commission and the timeliness and accuracy of final determinations. The
Commission sought specific comment on the ways it could reduce the
burden on smaller providers.
86. In the MF-II Challenge Process Order, the Commission amends its
decision to use a parties' most recent Form 477 data and will instead
supplement its coverage maps by providing an opportunity for interested
parties to provide up-to-date LTE coverage data to determine an initial
map of potentially eligible areas for MF-II support. This amended data
baseline, in response to concerns regarding the lack of standardization
and reliability of Form 477 data for the purpose of determining
coverage meeting the MF-II eligibility benchmark, is intended to
provide the Commission and interested parties with the best available
starting point of standardized coverage data. In building on this
baseline, the procedures the Commission adopts in the MF-II Challenge
Process Order will provide greater certainty and transparency for
entities participating in the MF-II challenge process, including small
entities. In the Mobility Fund II FNPRM, the Commission sought comment
on two options, ``Option A'' and ``Option B'' for the challenge
process, and invited alternative options for the challenge process.
87. ``Option A'' allowed a challenge to be made on a good-faith
belief, based on actual knowledge or past data collection, that 4G LTE
coverage was not available in an area as depicted by Form 477 filings.
Carriers and state and local governments would be eligible to
participate. The Commission sought comment on what evidence, if any,
should be required in support of a challenge, whether or not it should
require a challenged area to reach a minimum size threshold, whether
challenges should be allowed for areas marked as eligible, and how and
when challenged providers could respond and with what evidence of
coverage.
88. ``Option B'' gave challenging parties 60 days following the
Commission's release of a list of eligible areas to submit evidence,
which would include speed test data and shapefile maps and be filed in
the public record, contesting the eligibility status of an area.
Service providers and governmental entities located in or near the
relevant areas would be eligible to participate. Challenged providers
would then have 30 days to respond with their own speed tests and
shapefile maps. The Commission sought comment on what requirements
should be imposed for speed tests and on the burden of requiring such a
level of response from challenged providers.
89. The Commission explained that it intended to assemble a ``best
in class structure'' from the proposed options and made it clear the
Commission did not intend to adopt either option wholesale. The
Commission believes the challenge process procedures adopted today are
the ``best in class'' and will both promote fairness and minimize
burdens on small entities and other interested parties.
90. Given the concerns voiced in the comments regarding the lack of
standardization and the reliability of using Form 477 data for MF-II
purposes, a collection of new data will ultimately lead to a less
onerous and more efficient challenge process for small entities and
other MF-II participants. The challenge process will be streamlined
using universal, standardized coverage data. These data are already in
the possession of current providers who are therefore in the best
position to provide data to the Bureaus. Current providers of
unsubsidized, qualified 4G LTE coverage, including small businesses,
will benefit by filing their coverage data under the standardized
parameters adopted in the MF-II Challenge Process Order because they
can establish their coverage areas as initially ineligible to
competitors seeking subsidies in the MF-II auction.
91. Use of newly collected data enables the Commission to adopt a
streamlined challenge process that will ease the burden of submission
and resolution of challenges to the map of presumptively eligible
areas. Because the map of presumptively eligible areas will be
established using current, standardized data, challengers will be able
to target fewer areas to challenge and reduce the need for more in-
depth testing in certain areas. This in turn should reduce the burden
on challengers and providers that respond to challenges. The Commission
also limited the new, one-time data collection to providers who have
previously reported 4G LTE coverage in Form 477 and have qualified 4G
LTE coverage. The limited scope for the collection eases the burden by
only requiring a filing from those who have easy access to the
necessary data.
92. The Commission has taken a number of steps to reduce the burden
on small entities and other parties participating in the challenge
process while also collecting the information required to target areas
without qualified 4G LTE coverage. For example, the Commission limits
the types of challenges and will only accept challenges for areas
identified by the Bureaus as ineligible for MF-II support. Because the
data for the map of presumptively eligible areas are supplied by
service providers, the Commission believes a challenge to an eligible
area would likely be a correction by the service provider who supplied
the initial data. The Commission will not require challengers to match
up their challenged areas to census blocks or census block groups as
proposed in the Mobility Fund II FNPRM. The Commission will allow
challenges from government entities (state, local, and Tribal) and all
service providers required to file Form 477 data with the Commission,
limiting the process to those parties with an adequate interest who are
likely to have the knowledge and expertise to make
[[Page 42486]]
the requisite submission. The Commission does not include consumers as
challengers in the MF-II process and believe consumers are best suited
to participate in the MF-II challenge process through a state, local,
or Tribal government entity. If a consumer, organization, or business
believes that its interests cannot be met through its state, local, or
Tribal government entity, and it wishes to participate in the process
as a challenger, it is free to file a waiver with the Commission for
good cause shown, either on its own or with the assistance of an
organization. These limits promote an efficient challenge process and
prevent unnecessary delay of the deployment of MF-II support.
93. The Commission also requires that challenges be a minimum size
of at least one square kilometer. By including a minimum size
requirement for challenges, the Commission believe small businesses and
all interested parties will benefit from a streamlined challenge
process. The Commission rejected smaller alternatives to the size of
the minimum challenge area. Making the minimum zone smaller than one
square kilometer would make the area so small as to be inconsequential
for improving efficiency for the challenge process. Ineligible areas of
less than one square kilometer can be subject to challenge insofar as
they are part of a challenge where the total size of the areas being
challenged exceeds the de minimis size requirement. The minimum size
requirement for a partial area challenge will prevent challenges solely
regarding minor, patchy areas often at the edge of a covered area.
94. The MF-II Challenge Process Order adopts specific types of data
needed to support a challenge, including actual outdoor download speed
test data. The MF-II Challenge Process Order also adopts parameters
around the type and number of handsets tested, service plan types,
hours during which the tests must be completed, frequency of tests, and
timing of tests in relation to the submission of the challenge.
Standardizing the data-collection parameters will lead to a more
efficient and accurate process, deter excessive and unfounded
challenges, and minimize the burden on small business challengers as
well as other parties utilizing the challenge process. In requiring the
submission of standardized data, the Commission allows challengers to
use drive-based or application-based tests to generate the necessary
data reports. In addition, the Commission is not requiring that an
independent third party conduct the speed tests. Given the parameters
for speed test data, along with the required certification, the
Commission believes the flexibility afforded by allowing different
testing methods limits the burden on small businesses. The MF-II
Challenge Process Order also adopts an automatic system of validation
of a challenger's evidence. This automatic validation system ensures
that the evidence is reliable and accurately reflects consumer
experience in the challenged area, and can be analyzed quickly and
efficiently. Challenged parties are also given a limited opportunity to
respond to challenges. If a challenged party does not oppose the
challenge, it does not need to submit any additional data. To reduce
the burden on challenged parties, the Commission declines to require a
specific level of response from challenged parties.
95. The Commission will send a copy of the MF-II Challenge Process
Order, including this FRFA, in a report to be sent to Congress and the
Government Accountability Office pursuant to the Congressional Review
Act. In addition, the Commission will send a copy of the MF-II
Challenge Process Order, including this FRFA, to the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy of the Small Business Administration.
VI. Ordering Clauses
96. The Commission orders the following, pursuant to the authority
contained in sections 1, 2, 4(i), 5, 10, 201-206, 214, 219-220, 251,
254, 256, 303(r), 332, 403, 405, and 503 of the Communications Act of
1934, as amended, and section 706 of the Telecommunications Act of
1996, 47 U.S.C. 151, 152, 154(i), 155, 160, 201-206, 214, 219-220, 251,
254, 256, 303(r), 332, 403, 405, 503, 1302, and sections 1.1 and 1.429
of the Commission's rules, 47 CFR 1.1 and 1.429:
The Order on Reconsideration and Second Report and Order
is adopted. It is the Commission's intention in adopting these
procedures that if any of the procedures that the Commission retains,
modifies, or adopts herein, or the application thereof to any person or
circumstance, are held to be unlawful, the remaining portions of the
procedures not deemed unlawful, and the application of such procedures
to other persons or circumstances, shall remain in effect to the
fullest extent permitted by law.
The parameters set forth in the Order on Reconsideration
and Second Report and Order for the Mobility Fund Phase II challenge
process, along with all associated requirements also set forth therein,
go into effect October 10, 2017, except for the new or modified
information collection requirements in the challenge process that
require approval by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). The
Commission will publish a document in the Federal Register announcing
the approval of those information collection requirements and the date
they will become operative.
The Petition for Reconsideration and Comments filed by
CTIA on April 26, 2017, is granted in part to the extent described
herein.
The Petition for Reconsideration and/or Clarification
filed by the Rural Wireless Association, Inc. on April 12, 2017, is
denied as described herein.
The Petition for Reconsideration filed by Panhandle
Telephone Cooperative, Inc. and Pine Belt Cellular, Inc. on April 27,
2017, is denied as described herein.
The Petition for Reconsideration and Clarification filed
by Rural Wireless Carriers (i.e., United States Cellular Corporation,
East Kentucky Network, LLC d/b/a Appalachian Wireless, Cellular Network
Partnership d/b/a Pioneer Cellular, NE Colorado Cellular, Inc. d/b/a
Viaero Wireless, Nex-Tech Wireless, LLC, and Smith Bagley, Inc.) on
April 27, 2017, is denied as described herein.
The Petition for Reconsideration and/or Clarification
filed by the Blooston Rural Carriers on April 27, 2017, is denied as
described herein.
The Commission's Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau,
Reference Information Center, shall send a copy of the Order on
Reconsideration and Second Report and Order, including the Final
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of
the Small Business Administration.
Federal Communications Commission.
Katura Jackson,
Federal Register Liaison Officer.
[FR Doc. 2017-17824 Filed 9-7-17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712-01-P