Transforming the 2.5 GHz Band, 26396-26409 [2018-12183]
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 110 / Thursday, June 7, 2018 / Proposed Rules
United States Postal Service for the
Initiation of a Proceeding to Consider
Proposed Changes in Analytical
Principles (Proposal Two), filed May 25,
2018.
2. Comments by interested persons in
this proceeding are due no later than
July 16, 2018.
3. Pursuant to 39 U.S.C. 505, the
Commission appoints Lyudmila Y.
Bzhilyanskaya to serve as an officer of
the Commission (Public Representative)
to represent the interests of the general
public in this docket.
4. The Secretary shall arrange for
publication of this order in the Federal
Register.
By the Commission.
Ruth Ann Abrams,
Acting Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018–12200 Filed 6–6–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7710–FW–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Parts 1 and 27
[WT Docket No. 18–120; FCC 18–59]
Transforming the 2.5 GHz Band
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
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This is a
summary of the Commission’s Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking, WT Docket No.
18–120, FCC 18–59, adopted and
released on May 10, 2018. The complete
text of this document is available for
public inspection and copying from 8
a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Eastern Time (ET)
Monday through Thursday or from 8
a.m. to 11:30 a.m. ET on Fridays in the
FCC Reference Information Center, 445
12th Street SW, Room CY–A257,
Washington, DC 20554. The complete
text is available on the Commission’s
website at https://wireless.fcc.gov, or by
using the search function on the ECFS
web page at https://www.fcc.gov/cgb/
ecfs/. 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).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Comment Filing Procedures
In this document, the Federal
Communications Commission
(Commission or FCC) seeks comment on
proposed service rules on the 2.5 GHz
band and on refinements to the adopted
rules in this document.
DATES: Comments are due on or before
July 9, 2018; reply comments are due on
or before August 6, 2018.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by WT Docket No. 18–120, by
any of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Federal Communications
Commission’s Website: https://
www.fcc.gov/ecfs/filings. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• People With Disabilities: Contact
the FCC to request reasonable
accommodations (accessible format
documents, sign language interpreters,
CART, etc.) by email: FCC504@fcc.gov,
phone: 202–418–0530 or TTY: 202–418–
0432.
For detailed instructions for
submitting comments and additional
information on the rulemaking process,
see the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section of this document.
SUMMARY:
John
J. Schauble of the Wireless
Telecommunications Bureau,
Broadband Division, at 202–418–0797
or by email to John.Schauble@fcc.gov.
For information regarding the PRA
information collection requirements
contained in this PRA, contact Cathy
Williams, Office of Managing Director,
at (202) 418–2918 or Cathy.Williams@
fcc.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Pursuant to §§ 1.415 and 1.419 of the
Commission’s rules, 47 CFR 1.415,
1.419, interested parties may file
comments and reply comments on or
before the dates indicated on the first
page of this document. Comments may
be filed using the Commission’s
Electronic Comment Filing System
(ECFS). See Electronic Filing of
Documents in Rulemaking Proceedings,
63 FR 24121 (1998).
• Electronic Filers: Comments may be
filed electronically using the internet by
accessing the ECFS: https://
www.fcc.gov/ecfs/filings. Filers should
follow the instructions provided on the
website for submitting comments. In
completing the transmittal screen, filers
should include their full name, U.S.
Postal Service mailing address, and the
applicable docket number, WT Docket
No. 18–120.
• Paper Filers: Parties who choose to
file by paper must file an original and
one copy of each filing. If more than one
docket or rulemaking number appears in
the caption of this proceeding, filers
must submit two additional copies for
each additional docket or rulemaking
number.
Filings can be sent by hand or
messenger delivery, by commercial
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overnight courier, or by first-class or
overnight U.S. Postal Service mail. All
filings must be addressed to the
Commission’s Secretary, Office of the
Secretary, Federal Communications
Commission.
• All hand-delivered or messengerdelivered paper filings for the
Commission’s Secretary must be
delivered to FCC Headquarters at 445
12th St. SW, Room TW–A325,
Washington, DC 20554. The filing hours
are 8:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. All hand
deliveries must be held together with
rubber bands or fasteners. Any
envelopes and boxes must be disposed
of before entering the building.
• Commercial overnight mail (other
than U.S. Postal Service Express Mail
and Priority Mail) must be sent to 9050
Junction Dr., Annapolis Junction,
Annapolis, MD 20701.
• U.S. Postal Service first-class,
Express, and Priority mail must be
addressed to 445 12th Street SW,
Washington, DC 20554.
People With Disabilities: To request
materials in accessible formats for
people with disabilities (braille, large
print, electronic files, audio format),
send an email to fcc504@fcc.gov or call
the Consumer & Governmental Affairs
Bureau at 202–418–0530 (voice), 888–
835–5322 (tty).
Ex Parte Rules—Permit-But-Disclose
Pursuant to § 1.1200(a) of the
Commission’s rules, this NPRM shall be
treated as a ‘‘permit-but-disclose’’
proceeding in accordance with the
Commission’s ex parte rules. Persons
making ex parte presentations must file
a copy of any written presentation or a
memorandum summarizing any oral
presentation within two business days
after the presentation (unless a different
deadline applicable to the Sunshine
period applies). Persons making oral ex
parte presentations are reminded that
memoranda summarizing the
presentation must (1) list all persons
attending or otherwise participating in
the meeting at which the ex parte
presentation was made, and (2)
summarize all data presented and
arguments made during the
presentation. If the presentation
consisted in whole or in part of the
presentation of data or arguments
already reflected in the presenter’s
written comments, memoranda or other
filings in the proceeding, the presenter
may provide citations to such data or
arguments in his or her prior comments,
memoranda, or other filings (specifying
the relevant page and/or paragraph
numbers where such data or arguments
can be found) in lieu of summarizing
them in the memorandum. Documents
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shown or given to Commission staff
during ex parte meetings are deemed to
be written ex parte presentations and
must be filed consistent with
§ 1.1206(b). In proceedings governed by
§ 1.49(f) or for which the Commission
has made available a method of
electronic filing, written ex parte
presentations and memoranda
summarizing oral ex parte
presentations, and all attachments
thereto, must be filed through the
electronic comment filing system
available for that proceeding, and must
be filed in their native format (e.g., .doc,
.xml, .ppt, searchable .pdf). Participants
in this proceeding should familiarize
themselves with the Commission’s ex
parte rules.
Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
As required by the Regulatory
Flexibility Act of 1980 (‘‘RFA’’), the
Commission has prepared an Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
(‘‘IRFA’’) of the possible significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities of the policies
and rules proposed in the NPRM. The
Commission requests written public
comment on the analysis. Comments
must be filed in accordance with the
same deadlines as comments filed in
response to the NRPM and must have a
separate and distinct heading
designating them as responses to the
IRFA.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This document contains proposed
new or modified information collection
requirements. The Commission, as part
of its continuing effort to reduce
paperwork burdens, invites the general
public and the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) to comment on the
information collection requirements
contained in this document, as required
by the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995, Public Law 104–13. In addition,
pursuant to the Small Business
Paperwork Relief Act of 2002, Public
Law 107–198, see 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(4),
the Commission seeks specific comment
on how it might further reduce the
information collection burden for small
business concerns with fewer than 25
employees.
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Synopsis
I. Introduction
1. The 2.5 GHz band (2496–2690
MHz) constitutes the single largest band
of contiguous spectrum below 3
gigahertz and has been identified as
prime spectrum for next generation
mobile operations, including 5G uses.
Significant portions of this band,
however, currently lie fallow across
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approximately one-half of the United
States, primarily in rural areas.
Moreover, access to the Educational
Broadband Service (EBS) has been
strictly limited since 1995, and current
licensees are subject to a regulatory
regime largely unchanged from the days
when educational TV was the only use
envisioned for this spectrum. The
Commission proposes to allow more
efficient and effective use of this
spectrum band by providing greater
flexibility to current EBS licensees as
well as providing new opportunities for
additional entities to obtain unused 2.5
GHz spectrum to facilitate improved
access to next generation wireless
broadband, including 5G. The
Commission also seeks comment on
additional approaches for transforming
the 2.5 GHz band, including by moving
directly to an auction for some or all of
the spectrum.
II. Background
2. EBS, formerly known as ITFS
(Instructional Television Fixed Service),
permits the transmission of
instructional material for the formal
education of students by accredited
public and private schools, colleges, and
universities.
3. Currently, eligibility to hold an EBS
license is limited to (1) accredited
public and private educational
institutions, (2) governmental
organizations engaged in the formal
education of enrolled students, and (3)
nonprofit organizations whose purposes
are educational and include providing
educational and instructional television
materials to accredited institutions and
governmental organizations. EBS
licenses generally are held by state
government agencies, state universities
and university systems, public
community and technical colleges,
private universities and colleges, public
elementary and secondary school
districts, private schools (including
Catholic school systems and other
religious schools), public television and
radio stations, hospitals and hospital
associations, and other non-profit
educational entities.
4. EBS licensees operate in 114
megahertz of the 2.5 GHz band; the
remaining 80 megahertz is assigned to
the Broadband Radio Service (BRS). EBS
licensees are authorized to operate on
the A, B, C, D, and G channel groups,
with each group comprised of three 5.5
MHz channels in the lower or upper
band segment and one 6 MHz channel
in the mid-band segment. Since 1983
the Commission has allowed EBS
licensees to lease their excess capacity
to commercial providers, but it has
required EBS licensees to retain five
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percent of their capacity for educational
use, and it further has required that they
use each channel at least 20 hours per
week for educational purposes.
5. Currently, there are 1,300 EBS
licensees holding over 2,190 licenses.
EBS licenses generally are based on a
35-mile radius circular Geographic
Service Area (GSA) (with an area of
1934 square miles), although due to a
historical license modification process
the Commission adopted in 2005, many
EBS licenses have much smaller,
irregular GSAs. Incumbent EBS licenses
cover only about one half of the
geographic area of the United States in
any given channel. In the rest of the
country, mostly rural areas west of the
Mississippi River, the 2.5 GHz spectrum
remains unassigned. There is some EBS
spectrum unassigned in urban areas as
well, but such spectrum generally is
only available in small, irregularly
shaped areas between GSAs that are
considerably smaller than the area of a
35-mile radius circle.
6. The Commission suspended the
processing of EBS applications in 1993.
Only twice since then has the
Commission opened filing windows for
EBS applications. In 1995, the
Commission provided a five-day
window for the filing of applications for
new construction permits and for major
changes to existing EBS facilities. And
in 1996, the Mass Media Bureau
announced a sixty-day window for the
filing of a limited class of applications,
but during that window, it only
permitted the filing of EBS modification
applications and amendments to
pending EBS applications proposing to
co-locate with an authorized wireless
cable facility.
7. During the past 20 years, the
Commission, on several occasions, has
considered assigning EBS spectrum
licenses by auction. Most recently, the
Commission in 2008 decided to use
competitive bidding to license
unassigned BRS spectrum but held that
a ‘‘broader record should be developed
on how to distribute licenses for
unassigned EBS spectrum,’’ and it
sought further comment on how to
license unassigned EBS spectrum in the
BRS/EBS Second FNPRM.
8. In response to the BRS/EBS Second
FNPRM, commenters proposed various
alternative licensing schemes, including
awarding licenses through a
comparative point system; permitting
only consortia to apply for a Basic
Trading Area (BTA) license (an area
consisting of several counties
surrounding a common commercial
center); permitting existing licensees to
expand their respective GSAs to the
borders of the BTA, which would
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eliminate all white space and in turn,
eliminate the need to file applications
for new licenses (‘‘GSA maximization’’);
and permitting licensees to expand their
respective GSAs to the borders of the
BTA after accepting applications for
new stations (reverse GSA
maximization). Subsequently, on June 6,
2014, the Catholic Technology Network,
the National EBS Association, the
Wireless Communications Association
International, and the Hispanic
Information and Telecommunications
Network, Inc. proposed a multi-step
process for licensing unassigned EBS
spectrum. Unused EBS spectrum,
however, has remained generally
unavailable since 1995.
III. Discussion
9. In accordance with the
Commission’s goal of making additional
spectrum available for flexible use, and
to promote use of 2.5 GHz frequencies
that have been unassigned for far too
long, the Commission proposes and
seeks comment on a number of steps to
encourage and facilitate more efficient
use of this spectrum. First, given the
irregularity of current EBS geographic
service areas (as well as outdated
regulatory requirements), the
Commission proposes to rationalize
existing EBS holdings so that existing
licensees have new opportunities to put
2.5 GHz spectrum to its highest and best
use. Second, the Commission seeks
comment on whether to open one or
more local priority filing windows so
that existing licensees, Tribal Nations,
and educational entities could get
access to unassigned spectrum in the 2.5
GHz band. Third, the Commission
proposes to use geographic area
licensing to assign any remaining
spectrum, which may result in the
auction of any licenses for 2.5 GHz
spectrum still unassigned after
rationalizing holdings and any new
filing windows. Finally, the
Commission seeks comment on
additional approaches for transforming
the 2.5 GHz band, including by moving
directly to an auction for some or all of
the spectrum. The Commission believes
the proposed changes discussed herein
will reduce unnecessary regulatory
burdens on licensees, promote greater
spectrum efficiency, and facilitate the
full use of EBS spectrum to provide
advanced mobile broadband services,
particularly in rural areas where this
spectrum sits idle today.
A. Rationalizing Existing 2.5 GHz
Holdings
10. Ensuring that the radio spectrum
is used efficiently and intensively is an
important public interest goal—a goal
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that also serves the interests of the
existing licensees. The Commission
traditionally has recognized that a
spectrum policy based on flexible use in
regular geographic areas has several
advantages. Such flexible use licensing
can promote broadband deployment,
ensure the spectrum is put to its most
beneficial use, allow licensees to
respond to consumer demand for new
services, and maximize the probability
of success for new services.
1. Regular Geographic License Areas
11. As an initial step, the Commission
proposes to rationalize the GSAs of
existing EBS licensees, except
grandfathered licensees in the E and F
Channel groups, to a defined geographic
area, namely, the sum of census tracts
that are covered by, or that intersect, a
licensee’s existing GSA. The
Commission proposes that such
rationalization should occur
automatically (i.e., the Commission
would update our licensing records to
reflect the change), so existing licensees
would not be required to file
applications with the Commission or
otherwise notify the Commission to
effectuate this change.1
12. The Commission seeks comment
on whether such expansion should
include every census tract that is
covered by or that intersects the
licensee’s existing GSA. Alternatively,
should a census tract be included only
if a minimum percentage of that census
tract overlaps the GSA, and, if so, what
should that minimum percentage
threshold be (e.g., 10 percent, 25
percent, 50 percent)? The Commission
also seeks comment on whether, if the
Commission adopts a minimum
percentage overlap threshold, that
minimum percentage should be a
percentage of the census tract’s
geography or of the census tract’s
population.
13. Second, the Commission proposes
that, in this rationalization process, each
1 The Commission notes that it followed a similar
automatic process when ITFS licensees were
awarded a protected service area (‘‘PSA’’), the
precursor to a GSA, and when the PSA was
expanded from 15 miles to 35 miles. The
Commission also notes that pursuant to our existing
rules, grandfathered EBS licensees on the E and F
channel groups would not be permitted to expand
their GSAs. 47 CFR 27.1216. Pursuant to 47 CFR
27.1216, because there may be both EBS and BRS
stations on the same channels in the same market,
grandfathered E and F group EBS channels have
previously been limited in their ability to expand
their GSAs. This may still be the case. The
Commission seeks comment on whether
rationalizing the holdings of grandfathered EBS
licensees on the E and F channel groups would be
feasible, whether the Commission could use a
similar rationalization scheme as proposed herein
for EBS generally, and whether doing so would
facilitate more intensive use of 2.5 GHz spectrum.
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current EBS GSA will be converted to a
single license made up of all the census
tracts it covers or intersects, rather than
converted to a collection of separate
licenses, each the size of a single census
tract. The Commission seeks comment
on this proposal.
14. Finally, the Commission seeks
comment on how to resolve situations
in which two or more co-channel GSAs
overlap the same census tract(s), and
whether simply setting the threshold for
required overlap at 50 percent in order
to include the census tract in the GSA
is the best way to address such a
situation. Are there other ways to
address situations in which co-channel
GSAs overlap the same census tracts?
15. Modifying EBS licenses to GSAs
based on census tracts should generate
two particular benefits. First, since
census tract boundaries are predetermined and follow regular
geographic separation patterns (e.g.,
divisions based on streets), the
boundaries of census tract-based GSAs
should be easier to determine than a
circular GSA that cuts across regular
geographic boundaries.
16. Second, rationalizing incumbent
EBS licenses based on census tracts
would yield white spaces that also are
based on the boundaries of census tracts
and/or counties (since census tracts nest
into counties), rather than irregular
shapes and slivers. This regularity in the
shape and size of white spaces would
facilitate new entry into the 2.5 GHz
band. The Commission seeks comment
on these views. Commenters should
discuss the costs and benefits of such a
license area change.
17. As an alternative to basing GSAs
on census tracts, the Commission seeks
comment on whether the Commission
should expand existing GSAs to include
the counties covered by or that intersect
the GSA. Under this alternative, the
Commission seeks comment on whether
to include a county only if a minimum
percentage of the county overlaps the
GSA and, if so, what that minimum
percentage should be (e.g., 50 percent,
75 percent). The Commission also seeks
comment on whether, if it adopts a
minimum percentage overlap threshold,
that the minimum percentage should be
a percentage of the county’s geography
or of the county’s population. In
addition, the Commission seeks
comment on how to resolve situations
where more than one EBS licensee is in
the same county, and whether and to
what extent automatic expansion on a
county basis will result in inefficient
use of spectrum.
18. The Commission also seeks
comment on any other issue that may
arise from rationalizing existing EBS
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holdings and allowing EBS licensees to
apply to expand their GSA boundaries.
In addition to the criteria stated above,
are there any other requirements that
existing licensees should satisfy in order
to be permitted to expand into the
vacant area of a county? For instance,
should the right to expand to county
boundaries be limited to licensees that
provide service to a given percentage of
that county? If so, what should the
minimum percentage be? Should the
minimum percentage be a percentage of
the county’s geography or of the
county’s population? Should the
Commission establish a requirement
that the incumbent licensee’s GSA cover
a minimum percentage of the area in a
county before it is allowed to expand
into the remainder of the county? In the
alternative, should the Commission
simply have existing licensees maintain
their current contours, rather than
rationalizing existing holdings?
Commenters should discuss cost and
benefits of any advocated approach and
support their position with quantitative
and qualitative data.
2. Additional Flexibility for EBS
Licenses
19. Granting additional flexibility to
EBS licensees has been an effective
means of allowing better use of the 2.5
GHz band. In 1983, when the
Commission allowed 2.5 GHz licensees
to lease excess capacity, it provided
educators with another means of
acquiring the resources needed to
operate Instructional Television Fixed
Source (ITFS) facilities for education. In
2004, when the Commission created
BRS and EBS, the more flexible
technical rules allowed the bands to be
used for broadband services. Now,
significant amounts of commercial
broadband data flow through the 2.5
GHz band. The Commission believes
subsequent events have confirmed the
Commission’s prediction that
‘‘consumer benefits will be maximized
if BRS/EBS licensees are able to take
advantage of the flexible use standard in
Part 27.’’ The Commission now seeks
comment on granting additional
flexibility to EBS licensees in order to
promote more intensive and efficient
spectrum use.
20. First, the Commission proposes to
provide EBS licensees with the
flexibility to assign or transfer control of
their licenses to entities that are not
EBS-eligible. Specifically, the
Commission proposes to eliminate the
limit on what entities can hold EBS
licenses (rule 27.1201) and make clear
that licensees may assign or transfer
control of their licenses to other entities.
The Commission notes that the existing
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licensees have built out their systems
since 2011 and understand how they
use their EBS licenses as well as the
availability of wireless broadband in
their area. Under this proposal, the
decision whether to lease or transfer a
license would rest with the EBS
licensee.2 There is little reason to think
that, at this point in time, the
Commission is better positioned than
licensees themselves to determine how
to maximize the use of 2.5 GHz
spectrum for licensees and their
communities. And there is little reason
to think that licensees should not be
allowed to decide for themselves
whether to continue to hold their
licenses or to transfer their licenses to
a third party in the secondary market.
The Commission seeks comment on this
proposal.
21. EBS licensees whose licenses were
granted via waiver since the EBS filing
freeze was instituted are currently
prohibited from leasing the spectrum.
Consistent with our consideration of
providing additional secondary-markets
flexibility to existing EBS licensees, the
Commission proposes to eliminate any
special restrictions on such licensees;
accordingly, those whose licenses were
granted via waiver would have the same
flexibility to lease their spectrum or to
transfer or assign their licenses as the
Commission proposes for other EBS
licensees. The Commission seeks
comment on this proposal.
22. The Commission also seeks
comment on eliminating the educational
use requirements for EBS licensees. The
educational use requirements, which
have not been updated since 1998 were
based on the use of analog video and
permitted many administrative uses to
fulfill the educational requirement.
However, most EBS licensees or their
commercial lessees are providing digital
broadband service, offered 24/7, at the
school itself, at home, or anywhere
within the licensee’s GSA. It appears the
existing educational use requirements
are out of date and do not fit the actual
use of the spectrum. Given the
additional flexibility the Commission is
granting EBS licensees, the Commission
seeks comment on whether there is
value in attempting to update the
educational use requirements—who is
better positioned to determine the
highest and best use of 2.5 GHz
spectrum, the Commission or licensees?
Commenters should explain and
quantify the benefits and costs of these
2 If the EBS licensee’s lease provides for an option
or right or right of first refusal with respect to a
license, the provisions of the contract would apply,
subject to the requirement that all assignments and
transfers of Commissions licenses are subject to
Commission consent.
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regulatory requirements, including
whether to update them (and if so,
how).
23. The Commission also proposes to
eliminate the current restrictions on
EBS lease terms. Under existing rules,
EBS licensees are prohibited from
leasing their facilities for a term longer
than 30 years and lessees are required
to provide EBS lessors with the
opportunity to revisit their lease terms
at years 15, 20, and 25 to review their
‘‘educational use requirements in light
of changes in educational needs,
technology, and other relevant factors
and to obtain access to such additional
services, capacity, support, and/or
equipment as the parties shall agree
upon in the spectrum leasing
arrangement to advance the EBS
licensee’s educational mission.’’ To that
end, the Commission proposes to
eliminate these lease restrictions on a
going-forward basis.3 The Commission
also seeks comment on any other
revisions needed to fully rationalize our
rules for the transferability, leasing, and
use of EBS spectrum. Are there other
restrictions that unnecessarily reduce
the ability of licensees to put this
spectrum to its highest and best use?
24. Finally, the Commission asks
whether, in light of the actions the
Commission takes in this proceeding, it
should modify our treatment of EBS in
the spectrum screen. In the Mobile
Spectrum Holdings Report and Order,
the Commission concluded that it was
necessary to include most EBS spectrum
into the spectrum screen ‘‘to reflect
today’s marketplace realities.’’ While
the Commission found that EBS
spectrum generally was suitable and
available for the provision of mobile
telephony/mobile broadband services, it
did apply a discount. Specifically, the
Commission first excluded the five
percent of the EBS capacity that is
reserved for educational uses because it
remains committed to EBS spectrum
serving educational purposes. Second, it
excluded the EBS white space. After
taking these discounts into
consideration, the Commission, in 2014,
included 89 megahertz of EBS spectrum
in the screen. Are any changes to this
treatment warranted? Should the
Commission reconsider the spectrum
aggregation screen?
B. Opportunities To Acquire New 2.5
GHz Licenses
25. Once the Commission has
rationalized the holdings of existing
3 While the Commission proposes to eliminate
EBS-specific term-related restrictions for leases, the
Commission does not propose to eliminate the
requirement that lease notifications must be refiled
for each new license term.
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EBS licensees, unassigned portions of
the 2.5 GHz band will be ready for new
assignment—bringing new
opportunities to rural communities that
have lacked access to this spectrum
before. The Commission proposes to use
geographic area licensing to assign any
remaining spectrum, which should
result in the auction of licenses for
unassigned portions of the 2.5 GHz band
and seek comment on whether it should
first open up to three new local priority
filing windows to give existing
licensees, Tribal Nations, and
educational entities an opening to
access 2.5 GHz spectrum to serve their
local communities. The Commission
also proposes build-out requirements for
these new licenses to ensure that all
Americans have the opportunity to
benefit from the 2.5 GHz band.
1. New Local Priority Filing Windows
26. When the Commission reopened
applications for the 2.5 GHz band in
1985, it expressed a ‘‘strong preference’’
for local applicants in the licensing
process. The Commission found then
that local applicants were ‘‘convincingly
demonstrated . . . to be the best
authorities for evaluating their
educational needs and the needs of
others they propose to serve in their
communities,’’ to ‘‘best understand the
educational needs . . . of their
communities,’’ and to ‘‘act most
responsibly in designing and developing
[2.5 GHz] systems.’’ It thus opened a
‘‘local priority period’’ to give ‘‘more
local entities . . . the opportunity to fill
more channels as financial support from
non-[instructional] use becomes more
widespread.’’
27. Now that the Commission is again
opening the 2.5 GHz band for additional
licensing, the Commission starts by
seeking comment on whether the
Commission should open up to three
new filing windows for qualifying
applicants that want to use currently
unassigned 2.5 GHz spectrum to serve
their local communities. In each filing
window, qualifying applicants would
have the opportunity to apply for one or
more vacant channels of EBS spectrum
in areas where the applicant can show
it has a local presence. The first filing
window would be for existing EBS
licensees, the second for Tribal Nations,
and the third for other educational
entities. The Commission seeks
comment on whether the Commission
should open any new local priority
filing windows, if any, as well as the
details of such windows in turn.
28. In responding, commenters should
discuss whether such priority filing
windows to assign licenses is consistent
with our statutory authority to assign
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licenses that could be used for
telecommunications, and Commission
policy and precedent regarding use of
competitive bidding. Also, should these
entities be given preference over others,
in light of other benefits provided to
these entities, such as various Universal
Service programs, including E-Rate and
the Connect America Fund? The
Commission also seeks comment on
whether such filing windows can be
misused and result in unjust
enrichment, with licenses being sold or
leased to ineligible entities for profit.
What effect might these priority
windows have on the attractiveness of
the remaining spectrum for other
applicants? Should the Commission
have one combined priority window for
these entities, or the three the
Commission seeks comment on below?
29. Local Presence. When the
Commission previously created a local
priority period, it defined as ‘‘local’’
those ‘‘institutions and organizations
that are physically located in the
community, or metropolitan area, where
service is proposed.’’ The Commission
proposes for any new local priority
filing window, should the Commission
choose to implement this approach, to
similarly require an applicant to
demonstrate, as part of the application
process, that it is physically located
within the license area applied for. The
Commission seeks comment on this
requirement and what it would mean in
practice. For example, should a college
or university be considered to be
physically located in any area in which
it has a campus? Should an entity
created by a state or local government
for the purpose of serving formal
educational needs, such as a public
school or a school district, be
considered to be physically located in
every area where it has a school
building? Should having a physical or
mailing address within a particular area,
be sufficient to demonstrate that the
applicant has a local presence within
that area? Are there any situations in
which simply having some sort of
physical address is not indicative of the
local presence of an applicant?
Commenters should discuss whether the
proposed definition of local presence
would serve the public interest and
provide any relevant qualitative and
quantitative data to support their
positions.
30. Commenters also should address
what documentation applicants must
provide to make such a demonstration.
Should the determination of whether an
applicant is considered to have a local
presence be based solely on an
applicant’s physical location(s) and/or
physical address(es)? Commenters
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should discuss other factors that should
be considered and explain how any
factors that they suggest will ensure that
the local priority filing window is
available only to local applicants. The
Commission also seeks comment any
other issues that it may need to address
to implement a local presence
requirement.
31. The Commission notes that the
majority of current EBS licensees, such
as school districts, schools, colleges and
universities, appear to have a local
presence where they have licenses. It
also appears that the entities most likely
to be affected by a local presence
requirement are the ‘‘national’’
licensees. Although national licensees
serve a purpose in providing
educational services to educational
institutions and students, educational
entities with a local presence have a
closer understanding of the needs of
their local communities and are more
likely to use 2.5 GHz spectrum to meet
such needs, especially in rural areas.
Entities with a local presence are part of
the communities they wish to serve, and
requiring local presence would increase
the likelihood that the EBS spectrum
would be put to beneficial use for local
communities. The Commission seeks
comment on these views.
32. Local Priority Filing Window 1:
Existing Licensees. If the Commission
decides to use priority filing windows,
the Commission seeks comment on
whether it should open a window for
existing EBS licensees. Opening such a
window would allow existing licensees
that are already providing service in a
significant portion of a county (and have
a local presence in that county) to
expand their service to the county
border.4 Existing licensees have already
deployed service throughout a portion
may be best positioned to quickly put
the white-spaces in their local area to
use through an edging-out strategy. In
addition, since a number of school
districts are based on county
boundaries, allowing county expansion
could allow county-based school
districts to better provide services to the
students within their districts, and in
many cases, to provide services to those
students at home, as well as on school
premises. Alternatively, such a window
would preclude other applicants from
accessing 2.5 GHz white spaces,
including new entrants long excluded
from the band. The Commission seeks
4 To be clear, should another licensee already
hold licenses for census tracts in that county, the
Commission would not intend the countyexpansion to encompass those areas.
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comment on opening such a local
priority filing window.
33. Were the Commission to open
such a window, it would propose to
limit participation to existing licensees
as of the adoption of this NPRM.5
Setting a firm, fixed date allows all
commenters and the Commission to
easily discern what entities would be
potential applicants for this window
should the Commission adopt it.
Furthermore, applicants in this window
would be limited to seeking countybased licenses only in counties where
they have a local presence. And finally,
applicants in this window would be
limited to seeking county-based licenses
only where they hold, after the
rationalization of existing license areas,
licenses on a particular channel that
cover at least 25 percent of census tracts
in a county. The Commission seeks
comment on these conditions. In
particular, what adjustments to these
conditions, if any, would be appropriate
to ensure that the goals of such a
window would be met? For example,
should the Commission require
licensees to hold licenses covering even
more of a county (say 50 percent of
census tracts)? Or should the
Commission require that a local
presence of the licensee lie inside the
county but outside the already-licensed
area of the licensee (under a theory that
licensees should be permitted to expand
to cover areas where they have a
physical presence but otherwise
restricted so that new licensees have the
opportunity to participate in the 2.5
GHz band)?
34. What other conditions, if any,
should the Commission adopt on
participants in such a window? For
example, should the Commission
exclude channels in counties in which
more than one existing licensee would
qualify for expansion on a single
channel? If so, how would the
Commission determine all counties in
which existing licensees meet the local
presence requirement? Alternatively,
should the Commission only exclude
channels in counties in which more
than one licensee holds licenses
covering at least 25 percent of the
census tracts in the county? Should the
Commission exclude tribal areas that are
contained within a county that would
be subject to the Tribal Nations window
discussed below? The Commission
seeks comment on these and any other
issues related to opening a new local
5 The Commission seeks comment on whether
holders of special temporary authority (an STA)
who are not full-fledged licensees should qualify for
such a window. Should the Commission expect
them to have the permanent facilities in place to
quickly expand service to the county edge?
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priority filing window for existing
licensees.
35. Local Priority Filing Window 2:
Rural Tribal Nations. The Commission
seeks comment on whether the
Commission, if it decides to pursue this
approach, should open a new local
priority filing window for rural Tribal
Nations. The Commission has
recognized that ‘‘members of federallyrecognized American Indian Tribes and
Alaska Native Villages and other
residents of Tribal lands have lacked
meaningful access to wired and wireless
communications services.’’ Opening
such a window would allow rural Tribal
Nations an opportunity to access 2.5
GHz spectrum to address educational
and communications needs of their
communities and residents on rural
Tribal lands, including the deployment
of advanced wireless services to areas
that have too long been without.
Alternatively, such a window would
preclude other applicants from
accessing 2.5 GHz white spaces. The
Commission seeks comment on opening
such a local priority filing window.
36. Were the Commission to open
such a window, it would propose to
limit participation to federallyrecognized American Indian Tribes and
Alaska Native Villages located in rural
areas.6 Such a request would appear to
comport with Native Public Media’s
request to open the 2.5 GHz band to
Indian Tribes and Tribal Governments
to account for the special trust
relationship between Tribal Nations and
the Federal Government and the fact
that Native Americans are acutely
underrepresented in communications
media. Furthermore, applicants in this
window would be limited to seeking
new licenses only in rural areas where
they have a local presence—that would
include rural Tribal lands associated
with the Tribal Nation itself. The
Commission seeks comment on how
much of the license area would need to
be Tribal lands to qualify. Would 25
percent be sufficient? 50 percent? The
Commission further seeks comment on
how to define rural Tribal lands for
these purposes. Should the Commission
use the definition of rural Tribal lands
used for E-rate program and Lifeline;
i.e., Tribal Lands that are not part of ‘‘an
urbanized area or urban cluster area
with a population equal to or greater
6 Alternatively, should the Commission authorize
any ‘‘Native American Tribal entity’’ to participate,
including any entity that is listed on the U.S.
Secretary of the Interior’s currently published list
of Indian Tribes recognized to be eligible for the
special programs and services provided by the
United States to Indians because of their status as
Indians? See The Federally Recognized Indian Tribe
List Act of 1994 (Indian Tribe Act, Pub. L. 103–154,
108 Stat. 4791 (1994)) (Indian Tribe Act).
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than 25,000’’? The Commission asks
commenters to discuss any issues that
may arise out of a particular definition
of Tribal Lands. The Commission seeks
comment on whether to exclude lands
that currently are not inhabited by
members of the Tribal Nations and/or
are held as private property from the
definition. To this end, the Commission
requests comment on how to ensure that
the only entities eligible to participate
in this filing window are entities that
meet our definition of a Tribal Nation,
and whose Tribal lands are lands where
tribal members reside as a group and are
not used for purely commercial
purposes. The Commission seeks
comment on these conditions. In
particular, what adjustments to these
conditions, if any, would be appropriate
to ensure that the goals of such a
window would be met?
37. The Commission next seeks
comment on whether licenses granted
for white spaces in such a local priority
window should be at the county level or
on a census-tract-by-census-tract basis.
Commenters should discuss why a
particular geographic area size would be
appropriate taking into account all
relevant information, including border
interference coordination needs,
propagation characteristics of the band,
and the services that will be offered.
The Commission notes that using a
smaller license area (census tracts)
would increase the fit between areas
licensed to Tribal Nations and Tribal
lands, but may have offsetting efficiency
losses. Commenters should discuss the
costs and benefits of any advocated
approach and support their position
with quantitative and qualitative data.
38. The Commission also proposes
that, if it were to adopt such a local
priority filing window, it would not
limit the number of channels that a
Tribal Nation could acquire. Given the
state of wireless technologies (including
the use of progressively wider
channels), the Commission believes that
allowing access to contiguous spectrum
on any number of available channels
would more efficiently accommodate
varying business models and spectrum
needs for wireless broadband. The
Commission seeks comment on this
proposal.
39. Finally, the Commission seeks
comment on any other ways by which
it could encourage the use of 2.5 GHz
spectrum on Tribal Lands. Should the
Commission impose any additional
obligations to ensure that Tribal Nations
hold 2.5 GHz licenses for the benefit of
their Tribal community? The
Commission seeks comment on these
and any other issues related to opening
a new local priority filing window for
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Tribal Nations, and in particular it seeks
government-to-government consultation
and coordination with federally
recognized Tribes on these issues and
the input of inter-Tribal government
associations and Native representative
organizations.
40. Local Priority Filing Window 3:
New Educational Entities. To the extent
that the Commission implements any
filing windows, it seeks comment on
whether the Commission should open a
new local priority filing window for
educational entities that do not
currently hold any 2.5 GHz licenses.
Opening such a window would allow
new educational entities that have never
had the opportunity to benefit from
holding and using 2.5 GHz spectrum
(and that have a local presence in a
particular area) the opportunity to
access this spectrum for the first time.
The Commission notes that the majority
of requests for waiver of the current
filing freeze have come from educators
with a local presence in the
communities that they wish to serve.
Alternatively, such a window would
preclude the auction of any licenses for
remaining 2.5 GHz white spaces. The
Commission seeks comment on opening
such a local priority filing window.
41. Were the Commission to open
such a window, it would propose to
limit participation to accredited
institutions as well as governmental
organizations engaged in the formal
education of enrolled students who are
not 2.5 GHz licensees as of the adoption
of this NPRM.7 Setting a firm, fixed date
allows all commenters and the
Commission to easily discern what
entities would be potential applicants
for this window should it adopt it.
Furthermore, applicants in this window
would be limited to seeking licenses
only in areas where they have a local
presence. The Commission seeks
comment on these conditions. In
particular, what adjustments to these
conditions, if any, would be appropriate
to ensure that the goals of such a
window would be met?
42. The Commission next seeks
comment on whether licenses granted
for white spaces in such a local priority
window should be at the county level or
on a census-tract-by-census-tract basis.
Commenters should discuss why a
particular geographic area size would be
appropriate taking into account all
relevant information, including border
interference coordination needs,
propagation characteristics of the band,
7 As before, the Commission seeks comment on
whether holders of special temporary authority (an
STA) who are not full-fledged licensees should
qualify for such a window.
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and the services that will be offered.
Since a number of school districts are
based on county boundaries, would
allowing county-based licenses allow
county-based school districts to better
provide services to the students within
their districts, and in many cases, to
provide services to those students at
home, as well as on school premises?
Commenters should discuss the costs
and benefits of any advocated approach
and support their position with
quantitative and qualitative data.
43. The Commission also proposes
that, if it were to adopt such a local
priority filing window, it would not
limit the number of channels that a new
educational entity could acquire. Given
the state of wireless technologies
(including the use of progressively
wider channels), the Commission
believes that allowing access to
contiguous spectrum on any number of
available channels would more
efficiently accommodate varying
business models and spectrum needs for
wireless broadband. The Commission
seeks comment on this proposal.
44. Local Priority Filing Process. The
Commission seeks comment on the
appropriate time frame for any new
local priority filing windows. How long
should the Commission keep this
window open, and how much notice
should be given to applicants before the
filing window opens? For example,
should each such filing window last 30
days with at least 90 days’ notice to
potential applicants of the licenses
available? The Commission asks entities
that are interested in participating in the
application window and obtaining 2.5
GHz licenses to indicate their interests
and the difficulties that they may face
to help us evaluate any possible
technical and process issues that may
arise in implementing one or more new
local priority filing windows for
applicants and processing such
applications. Given technical
limitations of the Universal Licensing
System (ULS), the Commission notes
that it may not be able to accept
applications for all available EBS
licenses in one general filing window. If
that is the case, and the Commission
divides the available licenses among
multiple filing windows, how should
such division be implemented: by
region; by population, with the most
populous States first or last;
alphabetically; or by some other
method? The Commission seeks
comment on these and related issues.
45. Resolving Mutually Exclusive
Applications. The Act requires that, if
the Commission accepts mutually
exclusive applications for initial
spectrum licenses, the Commission
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‘‘shall grant the license . . . through a
system of competitive bidding.’’ The
Commission assigns licenses for
commercial and private internal use
through competitive bidding in order to
place the licenses in the hands of the
parties that value them most highly and
that are able to use them most
effectively. If the Commission decides to
create one or more local priority filing
windows, as discussed here, it would
result in relatively few mutually
exclusive applications, but such a result
is not precluded. Therefore, should the
Commission receive mutually exclusive
applications, it must use competitive
bidding to assign initial licenses subject
to mutually exclusive applications. The
Commission seeks comment on limiting
such competitive bidding to the
mutually exclusive applicants in that
particular filing window, however. In
addition, the Commission proposes to
employ the part 1 rules governing
competitive bidding design, unjust
enrichment, application and payment
procedures, reporting requirements, and
the prohibition on certain
communications between auction
applicants. The Commission does not
propose to adopt designated entity
provisions. Under this proposal, such
rules would be subject to any further
modifications that the Commission may
adopt for its part 1 general competitive
bidding rules in the future. The
Commission seeks comment on this
proposal.
46. The also seeks comment on
whether to allow a settlement window
for the filers to resolve any mutual
exclusivity before the Commission
accept any application for a 2.5 GHz
license. The Commission also seeks
comment on any alternative
‘‘engineering solutions, negotiation,
threshold qualifications, service
regulations, and other means’’ 8 of
avoiding mutually exclusive
applications for new licenses that might
further the public interest and comply
with the Act.
47. Holding Periods for Licenses
Acquired through a Local Priority Filing
Window. The Commission seeks
comment on whether to impose a
special holding period on any license
acquired through a local priority filing
window, if any. Although the
Commission generally seeks to facilitate
the free transfer of licenses among
parties, granting certain entities local
priority filing windows is premised on
the idea that such entities are uniquely
qualified to hold spectrum licenses and
ensures that the licenses are put to their
highest and best use—something that
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could not occur if such an entity quickly
flipped that license to another,
nonqualifying entity. Should the
Commission expect that these licenses
are likely to be used by the licensee, or
that they ultimately will be leased or
sold to others who are not eligible for
the priority preference? Should the
Commission implement a holding
period that deters the lease or sale of
spectrum to ineligible entities? What
factors should the Commission consider
in establishing a holding period? What
is the most appropriate length for a
holding period so as to alleviate
concerns involving any potential for
speculative behavior or acquisition of
2.5 GHz licenses by entities that do not
have a bona fide interest in providing
service? Would a three, five, or sevenyear or more holding period be most
appropriate for these circumstances? In
determining the appropriate length of
holding period, should the Commission
consider the chances for and mitigate
the potential unjust enrichment by those
receiving a priority preference? Are
there additional steps that should be
taken to ensure that entities are not
unjustly enriched? Should the
Commission require the licensee to
demonstrate completion of certain
buildout requirements before allowing a
transfer of control? Should the
Commission prohibit an EBS licensee
that is granted a license during one of
the local priority windows proposed
herein from leasing 100 percent or some
other percentage of their capacity to a
commercial entity during the holding
period? The Commission seeks
comment on these issues.
48. For EBS licenses granted via the
local priority windows proposed above,
the Commission proposes to require that
licensees must reserve a minimum of 20
percent of the capacity of their channels
for educational uses that ‘‘further the
educational mission of accredited
public and private schools’’ consistent
with paragraphs (b) and (c) of § 27.1203
of the Commission’s rules and may not
enter into spectrum leasing
arrangements involving this reserved
capacity. For EBS licensees that choose
to provide a broadcast-type service, the
Commission proposes to require such
licensees to offer 20 hours per channel,
per week of educational programming.
The Commission seeks comment on
these proposals.
2. Licensing White Spaces
49. The Commission proposes, after
any new licenses have been assigned
through one or more local priority filing
windows should the Commission
choose to implement that approach, that
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any remaining 2.5 GHz spectrum 9 be
made available for commercial use via
competitive bidding. The Commission
proposes that it would conduct an
auction for licenses of EBS spectrum in
conformity with the general competitive
bidding rules set forth in part 1, subpart
Q, of the Commission’s rules. As
proposed above for mutually exclusive
applications filed in the three EBS filing
windows, the Commission proposes to
employ the part 1 rules governing
competitive bidding design, unjust
enrichment, application and payment
procedures, reporting requirements, and
the prohibition on certain
communications between auction
applicants. The Commission also
proposes not to apply designated entity
preferences in this auction. The
Commission seeks comment on this
proposal.
50. The Commission seeks comment
on the appropriate geographic size of
new 2.5 GHz white space licenses (e.g.,
county, census tract, or something else)
and the size of the channel blocks (e.g.,
existing channels or the entire available
band). Commenters should discuss the
costs and benefits of adopting their
proposed geographic area size and
channel block size and why such area
and channel block sizes would serve the
public interest taking into account all
the characteristics of this band.
51. Consistent with our longstanding
approach, the Commission would
initiate a public notice process to solicit
public input on certain details of
auction design and the auction
procedures. This public notice process
would address auction-specific matters
such as the competitive bidding design
and mechanisms, minimum opening
bids and/or reserve prices, caps on
bidding credits, and payment
procedures. In advance of the auction,
another public notice would announce
the auction procedures and provide
detailed instructions for potential
auction participants. The Commission
also seeks comment on whether any of
our part 1 rules should be modified for
an auction of licenses in these frequency
bands.
3. Requirements for New 2.5 GHz
Licenses
52. The current performance
requirements for licensees in the 2.5
9 In the BRS/EBS Second FNPRM, the
Commission sought comment on a variety of issues
related to licensing EBS spectrum in the Gulf of
Mexico. The Commission need not address whether
to eliminate restrictions on EBS spectrum in the
Gulf of Mexico because, as explained herein, the
Commission proposes to eliminate restrictions on
all remaining ‘‘white space’’ EBS spectrum and
make it available for commercial use via
competitive bidding.
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GHz band were set forth in 2006, as part
of the ongoing efforts to transition the
band to the new band plan established
in 2004. The 2006 BRS/EBS Second
Report and Order established a
substantial service regime for BRS and
EBS licensees and required licensees to
demonstrate compliance by May 1,
2011. The 2006 BRS/EBS Second Report
and Order also established specific safe
harbors, including 30 percent
population coverage for mobile or pointto-multipoint use, or six permanent
links per million for fixed point-to-point
services. The 2006 BRS/EBS Second
Report and Order also established an
educational safe harbor for EBS
licensees, consisting of 20 hours of
educational use per channel, per week.
In 2010, the Commission established a
new requirement for new BRS licenses
issued after November 6, 2009: The
licensee must make a showing of
substantial service within four years
from the date of issue of the license. The
Commission seeks comment on how
effective these performance
requirements have been.
53. Last year, the Commission
adopted a unified regulatory framework
for the Wireless Radio Services (WRS)
that replaced the existing patchwork of
service-specific rules regarding renewal,
comparative renewal, continuity of
service, and partitioning and
disaggregation, with clear, consistent
rules of the road for WRS licensees. The
Commission included BRS in the new
WRS framework, but excluded EBS from
the WRS framework on the ground that
‘‘this service presents unique issues that
are under consideration in’’ this present
proceeding.
54. Performance Requirements for
New 2.5 GHz Licenses. The Commission
proposes more robust performance
requirements for any new 2.5 GHz
licenses granted through a local priority
filing window or a system of
competitive bidding. For mobile and
fixed point-to-multipoint services, the
Commission proposes an interim
benchmark of 50 percent population
coverage and a final benchmark of 80
percent population coverage. For fixed
point-to-point services, the Commission
proposes an interim benchmark of 20
point-to-point links per million persons
(one link per 50,000 persons) in a
license area, and a final benchmark of
40 point-to-point links per million
persons (one link per 25,000 persons) in
a licensed area. These benchmarks are
slightly higher than those for the AWS–
3 and WCS bands (which have similar
propagation characteristics) given the
maturity of technologies already
developed and deployed in the 2.5 GHz
band. For educational broadcast
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services, the Commission seeks
comment on an interim benchmark of
50 percent population coverage and a
final benchmark of 80 percent
population coverage. The Commission
seeks comment on these performance
benchmarks and on any other
requirements that may be more
appropriate for this band. Are there
considerations specific to this band that
would warrant a different approach?
Are there new technological
developments, or issues specific to the
2.5 GHz band, that render a usage-based
approach or any other approach suitable
here? When should the interim
benchmark showing be required? What
penalty should apply to licensees that
do not meet it? In addition, because the
Commission seeks comment on whether
to adopt a licensing framework based on
census tracts, the Commission also
seeks comment on how such a
framework would affect performance
requirements. Is there some other
method of evaluating meaningful
service, beyond traditional metrics, that
might be more appropriate considering
the size of license areas? The
Commission also seeks comment on
whether there are other more
appropriate construction requirements
for educational services.
55. Renewal Standards. The
Commission also proposes to bring any
new 2.5 GHz licenses granted through a
local priority filing window or a system
of competitive bidding into the unified
regulatory renewal framework for WRS.
The Commission believes that updating
the renewal standards in this manner
will encourage rapid deployment of
next generation wireless services,
including 5G. The Commission also
seeks comment on bringing existing EBS
licensees, once their licenses have been
rationalized as discussed earlier, into
the WRS framework for license renewal.
What are the costs and benefits of each
approach?
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C. Cleaning Up the 2.5 GHz Rules
56. The process for transitioning BRS
and EBS licensees to the new band plan
was completed in 2011. While a few
Multichannel Video Programming
Distributors have received waivers to
opt out of the transition so that they can
continue providing service, all other
licensees have transitioned to the new
band plan. It therefore appears that the
transition rules are no longer
necessary.10 The Commission believes it
10 Should an MVPD operator decide that it wishes
to discontinue video service and transition to the
new band plan, it can follow the process
established by the Wireless Telecommunications
Bureau in Antilles Wireless, LLC d/b/a USA Digital,
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is in the public interest to eliminate
regulations that are out of date and no
longer necessary. The Commission
therefore proposes to eliminate the BRS/
EBS transition rules.
57. The Commission also proposes to
make various non-substantive, clarifying
amendments to § 27.1206. The proposed
changes are contained in the Proposed
Rules. The changes are designed to
make the rules easier to understand
without changing the substantive
requirements for BRS. The Commission
seeks comment on these proposed
changes.
D. Additional Approaches for
Transforming the 2.5 GHz Band
58. The Commission seeks comment
on other approaches to rationalizing and
opening up the 2.5 GHz band for more
productive and intensive use. Generally,
are there better ways to restructure the
2.5 GHz band that will ensure that it is
put to its highest and best use? In
particular, the Commission seeks
comment on other licensing and auction
ideas and alternatives to the local
priority filing window approach.
Commenters should provide
information about the costs and benefits
of any approach suggested.
59. For instance, should the
Commission, regardless of the scope of
incumbent operations, create new
geographic area licenses? If so, what
types of geographic area licenses should
the FCC create? Should the Commission
license the spectrum based on census
tracts or counties or some other size?
Commenters should discuss whether
their view of the appropriate geographic
area size changes if the Commission is
considering licenses that encompass
more than the white spaces previously
discussed, and if so why. Additionally,
what channel size or sizes should the
Commission use in licensing this
spectrum?
60. If the FCC were to adopt this
approach, how would the Commission
account for reasonable investmentbacked expectations and incumbent
operations? Would a different approach
than those considered in section III.A.
above be preferable, and if so why? For
example, should the Commission
convert incumbent licenses into new,
flexible use spectrum licenses that
would be subject to its secondary
market rules? If so, how? Should our
approach to incumbent licensees
depend on or consider the existing and/
or historic use of the spectrum by those
incumbent licensees, including, for
instance, the construction of facilities or
et al., Order on Reconsideration, 25 FCC Rcd 8052,
8058, paras. 13–14 (WTB 2010).
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degree to which the spectrum has
consistently been put to use?
61. Should the Commission consider
moving directly to auction for this
spectrum, rather than open priority
filing windows for certain entities? In
section III.B.2, the Commission seeks
comment on auctioning the white
spaces, but, instead, should the
Commission consider other auction
options, such as an incentive auction of
this spectrum in order to provide
incentives for incumbents to make
underutilized spectrum available for
commercial use? In particular, should
the Commission rely on § 6402 of the
Spectrum Act, now codified at 47 U.S.C.
309(j)(8)(G) (or some other source of
authority) to encourage incumbent
licensees to relinquish voluntarily some
or all of their spectrum usage rights to
permit the assignment of new initial
licenses subject to flexible-use service
rules? Are there other means of
assigning licenses and promoting more
efficient uses that the Commission
should consider, such as an overlay
auction 11 or other auction mechanisms?
The Commission seeks comment on the
implications of moving directly to
auction.
62. Regardless of the particular
approach the Commission takes to
facilitate more intensive use of the 2.5
GHz spectrum, should the Commission
allow all entities that are interested in
using this spectrum the same
opportunity to acquire licenses in this
band? In other words, should the
Commission not adopt local priority
filing windows or otherwise grant
preferential treatment to potential
licensees based on their identity or
other criteria?
IV. Initial Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis
63. As required by the Regulatory
Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended
(RFA), the Commission has prepared
this Initial Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis (IRFA) of the possible
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities by
the policies and rules proposed in the
NPRM. Written public comments are
requested on this IRFA. Comments must
be identified as responses to the IRFA
and must be filed by the deadlines for
comments provided on the first page of
the NPRM. The Commission will send a
copy of this NPRM, including this IRFA,
11 In an overlay auction, the auction winner
acquires spectrum rights ‘‘subject to the exclusion
of overlapping, co-channel incumbent’’ licensees.
Typically, if an incumbent license cancels or is
forfeited, the overlay licensee automatically
acquires the right to operate in the area formerly
covered by the incumbent license.
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to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration (SBA).
In addition, the NPRM and IRFA (or
summaries thereof) will be published in
the Federal Register.
A. A. Need for, and Objectives of, the
Proposed Rules
64. In the NPRM, the Commission
take steps to permit more flexible use of
the 2496–2690 MHz (2.5 GHz) band by
current EBS licensees and to provide
new opportunities for EBS eligible
entities, Tribal Nations, and commercial
entities to obtain unused 2.5 GHz
spectrum to facilitate improved access
to next generation wireless broadband,
including 5G, for both educational and
commercial uses. As mentioned in the
NPRM, roughly half of EBS spectrum
currently is unassigned, while the other
half is assigned in geographic areas of
various sizes and shapes and is subject
to unique use and transfer restrictions.
The irregularity in the current
geographic service areas, combined in
some cases with outdated regulatory
requirements has impeded the efficient
deployment of services, such as mobile
broadband, in this spectrum band.
Consistent with the Commission’s goal
of making additional spectrum available
for flexible use, and to promote use of
EBS frequencies that have been
unassigned for far too long, the
Commission proposes and seeks
comment on a number of steps to
encourage and facilitate more efficient
use of the 2.5 GHz band. Additionally,
since the process for transitioning BRS
and EBS licensees to the new band plan
was completed in 2011, the Commission
proposes to eliminate the BRS/EBS
transition rules. The Commission
believes it is in the public interest to
eliminate these regulations that are out
of date and no longer necessary.
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B. B. Legal Basis
65. The proposed actions are
authorized pursuant to Sections 1, 2, 3,
4(i), 7, 201, 301, 302, 303, 304, 307, 308,
309, and 310 of the Communications
Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 151,
152, 154(i), 157, 201, 301, 302, 303, 304,
307, 308, 309, 310 and Section 706 of
the Telecommunications Act of 1996, as
amended, 47 U.S.C. 1302.
C. C. Description and Estimate of the
Number of Small Entities to Which the
Proposed Rules Will Apply
66. The RFA directs agencies to
provide a description of, and, where
feasible, an estimate of the number of
small entities that may be affected by
the proposed rules and policies, if
adopted. The RFA generally defines the
term ‘‘small entity’’ as having the same
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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.
67. Small Businesses, Small
Organizations, Small Governmental
Jurisdictions. Our 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.
68. 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 August 2016,
there were approximately 356,494 small
organizations based on registration and
tax data filed by nonprofits with the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS).
69. Finally, the small entity described
as a ‘‘small governmental jurisdiction’’
is defined generally as ‘‘governments of
cities, counties, towns, townships,
villages, school districts, or special
districts, with a population of less than
fifty thousand.’’ U.S. Census Bureau
data from the 2012 Census of
Governments indicate that there were
90,056 local governmental jurisdictions
consisting of general purpose
governments and special purpose
governments in the United States. Of
this number there were 37,132 General
purpose governments (county,
municipal and town or township) with
populations of less than 50,000 and
12,184 Special purpose governments
(independent school districts and
special districts) with populations of
less than 50,000. The 2012 U.S. Census
Bureau data for most types of
governments in the local government
category show that the majority of these
governments have populations of less
than 50,000. Based on this data the
Commission estimates that at least
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49,316 local government jurisdictions
fall in the category of ‘‘small
governmental jurisdictions.’’
70. 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 Bureau 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
1,000 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.
71. Broadband Radio Service and
Educational Broadband Service.
Broadband Radio Service systems,
previously referred to as Multipoint
Distribution Service (MDS) and
Multichannel Multipoint Distribution
Service (MMDS) systems, and ‘‘wireless
cable,’’ transmit video programming to
subscribers and provide two-way highspeed data operations using the
microwave frequencies of the BRS and
EBS (previously referred to as the
Instructional Television Fixed Service
(ITFS)).
72. BRS—In connection with the 1996
BRS auction, the Commission
established a small business size
standard as an entity that had annual
average gross revenues of no more than
$40 million in the previous three
calendar years. The BRS auctions
resulted in 67 successful bidders
obtaining licensing opportunities for
493 Basic Trading Areas (BTAs). Of the
67 auction winners, 61 met the
definition of a small business. BRS also
includes licensees of stations authorized
prior to the auction. At this time, based
on our review of licensing records, the
Commission estimates that of the 61small business BRS auction winners,
based on our review of licensing
records, 48 remain small business
licensees. In addition to the 48 small
businesses that hold BTA
authorizations, there are approximately
86 incumbent BRS licensees that are
considered small entities (18 incumbent
BRS licensees do not meet the small
business size standard). After adding the
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number of small business auction
licensees to the number of incumbent
licensees not already counted, there are
currently approximately 133 BRS
licensees that are defined as small
businesses under either the SBA or the
Commission’s rules.
73. In 2009, the Commission
conducted Auction 86, the sale of 78
licenses in the BRS areas. The
Commission offered three levels of
bidding credits: (i) A bidder with
attributed average annual gross revenues
that exceed $15 million and do not
exceed $40 million for the preceding
three years (small business) received a
15 percent discount on its winning bid;
(ii) a bidder with attributed average
annual gross revenues that exceed $3
million and do not exceed $15 million
for the preceding three years (very small
business) received a 25 percent discount
on its winning bid; and (iii) a bidder
with attributed average annual gross
revenues that do not exceed $3 million
for the preceding three years
(entrepreneur) received a 35 percent
discount on its winning bid. Auction 86
concluded in 2009 with the sale of 61
licenses. Of the ten winning bidders,
two bidders that claimed small business
status won 4 licenses; one bidder that
claimed very small business status won
three licenses; and two bidders that
claimed entrepreneur status won six
licenses.
74. EBS—Educational Broadband
Service has been included within the
broad economic census category and
SBA size standard for Wired
Telecommunications Carriers since
2007. Wired Telecommunications
Carriers are comprised of 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 telecommunications networks.
Transmission facilities may be based on
a single technology or a combination of
technologies.’’ The SBA’s small
business size standard for this category
is all such firms having 1,500 or fewer
employees. U.S. Census Bureau 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.
75. In addition to Census data, the
Commission’s Universal Licensing
System indicates that as of March 2018
there are 1,300 licensees holding over
2,190 active EBS licenses. The
Commission estimates that of these
2,190 licenses, the majority are held by
non-profit educational institutions and
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school districts, which are by statute
defined as small businesses.
D. D. Description of Projected Reporting,
Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance
Requirements
76. The Commission expects the rules
proposed in the NPRM will impose new
or additional reporting or recordkeeping
and/or other compliance obligations on
small entities as well as other EBS
licensees and EBS eligible entities. The
Commission discusses it proposals and
the obligations that would result below,
and seeks comment on these matters,
including cost and benefit analyses
supported by quantitative and
qualitative data from the parties in the
proceeding.
77. Rationalizing the GSAs of
incumbent EBS Licensees. The
Commission proposes to rationalize the
GSAs of incumbent EBS licensees,
except grandfathered licensees in the E
and F Channel groups, to a defined
geographic area, namely, the sum of
census tracts that are covered by, or that
intersect with, a licensee’s existing GSA.
The Commission proposes that, in this
rationalization process, each current
EBS GSA will be converted to a single
license made up of all the census tracts
it covers, rather than converted to a
collection of separate census tract-sized
licenses. The Commission also proposes
that EBS licensees with a local presence
in a county be given the opportunity to
apply to expand their GSA to the
boundaries of a county where they have
a local presence. Licensees who take
advantage of that option would be
subject to new performance
requirements. As an alternative to
basing GSAs on census tracts, the
Commission seeks comment on whether
it should expand existing GSAs to
include the county (or counties) covered
by or that intersect the GSA.
78. Additional Flexibility for EBS
Licenses. The Commission proposes to
provide EBS licensees with the
flexibility to assign or transfer control of
their licenses to entities that are not
EBS-eligible. To provide additional
flexibility and to facilitate the most
efficient use of the EBS spectrum
through a market-based mechanism, the
Commission proposes to allow an
incumbent EBS licensee, in addition to
leasing a portion of its license, to assign
or transfer control of its entire license to
entities that do not meet the eligibility
criteria contained in § 27.1201 of the
Commission’s rules. If the incumbent
EBS licensee were to choose to assign or
transfer its license, the new licensee
would not be required to comply with
the educational use requirements in
§ 27.1203 of the Commission’s rules.
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The Commission seeks comment on
whether licensees whose license were
granted via waiver, should be given
additional flexibility to lease their
spectrum or to transfer or assign their
licenses freely. Given this flexibility to
transfer or assign an entire EBS license
to non-eligible entities, free of
educational use requirements, the
Commission also proposes to eliminate
the educational use requirements in
§ 27.1203 for all EBS licensees. The
Commission also proposes to eliminate
restrictions on EBS lease terms on a
going forward basis and ask whether
additional revisions are necessary to
fully rationalize our rules for the
transferability, leasing and use of EBS
spectrum.
79. Opportunities to Acquire New 2.5
GHz Licenses. The Commission
proposes to auction off licenses for
unassigned portions of the 2.5 GHZ
band and seek comment on whether it
should first open up to three new local
priority filing windows to give existing
licensees, Tribal Nations and
educational entities an opportunity to
access 2.5 GHz spectrum to serve their
local communities. The Commission
also proposes build-out requirements for
these new licenses to ensure that all
Americans have the opportunity to
benefit from the 2.5 GHz band.
80. New Local Priority Filing
Window—Local Presence. The
Commission proposes to require an
applicant to demonstrate as part of the
application process that it has a local
presence, and that an EBS-eligible entity
should be considered to have a ‘‘local
presence’’ when it is physically located
within the license area where service is
proposed. The Commission seeks
comment on what documentation
applicants must provide to demonstrate
that they have a local presence.
81. Local Priority Filing Window 1:
Existing Licensees. The Commission
seeks comment on opening a window
that would permit existing 2.5 GHz
licensees to expand their service to the
county border if they were able to
demonstrate that they had a local
presence in that county, and if they
covered at least 25 percent of census
tracts in that county. Such a window
would allow existing licensees to
quickly put white space to use, but it
would also preclude new entrants.
82. Local Priority Filing Window 2:
Tribal Nations. The Commission seeks
comment on opening a new filing
priority filing window for Tribal
Nations. The Commission proposes to
limit participation to federallyrecognized American Indian Tribes and
Alaska Native Villages that also have a
local presence. The Commission also
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proposes not to limit the number of
channels that a Tribal Nations could
apply for as EBS-eligible entities for the
purposes of participating in the Native
National entity filing window. The
Commission asks commenters to
propose other ways by which it could
encourage the use of EBS spectrum on
Tribal Lands and in Native
communities.
83. Local Priority Filing Window 3:
New Educational Entities. The
Commission seeks comment on opening
a new local priority filing window for
educational entities that do not hold any
2.5 GHz spectrum. The Commission
would propose to limit participation in
such a window to accredited
institutions as well as governmental
organizations engaged in the formal
education of enrolled students who are
not 2.5 GHz licensees as of the adoption
of this NPRM and only in areas in
which they have a local presence. The
Commission seeks comment on whether
to assign new EBS licenses on a countywide or census tract basis.
84. Local Priority Filing Process. The
Commission seeks comment on the
appropriate time frame for any of the
new local priority filing windows, how
long the windows should be open, and
how much notice to give. The
Commission asks entities that are
interested in participating in the
application window and obtaining 2.5
GHz licenses to indicate their interests
and the difficulties that they may face
to help us evaluate any possible
technical and process issues that may
arise in implementing one or more new
local priority filing windows for
applicants and processing such
applications.
85. Resolving Mutually Exclusive
Applications. While the Commission
does not anticipate many mutually
exclusive applications based on the
local priority filing windows, it notes
that the Communications Act requires
that assign initial licenses subject to
mutually exclusive applications through
competitive bidding. The Commission
proposes to limit such competitive
bidding to the mutually exclusive
applications filed during a particular
window, and ask for comment on that.
The Commission asks for comment on
whether the Commission should permit
a settlement window to resolve such
mutual exclusivity. The Commission
also proposes to employ the part 1 rules
governing competitive bidding design,
unjust enrichment, application and
payment procedures, reporting
requirements, and the prohibition on
certain communications between
auction applicants, and seeks comment
on this proposal.
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86. Holding Periods for Licenses
Acquired Through a Local Priority Filing
Window. The Commission seeks
comment on whether to impose a
special holding period, and for how
long, on any license acquired through a
local priority filing window in order to
ensure that licenses are not immediately
flipped to a nonqualifying entity. The
Commission asks whether a three, five,
or seven-year holding period would be
most appropriate for these
circumstances. The Commission also
asks whether licensees should be
required to meet certain buildout
requirements before allowing a transfer.
87. Licensing White Spaces. The
Commission proposes that after any new
licenses have been assigned through one
or more local priority filing windows,
any remaining 2.5 GHz spectrum would
be made available for commercial use
via competitive bidding using our
general part 1 competitive bidding rules.
The Commission seeks comment on this
proposal and on the appropriate size of
such licenses and the size of channel
blocks. The Commission also proposes
to apply designated entity preferences
in this auction, and to eliminate the EBS
eligibility criteria contained in § 27.1201
of the rules with respect to unassigned
spectrum and ask for comment on these
proposals.
88. Requirements for New 2.5 GHz
Licenses. The Commission proposes
more robust construction requirements
for new 2.5 GHz licenses granted based
on the proposed local priority filing
window in the NPRM or a system of
competitive bidding. For mobile and
fixed point-to-multipoint services, the
Commission proposes an interim
benchmark of 50 percent population
coverage and a final benchmark of 80
percent population coverage. For fixed
point-to-point services, the Commission
proposes an interim benchmark of 20
point-to-point links per million persons
(one link per 50,000 persons) in a
license area, and 40 point-to-point links
per million persons (one link per 25,000
persons) in a licensed area. For
educational broadcast services that
provide least 20 hours of educational
use per channel per week, the
Commission seeks comment on an
interim benchmark of 50 percent
population coverage and a final
benchmark of 80 percent population
coverage. The Commission also
proposes to bring any new 2.5 GHz
licenses granted through a local priority
filing window or a system of
competitive bidding into the unified
regulatory renewal framework for WRS.
The Commission seeks comment on
bringing existing EBS licensees into the
WRS framework for license renewal
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once their licenses have been
rationalized.
89. Cleaning Up the 2.5 GHz Rules.
The Commission proposes to eliminate
the BRS/EBS transition rules since the
process for transitioning BRS and EBS
licensees to the new band plan was
completed in 2011 and the rules no
longer appear necessary. The
Commission also proposes to make
various non-substantive, clarifying
amendments to § 27.1206 to make the
rules easier to understand without
changing the substantive requirements
for BRS. The proposed changes are
contained in the Proposed Rules of the
NRPM, and the Commission seeks
comment on these proposed changes.
E. E. Steps Taken To Minimize
Significant Economic Impact on Small
Entities, and Significant Alternatives
Considered
90. The RFA requires an agency to
describe any significant, specifically
small business, alternatives that it has
considered in reaching its proposed
approach, which may include the
following four alternatives (among
others): ‘‘(1) the establishment of
differing compliance or reporting
requirements or timetables that take into
account the resources available to small
entities; (2) the clarification,
consolidation, or simplification of
compliance and reporting requirements
under the rule for such small entities;
(3) the use or performance rather than
design standards; and (4) an exemption
from coverage of the rules, or any part
thereof, for such small entities.’’
91. The Commission does not believe
that its proposed changes will have a
significant economic impact on small
entities however, to get a better
understanding costs and benefits
associated with proposals and any
alternatives raised in this proceeding as
mentioned above in the previous
section, the Commission has requested
that commenters discuss the costs and
benefits supported by quantitative and
qualitative data of any approach
advocated. The proposed changes
expanding the use of the 2.5 GHz band
will benefit small entities as well as
entities of other sizes by reducing
unnecessary regulatory burdens on
licensees, promoting greater spectrum
efficiency, and facilitating the full use of
EBS spectrum to provide advanced
mobile broadband services, particularly
in rural areas where this spectrum sits
idle today. Moreover, the proposed
reforms will permit more flexible use of
this spectrum by small and other sized
entities that currently hold EBS licenses
and will provide new opportunities for
EBS eligible entities, Tribal Nations, and
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commercial entities to obtain unused
2.5 GHz spectrum to facilitate improved
access to next generation wireless
broadband, including 5G, for both
educational and commercial uses.
92. More specifically, the
Commission’s proposed rationalization
process for incumbent EBS licensees
that would occur automatically allowing
incumbent licensees to avoid a
requirement to file applications with the
Commission or to otherwise notify the
Commission to effectuate this change
would minimize some costs and/or
administrative burdens on small entities
associated with the rule, if adopted.
Small entities should also benefit from
removal of the filing freeze for new EBS
licenses and the requirement that EBS
eligible entities applying for a new
license must have a local presence in
the areas in which they wish to provide
service, which will provide them greater
opportunity to obtain EBS spectrum to
meet the needs of their communities. In
addition, small entities should benefit
from the increased flexibility of our
proposal to allow EBS licensees with
the flexibility to assign or transfer
control of their licenses to entities that
are not EBS-eligible. The Commission
believes that, at this point in time,
licensees are in the best position to
determine how to use their licenses, or,
alternatively, whether to transfer their
licenses to a third party in the
secondary market.
93. For existing EBS licenses the
Commission’s action declining to issue
proposals creating new performance or
renewal requirements will spare small
entities and other existing EBS licensees
the costs of new compliance
requirements in these areas. With
respect to performance requirements
adopted for all new EBS licenses, the
Commission believes such requirements
are necessary to ensure that spectrum is
being put into use and has proposed a
variety of metrics to provide small
entities as well as other licensees with
a variety of means by which they may
demonstrate compliance. The
Commission anticipates that updating
the performance requirements in this
manner will encourage rapid
deployment of next generation wireless
services, including 5G, which will
benefit small entities and the industry
as a whole.
F. F. Federal Rules That May Duplicate,
Overlap, or Conflict With the Proposed
Rules
94. None.
V. Ordering Clauses
95. It is ordered, pursuant to the
authority found in Sections 1, 2, 3, 4(i),
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7, 201, 301, 302, 303, 304, 307, 308, 309,
and 310 of the Communications Act of
1934, 47 U.S.C. 151, 152, 153, 154(i),
157, 201, 301, 302, 303, 304, 307, 308,
309, 310, and Section 706 of the
Telecommunications Act of 1996, as
amended, 47 U.S.C. 1302, and Section
1.411 of the Commission’s Rules, 47
CFR 1.411, that this Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking is hereby adopted.
96. It is further ordered that notice is
hereby given of the proposed regulatory
changes described in this Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking, and that
comment is sought on these proposals.
97. It is further ordered that the
Commission’s Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau, Reference
Information Center, shall send a copy of
this Notice of Proposed Rulemaking,
including the Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis, to the Chief
Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration.
List of Subjects in 47 CFR Parts 1 and
27
Communications common carriers,
Communications equipment, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene H. Dortch,
Secretary, Office of the Secretary.
Proposed Rules
For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, the Federal Communications
Commission proposes to amend 47 CFR
parts 1 and 27 as follows:
PART 1—PRACTICE AND
PROCEDURE
1. The authority citation for part 1
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 151, 154(i), 155, 157,
160, 201, 225, 227, 303, 309, 332, 1403, 1404,
1451, 1452, and 1455, unless otherwise
noted.
2. Amend § 1.949 by revising
paragraph (c) to read as follows:
■
§ 1.949 Application for renewal of
authorization.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Implementation. Covered Sitebased Licenses, except Common Carrier
Fixed Point-to-Point Microwave Service
(part 101, subpart I of this chapter), and
Covered Geographic Licenses in the 600
MHz Service (part 27, subpart N); 700
MHz Commercial Services (part 27,
subpart F); Advanced Wireless Services
(part 27, subpart L) (AWS–3 (1695–1710
MHz, 1755–1780 MHz, and 2155–2180
MHz) and AWS–4 (2000–2020 MHz and
2180–2200 MHz) only); and H Block
Service (part 27, subpart K) must
comply with paragraphs (d) through (h)
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Frm 00028
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
of this section. Broadband Radio Service
and Educational Broadband Service
licenses (part 27, subpart M) initially
issued after [effective date of final rule]
must comply with paragraphs (d)
through (h) of this section. All other
Covered Geographic Licenses must
comply with paragraphs (d) through (h)
of this section beginning on January 1,
2023. Common Carrier Fixed Point-toPoint Microwave Service (part 101,
subpart I) must comply with paragraphs
(d) through (h) of this section beginning
on October 1, 2018.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 27—MISCELLANEOUS
WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS
SERVICES
3. The authority citation for part 27
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 301, 302a, 303,
307, 309, 332, 336, 337, 1403, 1404, 1451,
and 1452, unless otherwise noted.
4. Amend § 27.14 by revising
paragraph (o) to read as follows:
■
§ 27.14
Construction Requirements.
*
*
*
*
*
(o)(1) All BRS and EBS licensees
issued after [effective date of final rule],
must demonstrate compliance with the
performance requirements described in
this paragraph. All equipment used to
demonstrate compliance must be in use
and actually providing service, either
for internal use or to unaffiliated
customers, as of the interim deadline or
the end of the license term, whichever
is applicable.
(2) Licensees relying on mobile
service must demonstrate reliable signal
coverage of 50% of the population of the
geographic service area by the interim
deadline, and 80% of the population of
the geographic service area by the end
of the license term.
(3) Licensees relying on fixed service
must demonstrate operation of one link
for each 50,000 persons in the
geographic service area by the interim
deadline, and one link for each 25,000
persons in the geographic service area
by the end of the license term.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 27.1201
■
■
[Removed and Reserved]
5. Remove and reserve § 27.1201.
6. Revise § 27.1206 to read as follows:
§ 27.1206
Geographic Service Area.
(a) BRS:
(1) For BRS incumbent licenses
granted before September 15, 1995, the
GSA for a channel is the GSA as created
on January 10, 2005.
(2) For BRS BTA authorization
holders, the GSA for a channel is the
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BTA, subject to the exclusion of
overlapping, co-channel incumbent
GSAs created on January 10, 2005.
(3) If an incumbent BRS license is
cancelled or is forfeited, the GSA area
of the incumbent station shall dissolve
and the right to operate in that area
automatically reverts to the GSA
licensee that held the corresponding
BTA.
(b) For EBS:
(1) Incumbent EBS licensees. (i) The
GSA of EBS licenses on the E and F
channel groups is defined in § 27.1216.
EBS licensees on the E and F channel
groups are prohibited from expanding
their GSAs.
(ii) For EBS licenses not in the E and
F channel groups in effect as of
[effective date of final rule], the GSA for
a channel consists of all census tracts
which are covered by or intersect its
GSA existing as of [effective date of final
rule].
(2) New initial EBS licenses. The GSA
for a channel for new initial licenses
issued after [effective date of final rule],
is the county [census tract] for which
the license is issued, subject to the
exclusion of overlapping, co-channel
incumbent GSAs.
■ 7. Revise § 27.1214 to read as follows:
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§ 27.1214 EBS spectrum leasing
arrangements and grandfathered leases.
(a) All leases of current EBS spectrum
entered into prior to January 10, 2005
and in compliance with leasing rules
formerly contained in part 74 of this
chapter may continue in force and
effect, notwithstanding any
inconsistency between such leases and
the rules applicable to spectrum leasing
arrangements set forth in this chapter.
Such leases entered into pursuant to the
former part 74 rules of this chapter may
be renewed and assigned in accordance
with the terms of such lease. All
spectrum leasing arrangements leases
entered into after January 10, 2005,
pursuant to the rules set forth in part 1
and part 27 of this chapter, must comply
with the rules in those parts.
(b) For leasing arrangements entered
into between July 19, 2006 and
[effective date of final rule], the
maximum permissible term of an EBS
spectrum leasing arrangement
(including the initial term and all
renewal terms that commence
automatically or at the sole option of the
lessee) shall be 30 years. Any spectrum
leasing arrangement in excess of 15
years that is entered into on or after July
19, 2006 and before [effective date of
final rule] must include terms which
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Fmt 4702
Sfmt 9990
provide the EBS licensee on the 15th
year and every 5 years thereafter, with
an opportunity to review its educational
use requirements in light of changes in
educational needs, technology, and
other relevant factors and to obtain
access to such additional services,
capacity, support, and/or equipment as
the parties shall agree upon in the
spectrum leasing arrangement to
advance the EBS licensee’s educational
mission.
■ 8. Revise § 27.1217 to read as follows:
§ 27.1217 Competitive bidding procedures
for the Broadband Radio Service and the
Educational Broadband Service.
Mutually exclusive initial
applications for BRS and EBS licenses
are subject to competitive bidding. The
designated entity provisions in
§ 27.1218 shall not apply to auctions
held after [effective date of final rule].
The general competitive bidding
procedures set forth in part 1, subpart Q
of this chapter will apply unless
otherwise provided in this subpart.
§ § 27.1230 through 27.1239
[Removed]
9. Remove §§ 27.1230 through
27.1239.
■
[FR Doc. 2018–12183 Filed 6–6–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 110 (Thursday, June 7, 2018)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 26396-26409]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-12183]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
47 CFR Parts 1 and 27
[WT Docket No. 18-120; FCC 18-59]
Transforming the 2.5 GHz Band
AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In this document, the Federal Communications Commission
(Commission or FCC) seeks comment on proposed service rules on the 2.5
GHz band and on refinements to the adopted rules in this document.
DATES: Comments are due on or before July 9, 2018; reply comments are
due on or before August 6, 2018.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by WT Docket No. 18-120,
by any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Federal Communications Commission's Website: https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/filings. Follow the instructions for submitting
comments.
People With Disabilities: Contact the FCC to request
reasonable accommodations (accessible format documents, sign language
interpreters, CART, etc.) by email: [email protected], phone: 202-418-0530
or TTY: 202-418-0432.
For detailed instructions for submitting comments and additional
information on the rulemaking process, see the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section of this document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: John J. Schauble of the Wireless
Telecommunications Bureau, Broadband Division, at 202-418-0797 or by
email to [email protected]. For information regarding the PRA
information collection requirements contained in this PRA, contact
Cathy Williams, Office of Managing Director, at (202) 418-2918 or
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Commission's Notice
of Proposed Rulemaking, WT Docket No. 18-120, FCC 18-59, adopted and
released on May 10, 2018. The complete text of this document is
available for public inspection and copying from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Eastern Time (ET) Monday through Thursday or from 8 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.
ET on Fridays in the FCC Reference Information Center, 445 12th Street
SW, Room CY-A257, Washington, DC 20554. The complete text is available
on the Commission's website at https://wireless.fcc.gov, or by using the
search function on the ECFS web page at https://www.fcc.gov/cgb/ecfs/.
Alternative formats are available to persons with disabilities by
sending an email to [email protected] or by calling the Consumer &
Governmental Affairs Bureau at (202) 418-0530 (voice), (202) 418-0432
(tty).
Comment Filing Procedures
Pursuant to Sec. Sec. 1.415 and 1.419 of the Commission's rules,
47 CFR 1.415, 1.419, interested parties may file comments and reply
comments on or before the dates indicated on the first page of this
document. Comments may be filed using the Commission's Electronic
Comment Filing System (ECFS). See Electronic Filing of Documents in
Rulemaking Proceedings, 63 FR 24121 (1998).
Electronic Filers: Comments may be filed electronically
using the internet by accessing the ECFS: https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/filings. Filers should follow the instructions provided on the website
for submitting comments. In completing the transmittal screen, filers
should include their full name, U.S. Postal Service mailing address,
and the applicable docket number, WT Docket No. 18-120.
Paper Filers: Parties who choose to file by paper must
file an original and one copy of each filing. If more than one docket
or rulemaking number appears in the caption of this proceeding, filers
must submit two additional copies for each additional docket or
rulemaking number.
Filings can be sent by hand or messenger delivery, by commercial
overnight courier, or by first-class or overnight U.S. Postal Service
mail. All filings must be addressed to the Commission's Secretary,
Office of the Secretary, Federal Communications Commission.
All hand-delivered or messenger-delivered paper filings
for the Commission's Secretary must be delivered to FCC Headquarters at
445 12th St. SW, Room TW-A325, Washington, DC 20554. The filing hours
are 8:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. All hand deliveries must be held together
with rubber bands or fasteners. Any envelopes and boxes must be
disposed of before entering the building.
Commercial overnight mail (other than U.S. Postal Service
Express Mail and Priority Mail) must be sent to 9050 Junction Dr.,
Annapolis Junction, Annapolis, MD 20701.
U.S. Postal Service first-class, Express, and Priority
mail must be addressed to 445 12th Street SW, Washington, DC 20554.
People With Disabilities: To request materials in accessible
formats for people with disabilities (braille, large print, electronic
files, audio format), send an email to [email protected] or call the
Consumer & Governmental Affairs Bureau at 202-418-0530 (voice), 888-
835-5322 (tty).
Ex Parte Rules--Permit-But-Disclose
Pursuant to Sec. 1.1200(a) of the Commission's rules, this NPRM
shall be treated as a ``permit-but-disclose'' proceeding in accordance
with the Commission's ex parte rules. Persons making ex parte
presentations must file a copy of any written presentation or a
memorandum summarizing any oral presentation within two business days
after the presentation (unless a different deadline applicable to the
Sunshine period applies). Persons making oral ex parte presentations
are reminded that memoranda summarizing the presentation must (1) list
all persons attending or otherwise participating in the meeting at
which the ex parte presentation was made, and (2) summarize all data
presented and arguments made during the presentation. If the
presentation consisted in whole or in part of the presentation of data
or arguments already reflected in the presenter's written comments,
memoranda or other filings in the proceeding, the presenter may provide
citations to such data or arguments in his or her prior comments,
memoranda, or other filings (specifying the relevant page and/or
paragraph numbers where such data or arguments can be found) in lieu of
summarizing them in the memorandum. Documents
[[Page 26397]]
shown or given to Commission staff during ex parte meetings are deemed
to be written ex parte presentations and must be filed consistent with
Sec. 1.1206(b). In proceedings governed by Sec. 1.49(f) or for which
the Commission has made available a method of electronic filing,
written ex parte presentations and memoranda summarizing oral ex parte
presentations, and all attachments thereto, must be filed through the
electronic comment filing system available for that proceeding, and
must be filed in their native format (e.g., .doc, .xml, .ppt,
searchable .pdf). Participants in this proceeding should familiarize
themselves with the Commission's ex parte rules.
Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (``RFA''),
the Commission has prepared an Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
(``IRFA'') of the possible significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities of the policies and rules proposed in the
NPRM. The Commission requests written public comment on the analysis.
Comments must be filed in accordance with the same deadlines as
comments filed in response to the NRPM and must have a separate and
distinct heading designating them as responses to the IRFA.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This document contains proposed new or modified information
collection requirements. The Commission, as part of its continuing
effort to reduce paperwork burdens, invites the general public and the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to comment on the information
collection requirements contained in this document, as required by the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, Public Law 104-13. In addition,
pursuant to the Small Business Paperwork Relief Act of 2002, Public Law
107-198, see 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(4), the Commission seeks specific
comment on how it might further reduce the information collection
burden for small business concerns with fewer than 25 employees.
Synopsis
I. Introduction
1. The 2.5 GHz band (2496-2690 MHz) constitutes the single largest
band of contiguous spectrum below 3 gigahertz and has been identified
as prime spectrum for next generation mobile operations, including 5G
uses. Significant portions of this band, however, currently lie fallow
across approximately one-half of the United States, primarily in rural
areas. Moreover, access to the Educational Broadband Service (EBS) has
been strictly limited since 1995, and current licensees are subject to
a regulatory regime largely unchanged from the days when educational TV
was the only use envisioned for this spectrum. The Commission proposes
to allow more efficient and effective use of this spectrum band by
providing greater flexibility to current EBS licensees as well as
providing new opportunities for additional entities to obtain unused
2.5 GHz spectrum to facilitate improved access to next generation
wireless broadband, including 5G. The Commission also seeks comment on
additional approaches for transforming the 2.5 GHz band, including by
moving directly to an auction for some or all of the spectrum.
II. Background
2. EBS, formerly known as ITFS (Instructional Television Fixed
Service), permits the transmission of instructional material for the
formal education of students by accredited public and private schools,
colleges, and universities.
3. Currently, eligibility to hold an EBS license is limited to (1)
accredited public and private educational institutions, (2)
governmental organizations engaged in the formal education of enrolled
students, and (3) nonprofit organizations whose purposes are
educational and include providing educational and instructional
television materials to accredited institutions and governmental
organizations. EBS licenses generally are held by state government
agencies, state universities and university systems, public community
and technical colleges, private universities and colleges, public
elementary and secondary school districts, private schools (including
Catholic school systems and other religious schools), public television
and radio stations, hospitals and hospital associations, and other non-
profit educational entities.
4. EBS licensees operate in 114 megahertz of the 2.5 GHz band; the
remaining 80 megahertz is assigned to the Broadband Radio Service
(BRS). EBS licensees are authorized to operate on the A, B, C, D, and G
channel groups, with each group comprised of three 5.5 MHz channels in
the lower or upper band segment and one 6 MHz channel in the mid-band
segment. Since 1983 the Commission has allowed EBS licensees to lease
their excess capacity to commercial providers, but it has required EBS
licensees to retain five percent of their capacity for educational use,
and it further has required that they use each channel at least 20
hours per week for educational purposes.
5. Currently, there are 1,300 EBS licensees holding over 2,190
licenses. EBS licenses generally are based on a 35-mile radius circular
Geographic Service Area (GSA) (with an area of 1934 square miles),
although due to a historical license modification process the
Commission adopted in 2005, many EBS licenses have much smaller,
irregular GSAs. Incumbent EBS licenses cover only about one half of the
geographic area of the United States in any given channel. In the rest
of the country, mostly rural areas west of the Mississippi River, the
2.5 GHz spectrum remains unassigned. There is some EBS spectrum
unassigned in urban areas as well, but such spectrum generally is only
available in small, irregularly shaped areas between GSAs that are
considerably smaller than the area of a 35-mile radius circle.
6. The Commission suspended the processing of EBS applications in
1993. Only twice since then has the Commission opened filing windows
for EBS applications. In 1995, the Commission provided a five-day
window for the filing of applications for new construction permits and
for major changes to existing EBS facilities. And in 1996, the Mass
Media Bureau announced a sixty-day window for the filing of a limited
class of applications, but during that window, it only permitted the
filing of EBS modification applications and amendments to pending EBS
applications proposing to co-locate with an authorized wireless cable
facility.
7. During the past 20 years, the Commission, on several occasions,
has considered assigning EBS spectrum licenses by auction. Most
recently, the Commission in 2008 decided to use competitive bidding to
license unassigned BRS spectrum but held that a ``broader record should
be developed on how to distribute licenses for unassigned EBS
spectrum,'' and it sought further comment on how to license unassigned
EBS spectrum in the BRS/EBS Second FNPRM.
8. In response to the BRS/EBS Second FNPRM, commenters proposed
various alternative licensing schemes, including awarding licenses
through a comparative point system; permitting only consortia to apply
for a Basic Trading Area (BTA) license (an area consisting of several
counties surrounding a common commercial center); permitting existing
licensees to expand their respective GSAs to the borders of the BTA,
which would
[[Page 26398]]
eliminate all white space and in turn, eliminate the need to file
applications for new licenses (``GSA maximization''); and permitting
licensees to expand their respective GSAs to the borders of the BTA
after accepting applications for new stations (reverse GSA
maximization). Subsequently, on June 6, 2014, the Catholic Technology
Network, the National EBS Association, the Wireless Communications
Association International, and the Hispanic Information and
Telecommunications Network, Inc. proposed a multi-step process for
licensing unassigned EBS spectrum. Unused EBS spectrum, however, has
remained generally unavailable since 1995.
III. Discussion
9. In accordance with the Commission's goal of making additional
spectrum available for flexible use, and to promote use of 2.5 GHz
frequencies that have been unassigned for far too long, the Commission
proposes and seeks comment on a number of steps to encourage and
facilitate more efficient use of this spectrum. First, given the
irregularity of current EBS geographic service areas (as well as
outdated regulatory requirements), the Commission proposes to
rationalize existing EBS holdings so that existing licensees have new
opportunities to put 2.5 GHz spectrum to its highest and best use.
Second, the Commission seeks comment on whether to open one or more
local priority filing windows so that existing licensees, Tribal
Nations, and educational entities could get access to unassigned
spectrum in the 2.5 GHz band. Third, the Commission proposes to use
geographic area licensing to assign any remaining spectrum, which may
result in the auction of any licenses for 2.5 GHz spectrum still
unassigned after rationalizing holdings and any new filing windows.
Finally, the Commission seeks comment on additional approaches for
transforming the 2.5 GHz band, including by moving directly to an
auction for some or all of the spectrum. The Commission believes the
proposed changes discussed herein will reduce unnecessary regulatory
burdens on licensees, promote greater spectrum efficiency, and
facilitate the full use of EBS spectrum to provide advanced mobile
broadband services, particularly in rural areas where this spectrum
sits idle today.
A. Rationalizing Existing 2.5 GHz Holdings
10. Ensuring that the radio spectrum is used efficiently and
intensively is an important public interest goal--a goal that also
serves the interests of the existing licensees. The Commission
traditionally has recognized that a spectrum policy based on flexible
use in regular geographic areas has several advantages. Such flexible
use licensing can promote broadband deployment, ensure the spectrum is
put to its most beneficial use, allow licensees to respond to consumer
demand for new services, and maximize the probability of success for
new services.
1. Regular Geographic License Areas
11. As an initial step, the Commission proposes to rationalize the
GSAs of existing EBS licensees, except grandfathered licensees in the E
and F Channel groups, to a defined geographic area, namely, the sum of
census tracts that are covered by, or that intersect, a licensee's
existing GSA. The Commission proposes that such rationalization should
occur automatically (i.e., the Commission would update our licensing
records to reflect the change), so existing licensees would not be
required to file applications with the Commission or otherwise notify
the Commission to effectuate this change.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The Commission notes that it followed a similar automatic
process when ITFS licensees were awarded a protected service area
(``PSA''), the precursor to a GSA, and when the PSA was expanded
from 15 miles to 35 miles. The Commission also notes that pursuant
to our existing rules, grandfathered EBS licensees on the E and F
channel groups would not be permitted to expand their GSAs. 47 CFR
27.1216. Pursuant to 47 CFR 27.1216, because there may be both EBS
and BRS stations on the same channels in the same market,
grandfathered E and F group EBS channels have previously been
limited in their ability to expand their GSAs. This may still be the
case. The Commission seeks comment on whether rationalizing the
holdings of grandfathered EBS licensees on the E and F channel
groups would be feasible, whether the Commission could use a similar
rationalization scheme as proposed herein for EBS generally, and
whether doing so would facilitate more intensive use of 2.5 GHz
spectrum.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
12. The Commission seeks comment on whether such expansion should
include every census tract that is covered by or that intersects the
licensee's existing GSA. Alternatively, should a census tract be
included only if a minimum percentage of that census tract overlaps the
GSA, and, if so, what should that minimum percentage threshold be
(e.g., 10 percent, 25 percent, 50 percent)? The Commission also seeks
comment on whether, if the Commission adopts a minimum percentage
overlap threshold, that minimum percentage should be a percentage of
the census tract's geography or of the census tract's population.
13. Second, the Commission proposes that, in this rationalization
process, each current EBS GSA will be converted to a single license
made up of all the census tracts it covers or intersects, rather than
converted to a collection of separate licenses, each the size of a
single census tract. The Commission seeks comment on this proposal.
14. Finally, the Commission seeks comment on how to resolve
situations in which two or more co-channel GSAs overlap the same census
tract(s), and whether simply setting the threshold for required overlap
at 50 percent in order to include the census tract in the GSA is the
best way to address such a situation. Are there other ways to address
situations in which co-channel GSAs overlap the same census tracts?
15. Modifying EBS licenses to GSAs based on census tracts should
generate two particular benefits. First, since census tract boundaries
are pre-determined and follow regular geographic separation patterns
(e.g., divisions based on streets), the boundaries of census tract-
based GSAs should be easier to determine than a circular GSA that cuts
across regular geographic boundaries.
16. Second, rationalizing incumbent EBS licenses based on census
tracts would yield white spaces that also are based on the boundaries
of census tracts and/or counties (since census tracts nest into
counties), rather than irregular shapes and slivers. This regularity in
the shape and size of white spaces would facilitate new entry into the
2.5 GHz band. The Commission seeks comment on these views. Commenters
should discuss the costs and benefits of such a license area change.
17. As an alternative to basing GSAs on census tracts, the
Commission seeks comment on whether the Commission should expand
existing GSAs to include the counties covered by or that intersect the
GSA. Under this alternative, the Commission seeks comment on whether to
include a county only if a minimum percentage of the county overlaps
the GSA and, if so, what that minimum percentage should be (e.g., 50
percent, 75 percent). The Commission also seeks comment on whether, if
it adopts a minimum percentage overlap threshold, that the minimum
percentage should be a percentage of the county's geography or of the
county's population. In addition, the Commission seeks comment on how
to resolve situations where more than one EBS licensee is in the same
county, and whether and to what extent automatic expansion on a county
basis will result in inefficient use of spectrum.
18. The Commission also seeks comment on any other issue that may
arise from rationalizing existing EBS
[[Page 26399]]
holdings and allowing EBS licensees to apply to expand their GSA
boundaries. In addition to the criteria stated above, are there any
other requirements that existing licensees should satisfy in order to
be permitted to expand into the vacant area of a county? For instance,
should the right to expand to county boundaries be limited to licensees
that provide service to a given percentage of that county? If so, what
should the minimum percentage be? Should the minimum percentage be a
percentage of the county's geography or of the county's population?
Should the Commission establish a requirement that the incumbent
licensee's GSA cover a minimum percentage of the area in a county
before it is allowed to expand into the remainder of the county? In the
alternative, should the Commission simply have existing licensees
maintain their current contours, rather than rationalizing existing
holdings? Commenters should discuss cost and benefits of any advocated
approach and support their position with quantitative and qualitative
data.
2. Additional Flexibility for EBS Licenses
19. Granting additional flexibility to EBS licensees has been an
effective means of allowing better use of the 2.5 GHz band. In 1983,
when the Commission allowed 2.5 GHz licensees to lease excess capacity,
it provided educators with another means of acquiring the resources
needed to operate Instructional Television Fixed Source (ITFS)
facilities for education. In 2004, when the Commission created BRS and
EBS, the more flexible technical rules allowed the bands to be used for
broadband services. Now, significant amounts of commercial broadband
data flow through the 2.5 GHz band. The Commission believes subsequent
events have confirmed the Commission's prediction that ``consumer
benefits will be maximized if BRS/EBS licensees are able to take
advantage of the flexible use standard in Part 27.'' The Commission now
seeks comment on granting additional flexibility to EBS licensees in
order to promote more intensive and efficient spectrum use.
20. First, the Commission proposes to provide EBS licensees with
the flexibility to assign or transfer control of their licenses to
entities that are not EBS-eligible. Specifically, the Commission
proposes to eliminate the limit on what entities can hold EBS licenses
(rule 27.1201) and make clear that licensees may assign or transfer
control of their licenses to other entities. The Commission notes that
the existing licensees have built out their systems since 2011 and
understand how they use their EBS licenses as well as the availability
of wireless broadband in their area. Under this proposal, the decision
whether to lease or transfer a license would rest with the EBS
licensee.\2\ There is little reason to think that, at this point in
time, the Commission is better positioned than licensees themselves to
determine how to maximize the use of 2.5 GHz spectrum for licensees and
their communities. And there is little reason to think that licensees
should not be allowed to decide for themselves whether to continue to
hold their licenses or to transfer their licenses to a third party in
the secondary market. The Commission seeks comment on this proposal.
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\2\ If the EBS licensee's lease provides for an option or right
or right of first refusal with respect to a license, the provisions
of the contract would apply, subject to the requirement that all
assignments and transfers of Commissions licenses are subject to
Commission consent.
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21. EBS licensees whose licenses were granted via waiver since the
EBS filing freeze was instituted are currently prohibited from leasing
the spectrum. Consistent with our consideration of providing additional
secondary-markets flexibility to existing EBS licensees, the Commission
proposes to eliminate any special restrictions on such licensees;
accordingly, those whose licenses were granted via waiver would have
the same flexibility to lease their spectrum or to transfer or assign
their licenses as the Commission proposes for other EBS licensees. The
Commission seeks comment on this proposal.
22. The Commission also seeks comment on eliminating the
educational use requirements for EBS licensees. The educational use
requirements, which have not been updated since 1998 were based on the
use of analog video and permitted many administrative uses to fulfill
the educational requirement. However, most EBS licensees or their
commercial lessees are providing digital broadband service, offered 24/
7, at the school itself, at home, or anywhere within the licensee's
GSA. It appears the existing educational use requirements are out of
date and do not fit the actual use of the spectrum. Given the
additional flexibility the Commission is granting EBS licensees, the
Commission seeks comment on whether there is value in attempting to
update the educational use requirements--who is better positioned to
determine the highest and best use of 2.5 GHz spectrum, the Commission
or licensees? Commenters should explain and quantify the benefits and
costs of these regulatory requirements, including whether to update
them (and if so, how).
23. The Commission also proposes to eliminate the current
restrictions on EBS lease terms. Under existing rules, EBS licensees
are prohibited from leasing their facilities for a term longer than 30
years and lessees are required to provide EBS lessors with the
opportunity to revisit their lease terms at years 15, 20, and 25 to
review their ``educational use requirements in light of changes in
educational needs, technology, and other relevant factors and to obtain
access to such additional services, capacity, support, and/or equipment
as the parties shall agree upon in the spectrum leasing arrangement to
advance the EBS licensee's educational mission.'' To that end, the
Commission proposes to eliminate these lease restrictions on a going-
forward basis.\3\ The Commission also seeks comment on any other
revisions needed to fully rationalize our rules for the
transferability, leasing, and use of EBS spectrum. Are there other
restrictions that unnecessarily reduce the ability of licensees to put
this spectrum to its highest and best use?
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\3\ While the Commission proposes to eliminate EBS-specific
term-related restrictions for leases, the Commission does not
propose to eliminate the requirement that lease notifications must
be refiled for each new license term.
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24. Finally, the Commission asks whether, in light of the actions
the Commission takes in this proceeding, it should modify our treatment
of EBS in the spectrum screen. In the Mobile Spectrum Holdings Report
and Order, the Commission concluded that it was necessary to include
most EBS spectrum into the spectrum screen ``to reflect today's
marketplace realities.'' While the Commission found that EBS spectrum
generally was suitable and available for the provision of mobile
telephony/mobile broadband services, it did apply a discount.
Specifically, the Commission first excluded the five percent of the EBS
capacity that is reserved for educational uses because it remains
committed to EBS spectrum serving educational purposes. Second, it
excluded the EBS white space. After taking these discounts into
consideration, the Commission, in 2014, included 89 megahertz of EBS
spectrum in the screen. Are any changes to this treatment warranted?
Should the Commission reconsider the spectrum aggregation screen?
B. Opportunities To Acquire New 2.5 GHz Licenses
25. Once the Commission has rationalized the holdings of existing
[[Page 26400]]
EBS licensees, unassigned portions of the 2.5 GHz band will be ready
for new assignment--bringing new opportunities to rural communities
that have lacked access to this spectrum before. The Commission
proposes to use geographic area licensing to assign any remaining
spectrum, which should result in the auction of licenses for unassigned
portions of the 2.5 GHz band and seek comment on whether it should
first open up to three new local priority filing windows to give
existing licensees, Tribal Nations, and educational entities an opening
to access 2.5 GHz spectrum to serve their local communities. The
Commission also proposes build-out requirements for these new licenses
to ensure that all Americans have the opportunity to benefit from the
2.5 GHz band.
1. New Local Priority Filing Windows
26. When the Commission reopened applications for the 2.5 GHz band
in 1985, it expressed a ``strong preference'' for local applicants in
the licensing process. The Commission found then that local applicants
were ``convincingly demonstrated . . . to be the best authorities for
evaluating their educational needs and the needs of others they propose
to serve in their communities,'' to ``best understand the educational
needs . . . of their communities,'' and to ``act most responsibly in
designing and developing [2.5 GHz] systems.'' It thus opened a ``local
priority period'' to give ``more local entities . . . the opportunity
to fill more channels as financial support from non-[instructional] use
becomes more widespread.''
27. Now that the Commission is again opening the 2.5 GHz band for
additional licensing, the Commission starts by seeking comment on
whether the Commission should open up to three new filing windows for
qualifying applicants that want to use currently unassigned 2.5 GHz
spectrum to serve their local communities. In each filing window,
qualifying applicants would have the opportunity to apply for one or
more vacant channels of EBS spectrum in areas where the applicant can
show it has a local presence. The first filing window would be for
existing EBS licensees, the second for Tribal Nations, and the third
for other educational entities. The Commission seeks comment on whether
the Commission should open any new local priority filing windows, if
any, as well as the details of such windows in turn.
28. In responding, commenters should discuss whether such priority
filing windows to assign licenses is consistent with our statutory
authority to assign licenses that could be used for telecommunications,
and Commission policy and precedent regarding use of competitive
bidding. Also, should these entities be given preference over others,
in light of other benefits provided to these entities, such as various
Universal Service programs, including E-Rate and the Connect America
Fund? The Commission also seeks comment on whether such filing windows
can be misused and result in unjust enrichment, with licenses being
sold or leased to ineligible entities for profit. What effect might
these priority windows have on the attractiveness of the remaining
spectrum for other applicants? Should the Commission have one combined
priority window for these entities, or the three the Commission seeks
comment on below?
29. Local Presence. When the Commission previously created a local
priority period, it defined as ``local'' those ``institutions and
organizations that are physically located in the community, or
metropolitan area, where service is proposed.'' The Commission proposes
for any new local priority filing window, should the Commission choose
to implement this approach, to similarly require an applicant to
demonstrate, as part of the application process, that it is physically
located within the license area applied for. The Commission seeks
comment on this requirement and what it would mean in practice. For
example, should a college or university be considered to be physically
located in any area in which it has a campus? Should an entity created
by a state or local government for the purpose of serving formal
educational needs, such as a public school or a school district, be
considered to be physically located in every area where it has a school
building? Should having a physical or mailing address within a
particular area, be sufficient to demonstrate that the applicant has a
local presence within that area? Are there any situations in which
simply having some sort of physical address is not indicative of the
local presence of an applicant? Commenters should discuss whether the
proposed definition of local presence would serve the public interest
and provide any relevant qualitative and quantitative data to support
their positions.
30. Commenters also should address what documentation applicants
must provide to make such a demonstration. Should the determination of
whether an applicant is considered to have a local presence be based
solely on an applicant's physical location(s) and/or physical
address(es)? Commenters should discuss other factors that should be
considered and explain how any factors that they suggest will ensure
that the local priority filing window is available only to local
applicants. The Commission also seeks comment any other issues that it
may need to address to implement a local presence requirement.
31. The Commission notes that the majority of current EBS
licensees, such as school districts, schools, colleges and
universities, appear to have a local presence where they have licenses.
It also appears that the entities most likely to be affected by a local
presence requirement are the ``national'' licensees. Although national
licensees serve a purpose in providing educational services to
educational institutions and students, educational entities with a
local presence have a closer understanding of the needs of their local
communities and are more likely to use 2.5 GHz spectrum to meet such
needs, especially in rural areas. Entities with a local presence are
part of the communities they wish to serve, and requiring local
presence would increase the likelihood that the EBS spectrum would be
put to beneficial use for local communities. The Commission seeks
comment on these views.
32. Local Priority Filing Window 1: Existing Licensees. If the
Commission decides to use priority filing windows, the Commission seeks
comment on whether it should open a window for existing EBS licensees.
Opening such a window would allow existing licensees that are already
providing service in a significant portion of a county (and have a
local presence in that county) to expand their service to the county
border.\4\ Existing licensees have already deployed service throughout
a portion may be best positioned to quickly put the white-spaces in
their local area to use through an edging-out strategy. In addition,
since a number of school districts are based on county boundaries,
allowing county expansion could allow county-based school districts to
better provide services to the students within their districts, and in
many cases, to provide services to those students at home, as well as
on school premises. Alternatively, such a window would preclude other
applicants from accessing 2.5 GHz white spaces, including new entrants
long excluded from the band. The Commission seeks
[[Page 26401]]
comment on opening such a local priority filing window.
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\4\ To be clear, should another licensee already hold licenses
for census tracts in that county, the Commission would not intend
the county-expansion to encompass those areas.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
33. Were the Commission to open such a window, it would propose to
limit participation to existing licensees as of the adoption of this
NPRM.\5\ Setting a firm, fixed date allows all commenters and the
Commission to easily discern what entities would be potential
applicants for this window should the Commission adopt it. Furthermore,
applicants in this window would be limited to seeking county-based
licenses only in counties where they have a local presence. And
finally, applicants in this window would be limited to seeking county-
based licenses only where they hold, after the rationalization of
existing license areas, licenses on a particular channel that cover at
least 25 percent of census tracts in a county. The Commission seeks
comment on these conditions. In particular, what adjustments to these
conditions, if any, would be appropriate to ensure that the goals of
such a window would be met? For example, should the Commission require
licensees to hold licenses covering even more of a county (say 50
percent of census tracts)? Or should the Commission require that a
local presence of the licensee lie inside the county but outside the
already-licensed area of the licensee (under a theory that licensees
should be permitted to expand to cover areas where they have a physical
presence but otherwise restricted so that new licensees have the
opportunity to participate in the 2.5 GHz band)?
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\5\ The Commission seeks comment on whether holders of special
temporary authority (an STA) who are not full-fledged licensees
should qualify for such a window. Should the Commission expect them
to have the permanent facilities in place to quickly expand service
to the county edge?
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
34. What other conditions, if any, should the Commission adopt on
participants in such a window? For example, should the Commission
exclude channels in counties in which more than one existing licensee
would qualify for expansion on a single channel? If so, how would the
Commission determine all counties in which existing licensees meet the
local presence requirement? Alternatively, should the Commission only
exclude channels in counties in which more than one licensee holds
licenses covering at least 25 percent of the census tracts in the
county? Should the Commission exclude tribal areas that are contained
within a county that would be subject to the Tribal Nations window
discussed below? The Commission seeks comment on these and any other
issues related to opening a new local priority filing window for
existing licensees.
35. Local Priority Filing Window 2: Rural Tribal Nations. The
Commission seeks comment on whether the Commission, if it decides to
pursue this approach, should open a new local priority filing window
for rural Tribal Nations. The Commission has recognized that ``members
of federally-recognized American Indian Tribes and Alaska Native
Villages and other residents of Tribal lands have lacked meaningful
access to wired and wireless communications services.'' Opening such a
window would allow rural Tribal Nations an opportunity to access 2.5
GHz spectrum to address educational and communications needs of their
communities and residents on rural Tribal lands, including the
deployment of advanced wireless services to areas that have too long
been without. Alternatively, such a window would preclude other
applicants from accessing 2.5 GHz white spaces. The Commission seeks
comment on opening such a local priority filing window.
36. Were the Commission to open such a window, it would propose to
limit participation to federally-recognized American Indian Tribes and
Alaska Native Villages located in rural areas.\6\ Such a request would
appear to comport with Native Public Media's request to open the 2.5
GHz band to Indian Tribes and Tribal Governments to account for the
special trust relationship between Tribal Nations and the Federal
Government and the fact that Native Americans are acutely
underrepresented in communications media. Furthermore, applicants in
this window would be limited to seeking new licenses only in rural
areas where they have a local presence--that would include rural Tribal
lands associated with the Tribal Nation itself. The Commission seeks
comment on how much of the license area would need to be Tribal lands
to qualify. Would 25 percent be sufficient? 50 percent? The Commission
further seeks comment on how to define rural Tribal lands for these
purposes. Should the Commission use the definition of rural Tribal
lands used for E-rate program and Lifeline; i.e., Tribal Lands that are
not part of ``an urbanized area or urban cluster area with a population
equal to or greater than 25,000''? The Commission asks commenters to
discuss any issues that may arise out of a particular definition of
Tribal Lands. The Commission seeks comment on whether to exclude lands
that currently are not inhabited by members of the Tribal Nations and/
or are held as private property from the definition. To this end, the
Commission requests comment on how to ensure that the only entities
eligible to participate in this filing window are entities that meet
our definition of a Tribal Nation, and whose Tribal lands are lands
where tribal members reside as a group and are not used for purely
commercial purposes. The Commission seeks comment on these conditions.
In particular, what adjustments to these conditions, if any, would be
appropriate to ensure that the goals of such a window would be met?
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\6\ Alternatively, should the Commission authorize any ``Native
American Tribal entity'' to participate, including any entity that
is listed on the U.S. Secretary of the Interior's currently
published list of Indian Tribes recognized to be eligible for the
special programs and services provided by the United States to
Indians because of their status as Indians? See The Federally
Recognized Indian Tribe List Act of 1994 (Indian Tribe Act, Pub. L.
103-154, 108 Stat. 4791 (1994)) (Indian Tribe Act).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
37. The Commission next seeks comment on whether licenses granted
for white spaces in such a local priority window should be at the
county level or on a census-tract-by-census-tract basis. Commenters
should discuss why a particular geographic area size would be
appropriate taking into account all relevant information, including
border interference coordination needs, propagation characteristics of
the band, and the services that will be offered. The Commission notes
that using a smaller license area (census tracts) would increase the
fit between areas licensed to Tribal Nations and Tribal lands, but may
have offsetting efficiency losses. Commenters should discuss the costs
and benefits of any advocated approach and support their position with
quantitative and qualitative data.
38. The Commission also proposes that, if it were to adopt such a
local priority filing window, it would not limit the number of channels
that a Tribal Nation could acquire. Given the state of wireless
technologies (including the use of progressively wider channels), the
Commission believes that allowing access to contiguous spectrum on any
number of available channels would more efficiently accommodate varying
business models and spectrum needs for wireless broadband. The
Commission seeks comment on this proposal.
39. Finally, the Commission seeks comment on any other ways by
which it could encourage the use of 2.5 GHz spectrum on Tribal Lands.
Should the Commission impose any additional obligations to ensure that
Tribal Nations hold 2.5 GHz licenses for the benefit of their Tribal
community? The Commission seeks comment on these and any other issues
related to opening a new local priority filing window for
[[Page 26402]]
Tribal Nations, and in particular it seeks government-to-government
consultation and coordination with federally recognized Tribes on these
issues and the input of inter-Tribal government associations and Native
representative organizations.
40. Local Priority Filing Window 3: New Educational Entities. To
the extent that the Commission implements any filing windows, it seeks
comment on whether the Commission should open a new local priority
filing window for educational entities that do not currently hold any
2.5 GHz licenses. Opening such a window would allow new educational
entities that have never had the opportunity to benefit from holding
and using 2.5 GHz spectrum (and that have a local presence in a
particular area) the opportunity to access this spectrum for the first
time. The Commission notes that the majority of requests for waiver of
the current filing freeze have come from educators with a local
presence in the communities that they wish to serve. Alternatively,
such a window would preclude the auction of any licenses for remaining
2.5 GHz white spaces. The Commission seeks comment on opening such a
local priority filing window.
41. Were the Commission to open such a window, it would propose to
limit participation to accredited institutions as well as governmental
organizations engaged in the formal education of enrolled students who
are not 2.5 GHz licensees as of the adoption of this NPRM.\7\ Setting a
firm, fixed date allows all commenters and the Commission to easily
discern what entities would be potential applicants for this window
should it adopt it. Furthermore, applicants in this window would be
limited to seeking licenses only in areas where they have a local
presence. The Commission seeks comment on these conditions. In
particular, what adjustments to these conditions, if any, would be
appropriate to ensure that the goals of such a window would be met?
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ As before, the Commission seeks comment on whether holders
of special temporary authority (an STA) who are not full-fledged
licensees should qualify for such a window.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
42. The Commission next seeks comment on whether licenses granted
for white spaces in such a local priority window should be at the
county level or on a census-tract-by-census-tract basis. Commenters
should discuss why a particular geographic area size would be
appropriate taking into account all relevant information, including
border interference coordination needs, propagation characteristics of
the band, and the services that will be offered. Since a number of
school districts are based on county boundaries, would allowing county-
based licenses allow county-based school districts to better provide
services to the students within their districts, and in many cases, to
provide services to those students at home, as well as on school
premises? Commenters should discuss the costs and benefits of any
advocated approach and support their position with quantitative and
qualitative data.
43. The Commission also proposes that, if it were to adopt such a
local priority filing window, it would not limit the number of channels
that a new educational entity could acquire. Given the state of
wireless technologies (including the use of progressively wider
channels), the Commission believes that allowing access to contiguous
spectrum on any number of available channels would more efficiently
accommodate varying business models and spectrum needs for wireless
broadband. The Commission seeks comment on this proposal.
44. Local Priority Filing Process. The Commission seeks comment on
the appropriate time frame for any new local priority filing windows.
How long should the Commission keep this window open, and how much
notice should be given to applicants before the filing window opens?
For example, should each such filing window last 30 days with at least
90 days' notice to potential applicants of the licenses available? The
Commission asks entities that are interested in participating in the
application window and obtaining 2.5 GHz licenses to indicate their
interests and the difficulties that they may face to help us evaluate
any possible technical and process issues that may arise in
implementing one or more new local priority filing windows for
applicants and processing such applications. Given technical
limitations of the Universal Licensing System (ULS), the Commission
notes that it may not be able to accept applications for all available
EBS licenses in one general filing window. If that is the case, and the
Commission divides the available licenses among multiple filing
windows, how should such division be implemented: by region; by
population, with the most populous States first or last;
alphabetically; or by some other method? The Commission seeks comment
on these and related issues.
45. Resolving Mutually Exclusive Applications. The Act requires
that, if the Commission accepts mutually exclusive applications for
initial spectrum licenses, the Commission ``shall grant the license . .
. through a system of competitive bidding.'' The Commission assigns
licenses for commercial and private internal use through competitive
bidding in order to place the licenses in the hands of the parties that
value them most highly and that are able to use them most effectively.
If the Commission decides to create one or more local priority filing
windows, as discussed here, it would result in relatively few mutually
exclusive applications, but such a result is not precluded. Therefore,
should the Commission receive mutually exclusive applications, it must
use competitive bidding to assign initial licenses subject to mutually
exclusive applications. The Commission seeks comment on limiting such
competitive bidding to the mutually exclusive applicants in that
particular filing window, however. In addition, the Commission proposes
to employ the part 1 rules governing competitive bidding design, unjust
enrichment, application and payment procedures, reporting requirements,
and the prohibition on certain communications between auction
applicants. The Commission does not propose to adopt designated entity
provisions. Under this proposal, such rules would be subject to any
further modifications that the Commission may adopt for its part 1
general competitive bidding rules in the future. The Commission seeks
comment on this proposal.
46. The also seeks comment on whether to allow a settlement window
for the filers to resolve any mutual exclusivity before the Commission
accept any application for a 2.5 GHz license. The Commission also seeks
comment on any alternative ``engineering solutions, negotiation,
threshold qualifications, service regulations, and other means'' \8\ of
avoiding mutually exclusive applications for new licenses that might
further the public interest and comply with the Act.
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\8\ 47 U.S.C. 309(j)(6)(E).
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47. Holding Periods for Licenses Acquired through a Local Priority
Filing Window. The Commission seeks comment on whether to impose a
special holding period on any license acquired through a local priority
filing window, if any. Although the Commission generally seeks to
facilitate the free transfer of licenses among parties, granting
certain entities local priority filing windows is premised on the idea
that such entities are uniquely qualified to hold spectrum licenses and
ensures that the licenses are put to their highest and best use--
something that
[[Page 26403]]
could not occur if such an entity quickly flipped that license to
another, nonqualifying entity. Should the Commission expect that these
licenses are likely to be used by the licensee, or that they ultimately
will be leased or sold to others who are not eligible for the priority
preference? Should the Commission implement a holding period that
deters the lease or sale of spectrum to ineligible entities? What
factors should the Commission consider in establishing a holding
period? What is the most appropriate length for a holding period so as
to alleviate concerns involving any potential for speculative behavior
or acquisition of 2.5 GHz licenses by entities that do not have a bona
fide interest in providing service? Would a three, five, or seven-year
or more holding period be most appropriate for these circumstances? In
determining the appropriate length of holding period, should the
Commission consider the chances for and mitigate the potential unjust
enrichment by those receiving a priority preference? Are there
additional steps that should be taken to ensure that entities are not
unjustly enriched? Should the Commission require the licensee to
demonstrate completion of certain buildout requirements before allowing
a transfer of control? Should the Commission prohibit an EBS licensee
that is granted a license during one of the local priority windows
proposed herein from leasing 100 percent or some other percentage of
their capacity to a commercial entity during the holding period? The
Commission seeks comment on these issues.
48. For EBS licenses granted via the local priority windows
proposed above, the Commission proposes to require that licensees must
reserve a minimum of 20 percent of the capacity of their channels for
educational uses that ``further the educational mission of accredited
public and private schools'' consistent with paragraphs (b) and (c) of
Sec. 27.1203 of the Commission's rules and may not enter into spectrum
leasing arrangements involving this reserved capacity. For EBS
licensees that choose to provide a broadcast-type service, the
Commission proposes to require such licensees to offer 20 hours per
channel, per week of educational programming. The Commission seeks
comment on these proposals.
2. Licensing White Spaces
49. The Commission proposes, after any new licenses have been
assigned through one or more local priority filing windows should the
Commission choose to implement that approach, that any remaining 2.5
GHz spectrum \9\ be made available for commercial use via competitive
bidding. The Commission proposes that it would conduct an auction for
licenses of EBS spectrum in conformity with the general competitive
bidding rules set forth in part 1, subpart Q, of the Commission's
rules. As proposed above for mutually exclusive applications filed in
the three EBS filing windows, the Commission proposes to employ the
part 1 rules governing competitive bidding design, unjust enrichment,
application and payment procedures, reporting requirements, and the
prohibition on certain communications between auction applicants. The
Commission also proposes not to apply designated entity preferences in
this auction. The Commission seeks comment on this proposal.
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\9\ In the BRS/EBS Second FNPRM, the Commission sought comment
on a variety of issues related to licensing EBS spectrum in the Gulf
of Mexico. The Commission need not address whether to eliminate
restrictions on EBS spectrum in the Gulf of Mexico because, as
explained herein, the Commission proposes to eliminate restrictions
on all remaining ``white space'' EBS spectrum and make it available
for commercial use via competitive bidding.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
50. The Commission seeks comment on the appropriate geographic size
of new 2.5 GHz white space licenses (e.g., county, census tract, or
something else) and the size of the channel blocks (e.g., existing
channels or the entire available band). Commenters should discuss the
costs and benefits of adopting their proposed geographic area size and
channel block size and why such area and channel block sizes would
serve the public interest taking into account all the characteristics
of this band.
51. Consistent with our longstanding approach, the Commission would
initiate a public notice process to solicit public input on certain
details of auction design and the auction procedures. This public
notice process would address auction-specific matters such as the
competitive bidding design and mechanisms, minimum opening bids and/or
reserve prices, caps on bidding credits, and payment procedures. In
advance of the auction, another public notice would announce the
auction procedures and provide detailed instructions for potential
auction participants. The Commission also seeks comment on whether any
of our part 1 rules should be modified for an auction of licenses in
these frequency bands.
3. Requirements for New 2.5 GHz Licenses
52. The current performance requirements for licensees in the 2.5
GHz band were set forth in 2006, as part of the ongoing efforts to
transition the band to the new band plan established in 2004. The 2006
BRS/EBS Second Report and Order established a substantial service
regime for BRS and EBS licensees and required licensees to demonstrate
compliance by May 1, 2011. The 2006 BRS/EBS Second Report and Order
also established specific safe harbors, including 30 percent population
coverage for mobile or point-to-multipoint use, or six permanent links
per million for fixed point-to-point services. The 2006 BRS/EBS Second
Report and Order also established an educational safe harbor for EBS
licensees, consisting of 20 hours of educational use per channel, per
week. In 2010, the Commission established a new requirement for new BRS
licenses issued after November 6, 2009: The licensee must make a
showing of substantial service within four years from the date of issue
of the license. The Commission seeks comment on how effective these
performance requirements have been.
53. Last year, the Commission adopted a unified regulatory
framework for the Wireless Radio Services (WRS) that replaced the
existing patchwork of service-specific rules regarding renewal,
comparative renewal, continuity of service, and partitioning and
disaggregation, with clear, consistent rules of the road for WRS
licensees. The Commission included BRS in the new WRS framework, but
excluded EBS from the WRS framework on the ground that ``this service
presents unique issues that are under consideration in'' this present
proceeding.
54. Performance Requirements for New 2.5 GHz Licenses. The
Commission proposes more robust performance requirements for any new
2.5 GHz licenses granted through a local priority filing window or a
system of competitive bidding. For mobile and fixed point-to-multipoint
services, the Commission proposes an interim benchmark of 50 percent
population coverage and a final benchmark of 80 percent population
coverage. For fixed point-to-point services, the Commission proposes an
interim benchmark of 20 point-to-point links per million persons (one
link per 50,000 persons) in a license area, and a final benchmark of 40
point-to-point links per million persons (one link per 25,000 persons)
in a licensed area. These benchmarks are slightly higher than those for
the AWS-3 and WCS bands (which have similar propagation
characteristics) given the maturity of technologies already developed
and deployed in the 2.5 GHz band. For educational broadcast
[[Page 26404]]
services, the Commission seeks comment on an interim benchmark of 50
percent population coverage and a final benchmark of 80 percent
population coverage. The Commission seeks comment on these performance
benchmarks and on any other requirements that may be more appropriate
for this band. Are there considerations specific to this band that
would warrant a different approach? Are there new technological
developments, or issues specific to the 2.5 GHz band, that render a
usage-based approach or any other approach suitable here? When should
the interim benchmark showing be required? What penalty should apply to
licensees that do not meet it? In addition, because the Commission
seeks comment on whether to adopt a licensing framework based on census
tracts, the Commission also seeks comment on how such a framework would
affect performance requirements. Is there some other method of
evaluating meaningful service, beyond traditional metrics, that might
be more appropriate considering the size of license areas? The
Commission also seeks comment on whether there are other more
appropriate construction requirements for educational services.
55. Renewal Standards. The Commission also proposes to bring any
new 2.5 GHz licenses granted through a local priority filing window or
a system of competitive bidding into the unified regulatory renewal
framework for WRS. The Commission believes that updating the renewal
standards in this manner will encourage rapid deployment of next
generation wireless services, including 5G. The Commission also seeks
comment on bringing existing EBS licensees, once their licenses have
been rationalized as discussed earlier, into the WRS framework for
license renewal. What are the costs and benefits of each approach?
C. Cleaning Up the 2.5 GHz Rules
56. The process for transitioning BRS and EBS licensees to the new
band plan was completed in 2011. While a few Multichannel Video
Programming Distributors have received waivers to opt out of the
transition so that they can continue providing service, all other
licensees have transitioned to the new band plan. It therefore appears
that the transition rules are no longer necessary.\10\ The Commission
believes it is in the public interest to eliminate regulations that are
out of date and no longer necessary. The Commission therefore proposes
to eliminate the BRS/EBS transition rules.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ Should an MVPD operator decide that it wishes to
discontinue video service and transition to the new band plan, it
can follow the process established by the Wireless
Telecommunications Bureau in Antilles Wireless, LLC d/b/a USA
Digital, et al., Order on Reconsideration, 25 FCC Rcd 8052, 8058,
paras. 13-14 (WTB 2010).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
57. The Commission also proposes to make various non-substantive,
clarifying amendments to Sec. 27.1206. The proposed changes are
contained in the Proposed Rules. The changes are designed to make the
rules easier to understand without changing the substantive
requirements for BRS. The Commission seeks comment on these proposed
changes.
D. Additional Approaches for Transforming the 2.5 GHz Band
58. The Commission seeks comment on other approaches to
rationalizing and opening up the 2.5 GHz band for more productive and
intensive use. Generally, are there better ways to restructure the 2.5
GHz band that will ensure that it is put to its highest and best use?
In particular, the Commission seeks comment on other licensing and
auction ideas and alternatives to the local priority filing window
approach. Commenters should provide information about the costs and
benefits of any approach suggested.
59. For instance, should the Commission, regardless of the scope of
incumbent operations, create new geographic area licenses? If so, what
types of geographic area licenses should the FCC create? Should the
Commission license the spectrum based on census tracts or counties or
some other size? Commenters should discuss whether their view of the
appropriate geographic area size changes if the Commission is
considering licenses that encompass more than the white spaces
previously discussed, and if so why. Additionally, what channel size or
sizes should the Commission use in licensing this spectrum?
60. If the FCC were to adopt this approach, how would the
Commission account for reasonable investment-backed expectations and
incumbent operations? Would a different approach than those considered
in section III.A. above be preferable, and if so why? For example,
should the Commission convert incumbent licenses into new, flexible use
spectrum licenses that would be subject to its secondary market rules?
If so, how? Should our approach to incumbent licensees depend on or
consider the existing and/or historic use of the spectrum by those
incumbent licensees, including, for instance, the construction of
facilities or degree to which the spectrum has consistently been put to
use?
61. Should the Commission consider moving directly to auction for
this spectrum, rather than open priority filing windows for certain
entities? In section III.B.2, the Commission seeks comment on
auctioning the white spaces, but, instead, should the Commission
consider other auction options, such as an incentive auction of this
spectrum in order to provide incentives for incumbents to make
underutilized spectrum available for commercial use? In particular,
should the Commission rely on Sec. 6402 of the Spectrum Act, now
codified at 47 U.S.C. 309(j)(8)(G) (or some other source of authority)
to encourage incumbent licensees to relinquish voluntarily some or all
of their spectrum usage rights to permit the assignment of new initial
licenses subject to flexible-use service rules? Are there other means
of assigning licenses and promoting more efficient uses that the
Commission should consider, such as an overlay auction \11\ or other
auction mechanisms? The Commission seeks comment on the implications of
moving directly to auction.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ In an overlay auction, the auction winner acquires spectrum
rights ``subject to the exclusion of overlapping, co-channel
incumbent'' licensees. Typically, if an incumbent license cancels or
is forfeited, the overlay licensee automatically acquires the right
to operate in the area formerly covered by the incumbent license.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
62. Regardless of the particular approach the Commission takes to
facilitate more intensive use of the 2.5 GHz spectrum, should the
Commission allow all entities that are interested in using this
spectrum the same opportunity to acquire licenses in this band? In
other words, should the Commission not adopt local priority filing
windows or otherwise grant preferential treatment to potential
licensees based on their identity or other criteria?
IV. Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
63. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as
amended (RFA), the Commission has prepared this Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) of the possible significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small entities by the policies and rules
proposed in the NPRM. Written public comments are requested on this
IRFA. Comments must be identified as responses to the IRFA and must be
filed by the deadlines for comments provided on the first page of the
NPRM. The Commission will send a copy of this NPRM, including this
IRFA,
[[Page 26405]]
to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration
(SBA). In addition, the NPRM and IRFA (or summaries thereof) will be
published in the Federal Register.
A. A. Need for, and Objectives of, the Proposed Rules
64. In the NPRM, the Commission take steps to permit more flexible
use of the 2496-2690 MHz (2.5 GHz) band by current EBS licensees and to
provide new opportunities for EBS eligible entities, Tribal Nations,
and commercial entities to obtain unused 2.5 GHz spectrum to facilitate
improved access to next generation wireless broadband, including 5G,
for both educational and commercial uses. As mentioned in the NPRM,
roughly half of EBS spectrum currently is unassigned, while the other
half is assigned in geographic areas of various sizes and shapes and is
subject to unique use and transfer restrictions. The irregularity in
the current geographic service areas, combined in some cases with
outdated regulatory requirements has impeded the efficient deployment
of services, such as mobile broadband, in this spectrum band.
Consistent with the Commission's goal of making additional spectrum
available for flexible use, and to promote use of EBS frequencies that
have been unassigned for far too long, the Commission proposes and
seeks comment on a number of steps to encourage and facilitate more
efficient use of the 2.5 GHz band. Additionally, since the process for
transitioning BRS and EBS licensees to the new band plan was completed
in 2011, the Commission proposes to eliminate the BRS/EBS transition
rules. The Commission believes it is in the public interest to
eliminate these regulations that are out of date and no longer
necessary.
B. B. Legal Basis
65. The proposed actions are authorized pursuant to Sections 1, 2,
3, 4(i), 7, 201, 301, 302, 303, 304, 307, 308, 309, and 310 of the
Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 152, 154(i),
157, 201, 301, 302, 303, 304, 307, 308, 309, 310 and Section 706 of the
Telecommunications Act of 1996, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 1302.
C. C. Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities to Which
the Proposed Rules Will Apply
66. The RFA directs agencies to provide a description of, and,
where feasible, an estimate of the number of small entities that may be
affected by the proposed rules and policies, if adopted. 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.
67. Small Businesses, Small Organizations, Small Governmental
Jurisdictions. Our 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.
68. 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 August 2016, there were approximately 356,494 small
organizations based on registration and tax data filed by nonprofits
with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).
69. Finally, the small entity described as a ``small governmental
jurisdiction'' is defined generally as ``governments of cities,
counties, towns, townships, villages, school districts, or special
districts, with a population of less than fifty thousand.'' U.S. Census
Bureau data from the 2012 Census of Governments indicate that there
were 90,056 local governmental jurisdictions consisting of general
purpose governments and special purpose governments in the United
States. Of this number there were 37,132 General purpose governments
(county, municipal and town or township) with populations of less than
50,000 and 12,184 Special purpose governments (independent school
districts and special districts) with populations of less than 50,000.
The 2012 U.S. Census Bureau data for most types of governments in the
local government category show that the majority of these governments
have populations of less than 50,000. Based on this data the Commission
estimates that at least 49,316 local government jurisdictions fall in
the category of ``small governmental jurisdictions.''
70. 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 Bureau 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 1,000 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.
71. Broadband Radio Service and Educational Broadband Service.
Broadband Radio Service systems, previously referred to as Multipoint
Distribution Service (MDS) and Multichannel Multipoint Distribution
Service (MMDS) systems, and ``wireless cable,'' transmit video
programming to subscribers and provide two-way high-speed data
operations using the microwave frequencies of the BRS and EBS
(previously referred to as the Instructional Television Fixed Service
(ITFS)).
72. BRS--In connection with the 1996 BRS auction, the Commission
established a small business size standard as an entity that had annual
average gross revenues of no more than $40 million in the previous
three calendar years. The BRS auctions resulted in 67 successful
bidders obtaining licensing opportunities for 493 Basic Trading Areas
(BTAs). Of the 67 auction winners, 61 met the definition of a small
business. BRS also includes licensees of stations authorized prior to
the auction. At this time, based on our review of licensing records,
the Commission estimates that of the 61-small business BRS auction
winners, based on our review of licensing records, 48 remain small
business licensees. In addition to the 48 small businesses that hold
BTA authorizations, there are approximately 86 incumbent BRS licensees
that are considered small entities (18 incumbent BRS licensees do not
meet the small business size standard). After adding the
[[Page 26406]]
number of small business auction licensees to the number of incumbent
licensees not already counted, there are currently approximately 133
BRS licensees that are defined as small businesses under either the SBA
or the Commission's rules.
73. In 2009, the Commission conducted Auction 86, the sale of 78
licenses in the BRS areas. The Commission offered three levels of
bidding credits: (i) A bidder with attributed average annual gross
revenues that exceed $15 million and do not exceed $40 million for the
preceding three years (small business) received a 15 percent discount
on its winning bid; (ii) a bidder with attributed average annual gross
revenues that exceed $3 million and do not exceed $15 million for the
preceding three years (very small business) received a 25 percent
discount on its winning bid; and (iii) a bidder with attributed average
annual gross revenues that do not exceed $3 million for the preceding
three years (entrepreneur) received a 35 percent discount on its
winning bid. Auction 86 concluded in 2009 with the sale of 61 licenses.
Of the ten winning bidders, two bidders that claimed small business
status won 4 licenses; one bidder that claimed very small business
status won three licenses; and two bidders that claimed entrepreneur
status won six licenses.
74. EBS--Educational Broadband Service has been included within the
broad economic census category and SBA size standard for Wired
Telecommunications Carriers since 2007. Wired Telecommunications
Carriers are comprised of 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 telecommunications networks. Transmission
facilities may be based on a single technology or a combination of
technologies.'' The SBA's small business size standard for this
category is all such firms having 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census
Bureau 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.
75. In addition to Census data, the Commission's Universal
Licensing System indicates that as of March 2018 there are 1,300
licensees holding over 2,190 active EBS licenses. The Commission
estimates that of these 2,190 licenses, the majority are held by non-
profit educational institutions and school districts, which are by
statute defined as small businesses.
D. D. Description of Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other
Compliance Requirements
76. The Commission expects the rules proposed in the NPRM will
impose new or additional reporting or recordkeeping and/or other
compliance obligations on small entities as well as other EBS licensees
and EBS eligible entities. The Commission discusses it proposals and
the obligations that would result below, and seeks comment on these
matters, including cost and benefit analyses supported by quantitative
and qualitative data from the parties in the proceeding.
77. Rationalizing the GSAs of incumbent EBS Licensees. The
Commission proposes to rationalize the GSAs of incumbent EBS licensees,
except grandfathered licensees in the E and F Channel groups, to a
defined geographic area, namely, the sum of census tracts that are
covered by, or that intersect with, a licensee's existing GSA. The
Commission proposes that, in this rationalization process, each current
EBS GSA will be converted to a single license made up of all the census
tracts it covers, rather than converted to a collection of separate
census tract-sized licenses. The Commission also proposes that EBS
licensees with a local presence in a county be given the opportunity to
apply to expand their GSA to the boundaries of a county where they have
a local presence. Licensees who take advantage of that option would be
subject to new performance requirements. As an alternative to basing
GSAs on census tracts, the Commission seeks comment on whether it
should expand existing GSAs to include the county (or counties) covered
by or that intersect the GSA.
78. Additional Flexibility for EBS Licenses. The Commission
proposes to provide EBS licensees with the flexibility to assign or
transfer control of their licenses to entities that are not EBS-
eligible. To provide additional flexibility and to facilitate the most
efficient use of the EBS spectrum through a market-based mechanism, the
Commission proposes to allow an incumbent EBS licensee, in addition to
leasing a portion of its license, to assign or transfer control of its
entire license to entities that do not meet the eligibility criteria
contained in Sec. 27.1201 of the Commission's rules. If the incumbent
EBS licensee were to choose to assign or transfer its license, the new
licensee would not be required to comply with the educational use
requirements in Sec. 27.1203 of the Commission's rules. The Commission
seeks comment on whether licensees whose license were granted via
waiver, should be given additional flexibility to lease their spectrum
or to transfer or assign their licenses freely. Given this flexibility
to transfer or assign an entire EBS license to non-eligible entities,
free of educational use requirements, the Commission also proposes to
eliminate the educational use requirements in Sec. 27.1203 for all EBS
licensees. The Commission also proposes to eliminate restrictions on
EBS lease terms on a going forward basis and ask whether additional
revisions are necessary to fully rationalize our rules for the
transferability, leasing and use of EBS spectrum.
79. Opportunities to Acquire New 2.5 GHz Licenses. The Commission
proposes to auction off licenses for unassigned portions of the 2.5 GHZ
band and seek comment on whether it should first open up to three new
local priority filing windows to give existing licensees, Tribal
Nations and educational entities an opportunity to access 2.5 GHz
spectrum to serve their local communities. The Commission also proposes
build-out requirements for these new licenses to ensure that all
Americans have the opportunity to benefit from the 2.5 GHz band.
80. New Local Priority Filing Window--Local Presence. The
Commission proposes to require an applicant to demonstrate as part of
the application process that it has a local presence, and that an EBS-
eligible entity should be considered to have a ``local presence'' when
it is physically located within the license area where service is
proposed. The Commission seeks comment on what documentation applicants
must provide to demonstrate that they have a local presence.
81. Local Priority Filing Window 1: Existing Licensees. The
Commission seeks comment on opening a window that would permit existing
2.5 GHz licensees to expand their service to the county border if they
were able to demonstrate that they had a local presence in that county,
and if they covered at least 25 percent of census tracts in that
county. Such a window would allow existing licensees to quickly put
white space to use, but it would also preclude new entrants.
82. Local Priority Filing Window 2: Tribal Nations. The Commission
seeks comment on opening a new filing priority filing window for Tribal
Nations. The Commission proposes to limit participation to federally-
recognized American Indian Tribes and Alaska Native Villages that also
have a local presence. The Commission also
[[Page 26407]]
proposes not to limit the number of channels that a Tribal Nations
could apply for as EBS-eligible entities for the purposes of
participating in the Native National entity filing window. The
Commission asks commenters to propose other ways by which it could
encourage the use of EBS spectrum on Tribal Lands and in Native
communities.
83. Local Priority Filing Window 3: New Educational Entities. The
Commission seeks comment on opening a new local priority filing window
for educational entities that do not hold any 2.5 GHz spectrum. The
Commission would propose to limit participation in such a window to
accredited institutions as well as governmental organizations engaged
in the formal education of enrolled students who are not 2.5 GHz
licensees as of the adoption of this NPRM and only in areas in which
they have a local presence. The Commission seeks comment on whether to
assign new EBS licenses on a county-wide or census tract basis.
84. Local Priority Filing Process. The Commission seeks comment on
the appropriate time frame for any of the new local priority filing
windows, how long the windows should be open, and how much notice to
give. The Commission asks entities that are interested in participating
in the application window and obtaining 2.5 GHz licenses to indicate
their interests and the difficulties that they may face to help us
evaluate any possible technical and process issues that may arise in
implementing one or more new local priority filing windows for
applicants and processing such applications.
85. Resolving Mutually Exclusive Applications. While the Commission
does not anticipate many mutually exclusive applications based on the
local priority filing windows, it notes that the Communications Act
requires that assign initial licenses subject to mutually exclusive
applications through competitive bidding. The Commission proposes to
limit such competitive bidding to the mutually exclusive applications
filed during a particular window, and ask for comment on that. The
Commission asks for comment on whether the Commission should permit a
settlement window to resolve such mutual exclusivity. The Commission
also proposes to employ the part 1 rules governing competitive bidding
design, unjust enrichment, application and payment procedures,
reporting requirements, and the prohibition on certain communications
between auction applicants, and seeks comment on this proposal.
86. Holding Periods for Licenses Acquired Through a Local Priority
Filing Window. The Commission seeks comment on whether to impose a
special holding period, and for how long, on any license acquired
through a local priority filing window in order to ensure that licenses
are not immediately flipped to a nonqualifying entity. The Commission
asks whether a three, five, or seven-year holding period would be most
appropriate for these circumstances. The Commission also asks whether
licensees should be required to meet certain buildout requirements
before allowing a transfer.
87. Licensing White Spaces. The Commission proposes that after any
new licenses have been assigned through one or more local priority
filing windows, any remaining 2.5 GHz spectrum would be made available
for commercial use via competitive bidding using our general part 1
competitive bidding rules. The Commission seeks comment on this
proposal and on the appropriate size of such licenses and the size of
channel blocks. The Commission also proposes to apply designated entity
preferences in this auction, and to eliminate the EBS eligibility
criteria contained in Sec. 27.1201 of the rules with respect to
unassigned spectrum and ask for comment on these proposals.
88. Requirements for New 2.5 GHz Licenses. The Commission proposes
more robust construction requirements for new 2.5 GHz licenses granted
based on the proposed local priority filing window in the NPRM or a
system of competitive bidding. For mobile and fixed point-to-multipoint
services, the Commission proposes an interim benchmark of 50 percent
population coverage and a final benchmark of 80 percent population
coverage. For fixed point-to-point services, the Commission proposes an
interim benchmark of 20 point-to-point links per million persons (one
link per 50,000 persons) in a license area, and 40 point-to-point links
per million persons (one link per 25,000 persons) in a licensed area.
For educational broadcast services that provide least 20 hours of
educational use per channel per week, the Commission seeks comment on
an interim benchmark of 50 percent population coverage and a final
benchmark of 80 percent population coverage. The Commission also
proposes to bring any new 2.5 GHz licenses granted through a local
priority filing window or a system of competitive bidding into the
unified regulatory renewal framework for WRS. The Commission seeks
comment on bringing existing EBS licensees into the WRS framework for
license renewal once their licenses have been rationalized.
89. Cleaning Up the 2.5 GHz Rules. The Commission proposes to
eliminate the BRS/EBS transition rules since the process for
transitioning BRS and EBS licensees to the new band plan was completed
in 2011 and the rules no longer appear necessary. The Commission also
proposes to make various non-substantive, clarifying amendments to
Sec. 27.1206 to make the rules easier to understand without changing
the substantive requirements for BRS. The proposed changes are
contained in the Proposed Rules of the NRPM, and the Commission seeks
comment on these proposed changes.
E. E. Steps Taken To Minimize Significant Economic Impact on Small
Entities, and Significant Alternatives Considered
90. The RFA requires an agency to describe any significant,
specifically small business, alternatives that it has considered in
reaching its proposed approach, which may include the following four
alternatives (among others): ``(1) the establishment of differing
compliance or reporting requirements or timetables that take into
account the resources available to small entities; (2) the
clarification, consolidation, or simplification of compliance and
reporting requirements under the rule for such small entities; (3) the
use or performance rather than design standards; and (4) an exemption
from coverage of the rules, or any part thereof, for such small
entities.''
91. The Commission does not believe that its proposed changes will
have a significant economic impact on small entities however, to get a
better understanding costs and benefits associated with proposals and
any alternatives raised in this proceeding as mentioned above in the
previous section, the Commission has requested that commenters discuss
the costs and benefits supported by quantitative and qualitative data
of any approach advocated. The proposed changes expanding the use of
the 2.5 GHz band will benefit small entities as well as entities of
other sizes by reducing unnecessary regulatory burdens on licensees,
promoting greater spectrum efficiency, and facilitating the full use of
EBS spectrum to provide advanced mobile broadband services,
particularly in rural areas where this spectrum sits idle today.
Moreover, the proposed reforms will permit more flexible use of this
spectrum by small and other sized entities that currently hold EBS
licenses and will provide new opportunities for EBS eligible entities,
Tribal Nations, and
[[Page 26408]]
commercial entities to obtain unused 2.5 GHz spectrum to facilitate
improved access to next generation wireless broadband, including 5G,
for both educational and commercial uses.
92. More specifically, the Commission's proposed rationalization
process for incumbent EBS licensees that would occur automatically
allowing incumbent licensees to avoid a requirement to file
applications with the Commission or to otherwise notify the Commission
to effectuate this change would minimize some costs and/or
administrative burdens on small entities associated with the rule, if
adopted. Small entities should also benefit from removal of the filing
freeze for new EBS licenses and the requirement that EBS eligible
entities applying for a new license must have a local presence in the
areas in which they wish to provide service, which will provide them
greater opportunity to obtain EBS spectrum to meet the needs of their
communities. In addition, small entities should benefit from the
increased flexibility of our proposal to allow EBS licensees with the
flexibility to assign or transfer control of their licenses to entities
that are not EBS-eligible. The Commission believes that, at this point
in time, licensees are in the best position to determine how to use
their licenses, or, alternatively, whether to transfer their licenses
to a third party in the secondary market.
93. For existing EBS licenses the Commission's action declining to
issue proposals creating new performance or renewal requirements will
spare small entities and other existing EBS licensees the costs of new
compliance requirements in these areas. With respect to performance
requirements adopted for all new EBS licenses, the Commission believes
such requirements are necessary to ensure that spectrum is being put
into use and has proposed a variety of metrics to provide small
entities as well as other licensees with a variety of means by which
they may demonstrate compliance. The Commission anticipates that
updating the performance requirements in this manner will encourage
rapid deployment of next generation wireless services, including 5G,
which will benefit small entities and the industry as a whole.
F. F. Federal Rules That May Duplicate, Overlap, or Conflict With the
Proposed Rules
94. None.
V. Ordering Clauses
95. It is ordered, pursuant to the authority found in Sections 1,
2, 3, 4(i), 7, 201, 301, 302, 303, 304, 307, 308, 309, and 310 of the
Communications Act of 1934, 47 U.S.C. 151, 152, 153, 154(i), 157, 201,
301, 302, 303, 304, 307, 308, 309, 310, and Section 706 of the
Telecommunications Act of 1996, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 1302, and Section
1.411 of the Commission's Rules, 47 CFR 1.411, that this Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking is hereby adopted.
96. It is further ordered that notice is hereby given of the
proposed regulatory changes described in this Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking, and that comment is sought on these proposals.
97. It is further ordered that the Commission's Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau, Reference Information Center, shall send a
copy of this Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, including the Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of
the Small Business Administration.
List of Subjects in 47 CFR Parts 1 and 27
Communications common carriers, Communications equipment, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene H. Dortch,
Secretary, Office of the Secretary.
Proposed Rules
For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Federal
Communications Commission proposes to amend 47 CFR parts 1 and 27 as
follows:
PART 1--PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE
0
1. The authority citation for part 1 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 151, 154(i), 155, 157, 160, 201, 225, 227,
303, 309, 332, 1403, 1404, 1451, 1452, and 1455, unless otherwise
noted.
0
2. Amend Sec. 1.949 by revising paragraph (c) to read as follows:
Sec. 1.949 Application for renewal of authorization.
* * * * *
(c) Implementation. Covered Site-based Licenses, except Common
Carrier Fixed Point-to-Point Microwave Service (part 101, subpart I of
this chapter), and Covered Geographic Licenses in the 600 MHz Service
(part 27, subpart N); 700 MHz Commercial Services (part 27, subpart F);
Advanced Wireless Services (part 27, subpart L) (AWS-3 (1695-1710 MHz,
1755-1780 MHz, and 2155-2180 MHz) and AWS-4 (2000-2020 MHz and 2180-
2200 MHz) only); and H Block Service (part 27, subpart K) must comply
with paragraphs (d) through (h) of this section. Broadband Radio
Service and Educational Broadband Service licenses (part 27, subpart M)
initially issued after [effective date of final rule] must comply with
paragraphs (d) through (h) of this section. All other Covered
Geographic Licenses must comply with paragraphs (d) through (h) of this
section beginning on January 1, 2023. Common Carrier Fixed Point-to-
Point Microwave Service (part 101, subpart I) must comply with
paragraphs (d) through (h) of this section beginning on October 1,
2018.
* * * * *
PART 27--MISCELLANEOUS WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS SERVICES
0
3. The authority citation for part 27 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 301, 302a, 303, 307, 309, 332, 336,
337, 1403, 1404, 1451, and 1452, unless otherwise noted.
0
4. Amend Sec. 27.14 by revising paragraph (o) to read as follows:
Sec. 27.14 Construction Requirements.
* * * * *
(o)(1) All BRS and EBS licensees issued after [effective date of
final rule], must demonstrate compliance with the performance
requirements described in this paragraph. All equipment used to
demonstrate compliance must be in use and actually providing service,
either for internal use or to unaffiliated customers, as of the interim
deadline or the end of the license term, whichever is applicable.
(2) Licensees relying on mobile service must demonstrate reliable
signal coverage of 50% of the population of the geographic service area
by the interim deadline, and 80% of the population of the geographic
service area by the end of the license term.
(3) Licensees relying on fixed service must demonstrate operation
of one link for each 50,000 persons in the geographic service area by
the interim deadline, and one link for each 25,000 persons in the
geographic service area by the end of the license term.
* * * * *
Sec. 27.1201 [Removed and Reserved]
0
5. Remove and reserve Sec. 27.1201.
0
6. Revise Sec. 27.1206 to read as follows:
Sec. 27.1206 Geographic Service Area.
(a) BRS:
(1) For BRS incumbent licenses granted before September 15, 1995,
the GSA for a channel is the GSA as created on January 10, 2005.
(2) For BRS BTA authorization holders, the GSA for a channel is the
[[Page 26409]]
BTA, subject to the exclusion of overlapping, co-channel incumbent GSAs
created on January 10, 2005.
(3) If an incumbent BRS license is cancelled or is forfeited, the
GSA area of the incumbent station shall dissolve and the right to
operate in that area automatically reverts to the GSA licensee that
held the corresponding BTA.
(b) For EBS:
(1) Incumbent EBS licensees. (i) The GSA of EBS licenses on the E
and F channel groups is defined in Sec. 27.1216. EBS licensees on the
E and F channel groups are prohibited from expanding their GSAs.
(ii) For EBS licenses not in the E and F channel groups in effect
as of [effective date of final rule], the GSA for a channel consists of
all census tracts which are covered by or intersect its GSA existing as
of [effective date of final rule].
(2) New initial EBS licenses. The GSA for a channel for new initial
licenses issued after [effective date of final rule], is the county
[census tract] for which the license is issued, subject to the
exclusion of overlapping, co-channel incumbent GSAs.
0
7. Revise Sec. 27.1214 to read as follows:
Sec. 27.1214 EBS spectrum leasing arrangements and grandfathered
leases.
(a) All leases of current EBS spectrum entered into prior to
January 10, 2005 and in compliance with leasing rules formerly
contained in part 74 of this chapter may continue in force and effect,
notwithstanding any inconsistency between such leases and the rules
applicable to spectrum leasing arrangements set forth in this chapter.
Such leases entered into pursuant to the former part 74 rules of this
chapter may be renewed and assigned in accordance with the terms of
such lease. All spectrum leasing arrangements leases entered into after
January 10, 2005, pursuant to the rules set forth in part 1 and part 27
of this chapter, must comply with the rules in those parts.
(b) For leasing arrangements entered into between July 19, 2006 and
[effective date of final rule], the maximum permissible term of an EBS
spectrum leasing arrangement (including the initial term and all
renewal terms that commence automatically or at the sole option of the
lessee) shall be 30 years. Any spectrum leasing arrangement in excess
of 15 years that is entered into on or after July 19, 2006 and before
[effective date of final rule] must include terms which provide the EBS
licensee on the 15th year and every 5 years thereafter, with an
opportunity to review its educational use requirements in light of
changes in educational needs, technology, and other relevant factors
and to obtain access to such additional services, capacity, support,
and/or equipment as the parties shall agree upon in the spectrum
leasing arrangement to advance the EBS licensee's educational mission.
0
8. Revise Sec. 27.1217 to read as follows:
Sec. 27.1217 Competitive bidding procedures for the Broadband Radio
Service and the Educational Broadband Service.
Mutually exclusive initial applications for BRS and EBS licenses
are subject to competitive bidding. The designated entity provisions in
Sec. 27.1218 shall not apply to auctions held after [effective date of
final rule]. The general competitive bidding procedures set forth in
part 1, subpart Q of this chapter will apply unless otherwise provided
in this subpart.
Sec. Sec. 27.1230 through 27.1239 [Removed]
0
9. Remove Sec. Sec. 27.1230 through 27.1239.
[FR Doc. 2018-12183 Filed 6-6-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712-01-P