Connect America Fund, 31458-31460 [2018-14148]
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31458
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 130 / Friday, July 6, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
(c) * * *
EPA-APPROVED ALABAMA REGULATIONS
State citation
State
effective date
Title/subject
EPA approval date
Explanation
Chapter No. 335–1–1 Organization
Section 335–1–1–.03 ..............
Section 335–1–1–.04 ..............
*
*
*
Organization and Duties of
the Commission.
Organization of the Department.
*
*
*
12/8/2017
12/8/2017
*
*
7/6/2018, [Insert citation of
publication].
7/6/2018, [Insert citation of
publication].
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
EPA-APPROVED ALABAMA NON-REGULATORY PROVISIONS
Name of nonregulatory SIP
provision
Applicable geographic or
nonattainment area
State
submittal date/
effective
date
EPA approval date
*
*
*
110(a)(1) and (2) InfrastrucAlabama .................................
ture Requirements for the
1997 Annual PM2.5 NAAQS.
*
12/8/2017
*
7/6/2018, [Insert citation of
publication].
110(a)(1) and (2) InfrastrucAlabama .................................
ture Requirements for the
2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS.
12/8/2017
7/6/2018, [Insert citation of
publication].
110(a)(1) and (2) InfrastrucAlabama .................................
ture Requirements for the
2012 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS.
12/8/2017
7/6/2018, [Insert citation of
publication].
110(a)(1) and (2) Infrastructure Requirements for the
2008 Lead NAAQS.
Alabama .................................
12/8/2017
7/6/2018, [Insert citation of
publication].
110(a)(1) and (2) InfrastrucAlabama .................................
ture Requirements for the
2008 8-hour Ozone NAAQS.
12/8/2017
7/6/2018, [Insert citation of
publication].
110(a)(1) and (2) Infrastructure Requirements for the
2010 NO2 NAAQS.
Alabama .................................
12/8/2017
7/6/2018, [Insert citation of
publication].
110(a)(1) and (2) Infrastructure Requirements for the
2010 SO2 NAAQS.
Alabama .................................
12/8/2017
7/6/2018, [Insert citation of
publication].
§ 52.53
[Amended]
3. Section 52.53 is amended by
removing paragraphs (a) through (e).
■
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 54
[FR Doc. 2018–14525 Filed 7–5–18; 8:45 am]
[WC Docket Nos. 10–90; FCC 18–53]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with RULES
Connect America Fund
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Denial of petition for
reconsideration.
AGENCY:
In this document, the Federal
Communications Commission
SUMMARY:
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Explanation
*
*
Addressing the state board
requirements of sections
128 and 110(a)(2)(E)(ii)
only.
Addressing the state board
requirements of sections
128 and 110(a)(2)(E)(ii)
only.
Addressing the state board
requirements of sections
128 and 110(a)(2)(E)(ii)
only.
Addressing the state board
requirements of sections
128 and 110(a)(2)(E)(ii)
only.
Addressing the state board
requirements of sections
128 and 110(a)(2)(E)(ii)
only.
Addressing the state board
requirements of sections
128 and 110(a)(2)(E)(ii)
only.
Addressing the state board
requirements of sections
128 and 110(a)(2)(E)(ii)
only.
(Commission) addresses the petition for
reconsideration filed by Alaska
Communications Systems (ACS) of the
October 31, 2016 Commission’s ACS
Connect America Fund (CAF) Phase II
Order. The Commission denies the
petition.
The denial of the petition for
reconsideration is effective August 6,
2018.
DATES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Alexander Minard, Wireline
Competition Bureau, (202) 418–7400 or
TTY: (202) 418–0484.
E:\FR\FM\06JYR1.SGM
06JYR1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 130 / Friday, July 6, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
This is a
summary of the Commission’s Order on
Reconsideration in WC Docket Nos. 10–
90; FCC 18–53, adopted on April 25,
2018 and released on April 26, 2018.
The full text of this document is
available for public inspection during
regular business hours in the FCC
Reference Center, Room CY–A257, 445
12th Street SW, Washington, DC 20554
or at the following internet address:
https://www.fcc.gov/document/fccaddresses-alaska-communicationssystems-high-cost-petition.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with RULES
I. Introduction
1. In this Order, the Commission
addresses the petition for
reconsideration filed by ACS of the
October 31, 2016 Commission ACS CAF
Phase II Order. The ACS CAF II Order,
81 FR 83706, November 22, 2016,
established the CAF Phase II voice and
broadband service obligations for ACS.
In its petition, ACS seeks
reconsideration of the Commission’s
definition of ‘‘high-cost,’’ which the
Commission adopted to provide ACS
flexibility to meet its service
commitment by deploying to certain
locations within census blocks that
otherwise have been identified as ‘‘low
cost.’’ The Commission required ACS to
certify, in order to take advantage of that
flexibility, that its minimum capital
expenditure (capex) for each location in
the ‘‘low cost’’ census block was at least
$5,000, whereas ACS asks that the
threshold be lowered to $2,577.79.
2. The Commission hereby denies the
ACS petition. In denying the petition,
the Commission determines that it
struck an appropriate balance in
providing ACS some flexibility in
meeting its service commitment, while
ensuring that high-cost support is
targeted to areas that need it most.
II. Discussion
3. The Commission denies ACS’
petition to reconsider the conditions the
Commission placed on the flexibility it
granted ACS. In structuring support, the
Commission adopted a tailored
approach that reflects the unique
challenges of serving Alaska, while
preserving and adhering to its
fundamental universal service
principles and policies—including
targeting support to locations that are
truly in need of support. In its petition,
ACS states that it ‘‘objects to none of
[the] conditions [of substituting highcost locations in low-cost census
blocks], but seeks reconsideration only
of the meaning of ‘high-cost’ in [that]
context.’’
4. As a matter of policy, the
Commission decided that the minimum
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:23 Jul 05, 2018
Jkt 244001
capex for permitting ACS to substitute
a location in a low-cost census block for
a location in a high-cost census block
would be $5,000 as a way of prioritizing
support going to higher-cost unserved
locations even when allowing ACS to
forego deploying to locations in modelidentified eligible census blocks. Setting
the threshold at or near the lower bound
of what ACS estimates is the capex
required to serve a location in a highcost census block would counter the
Commission’s objective in the ACS CAF
II Order, because it would allow funding
to be re-directed to relatively lower cost
locations while leaving higher cost
locations unserved. These relatively
lower cost locations that would be
eligible under the revised threshold are
precisely the locations that are more
likely to be served even in the absence
of universal service support.
Particularly given that ACS does not
propose that their support levels be
adjusted to account for the fact that they
would be serving relatively lower cost
locations, granting the ACS request
would work against the Commission’s
efforts to efficiently serve the higher
cost locations which are least likely to
be served apart from universal service
support. Therefore, the Commission
chose to set the minimum threshold at
the average capex for locations in highcost areas otherwise available to ACS,
instead of at the lower bound otherwise
used for determining funded locations.
This decision thus made sure such
flexibility was available to ACS only in
instances where the location is among
the more costly to serve.
5. As the steward of the limited
Universal Service Fund (USF), the
Commission has discretion to tailor
high-cost support to areas that are the
most costly to serve. It is reasonable and
entirely within the Commission’s
authority to limit the flexibility by
prioritizing deployment to locations
with a greater need for funding, based
on the amount of capex ACS actually
spends. ACS seems to concede this is a
lawful and proper exercise of the
Commission’s discretion as it seeks even
greater flexibility. The $5,000 minimum
threshold ensures that ACS is meeting
its obligation to serve the locations in
model-determined high-cost areas,
while allowing ACS some flexibility to
exchange some unserved locations in
adjacent census blocks for which the
cost model did not calculate support,
but which nevertheless ultimately are
among the costliest for ACS to serve. As
the flexibility to swap locations is an
exception based on the unique
circumstance of ACS in Alaska, the
Commission finds that establishing this
PO 00000
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31459
limit is reasonable and consistent with
its overarching universal service
principal and policies. The Commission
is not persuaded by ACS’s arguments
that there is no reasonable basis for the
$5,000 minimum capex certification
requirement or that this obligation is
contrary to the public interest.
6. ACS is also misguided in arguing
that the $5,000 minimum threshold will
leave certain locations unserved and
deny support to locations that are
otherwise entitled to it. ACS is not
required to substitute any locations, and
regardless of whether it does, must still
deploy to 31,571 locations by the end of
the term of support. The Commission
made a limited exception in the ACS
CAF II Order that allows ACS to use
high-cost support in model-determined
low-cost census blocks where the
population is lacking service and where
it is very costly. Although the level of
the threshold will affect which specific
locations are served and counted toward
the requirement, the public interest is
served because the number of locations
ACS is required to serve remains the
same.
7. ACS has long argued that the CAM
does not appropriately account for the
significantly higher costs required to
build and operate in Alaska. It is due,
in part, to this advocacy that the
Commission adopted an ACS-specific
order. However, accepting ACS’s
premise that the CAM underestimates
locations’ costs would counsel against
establishing a threshold at the lower end
of what ACS’s own analysis of the CAM
would define as a high-cost location. To
use a threshold at such a level would
imply that the Commission should
allow ACS the flexibility to substitute
locations that may not even require
support while abandoning locations that
are clearly in need of high-cost support.
This is because accepting the premise
that the CAM underestimates costs
would suggest the lower bound
threshold ACS proposes is likely too
low. By setting the threshold at $5,000
per location, the Commission was able
to allow for some flexibility while also
reducing subsidization of lower cost
locations. Based on ACS’
representations regarding capex costs in
Alaska and the costs to build to these
unserved locations, meeting this
threshold should not be problematic.
Therefore, the Commission finds its
decision was reasoned and serves the
public interest. ACS provided nothing
in its Petition that persuades us to alter
this requirement.
E:\FR\FM\06JYR1.SGM
06JYR1
31460
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 130 / Friday, July 6, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
III. Procedural Matters
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
A. Paperwork Reduction Act
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
8. This document does not contain
new information collection
requirements subject to the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA), Public
Law 104–13. In addition, therefore, it
does not contain any new or
information collection burden for small
business concerns with fewer than 25
employees, pursuant to the Small
Business Paperwork Relief Act of 2002,
Public Law 107–198, see 44 U.S.C.
3506(c)(4).
B. Congressional Review Act
9. The Commission will send a copy
of this Report and Order to Congress
and the Government Accountability
Office pursuant to the Congressional
Review Act, see 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
IV. Ordering Clauses
10. Accordingly, it is ordered,
pursuant to the authority contained in
sections 1, 4(j), 214, 254, and 405 of the
Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 154(j), 214,
254, and 405 and § 1.429 of the
Commission’s rules, 47 CFR 1.429, that
this Order is adopted.
11. It is further ordered that, pursuant
to the authority contained in sections 1,
4(j), 214, 254, and 405 of the
Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 154(j), 214,
254, and 405, and § 1.429 of the
Commission’s rules, 47 CFR 1.429, the
Petition for Reconsideration of the
Commission’s Order, filed by Alaska
Communications, is denied as discussed
herein.
12. It is further ordered that, pursuant
to the authority contained in § 1.103 of
the Commission’s rules, 47 CFR 1.103,
this Order shall be effective August 6,
2018.
Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene Dortch,
Secretary, Office of the Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018–14148 Filed 7–5–18; 8:45 am]
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with RULES
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
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50 CFR Part 679
[Docket No. 170714670–8561–02]
RIN 0648–BH05
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic
Zone Off Alaska; Reclassifying Squid
Species in the BSAI and GOA
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
NMFS issues regulations to
implement Amendment 117 to the
Fishery Management Plan for
Groundfish of the Bering Sea and
Aleutian Islands Management Area
(BSAI FMP), implement Amendment
106 to the Fishery Management Plan for
Groundfish of the Gulf of Alaska (GOA
FMP), and update the species code
tables for octopus. This final rule
prohibits directed fishing for the squid
species complex (squids) by Federally
permitted groundfish fishermen,
specifies a squid retention limit in the
Gulf of Alaska (GOA) groundfish
fisheries consistent with the existing
Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands
Management Area (BSAI) squid
retention limit, and makes minor
corrections to the octopus species code
tables. This action is intended to
promote the goals and objectives of the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act, the
FMPs, and other applicable laws.
DATES: Effective August 6, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Electronic copies of
Amendment 117 to the BSAI FMP,
Amendment 106 to the GOA FMP, and
the Environmental Assessment/
Regulatory Impact Review (collectively
the ‘‘Analysis’’) prepared for this action
may be obtained from
www.regulations.gov.
Electronic copies of the Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analyses for the
BSAI and GOA Groundfish Harvest
Specifications for 2018 and 2019 may be
obtained from www.regulations.gov.
Written comments regarding the
burden-hour estimates or other aspects
of the collection-of-information
requirements contained in this final rule
may be submitted by mail to NMFS,
Alaska Region, P.O. Box 21668, Juneau,
AK 99082–1668, Attn: Ellen Sebastian,
Records Officer; in person at NMFS,
Alaska Region, 709 West 9th Street,
Room 420A, Juneau, AK; by email to
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4700
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OIRA_Submission@omb.eop.gov; or by
fax to (202) 395–5806.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Megan Mackey, (907) 586–7228.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Authority for Action
NMFS manages the groundfish
fisheries in the exclusive economic
zones of the BSAI and GOA under the
BSAI FMP and GOA FMP (collectively
the FMPs). The North Pacific Fishery
Management Council (Council)
prepared the FMPs under the authority
of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
(Magnuson-Stevens Act), 16 U.S.C. 1801
et seq. Regulations implementing the
FMPs appear at 50 CFR part 679.
General regulations governing U.S.
fisheries appear at 50 CFR part 600.
This final rule implements
Amendments 117/106 and updates the
species code for octopus in several
tables to 50 CFR part 679. The Council
submitted Amendments 117/106 for
review by the Secretary of Commerce,
and the notice of availability of these
amendments was published in the
Federal Register on March 27, 2018,
with comments invited through May 29,
2018 (83 FR 13117). NMFS published
the proposed rule for this action on
April 11, 2018 (83 FR 15538), with
comments invited through May 11,
2018. NMFS received three comment
letters from three members of the
public. The comments are summarized
and responded to under the heading
‘‘Comments and Responses’’ below.
A detailed review of the provisions
and rationale for this action is provided
in the preamble to the proposed rule
and is briefly summarized in this final
rule.
Background
In June 2017, the Council voted
unanimously to recommend FMP
Amendments 117/106 to reclassify
squids as non-target ecosystem
component species, not in need of
conservation and management. Squids
are currently classified as target species
in the FMPs, though as discussed below,
squids are currently only caught
incidental to other target fisheries. To
implement FMP Amendments 117/106,
NMFS implements regulations to
prohibit directed fishing for squids by
Federally permitted groundfish
fishermen and to specify a squid
retention limit in the GOA groundfish
fisheries consistent with the existing
BSAI squid retention limit. The
following sections of this preamble
describe (1) groundfish stock
classification in FMPs and a brief
E:\FR\FM\06JYR1.SGM
06JYR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 130 (Friday, July 6, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 31458-31460]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-14148]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 54
[WC Docket Nos. 10-90; FCC 18-53]
Connect America Fund
AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
ACTION: Denial of petition for reconsideration.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In this document, the Federal Communications Commission
(Commission) addresses the petition for reconsideration filed by Alaska
Communications Systems (ACS) of the October 31, 2016 Commission's ACS
Connect America Fund (CAF) Phase II Order. The Commission denies the
petition.
DATES: The denial of the petition for reconsideration is effective
August 6, 2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Alexander Minard, Wireline Competition
Bureau, (202) 418-7400 or TTY: (202) 418-0484.
[[Page 31459]]
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Commission's Order
on Reconsideration in WC Docket Nos. 10-90; FCC 18-53, adopted on April
25, 2018 and released on April 26, 2018. The full text of this document
is available for public inspection during regular business hours in the
FCC Reference Center, Room CY-A257, 445 12th Street SW, Washington, DC
20554 or at the following internet address: https://www.fcc.gov/document/fcc-addresses-alaska-communications-systems-high-cost-petition.
I. Introduction
1. In this Order, the Commission addresses the petition for
reconsideration filed by ACS of the October 31, 2016 Commission ACS CAF
Phase II Order. The ACS CAF II Order, 81 FR 83706, November 22, 2016,
established the CAF Phase II voice and broadband service obligations
for ACS. In its petition, ACS seeks reconsideration of the Commission's
definition of ``high-cost,'' which the Commission adopted to provide
ACS flexibility to meet its service commitment by deploying to certain
locations within census blocks that otherwise have been identified as
``low cost.'' The Commission required ACS to certify, in order to take
advantage of that flexibility, that its minimum capital expenditure
(capex) for each location in the ``low cost'' census block was at least
$5,000, whereas ACS asks that the threshold be lowered to $2,577.79.
2. The Commission hereby denies the ACS petition. In denying the
petition, the Commission determines that it struck an appropriate
balance in providing ACS some flexibility in meeting its service
commitment, while ensuring that high-cost support is targeted to areas
that need it most.
II. Discussion
3. The Commission denies ACS' petition to reconsider the conditions
the Commission placed on the flexibility it granted ACS. In structuring
support, the Commission adopted a tailored approach that reflects the
unique challenges of serving Alaska, while preserving and adhering to
its fundamental universal service principles and policies--including
targeting support to locations that are truly in need of support. In
its petition, ACS states that it ``objects to none of [the] conditions
[of substituting high-cost locations in low-cost census blocks], but
seeks reconsideration only of the meaning of `high-cost' in [that]
context.''
4. As a matter of policy, the Commission decided that the minimum
capex for permitting ACS to substitute a location in a low-cost census
block for a location in a high-cost census block would be $5,000 as a
way of prioritizing support going to higher-cost unserved locations
even when allowing ACS to forego deploying to locations in model-
identified eligible census blocks. Setting the threshold at or near the
lower bound of what ACS estimates is the capex required to serve a
location in a high-cost census block would counter the Commission's
objective in the ACS CAF II Order, because it would allow funding to be
re-directed to relatively lower cost locations while leaving higher
cost locations unserved. These relatively lower cost locations that
would be eligible under the revised threshold are precisely the
locations that are more likely to be served even in the absence of
universal service support. Particularly given that ACS does not propose
that their support levels be adjusted to account for the fact that they
would be serving relatively lower cost locations, granting the ACS
request would work against the Commission's efforts to efficiently
serve the higher cost locations which are least likely to be served
apart from universal service support. Therefore, the Commission chose
to set the minimum threshold at the average capex for locations in
high-cost areas otherwise available to ACS, instead of at the lower
bound otherwise used for determining funded locations. This decision
thus made sure such flexibility was available to ACS only in instances
where the location is among the more costly to serve.
5. As the steward of the limited Universal Service Fund (USF), the
Commission has discretion to tailor high-cost support to areas that are
the most costly to serve. It is reasonable and entirely within the
Commission's authority to limit the flexibility by prioritizing
deployment to locations with a greater need for funding, based on the
amount of capex ACS actually spends. ACS seems to concede this is a
lawful and proper exercise of the Commission's discretion as it seeks
even greater flexibility. The $5,000 minimum threshold ensures that ACS
is meeting its obligation to serve the locations in model-determined
high-cost areas, while allowing ACS some flexibility to exchange some
unserved locations in adjacent census blocks for which the cost model
did not calculate support, but which nevertheless ultimately are among
the costliest for ACS to serve. As the flexibility to swap locations is
an exception based on the unique circumstance of ACS in Alaska, the
Commission finds that establishing this limit is reasonable and
consistent with its overarching universal service principal and
policies. The Commission is not persuaded by ACS's arguments that there
is no reasonable basis for the $5,000 minimum capex certification
requirement or that this obligation is contrary to the public interest.
6. ACS is also misguided in arguing that the $5,000 minimum
threshold will leave certain locations unserved and deny support to
locations that are otherwise entitled to it. ACS is not required to
substitute any locations, and regardless of whether it does, must still
deploy to 31,571 locations by the end of the term of support. The
Commission made a limited exception in the ACS CAF II Order that allows
ACS to use high-cost support in model-determined low-cost census blocks
where the population is lacking service and where it is very costly.
Although the level of the threshold will affect which specific
locations are served and counted toward the requirement, the public
interest is served because the number of locations ACS is required to
serve remains the same.
7. ACS has long argued that the CAM does not appropriately account
for the significantly higher costs required to build and operate in
Alaska. It is due, in part, to this advocacy that the Commission
adopted an ACS-specific order. However, accepting ACS's premise that
the CAM underestimates locations' costs would counsel against
establishing a threshold at the lower end of what ACS's own analysis of
the CAM would define as a high-cost location. To use a threshold at
such a level would imply that the Commission should allow ACS the
flexibility to substitute locations that may not even require support
while abandoning locations that are clearly in need of high-cost
support. This is because accepting the premise that the CAM
underestimates costs would suggest the lower bound threshold ACS
proposes is likely too low. By setting the threshold at $5,000 per
location, the Commission was able to allow for some flexibility while
also reducing subsidization of lower cost locations. Based on ACS'
representations regarding capex costs in Alaska and the costs to build
to these unserved locations, meeting this threshold should not be
problematic. Therefore, the Commission finds its decision was reasoned
and serves the public interest. ACS provided nothing in its Petition
that persuades us to alter this requirement.
[[Page 31460]]
III. Procedural Matters
A. Paperwork Reduction Act
8. This document does not contain new information collection
requirements subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA),
Public Law 104-13. In addition, therefore, it does not contain any new
or information collection burden for small business concerns with fewer
than 25 employees, pursuant to the Small Business Paperwork Relief Act
of 2002, Public Law 107-198, see 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(4).
B. Congressional Review Act
9. The Commission will send a copy of this Report and Order to
Congress and the Government Accountability Office pursuant to the
Congressional Review Act, see 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
IV. Ordering Clauses
10. Accordingly, it is ordered, pursuant to the authority contained
in sections 1, 4(j), 214, 254, and 405 of the Communications Act of
1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 154(j), 214, 254, and 405 and Sec.
1.429 of the Commission's rules, 47 CFR 1.429, that this Order is
adopted.
11. It is further ordered that, pursuant to the authority contained
in sections 1, 4(j), 214, 254, and 405 of the Communications Act of
1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 154(j), 214, 254, and 405, and Sec.
1.429 of the Commission's rules, 47 CFR 1.429, the Petition for
Reconsideration of the Commission's Order, filed by Alaska
Communications, is denied as discussed herein.
12. It is further ordered that, pursuant to the authority contained
in Sec. 1.103 of the Commission's rules, 47 CFR 1.103, this Order
shall be effective August 6, 2018.
Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene Dortch,
Secretary, Office of the Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018-14148 Filed 7-5-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712-01-P