Notice of 90-Day Period To Submit Affirmation of Operational Status of Identified Earth Station Antennas To Avoid Losing Incumbent Status or File To Remove Identified Antennas From IBFS if No Longer Operational, 48141-48142 [2021-18532]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 164 / Friday, August 27, 2021 / Notices
until existing stocks are exhausted,
provided that such sale, distribution, or
use is consistent with the terms of the
previously approved labeling on, or that
accompanied, the canceled products.
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 136 et seq.
Dated: August 20, 2021.
Catherine Aubee,
Acting Director, Registration Division, Office
of Pesticide Programs.
[FR Doc. 2021–18490 Filed 8–26–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
[IB Docket No. 20–205; DA 21–893; FR ID
43422]
Notice of 90-Day Period To Submit
Affirmation of Operational Status of
Identified Earth Station Antennas To
Avoid Losing Incumbent Status or File
To Remove Identified Antennas From
IBFS if No Longer Operational
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
In this document, the
International Bureau (Bureau) provides
notice to certain incumbent earth station
operators in the 3700–4200 MHz
frequency band of 90-day period to
submit affirmation of operational status
of identified earth station antennas to
avoid losing incumbent status or file to
remove identified antennas from IBFS if
no longer operational. Specifically, IB
provides the following notice to
operators of certain incumbent FSS Cband earth station antennas recently
reported to the Bureau by RSM US LLP
(RSM), the C-band Relocation
Coordinator, on behalf of incumbent Cband satellite operators: Failure to
submit a filing to the Bureau by no later
than 90 days after the release of the
Bureau’s Public Notice (i.e., by October
21, 2021) affirming the continued
operation of the earth station antennas
reported to the Bureau as inactive and
the intent to participate in the C-band
transition will result in a Bureau
announcement that those authorizations
identified as inactive in the Appendix
attached to the Bureau’s Public Notice
have automatically terminated by
operation of rule, and that those
authorizations will be terminated in
IBFS and removed from the incumbent
earth station list. According to RSM,
each antenna included in the Appendix
to the Bureau’s Public Notice was
reported by their earth station operator
to RSM or a satellite operator as no
longer receiving service from a C-band
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:52 Aug 26, 2021
Jkt 253001
satellite even though the FCC’s
International Bureau Filing System
(IBFS) continues to include the antenna
as active.
DATES: Identified earth station operators
must provide notice of operational
status by October 21, 2021.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kerry Murray, International Bureau,
Satellite Division, at (202) 418–0734,
Kerry.Murray@fcc.gov or IBFSINFO@
fcc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a
summary of the Commission’s
document, DA 21–893, released July 23,
2021. The full text of this document,
along with the Appendix identifying the
specific earth station antennas subject to
automatic termination, is available for
public inspection and can be
downloaded at https://www.fcc.gov/
document/ib-identifies-inactive-c-bandincumbent-earth-station-antennas or by
using the search function for Docket No.
20–205 on the Commission’s ECFS page
at www.fcc.gov/ecfs.
Background. Under the Commission’s
3.7 GHz Band Report and Order, RSM
is responsible for coordinating with the
five incumbent C-band satellite
operators—Eutelsat, Intelsat, SES,
StarOne, and Telesat—to ensure that all
incumbent earth stations are accounted
for in the transition.1 The overwhelming
majority of incumbent earth stations
have been claimed by the satellite
operator(s) from which they receive
service, included in their transition
plans to the Commission, and will be
transitioned to the upper 200 megahertz
of the band.2 In other cases, RSM, as the
C-band Relocation Coordinator, has
conducted outreach and research to
determine whether the earth station is
still active and, if so, from which
satellite(s) the earth station receives its
service.3 In the course of their outreach,
the satellite operators and RSM have
identified certain antennas as inactive.
The inactive status of some of these
antennas has been confirmed when the
relevant earth station operators filed
with the Bureau to close out those
antennas in IBFS. For the rest of these
inactive antennas, their earth station
operators reported to the satellite
operators (according to RSM) that these
antennas were no longer being used
1 See
Expanding Flexible Use of the 3.7 to 4.2
GHz Band, Report and Order and Order of Proposed
Modification, 35 FCC Rcd 2343, 2391, paragraphs
116 through 123 (2020) (3.7 GHz Band Report and
Order).
2 47 CFR 27.1412(d) (transition plan
requirements). The satellite operators also file
quarterly status reports in GN Docket No. 20–173.
47 CFR 27.1412(f).
3 3.7 GHz Band Report and Order, 35 FCC Rcd
2343, 2460, paragraph 313.
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
48141
(even though in these cases their earth
station operators failed to make the
requisite discontinuance filings with the
FCC in order to close out those antennas
in IBFS). RSM has advised the
Commission that it and the incumbent
satellite operators regularly share the
results of their respective outreach
efforts to better coordinate the transition
of incumbent earth stations.
On January 19, 2021, the Bureau
released a Public Notice that provided
notice to those incumbent earth station
operators that RSM reported in a
January 14, 2021 filing as inactive, that
such earth station operators had 90
days, until April 19, 2021, to respond in
the Electronic Comment Filing System
(ECFS) or their registrations would be
automatically terminated and they
would be removed from the incumbent
earth station list.4 The Public Notice
released on January 19, 2021 also
provided such 90-day notice to a small
group of ‘‘unresponsive’’ (or, in terms
used in the January 14 RSM filing from
which these operators were drawn,
‘‘unable to reach’’) incumbent earth
station operators about their antennas.
Such ‘‘unresponsive’’ stations were all
incumbent earth stations that (a) had not
been claimed by any of the five
incumbent C-band satellite operators
and, therefore, were not included in any
of the satellite operator Transition
Plans, and (b) had failed to respond to
any outreach efforts from the very
beginning of those efforts. The
registrations of earth stations that failed
to respond have been terminated in
IBFS and those registrations have been
removed from the incumbent earth
station list.5
On July 14, 2021, RSM submitted a
letter identifying an additional group of
individual earth station antennas as no
longer operational at the location
provided in the latest incumbent earth
station list, even though these antennas
continue to be listed in IBFS. The July
14 RSM filing, with its attachment, can
be found in ECFS. RSM explains that it
compiled this group of antennas—
which were not included in the Public
Notice released on January 19, 2021—
from affirmative representations made
to RSM or the satellite operators by the
4 See International Bureau Identifies Inactive CBand Incumbent Earth Station Antennas and
Unresponsive C-Band Incumbent Earth Station
Operators, Public Notice, DA 21–81 (rel. Jan. 19,
2021).
5 See International Bureau Releases Updated List
of Incumbent Earth Stations in the 3.7–4.2 GHz
Band in the Contiguous United States, Public
Notice, DA 21–731, IB Docket No. 20–205 (rel. June
22, 2021) (June 22, 2021, Incumbent Earth Station
List) for the current incumbent earth station list and
an explanation of the criteria applied to be included
on the list.
E:\FR\FM\27AUN1.SGM
27AUN1
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
48142
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 164 / Friday, August 27, 2021 / Notices
antennas’ earth station operators. We
have attached to DA 21–893 an
Appendix listing this group of antennas.
We hereby presume, on a rebuttable
basis, that earth station antennas
included in the Appendix attached to
DA 21–893 are no longer operational.
Section 25.161(c) of the Commission’s
rules provides that an earth station
authorization is automatically
terminated if the station is not
operational for more than 90 days.6 We
also note that the Commission’s rules
require earth station operators to take
the steps necessary to remove nonoperational antennas from the active
records in the IBFS.7 Moreover, under
the Commission’s rules, antennas must
continue to be operational to qualify for
incumbent status.8
Incumbent earth station operators
who need to affirm the continued
operation of the identified earth station
antennas. We direct earth station
operators with incumbent earth station
antennas that appear on the inactive list
appended to DA 21–893 to make either
of two filings no later than 90 days after
release of this Notice (i.e., by October
21, 2021): (1) File to remove those
antennas from IBFS as no longer
operational as required by Commission
rule and optionally make a filing in
ECFS IB Docket No. 20–205 confirming
the extent to which they are
surrendering or removing antennas in
IBFS, or (2) file in ECFS IB Docket No.
20–205 affirming that those antennas are
still operational. An earth station
operator may contact Bureau staff at
IBFSINFO@fcc.gov if it has questions
about the above or if it needs
instructions on how to surrender entire
Callsigns in IBFS or how to remove an
inactive earth station antenna from a
Callsign that includes other operational
earth station antennas.
Earth station operators with earth
station antenna(s) on the inactive list in
the Appendix to DA 21–893 that do not
respond by October 21, 2021, affirming
the continued operation of the
identified earth station antennas will be
deemed to have had the authorizations
for those antennas automatically
terminated by rule. Those
authorizations will be terminated in
IBFS, i.e., the IBFS records for those
antennas will be shown with a
terminated status. Such terminated
earth stations will also be removed from
the incumbent earth station list and will
not be entitled to protection from
6 47
CFR 25.161(c). The Bureau has delegated
authority to enforce the Part 25 rules. 47 CFR
0.261(a)(15).
7 47 CFR 25.115(b)(8).
8 47 CFR 25.138(c)(1).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:52 Aug 26, 2021
Jkt 253001
interference from the network
deployments of new wireless licenses or
be eligible for reimbursement of any
transition costs, including the cost of
any filters, that those earth stations may
decide to incur. Of course,
notwithstanding an affirmation of
continued operation, the Bureau retains
the authority to eliminate an earth
station antenna’s incumbent status if the
Bureau receives additional evidence
that the antenna has failed to satisfy
applicable requirements for maintaining
operation.
Incumbent earth station operators
who need to provide additional
information to avoid harmful
interference. Apart from the foregoing
group of earth station operators for
which RSM received affirmative
representations of nonoperational
status, in the July 14 RSM filing, RSM
separately reported that it had identified
a limited number of incumbent earth
station operators with which it has been
able to establish contact but has not
been able to get enough information
from the earth station operator for it to
be included in a satellite operator
transition plan or for RSM to conclude
that the earth station is in fact
participating in the transition process.
Further outreach by RSM with the earth
station operator has not been successful.
Such earth station operators that do
not provide the necessary information to
the Relocation Coordinator or satellite
operators may not be successfully
transitioned before terrestrial wireless
licensees initiate service in the band
and, as a result, such earth station
operators may experience harmful
interference at their facilities as
terrestrial wireless licensees deploy
their networks.
Federal Communications Commission.
Troy Tanner,
Deputy Chief, International Bureau.
[FR Doc. 2021–18532 Filed 8–26–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
[FR ID 44726]
Ending 9–1–1 Fee Diversion Now
Strike Force; Meeting
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
In accordance with the
Federal Advisory Committee Act, the
Federal Communications Commission
(Commission) announces and provides a
preliminary agenda for the third
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00029
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
meeting of the ‘‘Ending 9–1–1 Fee
Diversion Now Strike Force’’ (911 Strike
Force).
DATES: Friday, September 17, 2021,
beginning at 10 a.m. EDT.
ADDRESSES: Federal Communications
Commission, 45 L Street NE,
Washington, DC 20554.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: John
A. Evanoff, Designated Federal Officer
(DFO), Federal Communications
Commission, Public Safety and
Homeland Security Bureau, (202) 418–
0848; or Jill Coogan, Deputy Designated
Federal Officer (DDFO), Federal
Communications Commission, Public
Safety and Homeland Security Bureau,
(202) 418–1499; or email:
911StrikeForce@fcc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Proposed
Agenda: The agenda for the September
17, 2021 meeting will include
presentations summarizing the
recommendations and report of the 911
Strike Force and its working groups, and
voting by the 911 Strike Force on the
recommendations and report. This
agenda may be modified at the
discretion of the 911 Strike Force Chair
and the DFO.
The September 17, 2021 meeting will
be held in a wholly electronic format to
accommodate continuing public health
precautions related to the coronavirus
(COVID–19) pandemic. The September
17, 2021 meeting will be open to
members of the general public via live
broadcast over the internet from the FCC
Live web page at https://www.fcc.gov/
live/. The public may also follow the
meeting on Twitter@fcc or via the
Commission’s Facebook page at
www.facebook.com/fcc. Members of the
public may submit any questions that
arise during the meeting to
livequestions@fcc.gov.
Open captioning will be provided for
the live stream. Other reasonable
accommodations for people with
disabilities are available upon request.
To request an accommodation, or for
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 and Governmental Affairs
Bureau at (202) 418–0530 (voice), (202)
418–0432 (TTY). Such requests should
include a detailed description of the
accommodation needed. In addition,
please include a way for the
Commission to contact the requester if
more information is needed to fulfill the
request. Please allow at least five days’
advance notice; last-minute requests
will be accepted but may not be possible
to accommodate.
E:\FR\FM\27AUN1.SGM
27AUN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 164 (Friday, August 27, 2021)]
[Notices]
[Pages 48141-48142]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-18532]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
[IB Docket No. 20-205; DA 21-893; FR ID 43422]
Notice of 90-Day Period To Submit Affirmation of Operational
Status of Identified Earth Station Antennas To Avoid Losing Incumbent
Status or File To Remove Identified Antennas From IBFS if No Longer
Operational
AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In this document, the International Bureau (Bureau) provides
notice to certain incumbent earth station operators in the 3700-4200
MHz frequency band of 90-day period to submit affirmation of
operational status of identified earth station antennas to avoid losing
incumbent status or file to remove identified antennas from IBFS if no
longer operational. Specifically, IB provides the following notice to
operators of certain incumbent FSS C-band earth station antennas
recently reported to the Bureau by RSM US LLP (RSM), the C-band
Relocation Coordinator, on behalf of incumbent C-band satellite
operators: Failure to submit a filing to the Bureau by no later than 90
days after the release of the Bureau's Public Notice (i.e., by October
21, 2021) affirming the continued operation of the earth station
antennas reported to the Bureau as inactive and the intent to
participate in the C-band transition will result in a Bureau
announcement that those authorizations identified as inactive in the
Appendix attached to the Bureau's Public Notice have automatically
terminated by operation of rule, and that those authorizations will be
terminated in IBFS and removed from the incumbent earth station list.
According to RSM, each antenna included in the Appendix to the Bureau's
Public Notice was reported by their earth station operator to RSM or a
satellite operator as no longer receiving service from a C-band
satellite even though the FCC's International Bureau Filing System
(IBFS) continues to include the antenna as active.
DATES: Identified earth station operators must provide notice of
operational status by October 21, 2021.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kerry Murray, International Bureau,
Satellite Division, at (202) 418-0734, [email protected] or
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Commission's
document, DA 21-893, released July 23, 2021. The full text of this
document, along with the Appendix identifying the specific earth
station antennas subject to automatic termination, is available for
public inspection and can be downloaded at https://www.fcc.gov/document/ib-identifies-inactive-c-band-incumbent-earth-station-antennas
or by using the search function for Docket No. 20-205 on the
Commission's ECFS page at www.fcc.gov/ecfs.
Background. Under the Commission's 3.7 GHz Band Report and Order,
RSM is responsible for coordinating with the five incumbent C-band
satellite operators--Eutelsat, Intelsat, SES, StarOne, and Telesat--to
ensure that all incumbent earth stations are accounted for in the
transition.\1\ The overwhelming majority of incumbent earth stations
have been claimed by the satellite operator(s) from which they receive
service, included in their transition plans to the Commission, and will
be transitioned to the upper 200 megahertz of the band.\2\ In other
cases, RSM, as the C-band Relocation Coordinator, has conducted
outreach and research to determine whether the earth station is still
active and, if so, from which satellite(s) the earth station receives
its service.\3\ In the course of their outreach, the satellite
operators and RSM have identified certain antennas as inactive. The
inactive status of some of these antennas has been confirmed when the
relevant earth station operators filed with the Bureau to close out
those antennas in IBFS. For the rest of these inactive antennas, their
earth station operators reported to the satellite operators (according
to RSM) that these antennas were no longer being used (even though in
these cases their earth station operators failed to make the requisite
discontinuance filings with the FCC in order to close out those
antennas in IBFS). RSM has advised the Commission that it and the
incumbent satellite operators regularly share the results of their
respective outreach efforts to better coordinate the transition of
incumbent earth stations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See Expanding Flexible Use of the 3.7 to 4.2 GHz Band,
Report and Order and Order of Proposed Modification, 35 FCC Rcd
2343, 2391, paragraphs 116 through 123 (2020) (3.7 GHz Band Report
and Order).
\2\ 47 CFR 27.1412(d) (transition plan requirements). The
satellite operators also file quarterly status reports in GN Docket
No. 20-173. 47 CFR 27.1412(f).
\3\ 3.7 GHz Band Report and Order, 35 FCC Rcd 2343, 2460,
paragraph 313.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On January 19, 2021, the Bureau released a Public Notice that
provided notice to those incumbent earth station operators that RSM
reported in a January 14, 2021 filing as inactive, that such earth
station operators had 90 days, until April 19, 2021, to respond in the
Electronic Comment Filing System (ECFS) or their registrations would be
automatically terminated and they would be removed from the incumbent
earth station list.\4\ The Public Notice released on January 19, 2021
also provided such 90-day notice to a small group of ``unresponsive''
(or, in terms used in the January 14 RSM filing from which these
operators were drawn, ``unable to reach'') incumbent earth station
operators about their antennas. Such ``unresponsive'' stations were all
incumbent earth stations that (a) had not been claimed by any of the
five incumbent C-band satellite operators and, therefore, were not
included in any of the satellite operator Transition Plans, and (b) had
failed to respond to any outreach efforts from the very beginning of
those efforts. The registrations of earth stations that failed to
respond have been terminated in IBFS and those registrations have been
removed from the incumbent earth station list.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See International Bureau Identifies Inactive C-Band
Incumbent Earth Station Antennas and Unresponsive C-Band Incumbent
Earth Station Operators, Public Notice, DA 21-81 (rel. Jan. 19,
2021).
\5\ See International Bureau Releases Updated List of Incumbent
Earth Stations in the 3.7-4.2 GHz Band in the Contiguous United
States, Public Notice, DA 21-731, IB Docket No. 20-205 (rel. June
22, 2021) (June 22, 2021, Incumbent Earth Station List) for the
current incumbent earth station list and an explanation of the
criteria applied to be included on the list.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On July 14, 2021, RSM submitted a letter identifying an additional
group of individual earth station antennas as no longer operational at
the location provided in the latest incumbent earth station list, even
though these antennas continue to be listed in IBFS. The July 14 RSM
filing, with its attachment, can be found in ECFS. RSM explains that it
compiled this group of antennas--which were not included in the Public
Notice released on January 19, 2021--from affirmative representations
made to RSM or the satellite operators by the
[[Page 48142]]
antennas' earth station operators. We have attached to DA 21-893 an
Appendix listing this group of antennas.
We hereby presume, on a rebuttable basis, that earth station
antennas included in the Appendix attached to DA 21-893 are no longer
operational. Section 25.161(c) of the Commission's rules provides that
an earth station authorization is automatically terminated if the
station is not operational for more than 90 days.\6\ We also note that
the Commission's rules require earth station operators to take the
steps necessary to remove non-operational antennas from the active
records in the IBFS.\7\ Moreover, under the Commission's rules,
antennas must continue to be operational to qualify for incumbent
status.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ 47 CFR 25.161(c). The Bureau has delegated authority to
enforce the Part 25 rules. 47 CFR 0.261(a)(15).
\7\ 47 CFR 25.115(b)(8).
\8\ 47 CFR 25.138(c)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Incumbent earth station operators who need to affirm the continued
operation of the identified earth station antennas. We direct earth
station operators with incumbent earth station antennas that appear on
the inactive list appended to DA 21-893 to make either of two filings
no later than 90 days after release of this Notice (i.e., by October
21, 2021): (1) File to remove those antennas from IBFS as no longer
operational as required by Commission rule and optionally make a filing
in ECFS IB Docket No. 20-205 confirming the extent to which they are
surrendering or removing antennas in IBFS, or (2) file in ECFS IB
Docket No. 20-205 affirming that those antennas are still operational.
An earth station operator may contact Bureau staff at [email protected]
if it has questions about the above or if it needs instructions on how
to surrender entire Callsigns in IBFS or how to remove an inactive
earth station antenna from a Callsign that includes other operational
earth station antennas.
Earth station operators with earth station antenna(s) on the
inactive list in the Appendix to DA 21-893 that do not respond by
October 21, 2021, affirming the continued operation of the identified
earth station antennas will be deemed to have had the authorizations
for those antennas automatically terminated by rule. Those
authorizations will be terminated in IBFS, i.e., the IBFS records for
those antennas will be shown with a terminated status. Such terminated
earth stations will also be removed from the incumbent earth station
list and will not be entitled to protection from interference from the
network deployments of new wireless licenses or be eligible for
reimbursement of any transition costs, including the cost of any
filters, that those earth stations may decide to incur. Of course,
notwithstanding an affirmation of continued operation, the Bureau
retains the authority to eliminate an earth station antenna's incumbent
status if the Bureau receives additional evidence that the antenna has
failed to satisfy applicable requirements for maintaining operation.
Incumbent earth station operators who need to provide additional
information to avoid harmful interference. Apart from the foregoing
group of earth station operators for which RSM received affirmative
representations of nonoperational status, in the July 14 RSM filing,
RSM separately reported that it had identified a limited number of
incumbent earth station operators with which it has been able to
establish contact but has not been able to get enough information from
the earth station operator for it to be included in a satellite
operator transition plan or for RSM to conclude that the earth station
is in fact participating in the transition process. Further outreach by
RSM with the earth station operator has not been successful.
Such earth station operators that do not provide the necessary
information to the Relocation Coordinator or satellite operators may
not be successfully transitioned before terrestrial wireless licensees
initiate service in the band and, as a result, such earth station
operators may experience harmful interference at their facilities as
terrestrial wireless licensees deploy their networks.
Federal Communications Commission.
Troy Tanner,
Deputy Chief, International Bureau.
[FR Doc. 2021-18532 Filed 8-26-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712-01-P