Single Network Future: Supplemental Coverage From Space; Space Innovation, 34148-34168 [2024-06669]
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34148
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 84 / Tuesday, April 30, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Congressional Review Act
Pursuant to Subtitle E of the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996 (also known as the
Congressional Review Act, 5 U.S.C 801
et seq.), OIRA has determined that this
rule does not meet the criteria set forth
in 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995
We have examined the impacts of this
rule as required by section 202 of the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
(UMRA; March 22, 1995; Pub. L. 104–
4). Section 202 of UMRA requires that
a covered agency prepare a budgetary
impact statement before promulgating a
rule that includes any Federal mandate
that may result in the expenditure by
State, local, and Tribal governments, in
the aggregate, or by the private sector, of
$100 million or more in any one year
(adjusted for inflation). In 2024, that
threshold is approximately $183 million
(in 2023 dollars). If a covered agency
must prepare a budgetary impact
statement, section 205 further requires
that it select the most cost-effective and
least burdensome alternative that
achieves the objectives of the rule and
is consistent with the statutory
requirements. In addition, section 203
requires a plan for informing and
advising any small governments that
may be significantly or uniquely
impacted by the rule. Based on
information currently available, we
expect the combined impact on State,
local, or Tribal governments and the
private sector does not meet the UMRA
definition of unfunded mandate.
List of Subjects in 42 CFR Part 136
Employment, Government
procurement, Healthcare, Health
facilities, Indians, Penalties, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Department of Health and
Human Services amends 42 CFR part
136 as follows:
PART 136—INDIAN HEALTH
1. The authority citation for part 136
continues to read as follows:
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■
Authority: 25 U.S.C. 13; sec. 3, 68 Stat.
674 (42 U.S.C., 2001, 2003); Sec. 1, 42 Stat.
208 (25 U.S.C. 13); 42 U.S.C. 2001, unless
otherwise noted.
Subpart F—[Removed and Reserved]
2. Remove and reserve subpart F,
consisting of §§ 136.51 through 136.57.
■
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Dated: April 24, 2024.
Xavier Becerra,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human
Services.
[FR Doc. 2024–09152 Filed 4–29–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4166–14–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Parts 1, 2, 9, and 25
[GN Docket No. 23–65, IB Docket No. 22–
271; FCC 24–28; FR ID 210313]
Single Network Future: Supplemental
Coverage From Space; Space
Innovation
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
In this document, the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC or
Commission) adopts rules to facilitate
the deployment of supplemental
coverage from space (SCS) in an effort
to serve several important public
interest goals for the Nation and expand
the reach of communications services,
particularly emergency services, so that
connectivity and assistance is available
in more remote places. In this
document, to allow satellite
communications on spectrum
previously allocated only to terrestrial
services, the Commission modifies the
United States Table of Frequency
Allocations to authorize bi-directional,
secondary mobile-satellite service
operations in certain spectrum bands
that have no primary, non-flexible-use
legacy incumbents, Federal or nonFederal. For these bands, we authorize
SCS only where one or more terrestrial
licensees—together holding all licenses
on the relevant channel throughout a
defined geographically independent
area—lease access to their spectrum
rights to a participating satellite
operator, whose license reflects these
frequencies and the geographically
independent area in which they will
offer SCS. In recognition that this new
offering has the potential to bring lifesaving connectivity to remote areas, the
Commission also applies interim 911
call and text routing requirements to
ensure that help is available to those
who need it today while we work
toward enabling automatic locationbased routing of all emergency
communications whether or not there is
a terrestrial connection available.
DATES: The rules are effective May 30,
2024, except for the amendments to
§§ 1.9047(d)(2) (amendatory instruction
SUMMARY:
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3), 9.10(t)(3) through (5) (amendatory
instruction 8), and 25.125(b)(1) and (2)
and (c) (amendatory instruction 16),
which are indefinitely delayed. The
Federal Communications Commission
will publish a document in the Federal
Register announcing the effective date
of these rule sections.
For
additional information on this
proceeding, contact Jon Markman of the
Mobility Division, Wireless
Telecommunications Bureau, at
Jonathan.Markman@fcc.gov or (202)
418–7090, or Merissa Velez of the Space
Bureau Satellite Programs and Policy
Division, at Merissa.Velez@fcc.gov or
(202) 418–0751. For information
regarding the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995 (PRA) information collection
requirements contained in this
document, contact Cathy Williams,
Office of Managing Director, at (202)
418–2918 or Cathy.Williams@fcc.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
This is a
summary of Commission’s Report and
Order, in GN Docket No. 23–65 and IB
Docket No. 22–271; FCC 24–28, adopted
and released on March 15, 2024. The
full text of this document is available for
public inspection online at https://
docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/FCC24-28A1.pdf. The Report and Order was
corrected by an erratum released on
April 18, 2024. The changes made by
the erratum are included in this
document.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Synopsis
1. In the Report and Order, the
Commission adopts a regulatory
framework—the first of its kind in the
world—to enable collaborations
between satellite operators and
terrestrial service providers to offer
ubiquitous connectivity directly to
consumer handsets using spectrum
previously allocated only to terrestrial
service. We anticipate that
supplemental coverage from space, or
SCS, will enable consumers in areas not
covered by terrestrial networks to be
connected using their existing devices
via satellite-based communications.
2. In the Report and Order, to allow
satellite communications on spectrum
previously allocated only to terrestrial
services, the Commission modifies the
United States Table of Frequency
Allocations to authorize bi-directional,
secondary mobile-satellite service (MSS)
operations in certain spectrum bands
that have no primary, non-flexible-use
legacy incumbents, Federal or nonFederal. Accordingly, the list of bands
that will be available for the provision
of SCS (the SCS Bands) is as follows:
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• 600 MHz: 614–652 MHz and 663–
698 MHz;
• 700 MHz: 698–769 MHz, 775 MHz–
799 MHz, and 805–806 MHz;
• 800 MHz: 824–849 MHz and 869–
894 MHz;
• Broadband PCS: 1850–1915 MHz
and 1930–1995 MHz; and
• AWS–H Block: 1915–1920 MHz and
1995–2000 MHz.
3. For these bands, the Commission
finds it in the public interest to limit
SCS authorizations to the following
geographically independent areas
(GIAs): (1) the contiguous United States
(CONUS); (2) Alaska; (3) Hawaii; (4)
American Samoa; (5) Puerto Rico/U.S.
Virgin Islands; and (6) Guam/Northern
Mariana Islands. Given the novel
technical challenges at play when
introducing satellite communications to
terrestrial spectrum, we believe that a
GIA restriction is necessary in the initial
SCS framework because it minimizes
the risk of potential interference to
geographically-adjacent, co-channel
license areas. For these bands, the
Commission authorizes SCS only where
one or more terrestrial licensees—
together holding all licenses on the
relevant channel throughout a defined
geographically independent area—lease
access to their spectrum rights to a
participating satellite operator, whose
part 25 license reflects these frequencies
and the geographically independent
area in which they will offer SCS.
4. In the Report and Order, the
Commission also adopts entry criteria
that non-geostationary satellite orbit
(NGSO) and geostationary satellite orbit
(GSO) operators must meet in order to
apply for or modify an existing part 25
license to operate satellites in the SCS
Bands in the United States and its
territories. Specifically, we establish an
SCS framework allowing satellite
operators to apply to modify a current
part 25 license to include SCS where:
(1) the satellite operator has one or more
leasing notification(s) or application(s),
or in the case of FirstNet, a Form 601,
on file with the Commission to access
the spectrum allocated for MSS
provision of SCS from a single terrestrial
licensee or multiple licensees that hold,
collectively or individually, all cochannel licenses throughout a GIA; (2)
the current part 25 space station
licensee or part 25 grantee of market
access for NGSO or GSO satellite
operation seeks modification of
authority to provide SCS in the same
geographic areas covered in the relevant
GIA; and (3) the terrestrial devices
involved in SCS qualify as ‘‘licensed by
rule’’ earth stations under the new
provisions of part 25. Similarly, satellite
operators may apply for an initial part
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25 license with authority to provide SCS
if they meet requirements (1) and (3)
above, and if in their part 25
application, those operators seek to
provide SCS in the same geographic
areas covered in the relevant GIA.
5. Our actions to facilitate the
deployment of SCS will serve several
important public interest goals for the
Nation. First, the SCS framework will
expand the reach of communications
services, particularly emergency
services, so that connectivity and
assistance is available in more remote
places. Second, the SCS framework will
spur advancements in cutting-edge,
space-based technologies that will
position the United States as a global
leader in this arena. And third, the SCS
framework will continue our efforts to
promote the innovative and efficient use
of our Nation’s spectrum resources in
ways that foster creative collaborations
among users.
6. In crafting this new framework, it
is essential that we balance the desire to
accelerate innovative SCS operations
that will serve these critical public
interest goals with the need to retain
service quality of terrestrial networks,
protect spectrum usage rights, and
minimize the risk of harmful
interference, both domestically and
internationally. Accordingly, the
framework we adopt in the Report and
Order represents an initial step to
encourage the development of SCS
while minimizing the risks of harmful
interference to existing terrestrial and
satellite networks that support nonFederal and Federal users. In the future,
as the marketplace for SCS develops, we
plan to build on the framework we
adopt in the Report and Order, to enable
deployment of SCS in additional bands
and scenarios. We will also continue to
monitor the nascent SCS marketplace to
consider modifications and address
proposals that do not fit neatly within
our framework by waiver.
7. In addition, the Commission
considered a framework for authorizing
terrestrial devices to communicate with
a space station in the SCS context. In
the Report and Order, the Commission
adopts a license by rule approach for
terrestrial devices as earth stations
communicating with a satellite network
for the purposes of SCS. Specifically, so
long as the terrestrial devices
connecting to the SCS network are
doing so pursuant to an effective part 1
leasing arrangement or agreement and
are operating within the existing
technical parameters of their Office of
Engineering and Technology (OET)
equipment authorization, the terrestrial
licensee’s license parameters, and
applicable part 22, 24, or 27 rules, then
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34149
those devices will be licensed as earth
stations by rule without the need to file
a part 25 earth station application for
additional authority.
8. In recognizing the importance of
911 service to emergency response and
disaster preparedness, we adopt interim
911 text and call routing requirements
for terrestrial providers that use SCS
arrangements to extend coverage areas.
Specifically, we require terrestrial
providers to transmit all 911 voice calls
and texts to a Public Safety Answering
Point (PSAP) using location-based
routing or an emergency call center.
Terrestrial providers must also transmit
location information and the user’s
phone number to facilitate dispatch and
callback capabilities at the receiving
PSAP. We also require terrestrial
providers that use SCS to file annual
reports with the Commission, submit a
privacy certification, and provide
consumer disclosures regarding SCS 911
connectivity.
9. Under the SCS framework, satellite
operators and terrestrial licensees
providing SCS must comply with
existing satellite and terrestrial rules to
avoid harmful interference into radio
astronomy and related services. The
Commission also amended some of its
technical rules as they apply to SCS. In
addition, the new MSS allocations will
remain subject to the United States’
international obligations under treaties,
bilaterial or multilateral agreements, the
International Radio Regulations, and
other instruments of the International
Telecommunication Union (ITU).
Procedural Matters
Paperwork Reduction Act
10. The requirements in
§§ 1.9047(d)(2), 9.10(t)(3) through (5),
and 25.125(b)(1) and (2) and (c)
constitute new or modified collections
subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995 (PRA), Public Law 104–13. They
will be submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for
review under section 3507(d) of the
PRA. OMB, the general public, and
other Federal agencies will be invited to
comment on the new or modified
information collection requirements
contained in this proceeding. In
addition, the Commission notes that,
pursuant to the Small Business
Paperwork Relief Act of 2002, Public
Law 107–198, see 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(4),
the Commission previously sought, but
did not receive, specific comment on
how the Commission might further
reduce the information collection
burden for small business concerns with
fewer than 25 employees. The
Commission describes impacts that
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might affect small businesses, which
includes more businesses with fewer
than 25 employees, in the Final
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis.
Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
11. The Regulatory Flexibility Act
(RFA) requires that an agency prepare a
regulatory flexibility analysis for notice
and comment rulemakings, unless the
agency certifies that ‘‘the rule will not,
if promulgated, have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities.’’ Accordingly,
the Commission has prepared a Final
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA)
concerning the possible impact of the
rule changes contained in the Report
and Order on small entities. As required
by the Regulatory Flexibility Act of
1980, as amended (RFA), an Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA)
was incorporated in the Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) released
in March 2023 in this proceeding (88 FR
21944, Mar. 16, 2023). The Commission
sought written public comment on the
proposals in the NPRM including
comments on the IRFA. No comments
were filed addressing the IRFA. This
present Final Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis (FRFA) conforms to the RFA.
Congressional Review Act
12. The Commission will send a copy
of the Report and Order in a report to
be sent to Congress and the Government
Accountability Office pursuant to the
Congressional Review Act, see 5 U.S.C.
801(a)(1)(A).
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Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
13. As required by the Regulatory
Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended
(RFA), an Initial Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis (IRFA) was incorporated in the
NPRM released in March 2023. The
Federal Communications Commission
(Commission) sought written public
comment on the proposals in the NPRM,
including comment on the IRFA. No
comments were filed addressing the
IRFA. This Final Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis (FRFA) conforms to the RFA.
A. Need for, and Objectives of, the
Report and Order
14. In the Report and Order, the
Commission takes a major step toward
harnessing the power of hybrid satelliteterrestrial networks to connect people to
modern communications services. To
accomplish this objective, the
Commission adopts a regulatory
framework to enable collaborations
between satellite operators and
terrestrial service providers to offer
ubiquitous connectivity directly to
consumer handsets using spectrum
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previously allocated only to terrestrial
service. Supplemental coverage from
space (SCS) will enable consumers in
areas not covered by terrestrial
infrastructure to be connected using
their existing devices via satellite-based
communications. The framework the
Commission adopts in the Report and
Order balances the desire to accelerate
innovative SCS operations that will
serve these critical public interest goals
with the need to retain service quality
of terrestrial networks, protect spectrum
usage rights, and minimize the risk of
harmful interference, both domestically
and internationally. The objectives of
the framework include facilitating
ubiquitous wireless coverage across the
Nation, expanding the availability of
emergency communications to
consumers and the geographic range of
first responders to provide emergency
services, and promoting competition in
the provision of wireless services to
consumers.
15. In the Report and Order, to allow
satellite communications on spectrum
previously allocated only to terrestrial
services, the Commission modifies the
United States Table of Frequency
Allocations (U.S. Table) to authorize bidirectional, secondary mobile-satellite
service (MSS) operations in certain
spectrum bands that have no primary,
non-flexible-use legacy incumbents,
Federal or non-Federal. For these bands,
the Commission authorizes SCS only
where one or more terrestrial
licensees—together holding all licenses
on the relevant channel throughout a
defined geographically independent
area (GIA)—lease access to their
spectrum rights to a participating
satellite operator, whose part 25 license
reflects these frequencies and the GIA in
which they will offer SCS. The list of
bands (SCS Bands) that will be available
for the provision of SCS is as follows:
• 600 MHz: 614–652 MHz and 663–
698 MHz;
• 700 MHz: 698–769 MHz, 775 MHz–
799 MHz, and 805–806 MHz;
• 800 MHz: 824–849 MHz and 869–
894 MHz;
• Broadband PCS: 1850–1915 MHz
and 1930–1995 MHz; and
• AWS–H Block: 1915–1920 MHz and
1995–2000 MHz.
16. In an effort to realize the public
interest benefits of SCS as soon as
possible, while minimizing the risk of
harmful interference, the Commission
adopts the proposal to limit SCS
authorizations to the following GIAs: (1)
the contiguous United States (CONUS);
(2) Alaska; (3) Hawaii; (4) American
Samoa; (5) Puerto Rico/U.S. Virgin
Islands; and (6) Guam/Northern Mariana
Islands.
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17. Additionally, in the Report and
Order, the Commission adopts rules
requiring a part 25 license as a
necessary component of an SCS
authorization that must be obtained
prior to commencing SCS. The
Commission also adopts entry criteria
that non-geostationary satellite orbit
(NGSO) and geostationary satellite orbit
(GSO) operators must meet to apply for
or modify an existing part 25 license to
operate satellites in SCS Bands. The
Commission adopts rules to establish a
license by rule approach for terrestrial
devices as earth stations communicating
with a satellite network for the purposes
of SCS. Furthermore, the Report and
Order authorizes SCS based on a lease
arrangement or agreement between one
or more terrestrial licensees and one or
more satellite operators, subject to the
restrictions adopted. The Commission
also adopts limited amendments to the
service rules governing satellite and
terrestrial licensees to enable the
provision of SCS.
18. Similarly, the Commission adopts
certain technical rules, including
requiring terrestrial device equipment
authorization grantees to modify
existing, or obtain new, equipment
authorizations for previously certified
terrestrial devices and also grants a
limited waiver of certain rules. The
Commission also addresses
international coordination, stating that
SCS will be authorized pursuant to a
secondary MSS allocation in the U.S.
Table. These operations may not cause
harmful interference to—and shall not
claim protection from—any station
operating in accordance with ITU
provisions, whether in the United States
or internationally. Finally, the
Commission clarifies that the SCS
framework is limited to operations
performed in the bands designated in
the Report and Order for SCS and
remains separate from the service rules
for MSS systems. Consequently, the
rules the Commission adopts in the
Report and Order represent an initial
step to encourage the development of
SCS while minimizing the risks of
harmful interference to existing
terrestrial and satellite networks that
support non-Federal and Federal users.
B. Summary of Significant Issues Raised
by Public Comments in Response to the
IRFA
19. Parties that filed comments did
not specifically reference the IRFA in
their comments; however, some
commenters, some of which include
small entities, expressed concerns that
the proposal in the NPRM in which a
single terrestrial licensee must hold all
co-channel licenses in a given GIA
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would either limit SCS to large carriers
with nationwide authority over a block
of spectrum, or, at a minimum, exclude
smaller or regional terrestrial operators
from participation in the framework.
These concerns are discussed in greater
detail in section F of this FRFA.
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C. Response to Comments by the Chief
Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration
20. Pursuant to the Small Business
Jobs Act of 2010, which amended the
RFA, the Commission is required to
respond to any comments filed by the
Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration (SBA), and to
provide a detailed statement of any
change made to the proposed rules as a
result of those comments.
21. The Chief Counsel did not file any
comments in response to the proposed
rules or policies in this proceeding.
D. Description and Estimate of the
Number of Small Entities to Which the
Rules Will Apply
22. The RFA directs agencies to
provide a description of, and where
feasible, an estimate of, the number of
small entities that may be affected by
the rules adopted herein. The RFA
generally defines the term ‘‘small
entity’’ as having the same meaning as
the terms ‘‘small business,’’ ‘‘small
organization,’’ and ‘‘small governmental
jurisdiction.’’ In addition, the term
‘‘small business’’ has the same meaning
as the term ‘‘small business concern’’
under the Small Business Act. A ‘‘small
business concern’’ is one which: (1) is
independently owned and operated; (2)
is not dominant in its field of operation;
and (3) satisfies any additional criteria
established by the SBA.
23. Small Businesses, Small
Organizations, Small Government
Jurisdictions. Our actions, over time,
may affect small entities that are not
easily categorized at present. We
therefore describe, at the outset, three
broad groups of small entities that could
be directly affected herein. First, where
there are industry specific size
standards for businesses that are used in
the regulatory flexibility analysis,
according to data from the Small
Business Administration’s (SBA) 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% of
all businesses in the United States,
which translates to 33.2 million
businesses.
24. Next, the type of small entity
described as a ‘‘small organization’’ is
generally ‘‘any not-for-profit enterprise
which is independently owned and
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operated and is not dominant in its
field.’’ The Internal Revenue Service
(IRS) uses a revenue benchmark of
$50,000 or less to delineate its annual
electronic filing requirements for small
exempt organizations. Nationwide, for
tax year 2020, there were approximately
447,689 small exempt organizations in
the U.S. reporting revenue of $50,000 or
less according to the registration and tax
data for exempt organizations available
from the IRS.
25. 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 2017 Census of
Governments indicate there were 90,075
local governmental jurisdictions
consisting of general purpose
governments and special purpose
governments in the United States. Of
this number, there were 36,931 general
purpose governments (county,
municipal, and town or township) with
populations of less than 50,000 and
12,040 special purpose governments—
independent school districts with
enrollment populations of less than
50,000. Accordingly, based on the 2017
U.S. Census of Government data, we
estimate that at least 48,971 entities fall
into the category of ‘‘small government
jurisdictions.’’
26. Satellite Telecommunications.
This industry comprises firms
‘‘primarily engaged in providing
telecommunications services to other
establishments in the
telecommunications and broadcasting
industries by forwarding and receiving
communications signals via a system of
satellites or reselling satellite
telecommunications.’’ Satellite
telecommunications service providers
include satellite and earth station
operators. The SBA small business size
standard for this industry classifies a
business with $38.5 million or less in
annual receipts as small. U.S. Census
Bureau data for 2017 show that 275
firms in this industry operated for the
entire year. Of this number, 242 firms
had revenue of less than $25 million.
Additionally, based on Commission
data in the 2022 Universal Service
Monitoring Report, as of December 31,
2021, there were 65 providers that
reported they were engaged in the
provision of satellite
telecommunications services. Of these
providers, the Commission estimates
that approximately 42 providers have
1,500 or fewer employees.
Consequently, using the SBA’s small
business size standard, a little more
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34151
than half of these providers can be
considered small entities.
27. 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 SBA size standard for this
industry classifies a business as small if
it has 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S.
Census Bureau data for 2017 show that
there were 2,893 firms in this industry
that operated for the entire year. Of that
number, 2,837 firms employed fewer
than 250 employees. Additionally,
based on Commission data in the 2021
Universal Service Monitoring Report, as
of December 31, 2020, there were 797
providers that reported they were
engaged in the provision of wireless
services. Of these providers, the
Commission estimates that 715
providers have 1,500 or fewer
employees. Consequently, using the
SBA’s small business size standard,
most of these providers can be
considered small entities.
28. 600 MHz Band. These wireless
communications services are
radiocommunication services licensed
in the 617–652 MHz and 663–698 MHz
frequency bands that can be used for
fixed and mobile flexible uses. 600 MHz
Band services fall within the scope of
the Wireless Telecommunications
Carriers (except Satellite) industry
where the SBA small business size
standard classifies a business as small if
it has 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S.
Census Bureau data for 2017 show that
there were 2,893 firms that operated in
this industry for the entire year. Of this
number, 2,837 firms employed fewer
than 250 employees. Thus, under the
SBA size standard, the Commission
estimates that a majority of licensees in
this industry can be considered small.
29. Based on Commission data as of
November 2021, there were
approximately 3,327 active licenses in
the 600 MHz Band service. The
Commission’s small business size
standards with respect to 600 MHz Band
services involve eligibility for bidding
credits and installment payments in the
auction of licenses for these services.
For purposes of bidding credits, the
Commission defined ‘‘small business’’
as an entity with average gross revenues
not exceeding $55 million for each of
the three preceding years, and a ‘‘very
small business’’ as an entity with
average gross revenues not exceeding
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$20 million for each of the three
preceding years for the 600 MHz band
auction. Pursuant to these definitions,
15 bidders claiming small business
status won 290 licenses.
30. In frequency bands where licenses
were subject to auction, the Commission
notes that as a general matter, the
number of winning bidders that qualify
as small businesses at the close of an
auction does not necessarily represent
the number of small businesses
currently in service. Further, the
Commission does not generally track
subsequent business size unless, in the
context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated.
Additionally, since the Commission
does not collect data on the number of
employees for licensees providing these
services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with
active licenses that would qualify as
small under the SBA’s small business
size standard.
31. Lower 700 MHz Band Licenses.
The lower 700 MHz band encompasses
spectrum in the 698–746 MHz
frequency bands. Permissible operations
in these bands include flexible fixed,
mobile, and broadcast uses, including
mobile and other digital new broadcast
operation; fixed and mobile wireless
commercial services (including
frequency division duplex (FDD)- and
time division duplex (TDD)-based
services); as well as fixed and mobile
wireless uses for private, internal radio
needs, two-way interactive, cellular, and
mobile television broadcasting services.
Wireless Telecommunications Carriers
(except Satellite) is the closest industry
with a SBA small business size standard
applicable to licenses providing services
in these bands. The SBA small business
size standard for this industry classifies
a business as small if it has 1,500 or
fewer employees. U.S. Census Bureau
data for 2017 show that there were 2,893
firms that operated in this industry for
the entire year. Of this number, 2,837
firms employed fewer than 250
employees. Thus, under the SBA size
standard, the Commission estimates that
a majority of licensees in this industry
can be considered small.
32. According to Commission data as
of December 2021, there were
approximately 2,824 active Lower 700
MHz Band licenses. The Commission’s
small business size standards with
respect to Lower 700 MHz Band
licensees involve eligibility for bidding
credits and installment payments in the
auction of licenses. For auctions of
Lower 700 MHz Band licenses the
Commission adopted criteria for three
groups of small businesses. A very small
business was defined as an entity that,
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together with its affiliates and
controlling interests, has average annual
gross revenues not exceeding $15
million for the preceding three years, a
small business was defined as an entity
that, together with its affiliates and
controlling interests, has average gross
revenues not exceeding $40 million for
the preceding three years, and an
entrepreneur was defined as an entity
that, together with its affiliates and
controlling interests, has average gross
revenues not exceeding $3 million for
the preceding three years. In auctions
for Lower 700 MHz Band licenses
seventy-two winning bidders claiming a
small business classification won 329
licenses, twenty-six winning bidders
claiming a small business classification
won 214 licenses, and three winning
bidders claiming a small business
classification won all five auctioned
licenses.
33. In frequency bands where licenses
were subject to auction, the Commission
notes that as a general matter, the
number of winning bidders that qualify
as small businesses at the close of an
auction does not necessarily represent
the number of small businesses
currently in service. Further, the
Commission does not generally track
subsequent business size unless, in the
context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated.
Additionally, since the Commission
does not collect data on the number of
employees for licensees providing these
services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with
active licenses that would qualify as
small under the SBA’s small business
size standard.
34. Upper 700 MHz Band Licenses.
The upper 700 MHz band encompasses
spectrum in the 746–806 MHz bands.
Upper 700 MHz D Block licenses are
nationwide licenses associated with the
758–763 MHz and 788–793 MHz bands.
Permissible operations in these bands
include flexible fixed, mobile, and
broadcast uses, including mobile and
other digital new broadcast operation;
fixed and mobile wireless commercial
services (including FDD- and TDDbased services); as well as fixed and
mobile wireless uses for private,
internal radio needs, two-way
interactive, cellular, and mobile
television broadcasting services.
Wireless Telecommunications Carriers
(except Satellite) is the closest industry
with a SBA small business size standard
applicable to licenses providing services
in these bands. The SBA small business
size standard for this industry classifies
a business as small if it has 1,500 or
fewer employees. U.S. Census Bureau
data for 2017 show that there were 2,893
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firms that operated in this industry for
the entire year. Of that number, 2,837
firms employed fewer than 250
employees. Thus, under the SBA size
standard, the Commission estimates that
a majority of licensees in this industry
can be considered small.
35. According to Commission data as
of December 2021, there were
approximately 152 active Upper 700
MHz Band licenses. The Commission’s
small business size standards with
respect to Upper 700 MHz Band
licensees involve eligibility for bidding
credits and installment payments in the
auction of licenses. For the auction of
these licenses, the Commission defined
a ‘‘small business’’ as an entity that,
together with its affiliates and
controlling principals, has average gross
revenues not exceeding $40 million for
the preceding three years, and a ‘‘very
small business’’ an entity that, together
with its affiliates and controlling
principals, has average gross revenues
that are not more than $15 million for
the preceding three years. Pursuant to
these definitions, three winning bidders
claiming very small business status won
five of the twelve available licenses.
36. In frequency bands where licenses
were subject to auction, the Commission
notes that as a general matter, the
number of winning bidders that qualify
as small businesses at the close of an
auction does not necessarily represent
the number of small businesses
currently in service. Further, the
Commission does not generally track
subsequent business size unless, in the
context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated.
Additionally, since the Commission
does not collect data on the number of
employees for licensees providing these
services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with
active licenses that would qualify as
small under the SBA’s small business
size standard.
37. Cellular Radiotelephone Service.
This service is radio service in which
licensees are authorized to offer and
provide cellular service for hire to the
general public and was formerly titled
Domestic Public Cellular Radio
Telecommunications Service. Cellular
Radiotelephone Service falls within the
scope the Wireless Telecommunications
Carriers (except Satellite) industry,
where the SBA small business size
standard classifies a business as small if
it has 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S.
Census Bureau data for 2017 show that
there were 2,893 firms that operated in
this industry for the entire year. Of this
number, 2,837 firms employed fewer
than 250 employees. Thus, under the
SBA size standard, the Commission
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estimates that a majority of licensees in
this industry can be considered small.
38. Based on Commission data, as of
November 2021, there were
approximately 1,908 active licenses in
this service. The Commission’s small
business size standards with respect to
Cellular Radiotelephone Services
involve eligibility for bidding credits
and installment payments in the auction
of licenses for these services. For
purposes of bidding credits, the
Commission has defined ‘‘small
business’’ as an entity that either (1)
together with its affiliates and
controlling interests has average gross
revenues of not more than $3 million for
each of the three preceding years, or (2)
together with its affiliates and
controlling interests has average gross
revenues of not more $15 million for
each of the three preceding years.
39. In frequency bands where licenses
were subject to auction, the Commission
notes that as a general matter, the
number of winning bidders that qualify
as small businesses at the close of an
auction does not necessarily represent
the number of small businesses
currently in service. Further, the
Commission does not generally track
subsequent business size unless, in the
context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated.
Additionally, since the Commission
does not collect data on the number of
employees for licensees providing these
services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with
active licenses that would qualify as
small under the SBA’s small business
size standard.
40. Advanced Wireless Services
(AWS)—(1710–1755 MHz and 2110–
2155 MHz bands (AWS–1); 1915–1920
MHz, 1995–2000 MHz, 2020–2025 MHz
and 2175–2180 MHz bands (AWS–2);
2155–2175 MHz band (AWS–3); 2000–
2020 MHz and 2180–2200 MHz (AWS–
4)). Spectrum is made available and
licensed in these bands for the provision
of various wireless communications
services. Wireless Telecommunications
Carriers (except Satellite) is the closest
industry with a SBA small business size
standard applicable to these services.
The SBA small business size standard
for this industry classifies a business as
small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees.
U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show
that there were 2,893 firms that operated
in this industry for the entire year. Of
this number, 2,837 firms employed
fewer than 250 employees. Thus, under
the SBA size standard, the Commission
estimates that a majority of licensees in
this industry can be considered small.
41. According to Commission data as
December 2021, there were
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approximately 4,472 active AWS
licenses. The Commission’s small
business size standards with respect to
AWS involve eligibility for bidding
credits and installment payments in the
auction of licenses for these services.
For the auction of AWS licenses, the
Commission defined a ‘‘small business’’
as an entity with average annual gross
revenues for the preceding three years
not exceeding $40 million, and a ‘‘very
small business’’ as an entity with
average annual gross revenues for the
preceding three years not exceeding $15
million. Pursuant to these definitions,
57 winning bidders claiming status as
small or very small businesses won 215
of 1,087 licenses. In the most recent
auction of AWS licenses 15 of 37
bidders qualifying for status as small or
very small businesses won licenses.
42. In frequency bands where licenses
were subject to auction, the Commission
notes that as a general matter, the
number of winning bidders that qualify
as small businesses at the close of an
auction does not necessarily represent
the number of small businesses
currently in service. Further, the
Commission does not generally track
subsequent business size unless, in the
context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated.
Additionally, since the Commission
does not collect data on the number of
employees for licensees providing these
services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with
active licenses that would qualify as
small under the SBA’s small business
size standard.
43. All Other Telecommunications.
This industry is comprised of
establishments primarily engaged in
providing specialized
telecommunications services, such as
satellite tracking, communications
telemetry, and radar station operation.
This industry also includes
establishments primarily engaged in
providing satellite terminal stations and
associated facilities connected with one
or more terrestrial systems and capable
of transmitting telecommunications to,
and receiving telecommunications from,
satellite systems. Providers of Internet
services (e.g. , dial-up ISPs) or voice
over Internet protocol (VoIP) services,
via client-supplied telecommunications
connections are also included in this
industry. The SBA small business size
standard for this industry classifies
firms with annual receipts of $35
million or less as small. U.S. Census
Bureau data for 2017 show that there
were 1,079 firms in this industry that
operated for the entire year. Of those
firms, 1,039 had revenue of less than
$25 million. Based on this data, the
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Commission estimates that the majority
of ‘‘All Other Telecommunications’’
firms can be considered small.
E. Description of Projected Reporting,
Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance
Requirements for Small Entities
44. While the Commission sought to
minimize compliance burdens where
practicable, the SCS framework adopted
in the Report and Order will impose
new or additional reporting,
recordkeeping, and/or other compliance
obligations on small entities. In
addition, while it sought comment from
concerned parties regarding costs
related to those obligations, the record
does not contain a detailed cost/benefit
analysis that would allow us to quantify
such related costs to small entities. The
rules adopted in the Report and Order
encompass a broad range of leasing,
licensing, and technical compliance
requirements that are summarized in
further detail below.
45. Part 25 License Entry Criteria. The
Report and Order effectuates SCS in
certain flexible-use bands previously
allocated solely for terrestrial use by the
adoption of rules to authorize satelliteto-terrestrial (uplink and downlink)
operations in these bands whereby a
NGSO or GSO satellite operator may
apply for a new or modify an existing
part 25 authorization when that entity
meets certain prerequisites, or ‘‘entry
criteria.’’ The ‘‘entry criteria’’ requires
the satellite operator intending to
modify its existing part 25 application
in order to provide SCS to include a
certification that provides the following
information: (1) the satellite operator
has one or more leasing notification(s)
or application(s), or in the case of
FirstNet, a Form 601, on file with the
Commission to access the spectrum
allocated for MSS provision of SCS from
a single terrestrial licensee or multiple
licensees that hold, collectively or
individually, all co-channel licenses
throughout a GIA; (2) the current part 25
space station licensee or part 25 grantee
of market access for NGSO or GSO
satellite operation seeks modification of
authority to provide SCS in the same
geographic areas covered in the relevant
GIA; and (3) the terrestrial devices
involved in SCS qualify as ‘‘licensed by
rule’’ earth stations under the new
provisions of part 25. Similarly, satellite
operators may apply for an initial part
25 license with authority to provide SCS
if it shows that it meets requirements (1)
and (3) above, and if in their part 25
application, those operators request to
provide SCS in in the same geographic
areas covered in the relevant GIA.
46. In its adopted rules, the
Commission maintains its existing part
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25 rules for obtaining and modifying a
license and applies them to the SCS
framework. Under this framework,
meeting the proposed entry criteria
would allow small and other entities to
apply to modify its existing satellite
authorization. However, all related
applications—including those seeking
modification, lease applications, and
earth station equipment certifications—
must first be granted to provide SCS.
Thus, the Report and Order’s
requirements are in addition to the
existing underlying reporting,
recordkeeping, and compliance
requirements. We further note, however,
that due to the significant costs involved
in SCS development and deployment,
we anticipate that few satellite operators
affected by this rulemaking would
qualify under the definition of ‘‘small
entity.’’
47. Part 1 Leasing. In the Report and
Order, the Commission adopts a
framework authorizing SCS by
amending its part 1 leasing rules to
permit terrestrial licensees to lease
terrestrial spectrum rights to satellite
operators for the purpose of providing
SCS. In order to properly comply, the
adopted rules require applicants for and
current licensees of the authorized SCS
bands to provide the following
information using the current FCC Form
608: (1) a certification that the parties
are entering into the leasing
arrangement for the purpose of fulfilling
the part 25 entry criteria; (2) a
description of which method, single or
multiple terrestrial licensee, the parties
are utilizing to meet the part 25 entry
criteria; and (3) if the parties are
utilizing the spectrum leasing
arrangement under the multiple
terrestrial licensee method, the parties
must: (a) describe the nature of the
leasing arrangement(s); and (b)
demonstrate how the entirety of the GIA
is covered by the lease arrangement(s).
The Commission believes that this
requirement will improve the level of
interference protection licensees receive
in the band; and will create a more
predictable and transparent spectrum
environment for any current and future
users of the band(s). This process also
utilizes the Commission’s current
application approval and notification
processing procedures because it will
remove unnecessary delay by utilizing
the procedures that are already in place.
Further, in light of these limited
changes to the current application
procedures, the Commission does not
believe that small entities will have to
hire professionals to comply with the
Report and Order.
48. Part 25 Automatic Termination. In
the Report and Order, the Commission
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retains the current part 25 rules
regarding automatic termination of
station authorizations to satellite
licensees seeking to provide SCS jointly
with a terrestrial operator, and adds a
rule whereby the termination of any
lease(s) that allow for the use of specific
terrestrial spectrum for SCS is a trigger
for automatic termination of the part 25
license. This requirement utilizes and
applies the Commission’s current part
25 automatic termination process. In
light of these limited changes to the
current procedures, the Commission
does not believe that small entities will
have to hire professionals to comply
with the Report and Order.
49. 911 Call Transmission
Requirements. In the Report and Order,
the Commission establishes on an
interim basis that terrestrial providers
must transmit all SCS 911 calls and
texts to a PSAP using either an
emergency call center or location-based
routing. Terrestrial providers must also
transmit location information and the
user’s phone number to facilitate
dispatch and callback capabilities at the
receiving PSAP. This interim step will
balance the need for SCS 911 voice calls
and texts to be routed to the appropriate
PSAP with the need for terrestrial
providers to have flexibility in their
implementation of SCS. Under this
approach, terrestrial providers must
either: (1) use information regarding the
location of a device, including but not
limited to device-based location
information, and transmit the phone
number of the device used to send the
SCS 911 voice call or SCS 911 text
message and available information to an
appropriate PSAP; or (2) use an
emergency call center, at which
emergency call center personnel must
determine the emergency caller’s phone
number and location and then transfer
or otherwise direct the SCS voice call or
SCS text message to an appropriate
PSAP. In addition, the Commission
requires terrestrial providers that use
SCS to file an SCS 911 report with the
Commission on an annual basis, by
October 15th of each year, that explains
how their SCS deployments have
supported 911 call/text routing to the
geographically appropriate PSAP with
sufficient location information.
Terrestrial providers that utilize SCS to
extend coverage must maintain records
of SCS 911 voice calls and 911 text
messages received under their SCS
arrangements and received at their
emergency centers. The Commission
finds that these reporting and locationbased routing requirements represent
minimally burdensome requirements
when weighed against the necessity of
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911 service for emergency response and
disaster preparedness. Further, while
these recordkeeping and reporting
requirements present new obligations
for small entities, we note that these
measures will promote the
Commission’s objectives regarding
transparency and accountability in
routing SCS voice calls and 911 text
messages and provide useful data.
Additionally, to advance consumer
awareness of the extent to which SCS is
used to provide connectivity to 911, the
Commission adopts consumer
disclosure requirements for terrestrial
providers to inform their subscribers of
the limitations when using SCS to
contact 911. Finally, there is a one-time
requirement that, prior to use of SCS
location information to meet the
Commission’s 911 rules, terrestrial
providers must certify that neither they
nor any third party they rely on to
obtain SCS location information will
use that information or associated data
for any non-911 purpose, except with
prior express consent or as otherwise
permitted or required by law. The
certification also must state that
terrestrial providers and any third party
they rely on to obtain SCS location
information will implement measures
sufficient to safeguard the privacy and
security of the information.
50. Market Area Boundary Limits. In
the Report and Order, the Commission
maintains the existing market area
boundary limits in parts 22, 24, and 27
of the Commission’s rules. Noting that
SCS partners should be expected to
coordinate regarding the technical
parameters necessary to avoid cochannel interference with one another’s
operations. Although the introduction of
SCS into spectrum licensed for
terrestrial networks should have no
impact to other radio systems operating
in the band within the same or nearby
geographical areas, the Commission
adopts a rule to limit the signal levels
from SCS at and beyond the terrestrial
operator’s licensed area to be the same
as those defined for terrestrial operation
in each respective band. More
specifically, the Commission maintains
the existing market area boundary limits
established in parts 22, 24, and 27 of the
Commission’s rules. These limits have
also been used and shown to be feasible
for operations similar to SCS. SCS can
therefore only be deployed on the
condition that stations using these
frequencies will not cause harmful
interference to, or claim protection from
harmful interference caused by, an
international station operating in
accordance with the provisions of the
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Constitution, the Convention, and the
Radio Regulations of the ITU.
51. The Commission recognizes that
managing time varying signal levels
from SCS space stations, which may be
moving and utilizing multibeam
transmissions, will require careful and
dynamic management of power level
and beams for small and other entities.
Satellite operators must also account for
multiple overlapping and changing
satellites or beams covering the same
areas, as well as leakage and
interference from side beams. Therefore,
the power limit for interference
protection at any given point or area
should be applied to aggregation of
power received across all visible beams
and satellites at all times as they move
over any given point or area. In
addition, operators may need to cease
beam transmissions in zones to allow
for signal degradation from the edge of
SCS coverage. Given that the size of
such zones depends on target services,
satellite and beamforming configuration,
and power management solutions which
may improve over time, the Commission
does not set a limit on the zone size as
long as the receive power limits are met.
52. Out of Band Emission (OOBE)
Limits. In the Report and Order the
Commission adopted a uniform OOBE
limit of ¥120 dBW/m2/MHz for SCS
operation across the SCS Bands
expressed as a terrestrial power fluxdensity (PFD) limit. To ensure those
adjacent band devices are protected
from the risk of harmful interference, we
find that both OOBE limits are
warranted, and given the nature of SCS,
that these limits should be measured
and enforced on the ground. In setting
these limits, we recognize that different
factors may affect the potential for
harmful interference due to the inherent
difference in propagation effects when
the signal is generated from a multibeam
satellite constellation compared to when
it is transmitted from a terrestrial base
station. As a result, we therefore adopt
limits that constitute a reasonable
middle ground between existing
terrestrial OOBE limits and satellitebased limits.
53. The existing OOBE limits for base
stations vary across different radio
services, and these services are
governed by different parts of the
Commission’s rules (e.g., parts 22, 24,
27). Although different OOBE limits
apply across individual SCS Bands, we
believe adopting a uniform PFD limit for
supplemental satellite coverage across
the various bands is reasonable and
provides a simple requirement for
satellite operator compliance. To
provide a uniform limit across the
various SCS Bands, the Commission
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considers some balancing of these
effects for PFD limits that are
normalized to both ‘‘per MHz’’ and ‘‘per
square meter’’-i.e., dBW/m2/MHz. We
also specify that this PFD limit will
apply at 1.5 meters above ground level,
a height frequently associated with
handset usage that has been used by the
Commission when developing
interference protection criteria for other
wireless services. We believe that this
limit represents an equitable- and
technologically feasible-balance
between the positions expressed in the
record and will effectively protect
adjacent band operations across the SCS
Bands. Further, given that the
Commission is breaking new ground in
permitting satellite operations to not
only operate in bands allocated for
terrestrial systems, but permitting them
to be fully integrated into those systems,
we believe that it is in the public
interest to require that those satellites
protect terrestrial systems
commensurate with the protections they
are afforded from terrestrial-only
systems. While the out-of-band PFD
limits the Commission adopted may
require more stringent attenuation than
the emission limits specified in
§ 25.202(f) for satellite operation, the
Commission believes that these stricter
limits are both necessary and
technologically feasible for small and
other satellite operators providing SCS.
54. Equipment Authorization for SCS.
The adopted rules in the Report and
Order also require terrestrial device
equipment authorization grantees to
modify existing, or obtain new,
equipment authorizations for previously
certified terrestrial devices to reflect
those devices’ approval to operate under
a part 25 MSS allocation and applicable
SCS rules. New applicants should
include a request for part 25 on future
certification applications for equipment
that is capable of operation in an SCS
mode. This requirement does introduce
a new administrative burden for
equipment authorization grantees and
applicants, especially as it relates to
already certified equipment. The
Commission’s existing procedures
through the permissive change process
which enable electrical or mechanical
changes to certified equipment when
those changes do not affect the
characteristics required to be reported to
the Commission do not apply here
where the only change being made to
the certification is adding authorization
for part 25. Under the Commission’s
existing rules, ‘‘a change other than a
permissive change’’ requires a grantee to
file a new application for certification
accompanied by the information
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specified in part 2 of the Commission’s
rules. The Commission believes there is
good reason to provide grantees a way
to effectuate the necessary changes to
their equipment authorization grants
under the Commission’s rules that also
minimizes the administrative burdens
associated with a new equipment
certification application by waiving
relevant rule provisions to provide a
simplified process for existing grantees
to modify their certifications to reflect
part 25 authorization for SCS.
55. In granting a limited waiver of its
rules, the Commission aims to minimize
the burden on small and other
equipment certification holders, while
ensuring tracking and accountability for
devices capable of SCS, and compliance
with its prohibition on the authorization
of covered equipment. Similarly, for
new equipment authorizations,
terrestrial devices need only show
compliance with the terrestrial technical
rules for the rule parts under which they
will operate; no additional tests are
needed for part 25 SCS capability. Thus,
seeking to have the part 25 SCS
designation on the equipment
certification only requires the applicant
to request such a designation pursuant
to the SCS rules.
56. International Coordination. In the
Report and Order, the adopted rules
require that SCS operations that may
occur in bands not allocated for such
services in the International Table must
be consistent with ITU Radio Regulation
No. 4.4 and finds that it would serve the
public interest to include express
conditions in the SCS licenses to ensure
that the Commission’s obligations are
met as the ITU notifying administration
for U.S. licensed space station
operations. In these cases, the
Commission will require additional
assurances from SCS licensees that
while operating outside of the United
States, pursuant to an authorization
from another country, the satellite
operations will not cause harmful
interference into a nearby country. Prior
to conducting any communications with
earth stations outside the United States,
a satellite operator licensed to provide
SCS, or applicant for a license to
provide SCS, must certify to Space
Bureau and the Office of International
Affairs (OIA) that it has obtained all
necessary authorizations from the
relevant country prior to initiation of
communications with earth stations in
that country. The certification must
include steps that were taken to address
harmful interference concerns and that
these SCS operations will not result in
harmful interference to operations that
are in conformity with the ITU Radio
Regulations in neighboring or nearby
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countries. The certification must also be
accompanied by a demonstration
specifying the measures that the U.S.
licensee or applicant will take to
eliminate any harmful interference
immediately, in the event that it is
notified of harmful interference
resulting from such SCS operations.
These requirements are consistent with
existing Commission rules, thereby
limiting the compliance burden for
small and other entities.
F. Steps Taken To Minimize the
Significant Economic Impact on Small
Entities and Significant Alternatives
Considered
57. The RFA requires an agency to
provide, ‘‘a description of the steps the
agency has taken to minimize the
significant economic impact on small
entities . . . including a statement of
the factual, policy, and legal reasons for
selecting the alternative adopted in the
final rule and why each one of the other
significant alternatives to the rule
considered by the agency which affect
the impact on small entities was
rejected.
58. As discussed above, the Report
and Order adopts an SCS framework
that allows, through a collaboration
between a terrestrial mobile service
provider and satellite operator,
transmissions directly from satellites to
terrestrial devices on spectrum that was
previously allocated and licensed
exclusively on a terrestrial basis. In the
discussion of the issues, the initial
NPRM sought comment on, the
Commission raised alternatives and
sought input such as a cost and benefit
analyses from small and other entities.
By requesting such information, the
Commission gave small entities the
opportunity to broaden the scope of the
Commission’s understanding of impacts
which may not be readily apparent, and
offer alternatives not already considered
that could minimize the economic
impact on small entities.
59. Waiver-Based Approach. The
Commission declines to adopt a waiverbased approach to enable SCS, opting
instead to enable SCS on a variety of
bands in all parts of the United States
through generally-applicable rules.
Some commenters argued for a waiverbased approach instead, but the
Commission believes a generallyapplicable rules approach allows the
Commission to better serve the public
by allowing it to more carefully consider
the entire landscape of an issue as well
as make more comprehensive policy
decisions. However, because there are
particular SCS implementations that do
not perfectly align with this framework,
in order to not discourage or delay other
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innovative solutions for SCS, the
Commission will continue to consider
on a case-by-case basis filings for waiver
or special temporary authority (STA)
made by interested parties for SCS.
Permitting case-by-case filings for
waiver or STA will allow more
flexibility for smaller entities who do
not have the resources that larger
entities have to participate in providing
SCS.
60. Geographically Independent Area
(GIA). In the initial NPRM, the
Commission proposed to limit the
provision of SCS ‘‘to instances where a
single terrestrial licensee holds all cochannel licenses in the relevant band
throughout one of the six GIAs.’’ In the
Report and Order, the Commission
adopted the proposal to limit SCS
authorizations to the following GIAs: (1)
CONUS; (2) Alaska; (3) Hawaii; (4)
American Samoa; (5) Puerto Rico/U.S.
Virgin Islands; and (6) Guam/Northern
Mariana Islands. The Commission
adopted its original proposal to limit
SCS to GIAs at this time, and
acknowledges that this decision does
not foreclose the ability for parties with
proposals for providing SCS that do not
satisfy the framework from applying to
the Commission and demonstrating that
they will not cause harmful
interference. Some commenters, some of
which include small entities, suggested
this proposal would limit SCS to large
carriers with nationwide authority over
a block of spectrum, or otherwise
exclude smaller or regional terrestrial
operators from participation in the
framework. Because of these concerns,
the Commission has taken the step of
expanding its entry criteria so that
multiple terrestrial service providers
may work with a satellite operator to
provide SCS, as long as together those
service providers hold all the licenses in
the relevant channel throughout a GIA.
These more expansive entry criteria
help provide an opportunity for broader
deployment of SCS both spectrally and
geographically and allows additional
licensees to participate, while still
minimizing the risk of harmful
interference.
61. Part 25 License Entry Criteria. In
the Report and Order, the Commission
adopted rules to authorize satellite-toterrestrial (uplink and downlink)
operations in certain bands whereby a
NGSO or GSO satellite operator may
apply for a new or modify an existing
part 25 authorization where that entity
meets certain prerequisites, or ‘‘entry
criteria.’’ This approach will
significantly expand and enhance
secondary markets in a manner that
aligns with the Commission’s public
interest objectives in order to permit
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spectrum to flow more freely among
users and uses in response to economic
demand. The Commission believes that
by allowing spectrum to be utilized in
this way, it will encourage small entities
to become more involved in this process
and collaborate with larger providers.
62. Furthermore, in the Report and
Order, the Commission declined to
require part 25 blanket earth station
licensing because the comments in the
record reflected that blanket licensing
would be unnecessarily burdensome to
small and other entities. In the initial
NPRM, the Commission proposed that a
terrestrial licensee seeking to collaborate
with a satellite operator to offer SCS
must apply for and obtain a blanket
earth station license for all of its
subscribers’ terrestrial devices that will
be transmitting to space stations for SCS
operations. The Commission sought
comment on this approach as well as
any other approaches that would be
consistent with statutory and
international obligations. However,
commenters raised significant concerns
regarding blanket licensing, and, thus,
the Commission instead adopts a license
by rule approach for terrestrial devices
as earth stations communicating with a
satellite network for the purposes of
SCS. By not requiring providers to apply
for and obtain a blanket earth station
license, the Commission removes a
barrier that was potentially
unnecessarily burdensome, in particular
for small entities with limited resources.
63. Part 1 Leasing. The Commission
adopts a framework authorizing SCS by
amending its part 1 leasing rules to
permit terrestrial licensees to lease
terrestrial spectrum rights to satellite
operators for the purpose of providing
SCS. These requirements are consistent
with existing Commission part 1 leasing
rules, and the Commission will require
applicants for and current licensees of
the authorized SCS bands to provide the
necessary information using current
FCC Form 608. This process will benefit
small entities by saving time and
resources, as it utilizes the
Commission’s current application
approval and notification processing
procedures, and it will remove
unnecessary delay by utilizing the
procedures that are already in place.
Additionally, the Commission
considered, but declined, to adopt an
approach where a lease was not initially
required. Some commenters advocated
for the adoption of a ‘‘two-step’’
licensing model in response to the
NPRM, which would have involved a
deployment grant that would not have
required a lease initially. However, the
Commission believes that a two-step
part 25 licensing process would require
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a duplicative and inefficient use of staff
resources that could create a significant
economic burden to small entities.
64. Part 25 Automatic Termination.
The Commission retains the current part
25 rules regarding automatic
termination of station authorizations to
satellite licensees seeking to provide
SCS jointly with a terrestrial operator
and adds a rule whereby the termination
of any lease(s) that allow for the use of
specific terrestrial spectrum for SCS is
a trigger for automatic termination of the
part 25 license. The new rule that
triggers the current part 25 automatic
termination requirement is consistent
with the current automatic termination
rules. By retaining the current part 25
rules regarding automatic termination,
small and other entities will not have to
become acquainted with a new set of
rules, thus reducing their compliance
burden.
65. 911 Call Transmission
Requirements. The Commission
establishes on an interim basis that
terrestrial providers must transmit all
SCS 911 calls and texts to a PSAP using
either an emergency call center or
location-based routing. Terrestrial
providers must also transmit location
information and the user’s phone
number to facilitate dispatch and
callback capabilities at the receiving
PSAP. This interim step will balance the
need for SCS 911 voice calls and texts
to be routed to the appropriate PSAP
with the need for entities to have
flexibility in their implementation of
SCS. The Commission implements this
interim step because some terrestrial
911 requirements may not be feasible at
this time and, thus, balanced feasibility
with the vital importance of 911
services. In connection with this interim
requirement, terrestrial providers that
use SCS to extend coverage must
maintain records of SCS 911 voice calls
and text messages received on their
network and emergency call centers. In
addition, the adopted rules require
terrestrial providers to file an SCS 911
report with the Commission on an
annual basis, which will provide critical
information regarding SCS 911
connectivity to the Commission while
accomplishing it in a manner that does
not create a severe burden for entities
required to file. The Commission
concluded that extending and adapting
the existing MSS 911 reporting and
location-based routing requirements are
minimally burdensome. While these
requirements do present new
obligations for small entities, these
measures will promote transparency
and accountability in routing SCS voice
calls and provide useful data. In
addition, the concurrently adopted
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Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking,
published elsewhere in this issue of the
Federal Register, will also provide an
ample record in which the Commission
may consider any additional concerns
regarding SCS 911-related issues.
66. The Report and Order also
establishes disclosure requirements for
terrestrial providers to inform their
subscribers of the limitations resulting
from the use of SCS to contact 911. This
disclosure requirement is consistent
with the disclosure requirement the
Commission adopted for interconnected
Voice Over Internet Protocol (VoIP)
service providers, demonstrating that it
will be familiar to entities and not cause
a significant economic impact. While
this is a new requirement for providers,
it will provide vital information to
consumers about the limitations of SCS
when contacting 911. The Commission
also adopts a rule requiring terrestrial
providers to file with the Commission a
one-time certification regarding
safeguarding the privacy and security of
SCS location information. These
obligations are consistent with the
Commission’s existing rules that apply
to z-axis and dispatchable location data,
as well as location information used for
location-based routing; therefore, it will
be familiar to terrestrial providers and
not create an additional costly burden
on small entities.
67. Market Area Boundary Limits. The
Commission maintains the existing
market area boundary limits in parts 22,
24, and 27 of the Commission’s rules,
noting that SCS partners should be
expected to coordinate regarding the
technical parameters necessary to avoid
co-channel interference with one
another’s operations. Although the
existing market area boundary limits
remain, the Commission states that
certain limits may be necessary and
applicable to the boundaries of the GIA,
including at international borders or
boundaries extending into water.
Therefore, the Commission adopts a rule
to limit the signal levels from SCS at
and beyond the terrestrial operator’s
licensed area to be the same as those
defined for terrestrial operation in each
respective band.
68. Out of Band Emission (OOBE)
Limits. The Commission adopts a
uniform OOBE limit for SCS operation
across the SCS Bands expressed as a
terrestrial PFD limit. The Commission
declined to apply the existing OOBE
limits for base stations; instead, after the
perspective of commenters who
expressed mixed views on which OOBE
limits to apply, the Commission adopts
a uniform PFD limit for SCS, which
provides an equitable- and
technologically feasible-compromise
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34157
between the positions expressed in the
record and will also effectively protect
adjacent band operations across the SCS
Bands. Further, by adopting a uniform
OOBE limit for SCS operations, entities
will not have to become knowledgeable
about several different limitations,
which will save much needed time and
resources for small entities. We note
that even though the out-of-band PFD
limits adopted may require more
stringent attenuation than the emission
limits specified in § 25.202(f) for
satellite operation, the Commission
believes these stricter limits are both
necessary and technologically feasible
for satellite operators providing SCS.
69. Equipment Authorization for SCS.
In the Report and Order, the
Commission requires terrestrial device
equipment authorization grantees to
modify existing, or obtain new,
equipment authorizations for previously
certified terrestrial devices to reflect
those devices’ approval to operate under
a part 25 MSS allocation and applicable
SCS rules. This requirement does
introduce a new administrative burden
for equipment authorization grantees
and applicants, especially as it relates to
already certified equipment. The
Commission’s existing procedures
through the permissive change process
which enable electrical or mechanical
changes to certified equipment when
those changes do not affect the
characteristics required to be reported to
the Commission do not apply here
where the only change being made to
the certification is adding authorization
for part 25. Under the Commission’s
existing rules, ‘‘a change other than a
permissive change’’ requires a grantee to
file a new application for certification
accompanied by the information
specified in part 2 of the Commission’s
rules. While the Commission believes
there is good reason to provide grantees
a way to effectuate the necessary
changes to their equipment
authorization grants under the
Commission’s rules that also minimizes
the administrative burdens associated
with a new equipment certification
application. The Commission therefore
waives relevant provisions to provide a
simplified process for existing grantees
to modify their certifications to reflect
part 25 authorization for SCS. In
providing this limited waiver to existing
rules, the Commission aims to minimize
the burden on equipment certification
holders, while ensuring tracking and
accountability for devices capable of
SCS, and compliance with our
prohibition on the authorization of
covered equipment. Similarly, for new
equipment authorizations, terrestrial
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devices need only show compliance
with the terrestrial technical rules for
the rule parts under which they will
operate; no additional tests are needed
for part 25 SCS capability.
70. International Coordination. In the
Report and Order, the Commission
requires that SCS operations in bands
not allocated for such services in the
International Table must be consistent
with ITU Radio Regulation No. 4.4 and
finds it would serve the public interest
to include express conditions in the SCS
licenses to ensure that the Commission’s
obligations are met as the ITU notifying
administration for U.S. licensed space
station operations. In these cases, the
Commission will require additional
assurances from SCS licensees that
while operating outside the United
States, pursuant to an authorization
from another country, the satellite
operations will not cause harmful
interference. Prior to conducting any
communications with earth stations
outside the United States, a satellite
operator licensed to provide SCS, or
applicant for a license to provide SCS,
must certify to the Space Bureau and
OIA that it has obtained all necessary
authorizations from the relevant country
prior to initiation of communications
with earth stations in that country.
71. ECIP Program. The initial NPRM
sought comment on eligibility for the
Enhanced Competition Incentive
Program (ECIP), which the Commission
established in July 2022 to facilitate new
opportunities for small carriers and
Tribal nations to increase access to
spectrum, while incorporating
provisions to ensure against program
waste, fraud and abuse. Given that the
framework is primarily intended to
facilitate provision of SCS to existing
consumer handsets, and ECIP was
adopted with requirements tailored
specifically towards provision of service
through terrestrial base stations, the
Commission considered whether to
make SCS participants, necessarily
engaged in leasing arrangements,
eligible for ECIP benefits which could
reduce the economic impacts for small
carriers and Tribal nations. In the
Report and Order, the Commission
declines to extend ECIP benefits to
stakeholders that presently intend to
enter into leasing arrangements for the
provision of SCS. The Commission
highlights that the provisions of SCS do
not align with the goals or entry criteria
of the ECIP program and believes it is
in the public interest to allow the SCS
marketplace and the ECIP program to
further develop before determining
whether it is appropriate for these two
new Commission efforts to support one
another.
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G. Report to Congress
72. The Commission will send a copy
of the Report and Order, including the
FRFA, in a report to Congress pursuant
to the Congressional Review Act. In
addition, the Commission will send a
copy of the Report and Order, including
the FRFA, to the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy of the SBA. A copy of the
Report and Order and FRFA (or
summaries thereof) will also be
published in the Federal Register.
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis and the
Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis,
to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration.
77. It is further ordered that the
Commission shall send a copy of the
Report and Order in a report to be sent
to Congress and the Government
Accountability Office pursuant to the
Congressional Review Act, see 5 U.S.C.
801(a)(1)(A).
List of Subjects
Ordering Clauses
47 CFR Part 1
73. Accordingly, it is ordered that,
pursuant to the authority found in
sections 1, 4(i), 157, 301, 303, 307, 308,
309, and 310 of the Communications
Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 151,
154(i), 157, 301, 303, 307, 308, 309, and
310, that the Report and Order and
Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
is hereby adopted.
74. It is further ordered that the
Report and Order shall be effective 30
days after publication in the Federal
Register, with the exception of revisions
to §§ 1.9047(d)(2), 9.10(t)(3) through (5),
and 25.125(b)(1) and (2) and (c) of the
Commission’s rules, 47 CFR
1.9047(d)(2), 9.10(t)(3) through (5), and
25.125(b)(1) and (2) and (c), which may
contain new or modified information
collection requirements and will not be
effective until after the Office of
Management and Budget completes any
review the Wireless
Telecommunications Bureau and the
Space Bureau determine is required
under the Paperwork Reduction Act and
provide an effective date by subsequent
Public Notice.
75. It is further ordered that, pursuant
to section 4(i) of the Communications
Act, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 154(i), and
§ 1.3 of the Commission’s rules, 47 CFR
1.3, the following rules are waived,
effective immediately upon adoption of
the Report and Order and extending
until the date that is six months
following the effective date announced
in the Public Notice issued pursuant to
paragraph 268 in the Report and Order,
to the limited extent and as described
herein: §§ 2.1043(c) and 2.911(c) and (e)
of the Commission’s rules, 47 CFR
2.1043(c) and 2.911(c) and (e). This
temporary waiver is granted only for the
purpose of adding a part 25 designation
to equipment certifications granted on
or before the 60th day after a summary
of the Report and Order is published in
the Federal Register.
76. It is further ordered that the
Commission’s Office of the Secretary,
SHALL SEND a copy of the Report and
Order and Further Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking, including the Final
Practice and procedure, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements,
Telecommunications, Wireless radio
services.
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47 CFR Part 2
Communications, Satellites,
Telecommunications.
47 CFR Part 9
Communications common carriers,
Communications equipment, Radio.
47 CFR Part 25
Administrative practice and
procedure, Satellites.
Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene Dortch,
Secretary.
Final Rules
For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, the Federal Communications
Commission amends 47 CFR parts 1, 2,
9, and 25 as follows:
PART 1—PRACTICE AND
PROCEDURE
1. The authority citation for part 1
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 47 U.S.C. chs. 2, 5, 9, 13; 28
U.S.C. 2461 note; 47 U.S.C. 1754, unless
otherwise noted.
2. Effective May 30, 2024, add
§ 1.9047 to read as follows:
■
§ 1.9047 Special provisions relating to
spectrum leasing arrangements involving
terrestrial spectrum rights for supplemental
coverage from space.
(a) Supplemental coverage from
space. For purposes of this section,
supplemental coverage from space
(SCS) has the same meaning as in
§ 25.103 of this chapter.
(b) Geographically independent area
(GIA). For purposes of this section,
geographically independent area (GIA)
has the same meaning as in § 25.103 of
this chapter.
(c) Part 25 SCS Entry Criteria. For
purposes of this section, part 25 SCS
Entry Criteria refers to the requirements
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outlined in § 25.125(a) and (b) of this
chapter.
(d) Scope. Under this section, a
licensee may enter into a spectrum
manager (see § 1.9020) or de facto
transfer (see §§ 1.9030 and 1.9035)
leasing or subleasing arrangement with
a spectrum lessee in only the bands
identified in § 2.106(d)(33)(i) of this
chapter for the purpose of meeting the
part 25 SCS Entry Criteria.
(1) The licensee seeking to engage in
spectrum leasing under this section may
do so under the following parameters:
(i) A single licensee that holds all cochannel licenses on the relevant band in
a GIA may enter into a leasing
arrangement with one or more satellite
operators.
(ii) If there are multiple co-channel
licensees that collectively hold all cochannel licenses in a particular band
throughout one of six GIAs, the
licensees may enter into spectrum
leasing arrangements only under one of
the following conditions:
(A) One licensee holding a license in
the GIA must enter into an individual
spectrum leasing arrangement with each
of the other co-channel licensees in that
GIA. The licensee may then enter into
a leasing arrangement with one satellite
operator; or
(B) One satellite operator may enter
into individual leasing arrangements
with each of the relevant co-channel
licensees that together hold all cochannel licenses on the relevant band in
the GIA.
(2) [Reserved]
(e) FirstNet. In order for the First
Responder Network Authority
(FirstNet), as defined in 47 U.S.C. 1424,
to fulfill the part 25 SCS Entry Criteria,
FirstNet must file an FCC Form 601 in
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the Universal Licensing System (ULS)
that:
(1) Describes the manner in which
FirstNet has conveyed to its satellite
partner an authorization to utilize the
758–769/788–799 MHz band or portions
of the band;
(2) Identifies and describes the
geographic area(s) and nature of the
proposed SCS operations; and
(3) Demonstrates how, under the
agreement, the rights and
responsibilities of the satellite operator
partner are substantively the same as
those of a lessee under this part.
(f) Subleasing. Notwithstanding the
provisions of §§ 1.9020(l) and 1.9030(k),
an SCS spectrum lessee may sublease
spectrum usage rights subject to the
following condition.
(1) Satellite operators may not enter
into a spectrum subleasing arrangement
where there are multiple terrestrial
licensees jointly leasing their cochannel rights in a given GIA pursuant
to paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this section.
(2) [Reserved]
(g) Construction/performance
requirements. Notwithstanding the
provisions of §§ 1.9020(d)(5)(i) and
1.9030(d)(5)(i), a licensee may not
attribute to itself the build-out or
performance activities of its SCS
spectrum lessee(s) for purposes of
complying with any applicable
performance or build-out requirement.
■ 3. Delayed indefinitely, further amend
§ 1.9047 by adding paragraph (d)(2) to
read as follows:
§ 1.9047 Special provisions relating to
spectrum leasing arrangements involving
terrestrial spectrum rights for supplemental
coverage from space.
*
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(d) * * *
(2) The spectrum lessee or sublessee
seeking to engage in spectrum leasing
under this section must provide within
the FCC Form 608:
(i) A certification that the parties are
entering into the leasing arrangement for
the purpose of fulfilling the part 25
Entry Criteria;
(ii) A description of which method,
single or multiple terrestrial licensee,
the parties are utilizing to meet the part
25 Entry Criteria; and
(iii) If the parties are utilizing the
spectrum leasing arrangement outlined
in paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this section, the
parties must:
(A) Describe the nature of the leasing
arrangement(s); and
(B) Demonstrate how the entirety of
the GIA is covered by the lease
arrangement(s).
*
*
*
*
*
PART 2—FREQUENCY ALLOCATIONS
AND RADIO TREATY MATTERS;
GENERAL RULES AND REGULATIONS
4. The authority citation for part 2
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 302a, 303, and
336, unless otherwise noted.
5. Effective May 30, 2024, amend
§ 2.106 by:
■ a. Revising pages 30, 36, 37, and 38 in
paragraph (a); and
■ b. Adding paragraph (d)(33)(i) and
reserved paragraph (d)(33)(ii).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
■
§ 2.106
Table of Frequency Allocations.
(a) * * *
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
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Wireless Communications (27)
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5.312 5.319
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FIXED
MOBILE 5.384A 5.388A 5.388B
1700-1710
FIXED
METEOROLOGICAL-SATELLITE
(space-to-Earth)
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
5.289 5.341 5.384
5.341 US91 US378 US385
1761-1780
SPACE OPERATION
(Earth-to-space) G42
US91
1780-1850
FIXED
MOBILE
SPACE OPERATION
IEarth-to-snace1 G42
1850-2025
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MOBILE 5.388A 5.388B
Mobile-satellite (Earth-to-space)
5.388
1970-1980
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5.388
30APR1
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1980-2010
FIXED
MOBILE
MOBILE-SATELLITE (Earth-to-space) 5.351A
5.388 5.389A 5.389B 5.389F
2010-2025
2010-2025
FIXED
FIXED
MOBILE 5.388A 5.388B
MOBILE
MOBILE-SATELLITE
(Earth-to-space)
5.388
5.388 5.389C 5.389E
5.341
1710-1761
1930-1970
FIXED
MOBILE 5.388A 5.388B
5.341 US88
1710-1780
FIXED
MOBILE
5.341 US91 US378 US385
1780-1850
1850-2000
FIXED
MOBILE
Mobile-satellite NG33A
5.388
2010-2025
FIXED
MOBILE 5.388A 5.388B
5.388
2000-2020
FIXED
MOBILE
MOBILE-SATELLITE
(Earth-to-space)
2020-2025
FIXED
MOBILE
RF Devices (15)
Personal
Communications (24)
Satellite Communications (25
Wireless Communications (27)
Fixed Microwave (101)
Satellite Communications (25)
Wireless Communications (27)
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FIXED
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5.392 US90 US92 US222
US346 US347
2110-2483.5 MHz (UHF)
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Region 2 Table
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2110-2120
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MOBILE 5.388A 5.3888
SPACE RESEARCH (deep space) (Earth-to-space)
Fmt 4700
5.388
2120-2170
FIXED
MOBILE 5.388A 5.3888
TV Auxiliary Broadcasting
(74F)
Cable TV Relay (78)
Local TV Transmission (101 J)
2120-2160
FIXED
MOBILE 5.388A 5.3888
Mobile-satellite (space-to-Earth)
Region 3 Table
2120-2170
FIXED
MOBILE 5.388A 5.3888
Federal Table
2110-2120
United States Table
Non-Federal Table
2110-2120
FIXED
MOBILE
US252
2120-2200
Page 36
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FCC Rule Part(s)
Public Mobile (22)
Wireless
Communications (27)
Fixed Microwave (101)
US252
2120-2180
FIXED
MOBILE
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5.388
2160-2170
FIXED
MOBILE
MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
5.388 5.389C 5.389E
5.388
5.388
2170-2200
FIXED
MOBILE
MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) 5.351A
30APR1
5.388 5.389A 5.389F
2200-2290
SPACE OPERATION (space-to-Earth) (space-to-space)
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) (space-to-space)
FIXED
MOBILE 5.391
SPACE RESEARCH (space-to-Earth) (space-to-space)
2200-2290
SPACE OPERATION (space-to-Earth)
(space-to-space) US96
EARTH EXPLORATl ON-SATELLITE
(space-to-Earth) (space-to-space)
FIXED (line-of-sight only)
MOBILE (line-of-sight only including
aeronautical telemetry, but excluding
flight testing of manned aircraft) 5.391
SPACE RESEARCH (space-to-Earth)
(space-to-space)
5.392 US303
2290-2300
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
SPACE RESEARCH (deep space)
NG41
2180-2200
Satellite
FIXED
Communications (25)
MOBILE
Wireless
MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth)
Communications (27)
2200-2290
US96 US303
2290-2300
SPACE RESEARCH (deep space)
(space-to-Earth)
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5.392 US90 US92 US222 US346
US347
5.392
5.392
2290-2300
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
ER30AP24.061
2025-2110
2025-2110
SPACE OPERATION
FIXED NG118
(Earth-to-space) (space-to-space) MOBILE 5.391
EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE
(Earth-to-space) (space-to-space)
SPACE RESEARCH
(Earth-to-space) (space-to-space)
FIXED
MOBILE 5.391
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MOBILE 5.391
SPACE RESEARCH (Earth-to-space) (space-to-space)
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2300-2450
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MOBILE 5.384A
RADIOLOCATION
Amateur
2300-2305
G122
2305-2310
2300-2305
Amateur
2305-2310
FIXED
MOBILE except aeronautical mobile
RADIOLOCATION
Amateur
US97
PO 00000
2310-2320
Fixed
Mobile US100
Radiolocation G2
2310-2320
FIXED
MOBILE
BROADCAST! NG-SATELLITE
RADIOLOCATION
US97 US327
2320-2345
Fixed
Radiolocation G2
US97 US100 US327
2320-2345
BROADCAST! NG-SATELLITE
Sfmt 4725
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Fixed
Mobile US100
Radiolocation G2
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2345-2360
FIXED
MOBILE US100
BROADCAST! NG-SATELLITE
RADIOLOCATION
US327
2360-2390
MOBILE US276
RADIOLOCATION G2 G120
Fixed
US327
2360-2390
MOBILE US276
30APR1
US101
2390-2395
MOBILE US276
US101
2390-2395
AMATEUR
MOBILE US276
US101
2395-2400
AMATEUR
US101
2400-2417
AMATEUR
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Fmt 4700
US101
2395-2400
US101 G122
2400-2417
ER30AP24.062
5.150 5.282 5.393 5.394
5.150 5.282
2417-2450
Amateur
Wireless
Communications (27)
Amateur Radio (97)
Wireless
Communications (27)
Satellite
Communications (25)
Wireless
Communications (27)
Aviation (87)
Personal Radio (95)
Aviation (87)
Personal Radio (95)
Amateur Radio (97)
Personal Radio (95)
Amateur Radio (97)
RF Devices (15)
ISM Equipment (18)
Amateur Radio (97)
34163
5.150 5.282 5.395
5.150 G122
2417-2450
Radiolocation G2
Amateur Radio (97)
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Amateur
Radiolocation
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2450-2483.5
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MOBILE
RADIOLOCATION
2450-2483.5
2450-2483.5
FIXED
MOBILE
Radiolocation
5.150
5.150
5.150 US41
5.150 US41
RF Devices (15)
ISM Equipment (18)
TV Auxiliary
Broadcasting (74F)
Private Land Mobile (90)
Fixed Microwave (101)
Paae 38
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FIXED
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Radiolocalion
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 84 / Tuesday, April 30, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
(d) * * *
(33) * * *
(i) NG33A The secondary MSS
operations in the bands 614–652 MHz
and 663–769 MHz, 775–799 MHz, and
805–806 MHz, 824–849 MHz and 869–
894 MHz, and 1850–1920 MHz and
1930–2000 MHz are limited to
supplemental coverage from space (SCS)
and are subject to the Commission’s SCS
rules in part 25 of this chapter.
(ii) [Reserved]
*
*
*
*
*
6. The authority citation for part 9
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 151–154, 152(a),
155(c), 157, 160, 201, 202, 208, 210, 214, 218,
219, 222, 225, 251(e), 255, 301, 302, 303, 307,
308, 309, 310, 316, 319, 332, 403, 405, 605,
610, 615, 615 note, 615a, 615b, 615c, 615a–
1, 616, 620, 621, 623, 623 note, 721, and
1471, and Section 902 of Title IX, Division
FF, Pub. L. 116–260, 134 Stat. 1182, unless
otherwise noted.
7. Effective May 30, 2024, amend
§ 9.10 by revising paragraph (a)
introductory text and adding paragraph
(t) to read as follows:
■
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES1
911 Service.
(a) Scope of section. Except as
described in paragraph (r) of this
section, the following requirements of
paragraphs (a) through (t) of this section
are only applicable to CMRS providers,
excluding mobile satellite service (MSS)
operators, to the extent that they:
*
*
*
*
*
(t) Interim 911 requirements for
supplemental coverage from space—(1)
Supplemental coverage from space. For
purposes of this paragraph (t),
supplemental coverage from space
(SCS) has the same meaning as in part
25, subpart A, of this chapter; SCS 911
calls are 911 calls (as defined in § 9.3)
that are carried over satellite facilities
pursuant to a CMRS provider’s SCS
arrangement; and an SCS 911 text
message is a 911 text message (as
defined in paragraph (q)(9) of this
section) that is carried over satellite
facilities pursuant to a CMRS provider’s
SCS arrangement.
(2) Call Transmission requirements.
For purposes of delivering SCS 911
voice calls and SCS 911 text messages,
CMRS providers must either:
(i) Use information regarding the
location of a device, including but not
limited to device-based location
information, to route SCS 911 voice
calls and SCS 911 text messages to an
appropriate PSAP and transmit the
phone number of the device used to
send the SCS 911 voice call or SCS 911
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:24 Apr 29, 2024
Jkt 262001
§ 9.10
911 Service.
*
PART 9—911 REQUIREMENTS
§ 9.10
text message and available location
information to an appropriate PSAP; or
(ii) Use an emergency call center, at
which emergency call center personnel
must determine the emergency caller’s
phone number and location and then
transfer or otherwise direct the 911
caller to an appropriate PSAP.
■ 8. Delayed indefinitely, further amend
§ 9.10 by adding paragraphs (t)(3)
through (5) to read as follows:
*
*
*
*
(t) * * *
(3) Reporting. Each CMRS provider
that utilizes SCS arrangements to
expand its coverage areas for providing
service to its end-user subscribers must
maintain records of all SCS 911 voice
calls and SCS 911 text messages
received on its network and received at
its emergency call center. By October 15
of each year, each CMRS provider that
utilizes SCS arrangements to expand its
coverage areas for providing service to
its end-user subscribers must submit a
report to the Commission regarding SCS
911 voice calls and 911 text messages,
and its emergency call center data,
current as of September 30 of that year.
CMRS providers that utilize SCS
arrangements to expand their coverage
areas for providing service to their enduser subscribers must submit this
certification in the Commission’s
Electronic Comment Filing System.
These reports must include, at a
minimum, the following:
(i) The name and address of the CMRS
provider, the address of that CMRS
provider’s emergency call center, and
the contact information of the
emergency call center;
(ii) The aggregate number of SCS 911
voice calls and SCS 911 text messages
received by the network of the CMRS
provider that provides SCS service to its
end-user subscribers during each month
during the relevant reporting period;
(iii) The aggregate number of SCS 911
voice calls and SCS 911 text messages
received by the emergency call center
each month during the relevant
reporting period;
(iv) The aggregate number of SCS 911
voice calls and SCS 911 text messages
received by the emergency call center
each month during the relevant
reporting period that required
forwarding to a PSAP and how many
did not require forwarding to a PSAP;
(v) The aggregate number of SCS 911
voice calls that were routed using
location information that met the
timeliness and accuracy thresholds
defined in paragraphs (s)(3)(i)(A) and
(B) of this section;
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34165
(vi) The aggregate number of SCS 911
voice calls and SCS 911 text messages
that were routed using location
information that did not meet the
timeliness and accuracy thresholds
defined in paragraphs (s)(3)(i)(A) and
(B) of this section; and
(vii) An explanation of how the SCS
deployment, including network
architecture, systems, and procedures,
will support routing SCS 911 voice calls
and SCS 911 text messages to the
geographically appropriate PSAP with
sufficient location information in
compliance with paragraph (t)(2) of this
section.
(4) Certification. CMRS providers that
utilize SCS arrangements to expand
their coverage areas for providing
service to their end-user subscribers
must certify on a one-time basis that
neither they nor any third party they
rely on to obtain location information or
associated data used for compliance
with paragraph (t)(2)(i) or (ii) of this
section will use such location
information or associated data for any
non-911 purpose, except with prior
express consent or as otherwise
permitted or required by law. The
certification must state that the CMRS
provider and any third parties it relies
on to obtain location information or
associated data used for compliance
with paragraph (t)(2)(i) or (ii) have
implemented measures sufficient to
safeguard the privacy and security of
such location information or associated
data. CMRS providers that utilize SCS
arrangements to expand their coverage
areas for providing service to their enduser subscribers must submit this onetime certification in the Commission’s
Electronic Comment Filing System on
the due date of the first report made
under paragraph (t)(3) of this section.
(5) Subscriber notification. Each
CMRS provider that utilizes SCS
arrangements to expand its coverage
areas for providing service to its enduser subscribers shall specifically advise
every subscriber, both new and existing,
in writing prominently and in plain
language, of the circumstances under
which 911 service for all SCS 911 calls,
or SCS 911 text messages may not be
available via SCS or may be in some
way limited by comparison to
traditional enhanced 911 service.
PART 25—SATELLITE
COMMUNICATIONS
9. The authority citation for part 25
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 301, 302, 303,
307, 309, 310, 319, 332, 605, and 721, unless
otherwise noted.
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 84 / Tuesday, April 30, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
10. Effective May 30, 2024, amend
§ 25.103 by adding definitions for
‘‘Geographically independent area
(GIA)’’, ‘‘SCS earth stations’’, and
‘‘Supplemental coverage from space
(SCS)’’ in alphabetical order to read as
follows:
■
§ 25.103
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Geographically independent area
(GIA). Any of the following six areas:
(1) CONUS;
(2) Alaska;
(3) Hawaii;
(4) American Samoa;
(5) Puerto Rico/U.S. Virgin Islands;
and
(6) Guam/Northern Mariana Islands.
*
*
*
*
*
SCS earth stations. Any earth station
used for the provision of supplemental
coverage from space consistent with
§ 25.115(q).
*
*
*
*
*
Supplemental coverage from space
(SCS). The provision of coverage to
terrestrial wireless subscribers through
an arrangement or agreement (see
§ 1.9047 of this chapter) between one or
more NGSO or GSO operator(s) and one
or more terrestrial wireless licensee(s),
involving transmissions between space
stations and SCS earth stations. NGSO
and GSO operators and terrestrial
wireless service licensees seeking to
provide SCS must be authorized in
compliance with § 25.125.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 11. Effective May 30, 2024, amend
§ 25.109 by adding paragraph (f) to read
as follows:
§ 25.109
Cross-reference.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) Space and SCS earth stations
providing SCS are subject to technical
rules in parts 2, 22, 24, and 27 of this
chapter where applicable.
■ 12. Effective May 30, 2024, amend
§ 25.114 by adding paragraph (a)(4) to
read as follows:
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES1
§ 25.114 Applications for space station
authorizations.
(a) * * *
(4) For an application filed pursuant
to the SCS procedure in § 25.125, the
filing must be submitted on FCC Form
312, Main Form and Schedule S, with
attached exhibits as required by
paragraph (d) of this section, and must
constitute a comprehensive proposal.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 13. Effective May 30, 2024, amend
§ 25.115 by adding paragraph (q) to read
as follows:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:24 Apr 29, 2024
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§ 25.115 Applications for earth station
authorizations.
*
*
*
*
*
(q) SCS earth stations. An applicant
seeking to use SCS earth stations to
provide SCS must comply with
§ 25.125.
(1) A satellite operator licensed under
§ 25.125 to provide SCS is permitted to
communicate with all terrestrial
wireless licensee(s)-associated SCS
earth stations that have been approved
for such use under part 2 of this chapter.
(i) Such earth stations must show
compliance with this part and at least
one of either part 22, 24, or 27 of this
chapter to provide SCS within the
technical parameters and provisions
associated with the device certification.
(ii) The device certification must
show compliance with the licensed
parameters of the terrestrial wireless
license(s) and at least one of either part
22, 24, or 27 of this chapter, as
applicable.
(2) An earth station may be used for
the provision of SCS when:
(i) The satellite operator licensed
under § 25.125 is a party to a valid and
approved spectrum leasing arrangement
or agreement pursuant to § 1.9047 of
this chapter with at least one terrestrial
wireless licensee(s) licensed under one
of either part 22, 24, or 27 of this
chapter; and
(ii) That terrestrial wireless licensee(s)
has met and operates within all
conditions associated with the relevant
terrestrial wireless license(s).
(3) A satellite operator authorized to
provide SCS under § 25.125 is
authorized under paragraph (q)(1) of
this section to communicate with SCS
earth stations for any period during
which each of the following apply:
(i) The service is provided during the
valid duration of any spectrum leasing
arrangement or agreement pursuant to
§ 1.9047 of this chapter between the
terrestrial wireless licensee(s) and
satellite operator;
(ii) The devices to which service is
provided are certified under part 2 of
this chapter; and
(iii) The terrestrial wireless licensee(s)
is a valid licensee(s) under part 22, 24,
or 27 of this chapter.
(4) A satellite operator with SCS
authorization via a market access grant
can avail itself of the provisions of this
paragraph (q) but, in addition to the
parameters established in paragraphs
(q)(1) and (2) of this section, must also
comply with any additional parameters
included in the satellite operator’s space
station market access grant.
(5) A satellite operator operating in
conformance with the parameters
established in this part does not need a
PO 00000
Frm 00094
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
separate earth station authorization for
the provision of SCS under this part.
■ 14. Effective May 30, 2024, amend
§ 25.117 by adding paragraph (j) to read
as follows:
§ 25.117
Modification of station license.
*
*
*
*
*
(j) An application for modification of
a space station authorization to provide
SCS must comply with § 25.125.
■ 15. Effective May 30, 2024, add
§ 25.125 to read as follows:
§ 25.125 Applications for supplemental
coverage from space (SCS).
(a) SCS entry criteria. This section
applies only to applicants seeking to
provide SCS. An applicant for SCS
space station authorization must hold
either an existing NGSO or GSO license
or grant of U.S. market access under this
part, or must be seeking a NGSO or GSO
license or grant of U.S. market access
under this part, and must have a lease
arrangement(s) or agreement pursuant to
§ 1.9047 of this chapter with one or
more terrestrial wireless licensee(s) that
hold, collectively or individually, all cochannel licenses throughout a GIA in a
band identified in § 2.106(d)(33)(i) of
this chapter. Applicants for SCS space
stations must comply with the
requirements set forth in paragraph (b)
of this section.
(b) SCS space station application
requirements. An applicant seeking a
space station authorization to provide
SCS must either submit an application
requesting modification of a current
NGSO or GSO license or grant of U.S.
market access under this part, or an
application seeking a new NGSO or
GSO license or grant of U.S. market
access under this part.
(1)–(2) [Reserved]
(3) Applications to modify an
authorization under this part to provide
SCS and applications seeking to provide
SCS in the bands identified in
§ 2.106(d)(33)(i) of this chapter will not
be subject to the processing round
procedures or first-come, first-served
procedures in §§ 25.137, 25.157, and
25.158.
(c) [Reserved]
(d) Effective date and continued
operation of SCS authorization. SCS
authorization will be deemed effective
in the Commission’s records and for
purposes of the application of the rules
set forth in this section after each of the
following requirements is satisfied:
(1) Grant of:
(i) A modification application under
this part or request for modification of
a grant of market access; or
(ii) An application to launch and
operate or market access;
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 84 / Tuesday, April 30, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
(2) Approval of a leasing
arrangement(s) or agreement(s) under
part 1 of this chapter (see § 1.9047 of
this chapter); and
(3) Grant of a valid SCS earth station
equipment certification under part 2 of
this chapter.
(e) SCS earth station equipment
certification requirements. Applicants
for certification for SCS earth stations
for use with a satellite system must meet
all requirements for equipment
certification and equipment test data
necessary to demonstrate compliance
with pertinent standards under part 22,
24, or 27 of this chapter as applicable.
■ 16. Delayed indefinitely, further
amend § 25.125 by adding paragraphs
(b)(1) and (2) and (c) to read as follows:
§ 25.125 Applications for supplemental
coverage from space (SCS).
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES1
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) The application must include a
certification that:
(i) A lease notification(s) or
application(s), pursuant to § 1.9047 of
this chapter, where a single terrestrial
wireless licensee holds or multiple cochannel licensees collectively hold all
co-channel licenses within the relevant
GIA in the bands identified in
§ 2.106(d)(33)(i) of this chapter, or as it
pertains to FirstNet, an agreement, is on
file with the Commission;
(ii) The current space station licensee
under this part or grantee of market
access for NGSO or GSO satellite
operation under this part seeks
modification of authority to provide
SCS in the same geographic areas
covered in the relevant GIA, or the
applicant for a space station license
under this part or grant of market access
for NGSO or GSO satellite operation
under this part seeks to provide SCS in
the same geographic areas covered in
the relevant GIA; and
(iii) SCS earth stations will qualify as
‘‘licensed by rule’’ earth stations under
§ 25.115(q).
(2) The application must include a
comprehensive proposal for the
prospective SCS system on FCC Form
312, Main Form and Schedule S, as
described in § 25.114, together with the
certification described in paragraph
(b)(1) of this section and include a list
of the file and identification numbers
associated with the relevant leasing
notification(s) under part 1 of this
chapter, application(s), and FCC Form
601(s), with a brief description of the
coverage areas that will be served,
domestically and internationally.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Equipment authorization for SCS
earth stations. Each SCS earth station
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16:24 Apr 29, 2024
Jkt 262001
used to provide SCS under this section
must meet the equipment authorization
requirements under paragraph (e) of this
section and all equipment authorization
requirements for all intended uses of the
device pursuant to the procedures
specified in part 2 of this chapter and
the requirements of at least one of part
22, 24, or 27 of this chapter.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 17. Effective May 30, 2024, amend
§ 25.137 by revising paragraphs (b) and
(f) to read as follows:
§ 25.137 Requests for U.S. market access
through non-U.S.-licensed space stations.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Any request pursuant to paragraph
(a) of this section must be filed
electronically through the International
Communications Filing System and
must include an exhibit providing legal
and technical information for the nonU.S.-licensed space station of the kind
that § 25.114, § 25.122, § 25.123, or
§ 25.125 would require in a license
application for that space station,
including but not limited to information
required to complete Schedule S. An
applicant may satisfy the requirement in
this paragraph (b) by cross-referencing a
pending application containing the
requisite information or by citing a prior
grant of authority to communicate via
the space station in question in the same
frequency bands to provide the same
type of service.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) A non-U.S.-licensed space station
operator that has been granted access to
the United States market pursuant to a
declaratory ruling may modify its U.S.
operations under the procedures set
forth in §§ 25.117(d), (h), and (j) and
25.118(e).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 18. Effective May 30, 2024, amend
§ 25.161 by adding paragraph (e) to read
as follows:
34167
(k) Space station downlinks operating
as SCS under the provisions of § 25.125
and § 2.106(d)(33)(i) of this chapter are
subject to the following rules.
(1) Out of band emission limits.
Notwithstanding the emission
limitations of paragraph (f) of this
section, the aggregation of all space
station downlink emissions outside a
licensee’s SCS frequency band(s) of
operation shall not exceed a power flux
density of ¥120 dBW/m2/MHz at 1.5
meters above ground level.
(2) Interference caused by out of band
emissions. If any emission from a
transmitter operating in the SCS service
results in harmful interference to users
of another radio service, the FCC may
require a greater attenuation of the
emission than specified in this section.
20. Effective May 30, 2024, amend
§ 25.204 by revising the section heading
and adding paragraph (g) to read as
follows:
■
§ 25.204 Power and out-of-band emission
limits for earth stations.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) SCS earth stations providing SCS
pursuant to §§ 25.125 and 25.115 shall
comply with the power requirements
and out-of-band emission limits
corresponding to devices operating in
part 22, 24, or 27 of this chapter (e.g.,
§ 22.913, § 24.232, or § 27.50), as
required for their operating frequencies.
21. Effective May 30, 2024, amend
§ 25.208 by revising the section heading
and adding paragraph (w) to read as
follows:
■
§ 25.208 Power flux-density and in-band
field strength limits.
*
*
*
*
(w) The aggregate field strength at the
earth’s surface produced by all visible
beams and satellites within each
satellite constellation providing SCS
service as they move over any given
§ 25.161 Automatic termination of station
authorization.
point or area in bands authorized by
NG33A in the United States Table of
*
*
*
*
*
Frequency Allocations and § 25.125
(e) The failure to provide any SCS on
must meet:
all or some of the SCS authorized
frequencies for more than 90 days. In
(1) 40 dBmV/m for the 600 MHz, 700
this instance, the authorization will be
MHz, and 800 MHz bands; and
terminated in whole or in part with
(2) 47 dmV/m for the AWS and PCS
respect to the relevant frequencies on
bands; and
which SCS has not been operational for
(3) Licensees must comply with all
more than 90 days in the United States,
applicable provisions and requirements
unless specific authority is requested.
of treaties and other international
■ 19. Effective May 30, 2024, amend
§ 25.202 by adding paragraph (k) read as agreements between the United States
Government and the governments of
follows:
other countries, including Canada and
§ 25.202 Frequencies, frequency tolerance, Mexico. Absent specific international
and emission limits.
agreements regarding SCS, licensees
must comply with the limited provided
*
*
*
*
*
PO 00000
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
*
E:\FR\FM\30APR1.SGM
30APR1
34168
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 84 / Tuesday, April 30, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
in paragraphs (w)(1) and (2) of this
section.
[FR Doc. 2024–06669 Filed 4–29–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 622
[Docket No. 240424–0118]
RIN 0648–BM63
Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of
Mexico, and South Atlantic; Fishery
Management Plans of Puerto Rico, St.
Croix, and St. Thomas and St. John;
Framework Amendment 2
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
NMFS issues regulations to
implement management measures
described in Framework Amendment 2
to each of the Puerto Rico, St. Croix, and
St. Thomas and St. John Fishery
Management Plans (FMPs). This final
rule modifies annual catch limits (ACLs)
for spiny lobster in the U.S. Caribbean
exclusive economic zone (EEZ) around
Puerto Rico, St. Croix, and St. Thomas
and St. John. The purpose of this final
rule is to update management reference
points for spiny lobster under the FMPs,
consistent with the best scientific
information available to prevent
overfishing and achieve optimum yield
(OY).
DATES: This final rule is effective on
May 30, 2024.
ADDRESSES: An electronic copy of
Framework Amendment 2, which
includes an environmental assessment,
a regulatory impact review, and a
Regulatory Flexibility Act analysis, may
be obtained from the Southeast Regional
Office website at https://
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/action/genericframework-amendment-2-updatesspiny-lobster-overfishing-limitacceptable-biological.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Sarah Stephenson, NMFS Southeast
Regional Office, telephone: 727–824–
5305, sarah.stephenson@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Puerto Rico, St. Croix, and St. Thomas
and St. John fisheries target spiny
lobster, and are managed under their
respective FMPs. The FMPs were
prepared by the Caribbean Fishery
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES1
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:24 Apr 29, 2024
Jkt 262001
Management Council (Council) and
NMFS. NMFS implements the FMPs
through regulations at 50 CFR part 622
under the authority of the MagnusonStevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act (Magnuson-Stevens
Act).
On January 31, 2024, NMFS
published a proposed rule to implement
management measures described in
Framework Amendment 2 and
requested public comment (89 FR 6085).
The proposed rule and Framework
Amendment 2 describe the rationale for
the actions contained in this final rule.
A summary of the management
measures described in Framework
Amendment 2 and implemented by this
final rule is provided below.
All weights described in this final
rule are in round weight.
Background
The Magnuson-Stevens Act requires
NMFS and regional fishery management
councils to prevent overfishing and to
achieve, on a continuing basis, the OY
from federally managed fish stocks to
ensure that fishery resources are
managed for the greatest overall benefit
to the Nation, particularly with respect
to providing food production and
recreational opportunities, and
protecting marine ecosystems.
For Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin
Islands, NMFS, with the advice of the
Council, manages fisheries under the
Puerto Rico, St. Croix, and St. Thomas
and St. John FMPs. The FMPs contain
management measures applicable for
Federal waters off the respective island
group. Federal waters around Puerto
Rico extend seaward from 9 nautical
miles [nmi; 16.7 kilometers (km)] from
shore to the offshore boundary of the
EEZ. Federal waters around St. Croix,
and St. Thomas and St. John extend
seaward from 3 nmi (5.6 km) from shore
to the offshore boundary of the EEZ.
For spiny lobster in the U.S.
Caribbean EEZ, only commercial
landings data are collected. Because
recreational landings data are not
available, the ACLs for spiny lobster are
based on commercial landings and
apply to all harvest for the stock,
whether commercial or recreational.
In 2019, the Southeast Data,
Assessment, and Review (SEDAR)
completed three separate assessments
for spiny lobster for the Puerto Rico, St.
Croix, and St. Thomas and St. John
management areas (SEDAR 57). In
response to SEDAR 57 and
recommendations from their Scientific
and Statistical Committee (SSC), the
Council prepared Framework
Amendment 1 to the FMPs to update the
overfishing limits (OFLs), acceptable
PO 00000
Frm 00096
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
biological catch (ABCs), ACLs, and
accountability measures (AMs) for spiny
lobster. NMFS published the final rule
that implemented Framework
Amendment 1 on March 16, 2023 (88 FR
16194).
After NMFS implemented the final
rule for Framework Amendment 1, the
Council requested that the NMFS
Southeast Fisheries Science Center
(SEFSC) conduct an update to SEDAR
57 to provide OFL and ABC estimates
for spiny lobster for each island group
for 2024 to 2026, which were not
included in SEDAR 57. The SEFSC
presented results of the 2022 Update
Assessment to SEDAR 57 (SEDAR 57
Update) to the Council’s SSC at its
November–December 2022 meeting. The
SSC accepted the SEDAR 57 Update and
OFLs and ABCs for spiny lobster under
each FMP.
Consistent with the SEDAR 57
Update, and recommendations from the
SSC, the Council developed Framework
Amendment 2 to prevent overfishing of
spiny lobster and achieve OY for each
stock, consistent with the requirements
of the Magnuson-Stevens Act. For each
FMP, the Council recommended ACLs
for spiny lobster equal to 95 percent of
the ABCs recommended by the SSC,
which reflects the Council’s
management uncertainty buffer.
Management Measures Contained in
This Final Rule
For spiny lobster, this final rule
revises the ACLs in the EEZ around
Puerto Rico, St. Croix, and St. Thomas
and St. John based on the SEDAR 57
Update.
For the EEZ around Puerto Rico, the
ACL for spiny lobster will decrease from
the current ACL of 366,965 pounds (lb)
or 166,452 kilograms (kg) to 357,629 lb
(162,218 kg).
For the EEZ around St. Croix, the ACL
for spiny lobster will increase from the
current ACL of 120,830 lb (54,807 kg) to
137,254 lb (62,257 kg).
For the EEZ around St. Thomas and
St. John, the ACL for spiny lobster will
increase from the current ACL of
126,089 lb (57,193 kg) to 133,207 lb
(60,422 kg).
Measures in Framework Amendment 2
Not Codified in This Final Rule
In addition to the ACLs described in
this final rule, Framework Amendment
2 specifies the OFL and ABC for spiny
lobster for Puerto Rico, St. Croix, and St.
Thomas and St. John.
For the Puerto Rico FMP, the OFL for
spiny lobster will decrease from 438,001
lb (198,673 kg) to 426,858 lb (193,620
kg) and the ABC for spiny lobster would
E:\FR\FM\30APR1.SGM
30APR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 84 (Tuesday, April 30, 2024)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 34148-34168]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-06669]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
47 CFR Parts 1, 2, 9, and 25
[GN Docket No. 23-65, IB Docket No. 22-271; FCC 24-28; FR ID 210313]
Single Network Future: Supplemental Coverage From Space; Space
Innovation
AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In this document, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC
or Commission) adopts rules to facilitate the deployment of
supplemental coverage from space (SCS) in an effort to serve several
important public interest goals for the Nation and expand the reach of
communications services, particularly emergency services, so that
connectivity and assistance is available in more remote places. In this
document, to allow satellite communications on spectrum previously
allocated only to terrestrial services, the Commission modifies the
United States Table of Frequency Allocations to authorize bi-
directional, secondary mobile-satellite service operations in certain
spectrum bands that have no primary, non-flexible-use legacy
incumbents, Federal or non-Federal. For these bands, we authorize SCS
only where one or more terrestrial licensees--together holding all
licenses on the relevant channel throughout a defined geographically
independent area--lease access to their spectrum rights to a
participating satellite operator, whose license reflects these
frequencies and the geographically independent area in which they will
offer SCS. In recognition that this new offering has the potential to
bring life-saving connectivity to remote areas, the Commission also
applies interim 911 call and text routing requirements to ensure that
help is available to those who need it today while we work toward
enabling automatic location-based routing of all emergency
communications whether or not there is a terrestrial connection
available.
DATES: The rules are effective May 30, 2024, except for the amendments
to Sec. Sec. 1.9047(d)(2) (amendatory instruction 3), 9.10(t)(3)
through (5) (amendatory instruction 8), and 25.125(b)(1) and (2) and
(c) (amendatory instruction 16), which are indefinitely delayed. The
Federal Communications Commission will publish a document in the
Federal Register announcing the effective date of these rule sections.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For additional information on this
proceeding, contact Jon Markman of the Mobility Division, Wireless
Telecommunications Bureau, at [email protected] or (202) 418-
7090, or Merissa Velez of the Space Bureau Satellite Programs and
Policy Division, at [email protected] or (202) 418-0751. For
information regarding the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA)
information collection requirements contained in this document, contact
Cathy Williams, Office of Managing Director, at (202) 418-2918 or
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of Commission's Report and
Order, in GN Docket No. 23-65 and IB Docket No. 22-271; FCC 24-28,
adopted and released on March 15, 2024. The full text of this document
is available for public inspection online at https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/FCC-24-28A1.pdf. The Report and Order was corrected
by an erratum released on April 18, 2024. The changes made by the
erratum are included in this document.
Synopsis
1. In the Report and Order, the Commission adopts a regulatory
framework--the first of its kind in the world--to enable collaborations
between satellite operators and terrestrial service providers to offer
ubiquitous connectivity directly to consumer handsets using spectrum
previously allocated only to terrestrial service. We anticipate that
supplemental coverage from space, or SCS, will enable consumers in
areas not covered by terrestrial networks to be connected using their
existing devices via satellite-based communications.
2. In the Report and Order, to allow satellite communications on
spectrum previously allocated only to terrestrial services, the
Commission modifies the United States Table of Frequency Allocations to
authorize bi-directional, secondary mobile-satellite service (MSS)
operations in certain spectrum bands that have no primary, non-
flexible-use legacy incumbents, Federal or non-Federal. Accordingly,
the list of bands that will be available for the provision of SCS (the
SCS Bands) is as follows:
[[Page 34149]]
600 MHz: 614-652 MHz and 663-698 MHz;
700 MHz: 698-769 MHz, 775 MHz-799 MHz, and 805-806 MHz;
800 MHz: 824-849 MHz and 869-894 MHz;
Broadband PCS: 1850-1915 MHz and 1930-1995 MHz; and
AWS-H Block: 1915-1920 MHz and 1995-2000 MHz.
3. For these bands, the Commission finds it in the public interest
to limit SCS authorizations to the following geographically independent
areas (GIAs): (1) the contiguous United States (CONUS); (2) Alaska; (3)
Hawaii; (4) American Samoa; (5) Puerto Rico/U.S. Virgin Islands; and
(6) Guam/Northern Mariana Islands. Given the novel technical challenges
at play when introducing satellite communications to terrestrial
spectrum, we believe that a GIA restriction is necessary in the initial
SCS framework because it minimizes the risk of potential interference
to geographically-adjacent, co-channel license areas. For these bands,
the Commission authorizes SCS only where one or more terrestrial
licensees--together holding all licenses on the relevant channel
throughout a defined geographically independent area--lease access to
their spectrum rights to a participating satellite operator, whose part
25 license reflects these frequencies and the geographically
independent area in which they will offer SCS.
4. In the Report and Order, the Commission also adopts entry
criteria that non-geostationary satellite orbit (NGSO) and
geostationary satellite orbit (GSO) operators must meet in order to
apply for or modify an existing part 25 license to operate satellites
in the SCS Bands in the United States and its territories.
Specifically, we establish an SCS framework allowing satellite
operators to apply to modify a current part 25 license to include SCS
where: (1) the satellite operator has one or more leasing
notification(s) or application(s), or in the case of FirstNet, a Form
601, on file with the Commission to access the spectrum allocated for
MSS provision of SCS from a single terrestrial licensee or multiple
licensees that hold, collectively or individually, all co-channel
licenses throughout a GIA; (2) the current part 25 space station
licensee or part 25 grantee of market access for NGSO or GSO satellite
operation seeks modification of authority to provide SCS in the same
geographic areas covered in the relevant GIA; and (3) the terrestrial
devices involved in SCS qualify as ``licensed by rule'' earth stations
under the new provisions of part 25. Similarly, satellite operators may
apply for an initial part 25 license with authority to provide SCS if
they meet requirements (1) and (3) above, and if in their part 25
application, those operators seek to provide SCS in the same geographic
areas covered in the relevant GIA.
5. Our actions to facilitate the deployment of SCS will serve
several important public interest goals for the Nation. First, the SCS
framework will expand the reach of communications services,
particularly emergency services, so that connectivity and assistance is
available in more remote places. Second, the SCS framework will spur
advancements in cutting-edge, space-based technologies that will
position the United States as a global leader in this arena. And third,
the SCS framework will continue our efforts to promote the innovative
and efficient use of our Nation's spectrum resources in ways that
foster creative collaborations among users.
6. In crafting this new framework, it is essential that we balance
the desire to accelerate innovative SCS operations that will serve
these critical public interest goals with the need to retain service
quality of terrestrial networks, protect spectrum usage rights, and
minimize the risk of harmful interference, both domestically and
internationally. Accordingly, the framework we adopt in the Report and
Order represents an initial step to encourage the development of SCS
while minimizing the risks of harmful interference to existing
terrestrial and satellite networks that support non-Federal and Federal
users. In the future, as the marketplace for SCS develops, we plan to
build on the framework we adopt in the Report and Order, to enable
deployment of SCS in additional bands and scenarios. We will also
continue to monitor the nascent SCS marketplace to consider
modifications and address proposals that do not fit neatly within our
framework by waiver.
7. In addition, the Commission considered a framework for
authorizing terrestrial devices to communicate with a space station in
the SCS context. In the Report and Order, the Commission adopts a
license by rule approach for terrestrial devices as earth stations
communicating with a satellite network for the purposes of SCS.
Specifically, so long as the terrestrial devices connecting to the SCS
network are doing so pursuant to an effective part 1 leasing
arrangement or agreement and are operating within the existing
technical parameters of their Office of Engineering and Technology
(OET) equipment authorization, the terrestrial licensee's license
parameters, and applicable part 22, 24, or 27 rules, then those devices
will be licensed as earth stations by rule without the need to file a
part 25 earth station application for additional authority.
8. In recognizing the importance of 911 service to emergency
response and disaster preparedness, we adopt interim 911 text and call
routing requirements for terrestrial providers that use SCS
arrangements to extend coverage areas. Specifically, we require
terrestrial providers to transmit all 911 voice calls and texts to a
Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) using location-based routing or an
emergency call center. Terrestrial providers must also transmit
location information and the user's phone number to facilitate dispatch
and callback capabilities at the receiving PSAP. We also require
terrestrial providers that use SCS to file annual reports with the
Commission, submit a privacy certification, and provide consumer
disclosures regarding SCS 911 connectivity.
9. Under the SCS framework, satellite operators and terrestrial
licensees providing SCS must comply with existing satellite and
terrestrial rules to avoid harmful interference into radio astronomy
and related services. The Commission also amended some of its technical
rules as they apply to SCS. In addition, the new MSS allocations will
remain subject to the United States' international obligations under
treaties, bilaterial or multilateral agreements, the International
Radio Regulations, and other instruments of the International
Telecommunication Union (ITU).
Procedural Matters
Paperwork Reduction Act
10. The requirements in Sec. Sec. 1.9047(d)(2), 9.10(t)(3) through
(5), and 25.125(b)(1) and (2) and (c) constitute new or modified
collections subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA),
Public Law 104-13. They will be submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) for review under section 3507(d) of the PRA. OMB, the
general public, and other Federal agencies will be invited to comment
on the new or modified information collection requirements contained in
this proceeding. In addition, the Commission notes that, pursuant to
the Small Business Paperwork Relief Act of 2002, Public Law 107-198,
see 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(4), the Commission previously sought, but did not
receive, specific comment on how the Commission might further reduce
the information collection burden for small business concerns with
fewer than 25 employees. The Commission describes impacts that
[[Page 34150]]
might affect small businesses, which includes more businesses with
fewer than 25 employees, in the Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis.
Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
11. The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) requires that an agency
prepare a regulatory flexibility analysis for notice and comment
rulemakings, unless the agency certifies that ``the rule will not, if
promulgated, have a significant economic impact on a substantial number
of small entities.'' Accordingly, the Commission has prepared a Final
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) concerning the possible impact
of the rule changes contained in the Report and Order on small
entities. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as
amended (RFA), an Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) was
incorporated in the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) released in
March 2023 in this proceeding (88 FR 21944, Mar. 16, 2023). The
Commission sought written public comment on the proposals in the NPRM
including comments on the IRFA. No comments were filed addressing the
IRFA. This present Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA)
conforms to the RFA.
Congressional Review Act
12. The Commission will send a copy of the Report and Order in a
report to be sent to Congress and the Government Accountability Office
pursuant to the Congressional Review Act, see 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
13. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as
amended (RFA), an Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) was
incorporated in the NPRM released in March 2023. The Federal
Communications Commission (Commission) sought written public comment on
the proposals in the NPRM, including comment on the IRFA. No comments
were filed addressing the IRFA. This Final Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis (FRFA) conforms to the RFA.
A. Need for, and Objectives of, the Report and Order
14. In the Report and Order, the Commission takes a major step
toward harnessing the power of hybrid satellite-terrestrial networks to
connect people to modern communications services. To accomplish this
objective, the Commission adopts a regulatory framework to enable
collaborations between satellite operators and terrestrial service
providers to offer ubiquitous connectivity directly to consumer
handsets using spectrum previously allocated only to terrestrial
service. Supplemental coverage from space (SCS) will enable consumers
in areas not covered by terrestrial infrastructure to be connected
using their existing devices via satellite-based communications. The
framework the Commission adopts in the Report and Order balances the
desire to accelerate innovative SCS operations that will serve these
critical public interest goals with the need to retain service quality
of terrestrial networks, protect spectrum usage rights, and minimize
the risk of harmful interference, both domestically and
internationally. The objectives of the framework include facilitating
ubiquitous wireless coverage across the Nation, expanding the
availability of emergency communications to consumers and the
geographic range of first responders to provide emergency services, and
promoting competition in the provision of wireless services to
consumers.
15. In the Report and Order, to allow satellite communications on
spectrum previously allocated only to terrestrial services, the
Commission modifies the United States Table of Frequency Allocations
(U.S. Table) to authorize bi-directional, secondary mobile-satellite
service (MSS) operations in certain spectrum bands that have no
primary, non-flexible-use legacy incumbents, Federal or non-Federal.
For these bands, the Commission authorizes SCS only where one or more
terrestrial licensees--together holding all licenses on the relevant
channel throughout a defined geographically independent area (GIA)--
lease access to their spectrum rights to a participating satellite
operator, whose part 25 license reflects these frequencies and the GIA
in which they will offer SCS. The list of bands (SCS Bands) that will
be available for the provision of SCS is as follows:
600 MHz: 614-652 MHz and 663-698 MHz;
700 MHz: 698-769 MHz, 775 MHz-799 MHz, and 805-806 MHz;
800 MHz: 824-849 MHz and 869-894 MHz;
Broadband PCS: 1850-1915 MHz and 1930-1995 MHz; and
AWS-H Block: 1915-1920 MHz and 1995-2000 MHz.
16. In an effort to realize the public interest benefits of SCS as
soon as possible, while minimizing the risk of harmful interference,
the Commission adopts the proposal to limit SCS authorizations to the
following GIAs: (1) the contiguous United States (CONUS); (2) Alaska;
(3) Hawaii; (4) American Samoa; (5) Puerto Rico/U.S. Virgin Islands;
and (6) Guam/Northern Mariana Islands.
17. Additionally, in the Report and Order, the Commission adopts
rules requiring a part 25 license as a necessary component of an SCS
authorization that must be obtained prior to commencing SCS. The
Commission also adopts entry criteria that non-geostationary satellite
orbit (NGSO) and geostationary satellite orbit (GSO) operators must
meet to apply for or modify an existing part 25 license to operate
satellites in SCS Bands. The Commission adopts rules to establish a
license by rule approach for terrestrial devices as earth stations
communicating with a satellite network for the purposes of SCS.
Furthermore, the Report and Order authorizes SCS based on a lease
arrangement or agreement between one or more terrestrial licensees and
one or more satellite operators, subject to the restrictions adopted.
The Commission also adopts limited amendments to the service rules
governing satellite and terrestrial licensees to enable the provision
of SCS.
18. Similarly, the Commission adopts certain technical rules,
including requiring terrestrial device equipment authorization grantees
to modify existing, or obtain new, equipment authorizations for
previously certified terrestrial devices and also grants a limited
waiver of certain rules. The Commission also addresses international
coordination, stating that SCS will be authorized pursuant to a
secondary MSS allocation in the U.S. Table. These operations may not
cause harmful interference to--and shall not claim protection from--any
station operating in accordance with ITU provisions, whether in the
United States or internationally. Finally, the Commission clarifies
that the SCS framework is limited to operations performed in the bands
designated in the Report and Order for SCS and remains separate from
the service rules for MSS systems. Consequently, the rules the
Commission adopts in the Report and Order represent an initial step to
encourage the development of SCS while minimizing the risks of harmful
interference to existing terrestrial and satellite networks that
support non-Federal and Federal users.
B. Summary of Significant Issues Raised by Public Comments in Response
to the IRFA
19. Parties that filed comments did not specifically reference the
IRFA in their comments; however, some commenters, some of which include
small entities, expressed concerns that the proposal in the NPRM in
which a single terrestrial licensee must hold all co-channel licenses
in a given GIA
[[Page 34151]]
would either limit SCS to large carriers with nationwide authority over
a block of spectrum, or, at a minimum, exclude smaller or regional
terrestrial operators from participation in the framework. These
concerns are discussed in greater detail in section F of this FRFA.
C. Response to Comments by the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration
20. Pursuant to the Small Business Jobs Act of 2010, which amended
the RFA, the Commission is required to respond to any comments filed by
the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration
(SBA), and to provide a detailed statement of any change made to the
proposed rules as a result of those comments.
21. The Chief Counsel did not file any comments in response to the
proposed rules or policies in this proceeding.
D. Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities to Which
the Rules Will Apply
22. The RFA directs agencies to provide a description of, and where
feasible, an estimate of, the number of small entities that may be
affected by the rules adopted herein. The RFA generally defines the
term ``small entity'' as having the same meaning as the terms ``small
business,'' ``small organization,'' and ``small governmental
jurisdiction.'' In addition, the term ``small business'' has the same
meaning as the term ``small business concern'' under the Small Business
Act. A ``small business concern'' is one which: (1) is independently
owned and operated; (2) is not dominant in its field of operation; and
(3) satisfies any additional criteria established by the SBA.
23. Small Businesses, Small Organizations, Small Government
Jurisdictions. Our actions, over time, may affect small entities that
are not easily categorized at present. We therefore describe, at the
outset, three broad groups of small entities that could be directly
affected herein. First, where there are industry specific size
standards for businesses that are used in the regulatory flexibility
analysis, according to data from the Small Business Administration's
(SBA) 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% of all businesses in the United States,
which translates to 33.2 million businesses.
24. 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.''
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) uses a revenue benchmark of $50,000
or less to delineate its annual electronic filing requirements for
small exempt organizations. Nationwide, for tax year 2020, there were
approximately 447,689 small exempt organizations in the U.S. reporting
revenue of $50,000 or less according to the registration and tax data
for exempt organizations available from the IRS.
25. 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 2017 Census of Governments indicate there were
90,075 local governmental jurisdictions consisting of general purpose
governments and special purpose governments in the United States. Of
this number, there were 36,931 general purpose governments (county,
municipal, and town or township) with populations of less than 50,000
and 12,040 special purpose governments--independent school districts
with enrollment populations of less than 50,000. Accordingly, based on
the 2017 U.S. Census of Government data, we estimate that at least
48,971 entities fall into the category of ``small government
jurisdictions.''
26. Satellite Telecommunications. This industry comprises firms
``primarily engaged in providing telecommunications services to other
establishments in the telecommunications and broadcasting industries by
forwarding and receiving communications signals via a system of
satellites or reselling satellite telecommunications.'' Satellite
telecommunications service providers include satellite and earth
station operators. The SBA small business size standard for this
industry classifies a business with $38.5 million or less in annual
receipts as small. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that 275 firms
in this industry operated for the entire year. Of this number, 242
firms had revenue of less than $25 million. Additionally, based on
Commission data in the 2022 Universal Service Monitoring Report, as of
December 31, 2021, there were 65 providers that reported they were
engaged in the provision of satellite telecommunications services. Of
these providers, the Commission estimates that approximately 42
providers have 1,500 or fewer employees. Consequently, using the SBA's
small business size standard, a little more than half of these
providers can be considered small entities.
27. 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
SBA size standard for this industry classifies a business as small if
it has 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show
that there were 2,893 firms in this industry that operated for the
entire year. Of that number, 2,837 firms employed fewer than 250
employees. Additionally, based on Commission data in the 2021 Universal
Service Monitoring Report, as of December 31, 2020, there were 797
providers that reported they were engaged in the provision of wireless
services. Of these providers, the Commission estimates that 715
providers have 1,500 or fewer employees. Consequently, using the SBA's
small business size standard, most of these providers can be considered
small entities.
28. 600 MHz Band. These wireless communications services are
radiocommunication services licensed in the 617-652 MHz and 663-698 MHz
frequency bands that can be used for fixed and mobile flexible uses.
600 MHz Band services fall within the scope of the Wireless
Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite) industry where the SBA
small business size standard classifies a business as small if it has
1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that
there were 2,893 firms that operated in this industry for the entire
year. Of this number, 2,837 firms employed fewer than 250 employees.
Thus, under the SBA size standard, the Commission estimates that a
majority of licensees in this industry can be considered small.
29. Based on Commission data as of November 2021, there were
approximately 3,327 active licenses in the 600 MHz Band service. The
Commission's small business size standards with respect to 600 MHz Band
services involve eligibility for bidding credits and installment
payments in the auction of licenses for these services. For purposes of
bidding credits, the Commission defined ``small business'' as an entity
with average gross revenues not exceeding $55 million for each of the
three preceding years, and a ``very small business'' as an entity with
average gross revenues not exceeding
[[Page 34152]]
$20 million for each of the three preceding years for the 600 MHz band
auction. Pursuant to these definitions, 15 bidders claiming small
business status won 290 licenses.
30. In frequency bands where licenses were subject to auction, the
Commission notes that as a general matter, the number of winning
bidders that qualify as small businesses at the close of an auction
does not necessarily represent the number of small businesses currently
in service. Further, the Commission does not generally track subsequent
business size unless, in the context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated. Additionally, since the
Commission does not collect data on the number of employees for
licensees providing these services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with active licenses that would
qualify as small under the SBA's small business size standard.
31. Lower 700 MHz Band Licenses. The lower 700 MHz band encompasses
spectrum in the 698-746 MHz frequency bands. Permissible operations in
these bands include flexible fixed, mobile, and broadcast uses,
including mobile and other digital new broadcast operation; fixed and
mobile wireless commercial services (including frequency division
duplex (FDD)- and time division duplex (TDD)-based services); as well
as fixed and mobile wireless uses for private, internal radio needs,
two-way interactive, cellular, and mobile television broadcasting
services. Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite) is
the closest industry with a SBA small business size standard applicable
to licenses providing services in these bands. The SBA small business
size standard for this industry classifies a business as small if it
has 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show
that there were 2,893 firms that operated in this industry for the
entire year. Of this number, 2,837 firms employed fewer than 250
employees. Thus, under the SBA size standard, the Commission estimates
that a majority of licensees in this industry can be considered small.
32. According to Commission data as of December 2021, there were
approximately 2,824 active Lower 700 MHz Band licenses. The
Commission's small business size standards with respect to Lower 700
MHz Band licensees involve eligibility for bidding credits and
installment payments in the auction of licenses. For auctions of Lower
700 MHz Band licenses the Commission adopted criteria for three groups
of small businesses. A very small business was defined as an entity
that, together with its affiliates and controlling interests, has
average annual gross revenues not exceeding $15 million for the
preceding three years, a small business was defined as an entity that,
together with its affiliates and controlling interests, has average
gross revenues not exceeding $40 million for the preceding three years,
and an entrepreneur was defined as an entity that, together with its
affiliates and controlling interests, has average gross revenues not
exceeding $3 million for the preceding three years. In auctions for
Lower 700 MHz Band licenses seventy-two winning bidders claiming a
small business classification won 329 licenses, twenty-six winning
bidders claiming a small business classification won 214 licenses, and
three winning bidders claiming a small business classification won all
five auctioned licenses.
33. In frequency bands where licenses were subject to auction, the
Commission notes that as a general matter, the number of winning
bidders that qualify as small businesses at the close of an auction
does not necessarily represent the number of small businesses currently
in service. Further, the Commission does not generally track subsequent
business size unless, in the context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated. Additionally, since the
Commission does not collect data on the number of employees for
licensees providing these services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with active licenses that would
qualify as small under the SBA's small business size standard.
34. Upper 700 MHz Band Licenses. The upper 700 MHz band encompasses
spectrum in the 746-806 MHz bands. Upper 700 MHz D Block licenses are
nationwide licenses associated with the 758-763 MHz and 788-793 MHz
bands. Permissible operations in these bands include flexible fixed,
mobile, and broadcast uses, including mobile and other digital new
broadcast operation; fixed and mobile wireless commercial services
(including FDD- and TDD-based services); as well as fixed and mobile
wireless uses for private, internal radio needs, two-way interactive,
cellular, and mobile television broadcasting services. Wireless
Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite) is the closest industry
with a SBA small business size standard applicable to licenses
providing services in these bands. The SBA small business size standard
for this industry classifies a business as small if it has 1,500 or
fewer employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that there were
2,893 firms that operated in this industry for the entire year. Of that
number, 2,837 firms employed fewer than 250 employees. Thus, under the
SBA size standard, the Commission estimates that a majority of
licensees in this industry can be considered small.
35. According to Commission data as of December 2021, there were
approximately 152 active Upper 700 MHz Band licenses. The Commission's
small business size standards with respect to Upper 700 MHz Band
licensees involve eligibility for bidding credits and installment
payments in the auction of licenses. For the auction of these licenses,
the Commission defined a ``small business'' as an entity that, together
with its affiliates and controlling principals, has average gross
revenues not exceeding $40 million for the preceding three years, and a
``very small business'' an entity that, together with its affiliates
and controlling principals, has average gross revenues that are not
more than $15 million for the preceding three years. Pursuant to these
definitions, three winning bidders claiming very small business status
won five of the twelve available licenses.
36. In frequency bands where licenses were subject to auction, the
Commission notes that as a general matter, the number of winning
bidders that qualify as small businesses at the close of an auction
does not necessarily represent the number of small businesses currently
in service. Further, the Commission does not generally track subsequent
business size unless, in the context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated. Additionally, since the
Commission does not collect data on the number of employees for
licensees providing these services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with active licenses that would
qualify as small under the SBA's small business size standard.
37. Cellular Radiotelephone Service. This service is radio service
in which licensees are authorized to offer and provide cellular service
for hire to the general public and was formerly titled Domestic Public
Cellular Radio Telecommunications Service. Cellular Radiotelephone
Service falls within the scope the Wireless Telecommunications Carriers
(except Satellite) industry, where the SBA small business size standard
classifies a business as small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S.
Census Bureau data for 2017 show that there were 2,893 firms that
operated in this industry for the entire year. Of this number, 2,837
firms employed fewer than 250 employees. Thus, under the SBA size
standard, the Commission
[[Page 34153]]
estimates that a majority of licensees in this industry can be
considered small.
38. Based on Commission data, as of November 2021, there were
approximately 1,908 active licenses in this service. The Commission's
small business size standards with respect to Cellular Radiotelephone
Services involve eligibility for bidding credits and installment
payments in the auction of licenses for these services. For purposes of
bidding credits, the Commission has defined ``small business'' as an
entity that either (1) together with its affiliates and controlling
interests has average gross revenues of not more than $3 million for
each of the three preceding years, or (2) together with its affiliates
and controlling interests has average gross revenues of not more $15
million for each of the three preceding years.
39. In frequency bands where licenses were subject to auction, the
Commission notes that as a general matter, the number of winning
bidders that qualify as small businesses at the close of an auction
does not necessarily represent the number of small businesses currently
in service. Further, the Commission does not generally track subsequent
business size unless, in the context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated. Additionally, since the
Commission does not collect data on the number of employees for
licensees providing these services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with active licenses that would
qualify as small under the SBA's small business size standard.
40. Advanced Wireless Services (AWS)--(1710-1755 MHz and 2110-2155
MHz bands (AWS-1); 1915-1920 MHz, 1995-2000 MHz, 2020-2025 MHz and
2175-2180 MHz bands (AWS-2); 2155-2175 MHz band (AWS-3); 2000-2020 MHz
and 2180-2200 MHz (AWS-4)). Spectrum is made available and licensed in
these bands for the provision of various wireless communications
services. Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite) is
the closest industry with a SBA small business size standard applicable
to these services. The SBA small business size standard for this
industry classifies a business as small if it has 1,500 or fewer
employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that there were 2,893
firms that operated in this industry for the entire year. Of this
number, 2,837 firms employed fewer than 250 employees. Thus, under the
SBA size standard, the Commission estimates that a majority of
licensees in this industry can be considered small.
41. According to Commission data as December 2021, there were
approximately 4,472 active AWS licenses. The Commission's small
business size standards with respect to AWS involve eligibility for
bidding credits and installment payments in the auction of licenses for
these services. For the auction of AWS licenses, the Commission defined
a ``small business'' as an entity with average annual gross revenues
for the preceding three years not exceeding $40 million, and a ``very
small business'' as an entity with average annual gross revenues for
the preceding three years not exceeding $15 million. Pursuant to these
definitions, 57 winning bidders claiming status as small or very small
businesses won 215 of 1,087 licenses. In the most recent auction of AWS
licenses 15 of 37 bidders qualifying for status as small or very small
businesses won licenses.
42. In frequency bands where licenses were subject to auction, the
Commission notes that as a general matter, the number of winning
bidders that qualify as small businesses at the close of an auction
does not necessarily represent the number of small businesses currently
in service. Further, the Commission does not generally track subsequent
business size unless, in the context of assignments or transfers,
unjust enrichment issues are implicated. Additionally, since the
Commission does not collect data on the number of employees for
licensees providing these services, at this time we are not able to
estimate the number of licensees with active licenses that would
qualify as small under the SBA's small business size standard.
43. All Other Telecommunications. This industry is comprised of
establishments primarily engaged in providing specialized
telecommunications services, such as satellite tracking, communications
telemetry, and radar station operation. This industry also includes
establishments primarily engaged in providing satellite terminal
stations and associated facilities connected with one or more
terrestrial systems and capable of transmitting telecommunications to,
and receiving telecommunications from, satellite systems. Providers of
Internet services (e.g. , dial-up ISPs) or voice over Internet protocol
(VoIP) services, via client-supplied telecommunications connections are
also included in this industry. The SBA small business size standard
for this industry classifies firms with annual receipts of $35 million
or less as small. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that there were
1,079 firms in this industry that operated for the entire year. Of
those firms, 1,039 had revenue of less than $25 million. Based on this
data, the Commission estimates that the majority of ``All Other
Telecommunications'' firms can be considered small.
E. Description of Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other
Compliance Requirements for Small Entities
44. While the Commission sought to minimize compliance burdens
where practicable, the SCS framework adopted in the Report and Order
will impose new or additional reporting, recordkeeping, and/or other
compliance obligations on small entities. In addition, while it sought
comment from concerned parties regarding costs related to those
obligations, the record does not contain a detailed cost/benefit
analysis that would allow us to quantify such related costs to small
entities. The rules adopted in the Report and Order encompass a broad
range of leasing, licensing, and technical compliance requirements that
are summarized in further detail below.
45. Part 25 License Entry Criteria. The Report and Order
effectuates SCS in certain flexible-use bands previously allocated
solely for terrestrial use by the adoption of rules to authorize
satellite-to-terrestrial (uplink and downlink) operations in these
bands whereby a NGSO or GSO satellite operator may apply for a new or
modify an existing part 25 authorization when that entity meets certain
prerequisites, or ``entry criteria.'' The ``entry criteria'' requires
the satellite operator intending to modify its existing part 25
application in order to provide SCS to include a certification that
provides the following information: (1) the satellite operator has one
or more leasing notification(s) or application(s), or in the case of
FirstNet, a Form 601, on file with the Commission to access the
spectrum allocated for MSS provision of SCS from a single terrestrial
licensee or multiple licensees that hold, collectively or individually,
all co-channel licenses throughout a GIA; (2) the current part 25 space
station licensee or part 25 grantee of market access for NGSO or GSO
satellite operation seeks modification of authority to provide SCS in
the same geographic areas covered in the relevant GIA; and (3) the
terrestrial devices involved in SCS qualify as ``licensed by rule''
earth stations under the new provisions of part 25. Similarly,
satellite operators may apply for an initial part 25 license with
authority to provide SCS if it shows that it meets requirements (1) and
(3) above, and if in their part 25 application, those operators request
to provide SCS in in the same geographic areas covered in the relevant
GIA.
46. In its adopted rules, the Commission maintains its existing
part
[[Page 34154]]
25 rules for obtaining and modifying a license and applies them to the
SCS framework. Under this framework, meeting the proposed entry
criteria would allow small and other entities to apply to modify its
existing satellite authorization. However, all related applications--
including those seeking modification, lease applications, and earth
station equipment certifications--must first be granted to provide SCS.
Thus, the Report and Order's requirements are in addition to the
existing underlying reporting, recordkeeping, and compliance
requirements. We further note, however, that due to the significant
costs involved in SCS development and deployment, we anticipate that
few satellite operators affected by this rulemaking would qualify under
the definition of ``small entity.''
47. Part 1 Leasing. In the Report and Order, the Commission adopts
a framework authorizing SCS by amending its part 1 leasing rules to
permit terrestrial licensees to lease terrestrial spectrum rights to
satellite operators for the purpose of providing SCS. In order to
properly comply, the adopted rules require applicants for and current
licensees of the authorized SCS bands to provide the following
information using the current FCC Form 608: (1) a certification that
the parties are entering into the leasing arrangement for the purpose
of fulfilling the part 25 entry criteria; (2) a description of which
method, single or multiple terrestrial licensee, the parties are
utilizing to meet the part 25 entry criteria; and (3) if the parties
are utilizing the spectrum leasing arrangement under the multiple
terrestrial licensee method, the parties must: (a) describe the nature
of the leasing arrangement(s); and (b) demonstrate how the entirety of
the GIA is covered by the lease arrangement(s). The Commission believes
that this requirement will improve the level of interference protection
licensees receive in the band; and will create a more predictable and
transparent spectrum environment for any current and future users of
the band(s). This process also utilizes the Commission's current
application approval and notification processing procedures because it
will remove unnecessary delay by utilizing the procedures that are
already in place. Further, in light of these limited changes to the
current application procedures, the Commission does not believe that
small entities will have to hire professionals to comply with the
Report and Order.
48. Part 25 Automatic Termination. In the Report and Order, the
Commission retains the current part 25 rules regarding automatic
termination of station authorizations to satellite licensees seeking to
provide SCS jointly with a terrestrial operator, and adds a rule
whereby the termination of any lease(s) that allow for the use of
specific terrestrial spectrum for SCS is a trigger for automatic
termination of the part 25 license. This requirement utilizes and
applies the Commission's current part 25 automatic termination process.
In light of these limited changes to the current procedures, the
Commission does not believe that small entities will have to hire
professionals to comply with the Report and Order.
49. 911 Call Transmission Requirements. In the Report and Order,
the Commission establishes on an interim basis that terrestrial
providers must transmit all SCS 911 calls and texts to a PSAP using
either an emergency call center or location-based routing. Terrestrial
providers must also transmit location information and the user's phone
number to facilitate dispatch and callback capabilities at the
receiving PSAP. This interim step will balance the need for SCS 911
voice calls and texts to be routed to the appropriate PSAP with the
need for terrestrial providers to have flexibility in their
implementation of SCS. Under this approach, terrestrial providers must
either: (1) use information regarding the location of a device,
including but not limited to device-based location information, and
transmit the phone number of the device used to send the SCS 911 voice
call or SCS 911 text message and available information to an
appropriate PSAP; or (2) use an emergency call center, at which
emergency call center personnel must determine the emergency caller's
phone number and location and then transfer or otherwise direct the SCS
voice call or SCS text message to an appropriate PSAP. In addition, the
Commission requires terrestrial providers that use SCS to file an SCS
911 report with the Commission on an annual basis, by October 15th of
each year, that explains how their SCS deployments have supported 911
call/text routing to the geographically appropriate PSAP with
sufficient location information. Terrestrial providers that utilize SCS
to extend coverage must maintain records of SCS 911 voice calls and 911
text messages received under their SCS arrangements and received at
their emergency centers. The Commission finds that these reporting and
location-based routing requirements represent minimally burdensome
requirements when weighed against the necessity of 911 service for
emergency response and disaster preparedness. Further, while these
recordkeeping and reporting requirements present new obligations for
small entities, we note that these measures will promote the
Commission's objectives regarding transparency and accountability in
routing SCS voice calls and 911 text messages and provide useful data.
Additionally, to advance consumer awareness of the extent to which SCS
is used to provide connectivity to 911, the Commission adopts consumer
disclosure requirements for terrestrial providers to inform their
subscribers of the limitations when using SCS to contact 911. Finally,
there is a one-time requirement that, prior to use of SCS location
information to meet the Commission's 911 rules, terrestrial providers
must certify that neither they nor any third party they rely on to
obtain SCS location information will use that information or associated
data for any non-911 purpose, except with prior express consent or as
otherwise permitted or required by law. The certification also must
state that terrestrial providers and any third party they rely on to
obtain SCS location information will implement measures sufficient to
safeguard the privacy and security of the information.
50. Market Area Boundary Limits. In the Report and Order, the
Commission maintains the existing market area boundary limits in parts
22, 24, and 27 of the Commission's rules. Noting that SCS partners
should be expected to coordinate regarding the technical parameters
necessary to avoid co-channel interference with one another's
operations. Although the introduction of SCS into spectrum licensed for
terrestrial networks should have no impact to other radio systems
operating in the band within the same or nearby geographical areas, the
Commission adopts a rule to limit the signal levels from SCS at and
beyond the terrestrial operator's licensed area to be the same as those
defined for terrestrial operation in each respective band. More
specifically, the Commission maintains the existing market area
boundary limits established in parts 22, 24, and 27 of the Commission's
rules. These limits have also been used and shown to be feasible for
operations similar to SCS. SCS can therefore only be deployed on the
condition that stations using these frequencies will not cause harmful
interference to, or claim protection from harmful interference caused
by, an international station operating in accordance with the
provisions of the
[[Page 34155]]
Constitution, the Convention, and the Radio Regulations of the ITU.
51. The Commission recognizes that managing time varying signal
levels from SCS space stations, which may be moving and utilizing
multibeam transmissions, will require careful and dynamic management of
power level and beams for small and other entities. Satellite operators
must also account for multiple overlapping and changing satellites or
beams covering the same areas, as well as leakage and interference from
side beams. Therefore, the power limit for interference protection at
any given point or area should be applied to aggregation of power
received across all visible beams and satellites at all times as they
move over any given point or area. In addition, operators may need to
cease beam transmissions in zones to allow for signal degradation from
the edge of SCS coverage. Given that the size of such zones depends on
target services, satellite and beamforming configuration, and power
management solutions which may improve over time, the Commission does
not set a limit on the zone size as long as the receive power limits
are met.
52. Out of Band Emission (OOBE) Limits. In the Report and Order the
Commission adopted a uniform OOBE limit of -120 dBW/m2/MHz for SCS
operation across the SCS Bands expressed as a terrestrial power flux-
density (PFD) limit. To ensure those adjacent band devices are
protected from the risk of harmful interference, we find that both OOBE
limits are warranted, and given the nature of SCS, that these limits
should be measured and enforced on the ground. In setting these limits,
we recognize that different factors may affect the potential for
harmful interference due to the inherent difference in propagation
effects when the signal is generated from a multibeam satellite
constellation compared to when it is transmitted from a terrestrial
base station. As a result, we therefore adopt limits that constitute a
reasonable middle ground between existing terrestrial OOBE limits and
satellite-based limits.
53. The existing OOBE limits for base stations vary across
different radio services, and these services are governed by different
parts of the Commission's rules (e.g., parts 22, 24, 27). Although
different OOBE limits apply across individual SCS Bands, we believe
adopting a uniform PFD limit for supplemental satellite coverage across
the various bands is reasonable and provides a simple requirement for
satellite operator compliance. To provide a uniform limit across the
various SCS Bands, the Commission considers some balancing of these
effects for PFD limits that are normalized to both ``per MHz'' and
``per square meter''-i.e., dBW/m2/MHz. We also specify that this PFD
limit will apply at 1.5 meters above ground level, a height frequently
associated with handset usage that has been used by the Commission when
developing interference protection criteria for other wireless
services. We believe that this limit represents an equitable- and
technologically feasible-balance between the positions expressed in the
record and will effectively protect adjacent band operations across the
SCS Bands. Further, given that the Commission is breaking new ground in
permitting satellite operations to not only operate in bands allocated
for terrestrial systems, but permitting them to be fully integrated
into those systems, we believe that it is in the public interest to
require that those satellites protect terrestrial systems commensurate
with the protections they are afforded from terrestrial-only systems.
While the out-of-band PFD limits the Commission adopted may require
more stringent attenuation than the emission limits specified in Sec.
25.202(f) for satellite operation, the Commission believes that these
stricter limits are both necessary and technologically feasible for
small and other satellite operators providing SCS.
54. Equipment Authorization for SCS. The adopted rules in the
Report and Order also require terrestrial device equipment
authorization grantees to modify existing, or obtain new, equipment
authorizations for previously certified terrestrial devices to reflect
those devices' approval to operate under a part 25 MSS allocation and
applicable SCS rules. New applicants should include a request for part
25 on future certification applications for equipment that is capable
of operation in an SCS mode. This requirement does introduce a new
administrative burden for equipment authorization grantees and
applicants, especially as it relates to already certified equipment.
The Commission's existing procedures through the permissive change
process which enable electrical or mechanical changes to certified
equipment when those changes do not affect the characteristics required
to be reported to the Commission do not apply here where the only
change being made to the certification is adding authorization for part
25. Under the Commission's existing rules, ``a change other than a
permissive change'' requires a grantee to file a new application for
certification accompanied by the information specified in part 2 of the
Commission's rules. The Commission believes there is good reason to
provide grantees a way to effectuate the necessary changes to their
equipment authorization grants under the Commission's rules that also
minimizes the administrative burdens associated with a new equipment
certification application by waiving relevant rule provisions to
provide a simplified process for existing grantees to modify their
certifications to reflect part 25 authorization for SCS.
55. In granting a limited waiver of its rules, the Commission aims
to minimize the burden on small and other equipment certification
holders, while ensuring tracking and accountability for devices capable
of SCS, and compliance with its prohibition on the authorization of
covered equipment. Similarly, for new equipment authorizations,
terrestrial devices need only show compliance with the terrestrial
technical rules for the rule parts under which they will operate; no
additional tests are needed for part 25 SCS capability. Thus, seeking
to have the part 25 SCS designation on the equipment certification only
requires the applicant to request such a designation pursuant to the
SCS rules.
56. International Coordination. In the Report and Order, the
adopted rules require that SCS operations that may occur in bands not
allocated for such services in the International Table must be
consistent with ITU Radio Regulation No. 4.4 and finds that it would
serve the public interest to include express conditions in the SCS
licenses to ensure that the Commission's obligations are met as the ITU
notifying administration for U.S. licensed space station operations. In
these cases, the Commission will require additional assurances from SCS
licensees that while operating outside of the United States, pursuant
to an authorization from another country, the satellite operations will
not cause harmful interference into a nearby country. Prior to
conducting any communications with earth stations outside the United
States, a satellite operator licensed to provide SCS, or applicant for
a license to provide SCS, must certify to Space Bureau and the Office
of International Affairs (OIA) that it has obtained all necessary
authorizations from the relevant country prior to initiation of
communications with earth stations in that country. The certification
must include steps that were taken to address harmful interference
concerns and that these SCS operations will not result in harmful
interference to operations that are in conformity with the ITU Radio
Regulations in neighboring or nearby
[[Page 34156]]
countries. The certification must also be accompanied by a
demonstration specifying the measures that the U.S. licensee or
applicant will take to eliminate any harmful interference immediately,
in the event that it is notified of harmful interference resulting from
such SCS operations. These requirements are consistent with existing
Commission rules, thereby limiting the compliance burden for small and
other entities.
F. Steps Taken To Minimize the Significant Economic Impact on Small
Entities and Significant Alternatives Considered
57. The RFA requires an agency to provide, ``a description of the
steps the agency has taken to minimize the significant economic impact
on small entities . . . including a statement of the factual, policy,
and legal reasons for selecting the alternative adopted in the final
rule and why each one of the other significant alternatives to the rule
considered by the agency which affect the impact on small entities was
rejected.
58. As discussed above, the Report and Order adopts an SCS
framework that allows, through a collaboration between a terrestrial
mobile service provider and satellite operator, transmissions directly
from satellites to terrestrial devices on spectrum that was previously
allocated and licensed exclusively on a terrestrial basis. In the
discussion of the issues, the initial NPRM sought comment on, the
Commission raised alternatives and sought input such as a cost and
benefit analyses from small and other entities. By requesting such
information, the Commission gave small entities the opportunity to
broaden the scope of the Commission's understanding of impacts which
may not be readily apparent, and offer alternatives not already
considered that could minimize the economic impact on small entities.
59. Waiver-Based Approach. The Commission declines to adopt a
waiver-based approach to enable SCS, opting instead to enable SCS on a
variety of bands in all parts of the United States through generally-
applicable rules. Some commenters argued for a waiver-based approach
instead, but the Commission believes a generally-applicable rules
approach allows the Commission to better serve the public by allowing
it to more carefully consider the entire landscape of an issue as well
as make more comprehensive policy decisions. However, because there are
particular SCS implementations that do not perfectly align with this
framework, in order to not discourage or delay other innovative
solutions for SCS, the Commission will continue to consider on a case-
by-case basis filings for waiver or special temporary authority (STA)
made by interested parties for SCS. Permitting case-by-case filings for
waiver or STA will allow more flexibility for smaller entities who do
not have the resources that larger entities have to participate in
providing SCS.
60. Geographically Independent Area (GIA). In the initial NPRM, the
Commission proposed to limit the provision of SCS ``to instances where
a single terrestrial licensee holds all co-channel licenses in the
relevant band throughout one of the six GIAs.'' In the Report and
Order, the Commission adopted the proposal to limit SCS authorizations
to the following GIAs: (1) CONUS; (2) Alaska; (3) Hawaii; (4) American
Samoa; (5) Puerto Rico/U.S. Virgin Islands; and (6) Guam/Northern
Mariana Islands. The Commission adopted its original proposal to limit
SCS to GIAs at this time, and acknowledges that this decision does not
foreclose the ability for parties with proposals for providing SCS that
do not satisfy the framework from applying to the Commission and
demonstrating that they will not cause harmful interference. Some
commenters, some of which include small entities, suggested this
proposal would limit SCS to large carriers with nationwide authority
over a block of spectrum, or otherwise exclude smaller or regional
terrestrial operators from participation in the framework. Because of
these concerns, the Commission has taken the step of expanding its
entry criteria so that multiple terrestrial service providers may work
with a satellite operator to provide SCS, as long as together those
service providers hold all the licenses in the relevant channel
throughout a GIA. These more expansive entry criteria help provide an
opportunity for broader deployment of SCS both spectrally and
geographically and allows additional licensees to participate, while
still minimizing the risk of harmful interference.
61. Part 25 License Entry Criteria. In the Report and Order, the
Commission adopted rules to authorize satellite-to-terrestrial (uplink
and downlink) operations in certain bands whereby a NGSO or GSO
satellite operator may apply for a new or modify an existing part 25
authorization where that entity meets certain prerequisites, or ``entry
criteria.'' This approach will significantly expand and enhance
secondary markets in a manner that aligns with the Commission's public
interest objectives in order to permit spectrum to flow more freely
among users and uses in response to economic demand. The Commission
believes that by allowing spectrum to be utilized in this way, it will
encourage small entities to become more involved in this process and
collaborate with larger providers.
62. Furthermore, in the Report and Order, the Commission declined
to require part 25 blanket earth station licensing because the comments
in the record reflected that blanket licensing would be unnecessarily
burdensome to small and other entities. In the initial NPRM, the
Commission proposed that a terrestrial licensee seeking to collaborate
with a satellite operator to offer SCS must apply for and obtain a
blanket earth station license for all of its subscribers' terrestrial
devices that will be transmitting to space stations for SCS operations.
The Commission sought comment on this approach as well as any other
approaches that would be consistent with statutory and international
obligations. However, commenters raised significant concerns regarding
blanket licensing, and, thus, the Commission instead adopts a license
by rule approach for terrestrial devices as earth stations
communicating with a satellite network for the purposes of SCS. By not
requiring providers to apply for and obtain a blanket earth station
license, the Commission removes a barrier that was potentially
unnecessarily burdensome, in particular for small entities with limited
resources.
63. Part 1 Leasing. The Commission adopts a framework authorizing
SCS by amending its part 1 leasing rules to permit terrestrial
licensees to lease terrestrial spectrum rights to satellite operators
for the purpose of providing SCS. These requirements are consistent
with existing Commission part 1 leasing rules, and the Commission will
require applicants for and current licensees of the authorized SCS
bands to provide the necessary information using current FCC Form 608.
This process will benefit small entities by saving time and resources,
as it utilizes the Commission's current application approval and
notification processing procedures, and it will remove unnecessary
delay by utilizing the procedures that are already in place.
Additionally, the Commission considered, but declined, to adopt an
approach where a lease was not initially required. Some commenters
advocated for the adoption of a ``two-step'' licensing model in
response to the NPRM, which would have involved a deployment grant that
would not have required a lease initially. However, the Commission
believes that a two-step part 25 licensing process would require
[[Page 34157]]
a duplicative and inefficient use of staff resources that could create
a significant economic burden to small entities.
64. Part 25 Automatic Termination. The Commission retains the
current part 25 rules regarding automatic termination of station
authorizations to satellite licensees seeking to provide SCS jointly
with a terrestrial operator and adds a rule whereby the termination of
any lease(s) that allow for the use of specific terrestrial spectrum
for SCS is a trigger for automatic termination of the part 25 license.
The new rule that triggers the current part 25 automatic termination
requirement is consistent with the current automatic termination rules.
By retaining the current part 25 rules regarding automatic termination,
small and other entities will not have to become acquainted with a new
set of rules, thus reducing their compliance burden.
65. 911 Call Transmission Requirements. The Commission establishes
on an interim basis that terrestrial providers must transmit all SCS
911 calls and texts to a PSAP using either an emergency call center or
location-based routing. Terrestrial providers must also transmit
location information and the user's phone number to facilitate dispatch
and callback capabilities at the receiving PSAP. This interim step will
balance the need for SCS 911 voice calls and texts to be routed to the
appropriate PSAP with the need for entities to have flexibility in
their implementation of SCS. The Commission implements this interim
step because some terrestrial 911 requirements may not be feasible at
this time and, thus, balanced feasibility with the vital importance of
911 services. In connection with this interim requirement, terrestrial
providers that use SCS to extend coverage must maintain records of SCS
911 voice calls and text messages received on their network and
emergency call centers. In addition, the adopted rules require
terrestrial providers to file an SCS 911 report with the Commission on
an annual basis, which will provide critical information regarding SCS
911 connectivity to the Commission while accomplishing it in a manner
that does not create a severe burden for entities required to file. The
Commission concluded that extending and adapting the existing MSS 911
reporting and location-based routing requirements are minimally
burdensome. While these requirements do present new obligations for
small entities, these measures will promote transparency and
accountability in routing SCS voice calls and provide useful data. In
addition, the concurrently adopted Further Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking, published elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register,
will also provide an ample record in which the Commission may consider
any additional concerns regarding SCS 911-related issues.
66. The Report and Order also establishes disclosure requirements
for terrestrial providers to inform their subscribers of the
limitations resulting from the use of SCS to contact 911. This
disclosure requirement is consistent with the disclosure requirement
the Commission adopted for interconnected Voice Over Internet Protocol
(VoIP) service providers, demonstrating that it will be familiar to
entities and not cause a significant economic impact. While this is a
new requirement for providers, it will provide vital information to
consumers about the limitations of SCS when contacting 911. The
Commission also adopts a rule requiring terrestrial providers to file
with the Commission a one-time certification regarding safeguarding the
privacy and security of SCS location information. These obligations are
consistent with the Commission's existing rules that apply to z-axis
and dispatchable location data, as well as location information used
for location-based routing; therefore, it will be familiar to
terrestrial providers and not create an additional costly burden on
small entities.
67. Market Area Boundary Limits. The Commission maintains the
existing market area boundary limits in parts 22, 24, and 27 of the
Commission's rules, noting that SCS partners should be expected to
coordinate regarding the technical parameters necessary to avoid co-
channel interference with one another's operations. Although the
existing market area boundary limits remain, the Commission states that
certain limits may be necessary and applicable to the boundaries of the
GIA, including at international borders or boundaries extending into
water. Therefore, the Commission adopts a rule to limit the signal
levels from SCS at and beyond the terrestrial operator's licensed area
to be the same as those defined for terrestrial operation in each
respective band.
68. Out of Band Emission (OOBE) Limits. The Commission adopts a
uniform OOBE limit for SCS operation across the SCS Bands expressed as
a terrestrial PFD limit. The Commission declined to apply the existing
OOBE limits for base stations; instead, after the perspective of
commenters who expressed mixed views on which OOBE limits to apply, the
Commission adopts a uniform PFD limit for SCS, which provides an
equitable- and technologically feasible-compromise between the
positions expressed in the record and will also effectively protect
adjacent band operations across the SCS Bands. Further, by adopting a
uniform OOBE limit for SCS operations, entities will not have to become
knowledgeable about several different limitations, which will save much
needed time and resources for small entities. We note that even though
the out-of-band PFD limits adopted may require more stringent
attenuation than the emission limits specified in Sec. 25.202(f) for
satellite operation, the Commission believes these stricter limits are
both necessary and technologically feasible for satellite operators
providing SCS.
69. Equipment Authorization for SCS. In the Report and Order, the
Commission requires terrestrial device equipment authorization grantees
to modify existing, or obtain new, equipment authorizations for
previously certified terrestrial devices to reflect those devices'
approval to operate under a part 25 MSS allocation and applicable SCS
rules. This requirement does introduce a new administrative burden for
equipment authorization grantees and applicants, especially as it
relates to already certified equipment. The Commission's existing
procedures through the permissive change process which enable
electrical or mechanical changes to certified equipment when those
changes do not affect the characteristics required to be reported to
the Commission do not apply here where the only change being made to
the certification is adding authorization for part 25. Under the
Commission's existing rules, ``a change other than a permissive
change'' requires a grantee to file a new application for certification
accompanied by the information specified in part 2 of the Commission's
rules. While the Commission believes there is good reason to provide
grantees a way to effectuate the necessary changes to their equipment
authorization grants under the Commission's rules that also minimizes
the administrative burdens associated with a new equipment
certification application. The Commission therefore waives relevant
provisions to provide a simplified process for existing grantees to
modify their certifications to reflect part 25 authorization for SCS.
In providing this limited waiver to existing rules, the Commission aims
to minimize the burden on equipment certification holders, while
ensuring tracking and accountability for devices capable of SCS, and
compliance with our prohibition on the authorization of covered
equipment. Similarly, for new equipment authorizations, terrestrial
[[Page 34158]]
devices need only show compliance with the terrestrial technical rules
for the rule parts under which they will operate; no additional tests
are needed for part 25 SCS capability.
70. International Coordination. In the Report and Order, the
Commission requires that SCS operations in bands not allocated for such
services in the International Table must be consistent with ITU Radio
Regulation No. 4.4 and finds it would serve the public interest to
include express conditions in the SCS licenses to ensure that the
Commission's obligations are met as the ITU notifying administration
for U.S. licensed space station operations. In these cases, the
Commission will require additional assurances from SCS licensees that
while operating outside the United States, pursuant to an authorization
from another country, the satellite operations will not cause harmful
interference. Prior to conducting any communications with earth
stations outside the United States, a satellite operator licensed to
provide SCS, or applicant for a license to provide SCS, must certify to
the Space Bureau and OIA that it has obtained all necessary
authorizations from the relevant country prior to initiation of
communications with earth stations in that country.
71. ECIP Program. The initial NPRM sought comment on eligibility
for the Enhanced Competition Incentive Program (ECIP), which the
Commission established in July 2022 to facilitate new opportunities for
small carriers and Tribal nations to increase access to spectrum, while
incorporating provisions to ensure against program waste, fraud and
abuse. Given that the framework is primarily intended to facilitate
provision of SCS to existing consumer handsets, and ECIP was adopted
with requirements tailored specifically towards provision of service
through terrestrial base stations, the Commission considered whether to
make SCS participants, necessarily engaged in leasing arrangements,
eligible for ECIP benefits which could reduce the economic impacts for
small carriers and Tribal nations. In the Report and Order, the
Commission declines to extend ECIP benefits to stakeholders that
presently intend to enter into leasing arrangements for the provision
of SCS. The Commission highlights that the provisions of SCS do not
align with the goals or entry criteria of the ECIP program and believes
it is in the public interest to allow the SCS marketplace and the ECIP
program to further develop before determining whether it is appropriate
for these two new Commission efforts to support one another.
G. Report to Congress
72. The Commission will send a copy of the Report and Order,
including the FRFA, in a report to Congress pursuant to the
Congressional Review Act. In addition, the Commission will send a copy
of the Report and Order, including the FRFA, to the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy of the SBA. A copy of the Report and Order and FRFA (or
summaries thereof) will also be published in the Federal Register.
Ordering Clauses
73. Accordingly, it is ordered that, pursuant to the authority
found in sections 1, 4(i), 157, 301, 303, 307, 308, 309, and 310 of the
Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 154(i), 157,
301, 303, 307, 308, 309, and 310, that the Report and Order and Further
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking is hereby adopted.
74. It is further ordered that the Report and Order shall be
effective 30 days after publication in the Federal Register, with the
exception of revisions to Sec. Sec. 1.9047(d)(2), 9.10(t)(3) through
(5), and 25.125(b)(1) and (2) and (c) of the Commission's rules, 47 CFR
1.9047(d)(2), 9.10(t)(3) through (5), and 25.125(b)(1) and (2) and (c),
which may contain new or modified information collection requirements
and will not be effective until after the Office of Management and
Budget completes any review the Wireless Telecommunications Bureau and
the Space Bureau determine is required under the Paperwork Reduction
Act and provide an effective date by subsequent Public Notice.
75. It is further ordered that, pursuant to section 4(i) of the
Communications Act, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 154(i), and Sec. 1.3 of the
Commission's rules, 47 CFR 1.3, the following rules are waived,
effective immediately upon adoption of the Report and Order and
extending until the date that is six months following the effective
date announced in the Public Notice issued pursuant to paragraph 268 in
the Report and Order, to the limited extent and as described herein:
Sec. Sec. 2.1043(c) and 2.911(c) and (e) of the Commission's rules, 47
CFR 2.1043(c) and 2.911(c) and (e). This temporary waiver is granted
only for the purpose of adding a part 25 designation to equipment
certifications granted on or before the 60th day after a summary of the
Report and Order is published in the Federal Register.
76. It is further ordered that the Commission's Office of the
Secretary, SHALL SEND a copy of the Report and Order and Further Notice
of Proposed Rulemaking, including the Final Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis and the Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, to the Chief
Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration.
77. It is further ordered that the Commission shall send a copy of
the Report and Order in a report to be sent to Congress and the
Government Accountability Office pursuant to the Congressional Review
Act, see 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
List of Subjects
47 CFR Part 1
Practice and procedure, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements,
Telecommunications, Wireless radio services.
47 CFR Part 2
Communications, Satellites, Telecommunications.
47 CFR Part 9
Communications common carriers, Communications equipment, Radio.
47 CFR Part 25
Administrative practice and procedure, Satellites.
Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene Dortch,
Secretary.
Final Rules
For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Federal
Communications Commission amends 47 CFR parts 1, 2, 9, and 25 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. chs. 2, 5, 9, 13; 28 U.S.C. 2461 note; 47
U.S.C. 1754, unless otherwise noted.
0
2. Effective May 30, 2024, add Sec. 1.9047 to read as follows:
Sec. 1.9047 Special provisions relating to spectrum leasing
arrangements involving terrestrial spectrum rights for supplemental
coverage from space.
(a) Supplemental coverage from space. For purposes of this section,
supplemental coverage from space (SCS) has the same meaning as in Sec.
25.103 of this chapter.
(b) Geographically independent area (GIA). For purposes of this
section, geographically independent area (GIA) has the same meaning as
in Sec. 25.103 of this chapter.
(c) Part 25 SCS Entry Criteria. For purposes of this section, part
25 SCS Entry Criteria refers to the requirements
[[Page 34159]]
outlined in Sec. 25.125(a) and (b) of this chapter.
(d) Scope. Under this section, a licensee may enter into a spectrum
manager (see Sec. 1.9020) or de facto transfer (see Sec. Sec. 1.9030
and 1.9035) leasing or subleasing arrangement with a spectrum lessee in
only the bands identified in Sec. 2.106(d)(33)(i) of this chapter for
the purpose of meeting the part 25 SCS Entry Criteria.
(1) The licensee seeking to engage in spectrum leasing under this
section may do so under the following parameters:
(i) A single licensee that holds all co-channel licenses on the
relevant band in a GIA may enter into a leasing arrangement with one or
more satellite operators.
(ii) If there are multiple co-channel licensees that collectively
hold all co-channel licenses in a particular band throughout one of six
GIAs, the licensees may enter into spectrum leasing arrangements only
under one of the following conditions:
(A) One licensee holding a license in the GIA must enter into an
individual spectrum leasing arrangement with each of the other co-
channel licensees in that GIA. The licensee may then enter into a
leasing arrangement with one satellite operator; or
(B) One satellite operator may enter into individual leasing
arrangements with each of the relevant co-channel licensees that
together hold all co-channel licenses on the relevant band in the GIA.
(2) [Reserved]
(e) FirstNet. In order for the First Responder Network Authority
(FirstNet), as defined in 47 U.S.C. 1424, to fulfill the part 25 SCS
Entry Criteria, FirstNet must file an FCC Form 601 in the Universal
Licensing System (ULS) that:
(1) Describes the manner in which FirstNet has conveyed to its
satellite partner an authorization to utilize the 758-769/788-799 MHz
band or portions of the band;
(2) Identifies and describes the geographic area(s) and nature of
the proposed SCS operations; and
(3) Demonstrates how, under the agreement, the rights and
responsibilities of the satellite operator partner are substantively
the same as those of a lessee under this part.
(f) Subleasing. Notwithstanding the provisions of Sec. Sec.
1.9020(l) and 1.9030(k), an SCS spectrum lessee may sublease spectrum
usage rights subject to the following condition.
(1) Satellite operators may not enter into a spectrum subleasing
arrangement where there are multiple terrestrial licensees jointly
leasing their co-channel rights in a given GIA pursuant to paragraph
(d)(1)(ii) of this section.
(2) [Reserved]
(g) Construction/performance requirements. Notwithstanding the
provisions of Sec. Sec. 1.9020(d)(5)(i) and 1.9030(d)(5)(i), a
licensee may not attribute to itself the build-out or performance
activities of its SCS spectrum lessee(s) for purposes of complying with
any applicable performance or build-out requirement.
0
3. Delayed indefinitely, further amend Sec. 1.9047 by adding paragraph
(d)(2) to read as follows:
Sec. 1.9047 Special provisions relating to spectrum leasing
arrangements involving terrestrial spectrum rights for supplemental
coverage from space.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(2) The spectrum lessee or sublessee seeking to engage in spectrum
leasing under this section must provide within the FCC Form 608:
(i) A certification that the parties are entering into the leasing
arrangement for the purpose of fulfilling the part 25 Entry Criteria;
(ii) A description of which method, single or multiple terrestrial
licensee, the parties are utilizing to meet the part 25 Entry Criteria;
and
(iii) If the parties are utilizing the spectrum leasing arrangement
outlined in paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this section, the parties must:
(A) Describe the nature of the leasing arrangement(s); and
(B) Demonstrate how the entirety of the GIA is covered by the lease
arrangement(s).
* * * * *
PART 2--FREQUENCY ALLOCATIONS AND RADIO TREATY MATTERS; GENERAL
RULES AND REGULATIONS
0
4. The authority citation for part 2 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 302a, 303, and 336, unless otherwise
noted.
0
5. Effective May 30, 2024, amend Sec. 2.106 by:
0
a. Revising pages 30, 36, 37, and 38 in paragraph (a); and
0
b. Adding paragraph (d)(33)(i) and reserved paragraph (d)(33)(ii).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 2.106 Table of Frequency Allocations.
(a) * * *
BILLING CODE 6712-01-P
[[Page 34160]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR30AP24.059
[[Page 34161]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR30AP24.060
[[Page 34162]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR30AP24.061
[[Page 34163]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR30AP24.062
[[Page 34164]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR30AP24.063
BILLING CODE 6712-01-C
[[Page 34165]]
(d) * * *
(33) * * *
(i) NG33A The secondary MSS operations in the bands 614-652 MHz and
663-769 MHz, 775-799 MHz, and 805-806 MHz, 824-849 MHz and 869-894 MHz,
and 1850-1920 MHz and 1930-2000 MHz are limited to supplemental
coverage from space (SCS) and are subject to the Commission's SCS rules
in part 25 of this chapter.
(ii) [Reserved]
* * * * *
PART 9--911 REQUIREMENTS
0
6. The authority citation for part 9 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 151-154, 152(a), 155(c), 157, 160, 201,
202, 208, 210, 214, 218, 219, 222, 225, 251(e), 255, 301, 302, 303,
307, 308, 309, 310, 316, 319, 332, 403, 405, 605, 610, 615, 615
note, 615a, 615b, 615c, 615a-1, 616, 620, 621, 623, 623 note, 721,
and 1471, and Section 902 of Title IX, Division FF, Pub. L. 116-260,
134 Stat. 1182, unless otherwise noted.
0
7. Effective May 30, 2024, amend Sec. 9.10 by revising paragraph (a)
introductory text and adding paragraph (t) to read as follows:
Sec. 9.10 911 Service.
(a) Scope of section. Except as described in paragraph (r) of this
section, the following requirements of paragraphs (a) through (t) of
this section are only applicable to CMRS providers, excluding mobile
satellite service (MSS) operators, to the extent that they:
* * * * *
(t) Interim 911 requirements for supplemental coverage from space--
(1) Supplemental coverage from space. For purposes of this paragraph
(t), supplemental coverage from space (SCS) has the same meaning as in
part 25, subpart A, of this chapter; SCS 911 calls are 911 calls (as
defined in Sec. 9.3) that are carried over satellite facilities
pursuant to a CMRS provider's SCS arrangement; and an SCS 911 text
message is a 911 text message (as defined in paragraph (q)(9) of this
section) that is carried over satellite facilities pursuant to a CMRS
provider's SCS arrangement.
(2) Call Transmission requirements. For purposes of delivering SCS
911 voice calls and SCS 911 text messages, CMRS providers must either:
(i) Use information regarding the location of a device, including
but not limited to device-based location information, to route SCS 911
voice calls and SCS 911 text messages to an appropriate PSAP and
transmit the phone number of the device used to send the SCS 911 voice
call or SCS 911 text message and available location information to an
appropriate PSAP; or
(ii) Use an emergency call center, at which emergency call center
personnel must determine the emergency caller's phone number and
location and then transfer or otherwise direct the 911 caller to an
appropriate PSAP.
0
8. Delayed indefinitely, further amend Sec. 9.10 by adding paragraphs
(t)(3) through (5) to read as follows:
Sec. 9.10 911 Service.
* * * * *
(t) * * *
(3) Reporting. Each CMRS provider that utilizes SCS arrangements to
expand its coverage areas for providing service to its end-user
subscribers must maintain records of all SCS 911 voice calls and SCS
911 text messages received on its network and received at its emergency
call center. By October 15 of each year, each CMRS provider that
utilizes SCS arrangements to expand its coverage areas for providing
service to its end-user subscribers must submit a report to the
Commission regarding SCS 911 voice calls and 911 text messages, and its
emergency call center data, current as of September 30 of that year.
CMRS providers that utilize SCS arrangements to expand their coverage
areas for providing service to their end-user subscribers must submit
this certification in the Commission's Electronic Comment Filing
System. These reports must include, at a minimum, the following:
(i) The name and address of the CMRS provider, the address of that
CMRS provider's emergency call center, and the contact information of
the emergency call center;
(ii) The aggregate number of SCS 911 voice calls and SCS 911 text
messages received by the network of the CMRS provider that provides SCS
service to its end-user subscribers during each month during the
relevant reporting period;
(iii) The aggregate number of SCS 911 voice calls and SCS 911 text
messages received by the emergency call center each month during the
relevant reporting period;
(iv) The aggregate number of SCS 911 voice calls and SCS 911 text
messages received by the emergency call center each month during the
relevant reporting period that required forwarding to a PSAP and how
many did not require forwarding to a PSAP;
(v) The aggregate number of SCS 911 voice calls that were routed
using location information that met the timeliness and accuracy
thresholds defined in paragraphs (s)(3)(i)(A) and (B) of this section;
(vi) The aggregate number of SCS 911 voice calls and SCS 911 text
messages that were routed using location information that did not meet
the timeliness and accuracy thresholds defined in paragraphs
(s)(3)(i)(A) and (B) of this section; and
(vii) An explanation of how the SCS deployment, including network
architecture, systems, and procedures, will support routing SCS 911
voice calls and SCS 911 text messages to the geographically appropriate
PSAP with sufficient location information in compliance with paragraph
(t)(2) of this section.
(4) Certification. CMRS providers that utilize SCS arrangements to
expand their coverage areas for providing service to their end-user
subscribers must certify on a one-time basis that neither they nor any
third party they rely on to obtain location information or associated
data used for compliance with paragraph (t)(2)(i) or (ii) of this
section will use such location information or associated data for any
non-911 purpose, except with prior express consent or as otherwise
permitted or required by law. The certification must state that the
CMRS provider and any third parties it relies on to obtain location
information or associated data used for compliance with paragraph
(t)(2)(i) or (ii) have implemented measures sufficient to safeguard the
privacy and security of such location information or associated data.
CMRS providers that utilize SCS arrangements to expand their coverage
areas for providing service to their end-user subscribers must submit
this one-time certification in the Commission's Electronic Comment
Filing System on the due date of the first report made under paragraph
(t)(3) of this section.
(5) Subscriber notification. Each CMRS provider that utilizes SCS
arrangements to expand its coverage areas for providing service to its
end-user subscribers shall specifically advise every subscriber, both
new and existing, in writing prominently and in plain language, of the
circumstances under which 911 service for all SCS 911 calls, or SCS 911
text messages may not be available via SCS or may be in some way
limited by comparison to traditional enhanced 911 service.
PART 25--SATELLITE COMMUNICATIONS
0
9. The authority citation for part 25 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 301, 302, 303, 307, 309, 310, 319,
332, 605, and 721, unless otherwise noted.
[[Page 34166]]
0
10. Effective May 30, 2024, amend Sec. 25.103 by adding definitions
for ``Geographically independent area (GIA)'', ``SCS earth stations'',
and ``Supplemental coverage from space (SCS)'' in alphabetical order to
read as follows:
Sec. 25.103 Definitions.
* * * * *
Geographically independent area (GIA). Any of the following six
areas:
(1) CONUS;
(2) Alaska;
(3) Hawaii;
(4) American Samoa;
(5) Puerto Rico/U.S. Virgin Islands; and
(6) Guam/Northern Mariana Islands.
* * * * *
SCS earth stations. Any earth station used for the provision of
supplemental coverage from space consistent with Sec. 25.115(q).
* * * * *
Supplemental coverage from space (SCS). The provision of coverage
to terrestrial wireless subscribers through an arrangement or agreement
(see Sec. 1.9047 of this chapter) between one or more NGSO or GSO
operator(s) and one or more terrestrial wireless licensee(s), involving
transmissions between space stations and SCS earth stations. NGSO and
GSO operators and terrestrial wireless service licensees seeking to
provide SCS must be authorized in compliance with Sec. 25.125.
* * * * *
0
11. Effective May 30, 2024, amend Sec. 25.109 by adding paragraph (f)
to read as follows:
Sec. 25.109 Cross-reference.
* * * * *
(f) Space and SCS earth stations providing SCS are subject to
technical rules in parts 2, 22, 24, and 27 of this chapter where
applicable.
0
12. Effective May 30, 2024, amend Sec. 25.114 by adding paragraph
(a)(4) to read as follows:
Sec. 25.114 Applications for space station authorizations.
(a) * * *
(4) For an application filed pursuant to the SCS procedure in Sec.
25.125, the filing must be submitted on FCC Form 312, Main Form and
Schedule S, with attached exhibits as required by paragraph (d) of this
section, and must constitute a comprehensive proposal.
* * * * *
0
13. Effective May 30, 2024, amend Sec. 25.115 by adding paragraph (q)
to read as follows:
Sec. 25.115 Applications for earth station authorizations.
* * * * *
(q) SCS earth stations. An applicant seeking to use SCS earth
stations to provide SCS must comply with Sec. 25.125.
(1) A satellite operator licensed under Sec. 25.125 to provide SCS
is permitted to communicate with all terrestrial wireless licensee(s)-
associated SCS earth stations that have been approved for such use
under part 2 of this chapter.
(i) Such earth stations must show compliance with this part and at
least one of either part 22, 24, or 27 of this chapter to provide SCS
within the technical parameters and provisions associated with the
device certification.
(ii) The device certification must show compliance with the
licensed parameters of the terrestrial wireless license(s) and at least
one of either part 22, 24, or 27 of this chapter, as applicable.
(2) An earth station may be used for the provision of SCS when:
(i) The satellite operator licensed under Sec. 25.125 is a party
to a valid and approved spectrum leasing arrangement or agreement
pursuant to Sec. 1.9047 of this chapter with at least one terrestrial
wireless licensee(s) licensed under one of either part 22, 24, or 27 of
this chapter; and
(ii) That terrestrial wireless licensee(s) has met and operates
within all conditions associated with the relevant terrestrial wireless
license(s).
(3) A satellite operator authorized to provide SCS under Sec.
25.125 is authorized under paragraph (q)(1) of this section to
communicate with SCS earth stations for any period during which each of
the following apply:
(i) The service is provided during the valid duration of any
spectrum leasing arrangement or agreement pursuant to Sec. 1.9047 of
this chapter between the terrestrial wireless licensee(s) and satellite
operator;
(ii) The devices to which service is provided are certified under
part 2 of this chapter; and
(iii) The terrestrial wireless licensee(s) is a valid licensee(s)
under part 22, 24, or 27 of this chapter.
(4) A satellite operator with SCS authorization via a market access
grant can avail itself of the provisions of this paragraph (q) but, in
addition to the parameters established in paragraphs (q)(1) and (2) of
this section, must also comply with any additional parameters included
in the satellite operator's space station market access grant.
(5) A satellite operator operating in conformance with the
parameters established in this part does not need a separate earth
station authorization for the provision of SCS under this part.
0
14. Effective May 30, 2024, amend Sec. 25.117 by adding paragraph (j)
to read as follows:
Sec. 25.117 Modification of station license.
* * * * *
(j) An application for modification of a space station
authorization to provide SCS must comply with Sec. 25.125.
0
15. Effective May 30, 2024, add Sec. 25.125 to read as follows:
Sec. 25.125 Applications for supplemental coverage from space (SCS).
(a) SCS entry criteria. This section applies only to applicants
seeking to provide SCS. An applicant for SCS space station
authorization must hold either an existing NGSO or GSO license or grant
of U.S. market access under this part, or must be seeking a NGSO or GSO
license or grant of U.S. market access under this part, and must have a
lease arrangement(s) or agreement pursuant to Sec. 1.9047 of this
chapter with one or more terrestrial wireless licensee(s) that hold,
collectively or individually, all co-channel licenses throughout a GIA
in a band identified in Sec. 2.106(d)(33)(i) of this chapter.
Applicants for SCS space stations must comply with the requirements set
forth in paragraph (b) of this section.
(b) SCS space station application requirements. An applicant
seeking a space station authorization to provide SCS must either submit
an application requesting modification of a current NGSO or GSO license
or grant of U.S. market access under this part, or an application
seeking a new NGSO or GSO license or grant of U.S. market access under
this part.
(1)-(2) [Reserved]
(3) Applications to modify an authorization under this part to
provide SCS and applications seeking to provide SCS in the bands
identified in Sec. 2.106(d)(33)(i) of this chapter will not be subject
to the processing round procedures or first-come, first-served
procedures in Sec. Sec. 25.137, 25.157, and 25.158.
(c) [Reserved]
(d) Effective date and continued operation of SCS authorization.
SCS authorization will be deemed effective in the Commission's records
and for purposes of the application of the rules set forth in this
section after each of the following requirements is satisfied:
(1) Grant of:
(i) A modification application under this part or request for
modification of a grant of market access; or
(ii) An application to launch and operate or market access;
[[Page 34167]]
(2) Approval of a leasing arrangement(s) or agreement(s) under part
1 of this chapter (see Sec. 1.9047 of this chapter); and
(3) Grant of a valid SCS earth station equipment certification
under part 2 of this chapter.
(e) SCS earth station equipment certification requirements.
Applicants for certification for SCS earth stations for use with a
satellite system must meet all requirements for equipment certification
and equipment test data necessary to demonstrate compliance with
pertinent standards under part 22, 24, or 27 of this chapter as
applicable.
0
16. Delayed indefinitely, further amend Sec. 25.125 by adding
paragraphs (b)(1) and (2) and (c) to read as follows:
Sec. 25.125 Applications for supplemental coverage from space (SCS).
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) The application must include a certification that:
(i) A lease notification(s) or application(s), pursuant to Sec.
1.9047 of this chapter, where a single terrestrial wireless licensee
holds or multiple co-channel licensees collectively hold all co-channel
licenses within the relevant GIA in the bands identified in Sec.
2.106(d)(33)(i) of this chapter, or as it pertains to FirstNet, an
agreement, is on file with the Commission;
(ii) The current space station licensee under this part or grantee
of market access for NGSO or GSO satellite operation under this part
seeks modification of authority to provide SCS in the same geographic
areas covered in the relevant GIA, or the applicant for a space station
license under this part or grant of market access for NGSO or GSO
satellite operation under this part seeks to provide SCS in the same
geographic areas covered in the relevant GIA; and
(iii) SCS earth stations will qualify as ``licensed by rule'' earth
stations under Sec. 25.115(q).
(2) The application must include a comprehensive proposal for the
prospective SCS system on FCC Form 312, Main Form and Schedule S, as
described in Sec. 25.114, together with the certification described in
paragraph (b)(1) of this section and include a list of the file and
identification numbers associated with the relevant leasing
notification(s) under part 1 of this chapter, application(s), and FCC
Form 601(s), with a brief description of the coverage areas that will
be served, domestically and internationally.
* * * * *
(c) Equipment authorization for SCS earth stations. Each SCS earth
station used to provide SCS under this section must meet the equipment
authorization requirements under paragraph (e) of this section and all
equipment authorization requirements for all intended uses of the
device pursuant to the procedures specified in part 2 of this chapter
and the requirements of at least one of part 22, 24, or 27 of this
chapter.
* * * * *
0
17. Effective May 30, 2024, amend Sec. 25.137 by revising paragraphs
(b) and (f) to read as follows:
Sec. 25.137 Requests for U.S. market access through non-U.S.-licensed
space stations.
* * * * *
(b) Any request pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section must be
filed electronically through the International Communications Filing
System and must include an exhibit providing legal and technical
information for the non-U.S.-licensed space station of the kind that
Sec. 25.114, Sec. 25.122, Sec. 25.123, or Sec. 25.125 would require
in a license application for that space station, including but not
limited to information required to complete Schedule S. An applicant
may satisfy the requirement in this paragraph (b) by cross-referencing
a pending application containing the requisite information or by citing
a prior grant of authority to communicate via the space station in
question in the same frequency bands to provide the same type of
service.
* * * * *
(f) A non-U.S.-licensed space station operator that has been
granted access to the United States market pursuant to a declaratory
ruling may modify its U.S. operations under the procedures set forth in
Sec. Sec. 25.117(d), (h), and (j) and 25.118(e).
* * * * *
0
18. Effective May 30, 2024, amend Sec. 25.161 by adding paragraph (e)
to read as follows:
Sec. 25.161 Automatic termination of station authorization.
* * * * *
(e) The failure to provide any SCS on all or some of the SCS
authorized frequencies for more than 90 days. In this instance, the
authorization will be terminated in whole or in part with respect to
the relevant frequencies on which SCS has not been operational for more
than 90 days in the United States, unless specific authority is
requested.
0
19. Effective May 30, 2024, amend Sec. 25.202 by adding paragraph (k)
read as follows:
Sec. 25.202 Frequencies, frequency tolerance, and emission limits.
* * * * *
(k) Space station downlinks operating as SCS under the provisions
of Sec. 25.125 and Sec. 2.106(d)(33)(i) of this chapter are subject
to the following rules.
(1) Out of band emission limits. Notwithstanding the emission
limitations of paragraph (f) of this section, the aggregation of all
space station downlink emissions outside a licensee's SCS frequency
band(s) of operation shall not exceed a power flux density of -120 dBW/
m\2\/MHz at 1.5 meters above ground level.
(2) Interference caused by out of band emissions. If any emission
from a transmitter operating in the SCS service results in harmful
interference to users of another radio service, the FCC may require a
greater attenuation of the emission than specified in this section.
0
20. Effective May 30, 2024, amend Sec. 25.204 by revising the section
heading and adding paragraph (g) to read as follows:
Sec. 25.204 Power and out-of-band emission limits for earth stations.
* * * * *
(g) SCS earth stations providing SCS pursuant to Sec. Sec. 25.125
and 25.115 shall comply with the power requirements and out-of-band
emission limits corresponding to devices operating in part 22, 24, or
27 of this chapter (e.g., Sec. 22.913, Sec. 24.232, or Sec. 27.50),
as required for their operating frequencies.
0
21. Effective May 30, 2024, amend Sec. 25.208 by revising the section
heading and adding paragraph (w) to read as follows:
Sec. 25.208 Power flux-density and in-band field strength limits.
* * * * *
(w) The aggregate field strength at the earth's surface produced by
all visible beams and satellites within each satellite constellation
providing SCS service as they move over any given point or area in
bands authorized by NG33A in the United States Table of Frequency
Allocations and Sec. 25.125 must meet:
(1) 40 dB[mu]V/m for the 600 MHz, 700 MHz, and 800 MHz bands; and
(2) 47 d[mu]V/m for the AWS and PCS bands; and
(3) Licensees must comply with all applicable provisions and
requirements of treaties and other international agreements between the
United States Government and the governments of other countries,
including Canada and Mexico. Absent specific international agreements
regarding SCS, licensees must comply with the limited provided
[[Page 34168]]
in paragraphs (w)(1) and (2) of this section.
[FR Doc. 2024-06669 Filed 4-29-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712-01-P