[FedCom] 1, 500 MHz of Federal Spectrum To Be Evaluated for Broadband
Brian
mtnbiker2005ipn at sbcglobal.net
Tue Oct 18 14:38:02 EDT 2011
1,500 MHz of Federal Spectrum To Be Evaluated for Broadband
10.18.2011
<http://www.tvtechnology.com/article/125416>
<http://mt-fedfiles.blogspot.com/2011/10/federa-spectrum-under-scrutiny.html>
WASHINGTON: The Commerce Department has identified 1,500 MHz of federal spectrum to further evaluate
for wireless broadband, while Congress considers legislation to reassign 120 MHz of broadcast TV
spectrum for the same purpose. The National Telecommunications and Information Administration issued
its Second Interim Progress Report on the 10-Year Plan and Timetable for coming up with 500 MHz of
spectrum for the president's National Broadband Plan.
The NBP calls for claiming 40 percent, or 120 MHz, of broadcast spectrum. Government agencies occupy
several thousand MHz. The NTIA is in the process of figuring out what portion of federally occupied
spectrum can be used for wireless broadband. In doing so, it must determine which agencies license
the spectrum, for what purpose, and how feasible it is for them to move or share the airwaves.
Its second interim report highlights 1,473.9 MHz licensed by federal agencies in 11 "blocks,"
between 406.1 MHz and 4.4 GHz. The total includes three blocks comprising 385 MHz that the NTIA put
on "fast-track" evaluation last year. It determined that 115 MHz could be used for wireless
broadband within five years, and the Federal Communications Commission is currently reviewing
feedback on how that could be accomplished.
The NTIA's second interim report focuses particularly on two consecutive blocks of spectrum
comprising 95 MHz between 1,755 and 1,850 MHz. Sixteen federal agencies hold 3,000 frequency
assignments in that band, including the Departments of Commerce, Defense, Energy, Homeland Security,
Interior, Justice, Housing and Veterans' Affairs; the Federal Aviation Administration, NASA, the
Treasury, the Coast Guard the Post Office, the Capitol Police, the Office of Personnel Management
and USAID. Uses include fixed-to-point microwave, military tactical radio relay, air combat training
systems, law enforcement mobile video surveillance, HD video data links for space systems,
land-mobile robotic video functions "such as explosive ordnance disposal," electronic warfare and
others.
Each of the agencies submitted reports to the NTIA on the estimated cost, timetables and
prerequisites for relocating to other frequencies. The NTIA said it would summarize its analysis of
those submissions in another report to be completed this fall.
In the meantime, Congress's so-called "super committee," charged with trimming $1.5 trillion from
the federal deficit, is expected to authorize the FCC to hold TV spectrum incentive auctions. The
intent is to get broadcasters to give up spectrum in return for a split of the proceeds from the
auction of that spectrum. The commission can't hold incentive auctions without an expressive
directive from Congress. The super committee is also reported to be considering a proposal in the
president's jobs bill to impose $4.4 billion in spectrum fees--something broadcasters and wireless
providers jointly oppose.
Spectrum incentive auctions and fees would yield about $15.8 billion for government coffers,
according to the Congressional Budget Office. The CBO estimates that the auction of 120 MHz itself
will bring in $23.3 billion, while the fees would generate $4.4 billion from 2012 to 2021, bring
total spectrum revenues to $27.7 billion. That figure would be offset by an estimated $11.9 billion
necessary to compensate and relocate broadcasters, and assess the fees.
The super committee has until Thanksgiving to submit its recommendations to Congress, which in turn
has until Dec. 23 to pass a budget bill to avoid across-the-board spending cuts.
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