Subscribe in NewsGator Online   Subscribe in Bloglines     

FCC extends negotiation period for Wave 4, Stage 1 800 MHz licensees

Jan 3, 2007 12:36 PM, By Donny Jackson

Just days before Channel 1-120 border-area licensees in Wave 4 of the 800 MHz rebanding project were scheduled to enter mediation, the FCC announced a 90-day extension of the mandatory negotiating period for the licensees and Sprint Nextel.

At issue is the fact that the U.S. State Department has not reached treaty agreements with Canada and Mexico outlining the configuration of the 800 MHz spectrum after rebanding is completed. Until such negotiations are completed, border-area licensees cannot be assigned new frequencies.

“In the absence of new frequency designations, these licensees cannot fully plan for rebanding or complete their negotiation of FRAs with Sprint,” the FCC’s Dec. 27 announcement stated. “Therefore, there is no practical purpose in requiring such licensees to enter mediation under the current schedule.”

Given this situation, all sources close to the rebanding effort had anticipated some sort of extension being granted. Public-safety officials have been assured that the state department views the matter as a priority and is actively trying to negotiate treaty agreements, said Wanda McCarley, president of the Association of Public-Safety Communications Officials (APCO).

In November, the state department reached a treaty agreement with Mexico on frequencies in the adjacent 700 MHz band, but that success does not mean that a similar deal in the 800 MHz band is imminent, said Alan Tilles, who represents many rebanding licensees as a partner in the law firm of Shulman Rogers Gandal Pordy & Ecker.

“I would think not, because of the way the allocation was done,” he said. “[In the 700 MHz band,] they were not dealing with any of the issues we’re dealing with at 800 MHz.”

Most licensees affected by the border issues were placed in Wave 4 to give the government as much time as possible to reach treaty agreements. However, not all Wave 4 licensees are in border areas, so they have been given new frequency assignments. These licensees are expected to meet the existing timetable, which calls for them to enter mediation today if they lack a reconfiguration agreement with Sprint Nextel.

For border-area Wave 4 licensees operating in Channels 1-120, the mediation period is now scheduled to begin on April 3, 2007.


Commenting terms of use blog comments powered by Disqus

ONLINE SHOWCASE

Get vendor information in this special online showcase.

WHITE PAPERS

Download these free public safety white papers from Motorola.

E-NEWSLETTERS

Check out our latest edition of Urgent Communications Today and Tech Talk. Missed one? Check out our newsletter archive page.

More from Policy & Law

Essential Reading

A corner turned

Let the buyer beware

When measurements aren't feasible

Verizon, AT&T both plan 2010 launch for LTE networks

Motorola shuffles the deck

Most Popular Articles

Microwave Path Design: The Basics

The Real Life Of Adrian Cronauer

How Project 25 two-slot TDMA works

Bluetooth comes to walkie-talkies

Switching vs. linear power supplies

TECH SPEAK

Browse Back Issues