Print Page
FCC Freezes Ch. 51, Encourages Broadcast Occupants to Vacate
8/22/2011
WASHINGTON: The Federal Communications Commission today took
a step toward taking 6 MHz of spectrum out of the broadcast band. The
commission ordered a freeze on broadcast applications in Ch. 51, the top
channel in the band. The FCC took the action at the behest of wireless
providers. CTIA-The Wireless Association and the Rural Cellular Association
petitioned the FCC in March to clear broadcasters from Ch. 51 because they said
TV signals interfered with adjacent-channel wireless transmissions.
The commission today issued a public notice freezing all new and pending
applications for licenses on Ch.. 51, and encouraging incumbents to relocate. It
also opens a 60-day window for pending low-power applicants seeking an assignment on Ch. 51 to amend
their applications and file for a different channel. Around 75 applications are
currently pending. Thirty-four belong to Landover 2, LLC., a New York-based
concern with ties to CTB Spectrum Services, which has seven. CTB is involved in
aggregating UHF spectrum across the country to build a hybrid broadcast and
unicast wireless network, Doug Lung
reported in March. Cavell
Mertz & Associates list 777 results for facilities licensed to Landover
2.
The freeze is said to be “temporary” while the commission considers the
wireless lobbies’ petition. It doesn’t affect existing full- and low-power
stations operating on previously authorized facilities. Those stations may also
apply for a waiver where minor modifications need to be done.
“We agree with the petitioners that the freeze is “consistent with the commission’s
prior spectrum rulemaking proceedings, and past precedent clearly supports the commission’s
authority to adopt immediate freezes pending the outcome of rulemaking changes,”
the
Notice
states.
Ch. 51 is the highest channel on the broadcast TV spectrum, at 698 MHz. It came
to define that boundary after broadcasters gave up Chs. 52-69 in the 2009 digital
transition. The spectrum between those channels was auctioned off to wireless
providers in blocks. Ch. 51 now lies adjacent to the A Block, which comprises
176 wireless licenses from 698 to 704 MHz, and from 728 to 734 MHz. CTIA
members Verizon,
U.S. Cellular and Cavalier, and several other companies, won licenses in the A Block.
The petitioners cited the Obama Administration’s goal of creating nationwide
wireless broadband as justification for booting broadcasters from Ch. 51. The
Obama FCC’s National Broadband Plan already proposes taking 120 MHz of
broadcast spectrum and reallocating it for wireless services. This is in
addition to the 108 MHz relinquished after over-the-air analog TV signals were
shut down in 2009.
~ Deborah D. McAdams
Print Page