Utah company involved in cell phone booster battle
St. George maker of antennas, amplifiers seeking FCC ruling.

By Mark Havnes
The Salt Lake Tribune

03/12/2010 04:29:51 PM MST

http://www.sltrib.com/business/ci_14665426


St. George, UT --  A bad apple spoiling the barrel is a metaphor Joe 
Banos could live without, especially when there are millions of dollars 
at stake.

As chief operating officer of Wilson Electronics Inc. in St. George, he 
and his company are taking on the giants of the wireless communications 
industry, who are lobbying for regulations that would severely restrict 
use of cellular amplifiers and antennas made by Wilson and others.

The amplifiers, which dramatically boost a cell phone signal, can be 
used in vehicles, homes or offices, and are popular in rural areas such 
as southern Utah where coverage can be spotty or nonexistent. Cell 
phones nest in the amplifier, which has an antenna that connects to an 
exterior antenna.

But according to the CTIA-Wireless Association, a trade group that 
represents such companies as Verizon Wireless and AT&T whose cell towers 
dot ridges and hills, the amplifiers have the unintended consequence of 
interfering with tower signals. The association contends the 
interference results in its customers losing service and experiencing 
dropped calls.

In an age when most companies want less interference from the federal 
government, the dispute has placed Wilson in the unusual position of 
asking the Federal Communications Commission for more rules when it 
comes to regulating standards for its devices.

One of the biggest manufactures of amplifiers and antennas in North 
America, Wilson has sold more than 2 million of them since 2001 (ranging 
in price from $120 to $700), usually through Best Buy and other big-box 
stores or online at Amazon.com.

While pointing to those sales figures as evidence there is consumer 
demand, Banos also concedes that inexpensive, poorly made amplifiers can 
cause havoc with cell tower signals, which he says taints his entire 
industry.

He insists that Wilson's engineers have overcome the interference 
issues, and that the real problem is a lack of manufacturing standards 
within his industry.

So, in its petition to the FCC, Wilson asked the agency to set rules and 
manufacturing standards for the devices, which the company contends are 
lacking. Four other firms have filed petitions with the FCC seeking 
clarification on everything from technical and operational use of the 
boosters, to marketing and installation. The agency has taken the 
requests under advisement.

"The comments we received will be reviewed and we will go from there," 
said Matthew Nodine, chief of staff of the FCC's Wireless Communications 
Bureau.

Although Wilson has patented the technology for producing the "clean" 
boosters, making it possible the company would be the only supplier to 
competitors if its petition is granted, Banos said profit is not the 
primary motive.

"Of course a monopoly is great, but there are other engineers out there 
with the wherewithal to do what we have done. It's not like launching 
the Space Shuttle."

By making better products, Banos said Wilson and other manufacturers can 
create devices that he contends are essential for delivering cell phone 
signals to remote regions and metropolitan areas alike.

He said amplifiers help police and fire departments in rural settings 
and that the devices have been purchased by 500 government agencies, 
including the Department of Homeland Security and the FBI.

In Wilson's FCC petition, attorney Russell D. Lukas cited the example of 
a tour bus that crashed in 2008 near Mexican Hat in southeastern Utah, 
killing nine and injuring 43. "The motorist who discovered the accident 
had to drive 36 minutes before they could get a signal to report the 
accident," the document states.

The reporting delay prompted the National Transportation Safety Board to 
recommend that the American Bus Association and United Motorcoach 
Association advise their members "to carry mobile cellular amplifiers or 
satellite-based devices to communicate emergency events," according to 
Lukas' petition.

For its part, the Wireless Association doesn't buy these arguments.

Brian Josef, director of regulatory affairs for the Washington, 
D.C.-based organization, said signals from the devices should be 
broadcast on assigned frequencies, much the way ham radio operators do, 
rather than on frequencies used by the carriers.

His group wants the FCC to clarify that the sale or use of signal 
boosters without the consent of a wireless company be unlawful.

He argues that the devices made by Wilson and others, rather than being 
an aid to public safety agencies, actually have drawn complaints from 
law enforcement in many parts of the country because the amplifiers 
interfere with their frequencies.

It takes thousands of hours to track down such interference, Josef said.

As for Wilson's efforts to strengthen standards for the devices, Josef 
contends that ever-changing technology and constant adjustments to 
equipment based on demand make a single standard hard to create.

He also questions the need for amplifiers and antennas, noting that 
between 2001 and 2008, the wireless industry invested $23 billion to 
meet mandates designed to ensure that carriers address the needs of 
consumers, including those in rural areas.

Wilson intends to continue the fight, and last week got some 
high-powered support when Utah Sens. Orrin Hatch and Bob Bennett sent a 
letter to FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski, encouraging the agency to 
establish standards for signal-enhancing devices.

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

_______________________________________________
Medianews mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.etskywarn.net/mailman/listinfo/medianews

Reply via email to