June 27, 2010

Broadband Availability to Expand
By EDWARD WYATT
NY Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/28/technology/28broadband.html?hp=&pagewanted=print


WASHINGTON — The Obama administration is seeking to nearly double the 
wireless communications spectrum available for commercial use over the 
next 10 years, an effort that could greatly enhance the ability of 
consumers to send and receive video and data with smartphones and other 
hand-held devices.

President Obama will sign a presidential memorandum on Monday that aims 
to make available for auction some 500 megahertz of spectrum that is now 
controlled by the federal government and private companies, 
administration officials said Sunday. Most of that would be designated 
for commercial use in mobile broadband and similar applications, though 
aspects of the plan will require Congressional approval.

The effort embraces recommendations made by the Federal Communications 
Commission in its National Broadband Plan, which was released in March 
and encourages the expansion of high-speed wireless broadband services.

But some aspects could be opposed by television broadcast companies, 
which will be asked if they want to give up some of their spectrum for 
auction. Cable companies that have invested heavily in wired 
telecommunications networks could also lose from the new direction.

Proceeds from the auctions would go in part to finance the construction 
of improved communications systems for police, fire and other public 
safety agencies. Law enforcement agencies have proposed that parts of 
the newly available wireless spectrum be used for a dedicated broadband 
public safety network.

Roughly 45 percent of the spectrum to be auctioned would come from 
federal government agencies that will be asked to give up allocations 
that they are not using or could share, according to administration 
officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity so as not to upstage 
the announcement.

The remainder would come from unused spectrum already scheduled for 
auction or from broadcasters and other spectrum licensees who would be 
offered incentives to give up or share parts of their communications 
airwaves. Currently, the spectrum for wireless communications is about 
547 megahertz.

Lawrence H. Summers, the director of the National Economic Council and 
assistant to the president for economic policy, is expected to detail 
the broadband effort in a lunchtime speech in Washington to the New 
America Foundation, a public policy institute.

“This initiative will catalyze private sector investment, contribute to 
economic growth, and help to create hundreds of thousands of jobs,” Mr. 
Summers said in a statement. “This policy is a win three times over. It 
creates prosperity and jobs while at the same time raising revenue for 
public purposes like public safety and increasing our ability to compete 
internationally.”

While it is not unexpected that the Obama administration would embrace 
some of the recommendations of the National Broadband Plan, the 
announcement is significant because it puts momentum behind actions that 
the F.C.C. does not have the authority to take on its own.

Specifically, the presidential memorandum will direct the National 
Telecommunications and Information Administration to identify federally 
controlled communications bands that can be made available within five 
years for exclusive or shared use by commercial companies.

Negotiations have been continuing between the White House and federal 
departments including defense, justice, state, Treasury and energy, 
which use dedicated government spectrum for official and classified 
communications.

The administration is expected to ask Congress to approve the use of 
some of the proceeds from an auction of federal spectrum to finance the 
upgrading of government communications equipment and systems.

Congress would also need to approve the F.C.C.’s use of so-called 
incentive auctions of spectrum that is already allocated to private 
companies, including broadcast networks. Those auctions would pay 
broadcast networks and others to give up unused portions of the spectrum 
that they license from the federal government, which would then be 
licensed to or shared with wireless companies.

Finally, Congress would have to designate how the money generated by 
auctions should be spent. The plan seeks to use some of the proceeds to 
build the public safety network that would allow police and fire 
departments from different jurisdictions to talk to one another in 
emergencies — something that generally is not possible now and that was 
identified as an issue on 9/11.

Julius Genachowski, the chairman of the F.C.C. and an Obama appointee, 
welcomed the administration’s initiative on Sunday. “The 
administration’s strong actions on wireless broadband will move us 
significantly toward sustainable economic success, robust investment, 
and global leadership in innovation,” he said.

In the long term, companies that are developing emerging wireless 
technologies could benefit from the greater availability of wireless 
spectrum, industry analysts say. Consumers also could benefit from the 
actions, as wireless communications continue to improve and more 
convenient devices are made widely available.

Some spectrum also would be made available for free, unlicensed use by 
start-up companies and others, administration officials said. Such 
unlicensed spectrum has previously helped in the development of cordless 
phones, Wi-Fi and Bluetooth applications.

Harold Feld, legal director of Public Knowledge, a consumer-oriented 
policy group, said the interest of consumers will be most helped by 
auctions that help to promote competition between wireless companies 
rather than entrenching the dominant providers in the market.

Since the release of the F.C.C.’s broadband plan, some broadcasters have 
expressed doubts about the spectrum allocation recommendations. Dennis 
Wharton, an executive vice president at the National Association of 
Broadcasters, said that while expanding broadband is important, it 
should not be done at the expense of broadcasting, which provides free, 
local television service to tens of millions of Americans.

“We appreciate F.C.C. assurances that further reclamation of broadcast 
television spectrum will be completely voluntary,” Mr. Wharton said.

With the recent conversion of analog broadcast signals to digital, 
broadcasters returned 108 megahertz of spectrum to the government for 
auction. Some of the wireless companies that bought that spectrum have 
not developed all of it, leaving broadcasters wary of giving up more of 
their holdings to companies that might simply warehouse it, industry 
officials say.

-- 
================================
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

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