NAB Asks Congress to Probe Dish, Time Warner for Spectrum Hoarding
By Maisie Ramsay Tuesday, March 1, 2011
The National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) is asking Congress to
investigate Dish Network and Time Warner Cable over alleged spectrum
hoarding.
The letter, sent to the ranking members of the House Energy and Commerce
Committee and the Senate Commerce Committee, accuses Dish Network and
Time Warner Cable of warehousing their spectrum licenses so they can
sell them off at a huge profit to bandwidth-starved operators.
The NAB wants the lawmakers to investigate Dish Network, Time Warner
Cable and other government agencies for potential cases of spectrum
hoarding and financial speculation before allowing the FCC to move ahead
with its proposed incentive auctions of television broadcast spectrum.
"The pattern of spectrum speculation from Time Warner Cable and Dish
Network is especially troubling given that the FCC's National Broadband
Plan proclaimed a year ago that there is a 'looming spectrum crisis,'"
wrote NAB President and CEO Gordon Smith. "If America is truly facing a
spectrum shortage, then it is imperative that policymakers receive an
unbiased and thorough report on how private companies like Dish, Time
Warner Cable and government agencies are using or warehousing this
precious resource."
Gordon's letter was prompted by comments from Dish Network CEO Charlie
Ergen in the company's earnings call last week that suggested the
company had no concrete plans for the spectrum, instead planning to let
it sit idle and increase in value so it could be sold off at a profit.
Dish is working to buy bankrupt satellite company DBSD, which holds
satellite spectrum licenses. When asked what Dish would do with the
spectrum it could acquire through the DBSD deal, Ergen said the company
believed that "spectrum has value" but "there's not a grand strategy at
this point."
Time Warner Cable has said it doesn't have any plans to sell or use its
spectrum holdings, implying it plans to let the spectrum grow in value
so it can be sold at a profit.
The latest missive from the NAB is part of the group's ongoing efforts
to undermine the FCC's plan to use airwaves currently used for
television broadcast to alleviate the spectrum crunch. Last month, the
NAB accused the wireless industry and cable operators like Time Warner
of fabricating the spectrum crunch by hoarding their spectrum to create
false scarcity. CTIA denounced NAB's allegations, calling them "baffling."
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
WISPA Wants You! Join today!
http://signup.wispa.org/
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org
Subscribe/Unsubscribe:
http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless
Archives: http://lists.wispa.org/pipermail/wireless/