Yes,
They can contract that with the building/tower owner.   All it means is 
if you want to go on the tower you can't use those frequencies.  You can 
erect a structure on the next available land plot and use them.


Matt Hoppes
Director of Information Technology
Indigo Wireless
+1 (570) 723-7312

On 8/22/12 12:38 PM, Chris Stradtman wrote:
> Folks,
>
> I'm dealing with a situation in a structure where an incumbent cell
> carrier is claiming full control of the
> RF spectrum (if I understand correctly from  3 kHz
> <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KHz> to 300 GHz
> <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gigahertz>). This claim is based on a
> contract with
> the buildings management company.  Currently they are not offering any
> services in the ISM or UNII ranges,
> however they claim that no other vendor can offer services in that range
> without the express permission (
> and a healthy chunk of all the revenues).  Has anybody dealt with this
> before?? I realize that they are probably (one of) the
> license holder(s) on record for the regulated cellular spectrum, but I
> wonder if a contract with the venue can actually override
> the FCCs licensing ( or lack thereof ) on the ISM and UNII spectrums space?
>
> Anybody have any wisdom on this ??
>
> Thanks,
>
> Chris
>
>
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