That was actually a post by "Jan", not me ;)

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Joe Lenig 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Friday, December 29, 2017 8:57 AM
  Subject: Re: [WISPA] Last day to file CBRS Comments is today. Please 
fileifyou have not already done so.


  I have to agree with you Jay Fuller – but I’m trying to keep my paranoia 
optimistic.  

   

  I read Comcast’s comments…. Very interesting with good, compelling 
suggestions to keep it at the County level, 7 year licenses, bid credits for 
incumbents.  And they showed several examples of where PEA licensing failed to 
encourage innovation and expansion. 

   

  Comcast clearly has a vested interest in this outcome.  Is it to be a player? 
Or to make sure they are not overrun by the cell carriers using a clean and 
powerful frequency.  

   

  Time will tell… 

   

  Best regards,

  Joe Lenig

  Head of Impact

  Virginia Broadband, LLC  “VABB”

  540-727-2863 (direct)

  [email protected]

  www.vabb.com 

   

  From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Jan-OOLLC
  Sent: Friday, December 29, 2017 4:01 AM
  To: [email protected]
  Subject: Re: [WISPA] Last day to file CBRS Comments is today. Please file 
ifyou have not already done so.

   

  An opinion from this peanut gallery is that o-jit-pie is not interested in 
serving the American public or the governments interests, he is only interested 
in serving himself with all the money he can garner from his large corporate 
donors.  Folks the mafia has taken over the government.  We can cry all we 
want, the tone-deaf aren't listening.

  J

   

  On 12/28/2017 08:27 PM, CBB - Jay Fuller wrote:

     

    I look forward to reading everyone's comments - especially after I stole 
some very useful paragraphs from a few of you. :)

     

      ----- Original Message ----- 

      From: Ken Garnett 

      To: 'WISPA General List' ; [email protected] ; 'Principal WISPA Member 
List' 

      Sent: Thursday, December 28, 2017 10:17 PM

      Subject: Re: [WISPA] Last day to file CBRS Comments is today. Please file 
ifyou have not already done so.

       

      Done.

       

      Proceeding:17-258

      Confirmation #:201712293080913313

      Submitted:Dec 28, 2017 8:07:52 PM

      Status:RECEIVED

      Name(s) of Filer(s)Cal.net, Inc.

       

       

      - Ken Garnett
        Chief Technology Officer
        Cal.Net
        530-672-1078, x103

       

      From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Mark Radabaugh
      Sent: Thursday, December 28, 2017 4:58 AM
      To: [email protected]; Principal WISPA Member List <[email protected]>; 
[email protected]
      Subject: [WISPA] Last day to file CBRS Comments is today. Please file if 
you have not already done so.

       

      WISPA Members,

      We are in the middle of one of the most important fights in the history 
of our industry.  We need every member (operators, vendors, service providers) 
to submit comments to the FCC.  More background and an outline to help you 
cover all the bases are in Steve Coran’s email below.   

      Please take 30 minutes today and put together a letter to the FCC on 
CBRS.  If you need assistance, or want help reviewing a draft, contact me, Mark 
Radabaugh, or Steve Coran off list and we’ll help you.  

      We have also developed a website that will enable you to see the 
difference between census tracts (the current proposal for allocating PALs) and 
PEAS.  Instructions for accessing that website are below.  

      If you would prefer to have a KMZ file showing PEA's that you can use, 
you can download it here: 

      https://www.dropbox.com/s/y5b1zf1mtm5b0v2/FCC_PEAs_website.kmz?dl=0

       

      THIS IS CRITICALLY IMPORTANT 

       

       

      Citizens Broadband Radio Service

      GN Docket No. 17-258

       

      Suggestions for Filing Comments regarding Notice of Proposed Rulemaking

      Deadline: Thursday, December 28, 2017 at 11:59 pm Eastern Time

       

      Background

       

      On October 24, 2017, the FCC released a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking 
(NPRM) that would fundamentally change the Citizens Broadband Radio Service 
(CBRS), which includes the 3550-3650 MHz band and the existing 3650-3700 MHz 
band.  WISPA will be filing extensive Comments opposing many of the proposed 
rule changes, and we believe it is very important for individual members – 
WISPs, manufacturers, vendors, etc. – to also file Comments.

       

      Summary of Current Rules That Will Be Changed If WISPs Do Not Comment

       

      The FCC adopted rules in April 2015 to establish the CBRS band.  The band 
employs a three-tier spectrum access model.  Incumbent Access (earth stations 
and military) that must always be protected from interference; Priority Access, 
which will be auctioned by the FCC according to census tracts and must protect 
incumbents; and General Authorized Access (GAA), a “license by rule” service 
that must protect Incumbent and Priority Access use.  The FCC allocated up to 
70 megahertz for Priority Access Licenses (PALs) and the remaining 80 megahertz 
for GAA use.  The FCC also will allow GAA use opportunistically when and where 
Priority Access Licenses (PALs) are not in use.  The model will be governed by 
a Spectrum Access System (SAS) that will enforce the three-tier approach.

       

      In addition to fixed wireless service, the CBRS band is viewed as an 
“innovation band” to enable other business models such as Industrial Internet 
of Things, private networks, venues (e.g., airports, arenas, shopping malls), 
neutral host networks and others.

       

      Summary of Proposed Changes to the Rules Sought by the Mobile Industry

       

      Here is a link to the proposed regulatory action that the FCC is 
considering: https://apps.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-17-134A1.pdf)

      PLEASE BE SURE TO READ Paragraphs 9-27, which are relevant to the 
proposals discussed below  

       

      The FCC, at the request of the mobile industry, is proposing changes to 
the PAL rules so they are friendlier to national mobile carriers.  If adopted, 
the proposed rules would effectively foreclose small companies that wish to 
acquire protected spectrum for small areas and create a “5G-only” band 
available only to the large mobile wireless providers.  The specific proposals 
are as follows:  

      Ø  Conduct PAL auctions based on Partial Economic Areas (PEAs) or other 
geographic areas that are larger than census tracts, such as counties.  There 
are 416 PEAs and more than 74,000 census tracts.  Census tracts are optimized 
at a population of ~4,000.

      Ø  Extend Priority Access License (PAL) terms from 3 years to 10 years 
and add a “renewal expectancy” that could make PALs essentially perpetual.

       

      These proposed rule changes would make the cost of acquiring protected 
PALs through auction significantly higher, pricing out many small would-be 
bidders and essentially ensuring that the large mobile wireless carriers have 
exclusive access to the spectrum for an indefinite period of time over a large 
geographic area.  Smaller providers, even if they had the means to outbid the 
large carriers, would be forced to acquire large-area licenses that are likely 
much larger than the targeted areas WISPs would want to serve.

       

      Guidelines

       

      ·         Please review the NPRM

      ·         You can also review WISPA’s recent comments in meetings with 
Chairman Pai and Commissioner O’Rielly, which are attached to this email

      ·         File comments unique to your company, not “cookie-cutter” 
comments 

      o   BE AS SPECIFIC AS YOU CAN BE – THE FCC WILL LOOK AT THE SUBSTANCE OF 
THE ARGUMENTS MADE, NOT OVERBROAD STATEMENTS

      o   Explain what your company does 

      §  How many customers do you have?

      §  What part(s) of the country do you serve?  How rural is the area you 
serve?

      §  What service do you currently offer (e.g., speed)?

      o   As appropriate, emphasize:

      §  Your company’s investments in 3650-3700 MHz, especially if those 
investment were made in reliance on the CBRS rules that were adopted in April 
2015

      §  Plans for gaining access to the CBRS band

      §  How expanding the geographic area of PALs to an area larger than 
census tracts will dramatically reduce your ability to make competitive bids at 
the PAL auction, because you have to acquire a much larger area than you plan 
to use to connect unserved and/or  provide better service to your existing 
customers

      §  Benefits of having the ability to get access to 100 megahertz of 
mid-band spectrum

      §  Any reduction in investment based on the threat of the proposals in 
the NPRM

      §  Note that you have an experimental license (if you do) and what the 
purpose of the trial is

      §  Problems that additional spectrum will solve (e.g., investment, 
congestion, throughput, QoS, interference, etc. 

      o   Include maps of your service area, showing PEA boundaries, and 
identifying areas where licensed mid-band spectrum would help you connect 
additional customers or provide better service to existing customers 

      o   Focus on consumers 

      o   For rural providers:  focus on extending fixed broadband service to 
rural Americans that lack broadband or choice

      o   Be clear that you oppose the proposals to increase the size of PALs 
or lengthen the term of licenses

      ·         We are happy to answer questions, provide suggestions and 
assist in filing your Comments.  Please contact the WISPA DC team (email 
[email protected] who will forward your request for assistance to the 
appropriate member of WISPA’s team)  

       

      INSTRUCTIONS FOR FILING YOUR COMMENTS WITH THE FCC IN GN Docket No. 17-258

       

      Comments can be prepared as a double-spaced document with a caption, or 
as a single-spaced letter.

       

      Comments are filed electronically at the FCC’s ECFS web site: 
https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/filings

       

      Proceedings:  17-258 

      Name of Filer:  enter your company’s name, not your name

      Type of Filing:  pull down menu, enter “Comment” right at the top of the 
menu

      File Number, Report Number, Bureau ID number:  leave these blank

       

      Please be sure to file by Thursday, December 28 at 11:59 pm Eastern Time

       

      Thank you. 

      Attached is a link to a site which will allow you to overlay 
state-by-state census tracts with Partial Economic Areas (PEA).  Registration 
is required to access the site, use this registration form.  After registering, 
you can select the states to display census tracts from. and add the PEA layer 
in the menu on the left.  You can click on any tract or PEA to display data 
about it in a popup window.   

       

      https://wispa.allpointsbroadband.net/  

       

      A few notes:

        a.. The order you add layers to the map matters; think of it like 
adding physical layers.  If you add tract layers first, then the PEA layer, 
when you click you will see data about the PEA you clicked.  If you add the PEA 
layer first, then tracts, you will see census data when you click because the 
tract layer will be "on top" 
        b.. Due to technical limitations you can only display a handful layers 
concurrently, if you try to select too many they will not load, and you may 
need to refresh the page 
        c.. When zoomed-out, holes may appear in the tract layers, especially 
around population centers.  When you zoom in those holes will fill in.
       

      For technical or registration issues please contact Michael Hespenheide 
([email protected])

       

       


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