Congress Won't Kill Off New Unlicensed Spectrum After All
A bipartisan coalition of lawmakers today touted a new agreement that would preserve the Federal Communications Commission's ability to open up new unlicensed spectrum.
Thu, February 16, 2012
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A bipartisan coalition of lawmakers today touted a new agreement that would preserve the Federal Communications Commission's ability to open up new unlicensed spectrum. The new agreement represents a compromise from the spectrum legislation that the House passed late last year that barred the FCC from designating newly freed spectrum as unlicensed and mandated all newly acquired spectrum be put up for a competitive auction.
The latest compromise achieved between House and Senate lawmakers last night preserves the FCC's right to designate unlicensed spectrum but still prevents the FCC from excluding any carrier from bidding on spectrum. The FCC has traditionally had the power to limit the number of bands that an individual carrier can bid on in an effort to ensure competitive balance in the wireless market. Under the new agreement, the FCC would still have the right to pull licenses from wireless carriers if it believed those carriers had too much spectrum in a given market, however.
During a joint press event held today, Rep. Darrell Issa (R - Calif.) and Rep. Anna Eshoo (D - Calif.) touted the new deal as a way to open up more potential spectrum for the next generation of unlicensed wireless technologies. Issa in particular pointed out the importance of 802.11 Wi-Fi technology not just in delivering wireless service to consumers but in helping wireless carriers offload some of their cellular traffic and preserve the quality of their networks.
"802.11 carries more packets of data than all cellular spectrum combined," said Issa. "There's a lot more we can do with unlicensed spectrum, it's not just Bluetooth and Wi-Fi."
The original House legislation had drawn the ire of consumer advocacy groups and of former FCC chairman Reed Hundt, who argued that barring the FCC from designating unlicensed spectrum would kill the next generation of unlicensed wireless technology. The media reform group Free Press today expressed relief that Congress had decided to change course when it came to letting the FCC promote unlicensed spectrum.
"Today's news is undeniably good for unlicensed spectrum, a public resource that drives economic growth and spurs technological innovation," said Matt Wood, the action fund policy director for Free Press. "Recent weeks have seen an outpouring of strong bipartisan support for keeping some prime spectrum available for such beneficial uses, if and when the FCC repurposes portions of the TV band."


