O'Rielly, Clyburn Haven't Acted on Globalstar
The state of Globalstar's broadband terrestrial low-power broadband system (TLPS) remains in limbo, with two FCC commissioners having yet to vote. Commissioner Mike O'Rielly said Friday he hasn't voted on or made up his mind about Globalstar. An agency official…
Sign up for a free preview to unlock the rest of this article
If your job depends on informed compliance, you need International Trade Today. Delivered every business day and available any time online, only International Trade Today helps you stay current on the increasingly complex international trade regulatory environment.
tells us likewise for Commissioner Mignon Clyburn. Commissioners Ajit Pai and Jessica Rosenworcel voted no (see 1606030041). Asked after the commissioners' meeting Friday about the likelihood of changing his vote, Pai said the Globalstar issue "involves a fundamental question: Do we want to grant special rights to a particular company to unlicensed spectrum? I think the answer should be no ... the agency has not bestowed largess upon a competitor in that space." Meanwhile, Globalstar continues to lobby the FCC on approval, with the company repeatedly talking to the agency about the possibility of opportunistic sharing of Wi-Fi channel 14 where TLPS isn't otherwise deployed. A big part of any such approach would be Globalstar's network operating system protecting the company's mobile satellite service and other services from interference, the company said in an ex parte filing Thursday in docket 13-213. Public Knowledge and the Open Technology Institute and, separately, the Wireless ISP Association pushed for that condition on Globalstar's TLPS plans (see 1606140020), and Globalstar discussed the idea at other recent lobbying meetings. The ex parte filing recapped a meeting with Chairman Tom Wheeler aide Edward Smith.