97-6092. Facilitate Future Development of Paging Systems and Implementation of Section 309(j) of the Communications Act; Competitive Bidding  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 48 (Wednesday, March 12, 1997)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 11616-11637]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-6092]
    
    
    
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    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    Part V
    
    
    
    
    
    Federal Communications Commission
    
    
    
    
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    
    
    47 CFR Parts 22 and 90
    
    
    
    Facilitate Future Development of Paging Systems and Implementation of 
    Section 309(j) of the Communications Act; Competitive Bidding; Final 
    and Proposed Rules
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 62, No. 48 / Wednesday, March 12, 1997 / 
    Rules and Regulations
    
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    FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
    
    47 CFR Parts 22 and 90
    
    [WT Docket No. 96-18; PP Docket No. 93-253; FCC 97-59]
    
    
    Facilitate Future Development of Paging Systems and 
    Implementation of Section 309(j) of the Communications Act; Competitive 
    Bidding
    
    AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: In this Second Report and Order the Commission adopts rules 
    governing geographic area licensing of Common Carrier Paging (CCP) and 
    exclusive 929 MHz Private Carrier Paging (PCP), and competitive bidding 
    procedures for auctioning mutually exclusive applications for these 
    licenses. This action is necessary to promote efficient licensing and 
    competition in paging services. The Commission's objectives in this 
    proceeding are to ensure that the paging service rules are consistent 
    with the rules for competing services, so that competitive success is 
    dictated by the marketplace, rather than by regulatory distinctions, 
    and to ensure that the licensing process promotes the goals of 
    competition and efficient use of spectrum.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: May 12, 1997.
    
    ADDRESSES: Federal Communications Commission, 1919 M Street, NW., 
    Washington, DC 20554
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mika Savir, Commercial Wireless 
    Division, Wireless Telecommunications Bureau, at (202) 418-0620, or 
    Frank Stilwell, Auctions Division, Wireless Telecommunications Bureau, 
    at (202) 418-0660.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This Second Report and Order in WT Docket 
    96-18 and PP Docket No. 93-252, adopted on February 19, 1997, and 
    released on February 24, 1997, is available for inspection and copying 
    during normal business hours in the FCC Reference Center, Room 239, 
    1919 M Street NW., Washington, DC 20554. The complete text may also be 
    purchased from the Commission's copy contractor, International 
    Transcription Service, Inc., 2100 M Street, NW., Suite 140, Washington, 
    DC 20037 (202) 857-3800.
        Paperwork Reduction Act: The collection of information requirements 
    have been approved by the Office of Management and Budget and assigned 
    OMB control number 3060-0697. The FCC Form 175 is assigned OMB control 
    number 3060-0600. The FCC Form 600 is assigned OMB control number 3060-
    0623.
    
    Summary of Action
    
    I. Background
    
        1. In the NPRM, Revision of part 22 and part 90 of the Commission's 
    rules to Facilitate Future Development of Paging Systems, WT Docket No. 
    96-18, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 61 FR 6199 (February 16, 1996) 
    (NPRM), the Commission proposed a transition to geographic area 
    licensing for CCP and PCP channels pursuant to the statutory objective 
    of regulatory symmetry for all Commercial Mobile Radio Services (CMRS) 
    set forth in the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993, Pub. L. 
    103-66, Title VI section 6002(b)(2) (A), (B), 107 Stat. 312 (largely 
    codified at 47 U.S.C. 332 et seq.) (1993 Budget Act). The 1993 Budget 
    Act mandated that substantially similar mobile services receive 
    comparable regulatory treatment. In the NPRM, the Commission also 
    proposed competitive bidding procedures for resolving mutually 
    exclusive applications for these licenses pursuant to its statutory 
    authority under the 1993 Budget Act, section 6002 (codified at 47 
    U.S.C. 309(j)).
        2. In the NPRM, the Commission proposed a transition from site-by-
    site licensing to geographic area licensing for all exclusive, non-
    nationwide paging services. The Commission also proposed to adopt 
    competitive bidding rules for the geographic area licenses. Due to the 
    fundamental changes proposed in the NPRM, the Commission suspended 
    acceptance of new applications for paging licenses as of February 8, 
    1996. The Commission observed that continuing to accept new 
    applications after releasing the NPRM with the proposed rule changes 
    would impair the objectives of the rulemaking proceeding. The 
    Commission partially lifted the paging freeze for incumbent licensees 
    by allowing incumbents to file applications for additional sites within 
    65 kilometers (40 miles) of operating sites in the First Report and 
    Order, Revision of part 22 and part 90 of the Commission's rules to 
    Facilitate Future Development of Paging Systems, WT Docket No. 96-18, 
    First Report and Order, 61 FR 21380 (May 10, 1996); reconsideration in 
    Order on Reconsideration of First Report and Order, 61 FR 34375 (July 
    2, 1996). Additionally, the First Report and Order exempted Basic 
    Exchange Telecommunications Radio Service (BETRS), Rural Radiotelephone 
    Service, and Special Emergency Radio Service (SERS) from the interim 
    freeze.
        3. In this Second Report and Order, the Commission adopts final 
    rules governing geographic area licensing for channels in the 35-36 
    MHz, 43-44 MHz, 152-159 MHz, 454-460 MHz, 929-930 MHz, and 931-932 MHz 
    bands allocated for paging; competitive bidding rules for granting 
    geographic area non-nationwide licenses; and a standard methodology for 
    providing protection to incumbent licensees from co-channel 
    interference for the 929-930 MHz and 931-932 MHz paging bands. All 
    pending mutually exclusive paging applications will be dismissed, 
    including those filed under the interim rules. As of the adoption date 
    of this Second Report and Order, February 19, 1997, no further 
    applications for site-by-site licenses, other than for shared channels 
    will be accepted (with the exception of applications filed pursuant to 
    47 CFR 22.369, 90.177, 1.1301 et seq., and applications filed for 
    coordination with Mexico and Canada).
    
    II. Second Report and Order
    
    A. Geographic Area Licensing for Non-Nationwide Paging Channels
    
    1. Geographic Area Licensing for Exclusive 929 MHz and 931 MHz Bands
        4. The Commission observes that geographic area licensing provides 
    flexibility for licensees and ease of administration, facilitates 
    further build-out of wide-area systems, and enables paging operators to 
    act quickly to meet the needs of their customers. The Commission finds, 
    therefore, that converting the 931 MHz channels and the exclusive 929 
    MHz channels to geographic area licensing will further the goal of 
    giving carriers offering substantially similar services more 
    flexibility to compete, and will enhance regulatory symmetry between 
    paging and narrowband personal communications services (PCS). The 
    Commission states that exclusive 929 MHz and 931 MHz licensees will be 
    extended the same flexibility as narrowband PCS licensees in terms of 
    the location, design, construction, and modification of their 
    facilities throughout their geographic areas.
        5. The Commission is implementing geographic area licensing in lieu 
    of the current site-by-site licensing, with Major Trading Areas (MTAs) 
    as the geographic area for the 931 MHz and exclusive 929 MHz channels. 
    The Commission is licensing these channels using 51 MTA geographic 
    areas. In addition to the 47 Rand McNally MTAs, the Commission is 
    adding three MTAs for the U.S. territories of (1) Guam and the Northern
    
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    Mariana Islands, (2) Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, and (3) 
    American Samoa. The Commission is also licensing Alaska as a single 
    area separate from the Seattle MTA.
        6. Geographic area licensees will have the flexibility to construct 
    transmitters at any place within their license area, subject to the co-
    channel interference rules and will not be required to file 
    applications for additional sites or modifications with the Commission. 
    Geographic area licensees may add or modify sites consistent with this 
    Second Report and Order. Applications must be filed with the Commission 
    for coordination with Mexico or Canada and where required by 
    Secs. 22.369, 90.177, or 1.1301 et seq. Geographic area licensees will 
    be able to act quickly to add sites or make modifications of existing 
    sites to meet the needs of their customers. Due to the prevalence of 
    wide-area paging systems on these channels and the flexibility 
    geographic area licensing will afford paging licensees, the Commission 
    believes that geographic area licensing for exclusive 929 MHz and 931 
    MHz channels, with MTAs as the geographic area, is consistent with the 
    public interest, convenience and necessity, and the purposes of the 
    Communications Act of 1934, as amended (Communications Act), and 
    fulfills the objectives of section 309(j)(4)(c).
        7. Spectrum recovered by the Commission within a geographic area 
    will revert automatically to the geographic area licensee. The 
    Commission will consider transfers and assignments between a geographic 
    area licensee and an incumbent to be presumptively in the public 
    interest. The Commission is also eliminating finders' preferences 
    immediately for paging services, and will no longer accept finders' 
    preferences requests following adoption of the Second Report and Order.
        8. Mutually exclusive applications for geographic area licenses 
    will be processed pursuant to the competitive bidding rules adopted in 
    this Second Report and Order. All incumbent licensees will continue to 
    operate under the existing authorizations with full protection from co-
    channel interference, and will not be required to file applications for 
    additional internal sites.
    2. Geographic Area Licensing for Common Carrier Paging Services in the 
    35-36 MHz, 43-44 MHz, 152-159 MHz, and 454-460 MHz Bands
    a. Common Carrier Paging Services
        9. The Commission believes that the advantages of geographic 
    licensing--flexibility, enhanced regulatory symmetry with other CMRS, 
    and eliminating the inefficiencies in the licensing process--are 
    applicable to these channels, particularly for regional and wide-area 
    paging services. One of the Commission's goals in this proceeding is to 
    revise the paging rules so that substantially similar mobile services 
    receive comparable regulatory treatment, to the extent feasible, in a 
    manner consistent with the public interest, convenience, necessity, and 
    the purposes of the Communications Act. The Commission notes that 
    paging providers on these CCP channels generally have smaller paging 
    systems than the 931 MHz band paging services, and therefore smaller 
    market areas would be more appropriate than MTAs for these bands. The 
    Commission finds that Economic Areas (EAs) would be an appropriate size 
    for geographic licensing on these bands. The Bureau of Economic 
    Analysis of the Department of Commerce has divided the United States 
    into 172 EAs. See Final Redefinition of the BEA Economic Areas, 
    Department of Commerce, Docket No. 950-3020-64-5064-01, 60 FR 13114 
    (March 10, 1995). The Commission adopts EAs as the geographic area for 
    paging licenses. Geographic area licensees will have the flexibility to 
    construct transmitters at any place within their EA, subject to the co-
    channel interference rules; however, geographic area licensees must 
    file applications with the Commission if such filing is necessary for 
    coordination with Canada or Mexico, or is required by Sec. 22.369, 
    90.177, or 1.1301 et seq. The EA geographic area licenses will be 
    assigned pursuant to the competitive bidding rules.
    b. Other Services in the 152-159 MHz and 454-460 MHz Bands
        10. The Commission concludes that Rural Radiotelephone Service 
    licensees, including BETRS licensees, can participate in the geographic 
    area licensing framework adopted for paging. Additionally, these 
    licensees may obtain site licenses and operate facilities on a 
    secondary basis. If any geographic area licensee subsequently notifies 
    the Rural Radiotelephone or BETRS licensee that a secondary site must 
    be shut down because it may cause interference to the paging licensee's 
    existing or planned facilities, the Rural Radiotelephone or BETRS 
    licensee must discontinue use of the particular channel at that site no 
    later than six months after such notice. Additionally, mobile two-way 
    telephone service on the paging channels will also be subject to 
    geographic area licensing and competitive bidding.
    3. Shared Channels
        11. The shared channels consist of five 929 MHz channels and 
    thirteen Business Radio Service channels. The Commission concludes that 
    the existing shared paging channels should continue to be licensed on a 
    shared basis. The Commission is concerned about the consumer fraud and 
    license application speculation issues and is seeking comment in a 
    Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on changes in the license 
    application and frequency coordination procedures. The Commission is 
    eliminating the interim 40-mile rule for additional sites. Pending 
    resolution of the fraud and speculation issues, the Commission is 
    limiting applications for shared channels to (1) licensees expanding 
    their commercial mobile radio systems; (2) applicants, including new 
    applicants, for private, internal-use systems; and (3) Special 
    Emergency Radio Services (SERS) providers on the shared channels.
    4. Exempting Certain Incumbents From Competitive Bidding
        12. The Commission believes that the market, not regulation, should 
    determine participation in competitive bidding for geographic area 
    licenses. Therefore, the Commission is adopting open eligibility for 
    paging licenses. The Commission believes that this will be pro-
    competitive and potentially will result in further wide-area coverage 
    of paging services.
    
    B. Geographic Area Licensing for Nationwide Channels
    
        13. Three 931 MHz channels, 931.8875 MHz, 931.9125 MHz, and 
    931.9375 MHz, were allocated for nationwide paging, and have been 
    assigned to licensees on a nationwide basis. The Commission is granting 
    nationwide geographic area licenses, without competitive bidding, to 
    these three licensees. Additionally, 23 licensees have met requirements 
    for nationwide exclusivity on 929 MHz channels under Sec. 90.495 of the 
    Commission's rules. The Commission is granting nationwide geographic 
    area licenses, without competitive bidding, to those 929 MHz licensees 
    who had constructed sufficient transmitters to obtain nationwide 
    exclusivity under the
    
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    prior rules, and to those licensees who had sufficient authorizations 
    as of February 8, 1996 and have since constructed sufficient 
    transmitters to earn nationwide exclusivity. The Commission notes that 
    these nationwide licensees have built out their paging systems to serve 
    consumers, and the public interest would not be served in eliminating 
    the nationwide authorizations that were previously granted by the 
    Commission. Therefore, the Commission concludes that licensees on these 
    channels will not be subject to competitive bidding for nationwide 
    geographic area licenses.
        14. The Commission declines to extend automatic nationwide 
    geographic area licensing to MTel's 931.4375 MHz channel. The 
    Commission notes that MTel has been extensively licensed on 931.4375 
    MHz; however, this channel has not been reallocated as a nationwide 
    channel thus MTel has not built-out this channel in reliance on a grant 
    of a nationwide license or nationwide exclusivity. The Commission notes 
    that many paging carriers, including MTel, have extensive systems on 
    channels that are not specifically designated as nationwide channels. 
    Paging is a competitive industry, and to the extent that nationwide 
    licensees not only compete with each other, but also with the paging 
    carriers who provide local and regional service, the Commission does 
    not believe it would be pro-competitive to automatically grant 
    nationwide geographic area licenses to any additional licensees.
    
    C. Protection for Incumbents
    
        15. The Commission believes that the public interest would be 
    served by allowing incumbent (non-geographic) paging licensees to 
    continue to operate under their existing authorizations with full 
    protection from co-channel interference, and similarly protecting the 
    geographic area licensees from co-channel interference from the 
    incumbent licensees. Therefore, consistent with the rules for 900 MHz 
    Specialized Mobile Radio (SMR), the Commission will not allow incumbent 
    (non-geographic) licensees to expand beyond their composite 
    interference contour unless the incumbents and the geographic licensee 
    have reached agreement on such modifications.
    
    D. Coverage Requirements
    
        16. The Commission notes that coverage requirements satisfy the 
    mandate for performance requirements under section 309(j)(4)(B) of the 
    Communications Act. The Commission is imposing the following coverage 
    requirements: for each MTA or EA, the geographic licensee must provide 
    coverage to one-third of the population within three years of the 
    geographic area license grant and to two-thirds of the population 
    within five years of the geographic area license grant. In the 
    alternative, the MTA or EA licensee may provide substantial service to 
    the geographic license area within five years of license grant. 
    Substantial service is defined as service that is sound, favorable, and 
    substantially above a level of mediocre service which would barely 
    warrant renewal. The failure to meet these coverage requirements will 
    result in automatic cancellation of the geographic license. The 
    Commission will reinstate any licenses held prior to auction for sites 
    that were authorized, constructed, and operating at the time of the 
    cancellation of the geographic area license.
    
    E. Co-Channel Interference Protection
    
    1. Co-Channel Interference Protection--Incumbent Licensees
        17. The Commission is persuaded that the advantages of adopting the 
    formulas proposed in the NPRM are outweighed by the disadvantages noted 
    by the commenters. As the commenters observed, changing from Tables E-1 
    and E-2 to the proposed formulas would, in most cases, reduce the 
    service area and composite interference contour that incumbent 
    licensees have relied on in developing their systems to date. 
    Additionally, the proposed formulas may underestimate the actual 
    reliable coverage of the paging systems. Using the fixed distances in 
    Tables E-1 and E-2 in Sec. 22.537 for the 929 MHz and 931 MHz channels 
    would maintain the status quo for 931 MHz channels and conform 929 MHz 
    channels to the current procedure for 931 MHz. Therefore, the 
    Commission is adopting the fixed distances in Tables E-1 and E-2 in 
    Sec. 22.537 for the exclusive 929 MHz and 931 MHz channels. Geographic 
    area licensees must provide co-channel protection to all incumbent 
    licensees, including incumbents in other geographic areas. The 
    Commission will allow geographic and incumbent licensees to use short-
    spaced locations pursuant to mutual written consent. The Commission 
    will continue to use the current formulas for the CCP channels below 
    931 MHz.
    2. Co-Channel Interference Protection--Adjacent Geographic Licensees
        18. Geographic licensees generally are not required to file 
    applications with the Commission, therefore it is possible that a 
    geographic licensee with a transmitter at or close to the border of the 
    MTA or EA could unknowingly cause interference to a neighboring 
    geographic licensee. It is in the interest of the geographic licensees 
    to find mutually beneficial ways to accommodate their needs in 
    providing service within their respective MTAs and EAs. Instead of 
    specifying a minimum distance a geographic licensee's transmission site 
    must be from the geographic border, which may result in unserved areas, 
    the Commission is allowing geographic licensees to negotiate mutually 
    acceptable agreements with all adjacent geographic area licensees if 
    the interfering contour of one geographic area licensee will extend 
    into the adjacent geographic area or areas. Adjacent geographic area 
    licensees have a duty to negotiate with each other in good faith 
    regarding co-channel interference protection. The Commission believes 
    that informal negotiations between parties in determining mutually 
    agreeable arrangements between adjacent MTAs and EAs will achieve the 
    most expeditious and effective resolution of co-channel interference. 
    The lack of adequate service to the public due to failure to negotiate 
    reasonable solutions to co-channel interference problems with adjacent 
    geographic area licensees could reflect negatively on licensees seeking 
    renewal.
    3. Maximum Power and Height-Power Limit
        19. The Commission believes that the 931 MHz and 929 MHz bands 
    should operate under the same power and height-power rules. Conforming 
    these rules will allow paging operators to design their systems in the 
    most economical manner. Most of the commenters addressing this issue 
    contend that the Commission should eliminate the disparity between the 
    931 and 929 MHz channels, and conform the maximum effective radiated 
    power (ERP) limit and the height-power limit in these bands. The 
    Commission is eliminating the height-power limit for 929 MHz systems, 
    to conform them to the 931 MHz systems. The Commission is also 
    increasing the permitted maximum ERP for all 929 MHz systems to 3500 
    Watts, to conform these systems with the nationwide 929 MHz systems and 
    the 931 MHz systems. With respect to the CCP bands below 931 MHz, the 
    Commission is maintaining the current power and height-power limits for 
    these channels.
    
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    F. Licensing in Mexican and Canadian Border Areas
    
        20. The Commission notes that commenters agree with the proposal 
    that border areas should be treated like any other area for licensing 
    purposes and carriers can determine whether spectrum is usable in 
    border areas under applicable treaties and protocols. Therefore, the 
    Commission will not distinguish between border and non-border areas in 
    geographic licensing. Geographic licensees will be responsible for 
    advising the Commission of any transmitter site changes or additions if 
    site-by-site coordination is required by Canada or Mexico.
    
    G. Eligibility to Participate in Competitive Bidding
    
        21. The Commission believes that it is important to allow all 
    parties to participate in the competitive bidding process for 
    geographic area licenses, and accordingly, apart from foreign ownership 
    limitations, eligibility will not be restricted. The Commission 
    believes that non-incumbents should be allowed to bid for available 
    spectrum, or to enter into joint ventures with incumbents for purposes 
    of bidding in a geographic area. The competitive bidding process itself 
    should deter speculation by those not genuinely interested in providing 
    service to the public. In addition, the Commission believes that the 
    open eligibility for the geographic area licenses will be pro-
    competitive and potentially will result in a diverse group of entities 
    providing paging services to the public.
    
    H. Channel Aggregation Limit
    
        22. The Commission has imposed a spectrum aggregation cap of 45 MHz 
    as the total amount of combined PCS, cellular, and SMR spectrum 
    classified as CMRS in which an entity may have an attributable interest 
    in any geographic area at any point in time. Narrowband radio services, 
    including paging, are not included in the spectrum cap because it is 
    highly unlikely that one entity could ever accumulate as much as 5 MHz 
    in any given geographic market. The Commission now concludes that a 
    channel aggregation limit is unnecessary for paging services. The 
    paging market is highly competitive and diversified, making it unlikely 
    that any one licensee could accumulate sufficient spectrum to dominate 
    the paging market, much less the CMRS market as a whole. The Commission 
    does not find any evidence that excessive channel aggregation has 
    occurred in the paging industry; to the contrary, paging channel use is 
    highly dispersed among numerous competing licensees. Additionally, the 
    Commission anticipates that many applicants for geographic area paging 
    licenses will be incumbents seeking to obtain geographic area licenses 
    where their existing facilities reside. Thus, the Commission does not 
    believe that geographic area licensing is likely to increase market 
    concentration in the paging industry. Finally, the Commission believes 
    that a cap could arbitrarily limit a carrier's capacity to provide 
    services that may require multiple channels. Therefore, the Commission 
    is not imposing a spectrum or channel aggregation cap on paging 
    licenses at this time.
    
    I. Competitive Bidding
    
    1. Competitive Bidding Design
    a. Bidding Methodology
        23. Based on the record in this proceeding and its successful 
    experience conducting simultaneous multiple round auctions for other 
    services, the Commission believes this type of auction is most 
    appropriate for paging licenses. The Commission believes that, for 
    certain bidders, these licenses will be significantly interdependent 
    because of the desirability of aggregation across spectrum blocks and 
    geographic areas and because some licenses are likely to be 
    substitutes. Given such interdependence, simultaneous multiple round 
    bidding generates more information about license values during the 
    course of the auction and provides bidders with more flexibility to 
    pursue back-up strategies than if the licenses were auctioned 
    separately or through sealed bidding. The Commission also expects the 
    value of paging licenses to be sufficiently high to warrant 
    simultaneous multiple round bidding. The Commission retains the 
    discretion, however, to use a different methodology if that proves to 
    be more efficient administratively. Prior to the auction, information 
    will be provided about the bidding design to be used.
    b. License Grouping
        24. Although it may be desirable to hold a single simultaneous 
    multiple round auction for all paging licenses, such an auction is not 
    currently feasible from an operational standpoint because there will be 
    more than 15,000 paging licenses available for auction. The Commission 
    finds that there is significant interdependence among licenses in the 
    929 MHz and 931 MHz services, and similar interdependency among the 
    licenses of the lower band paging services. The Commission also 
    believes that grouping interdependent licenses and putting them up for 
    bid at the same time promotes awarding licenses to bidders who value 
    them most highly. The Commission therefore will award the paging 
    licenses in a series of simultaneous multiple round auctions, grouping 
    them based on interdependency and operational feasibility. The 
    Commission reserves the discretion to decide on specific license 
    groupings as administrative circumstances dictate.
    c. Bidding Procedures
        25. Bid increments and tie bids. The Commission will announce, by 
    Public Notice prior to the auction, general guidelines for minimum bid 
    increments. Minimum bid increments for individual paging licenses or 
    groups of licenses may vary over the course of the auction and will be 
    announced before or during the auction. In the case of a tie bid, the 
    high bidder will be determined by the order in which the bids are 
    received by the Commission.
        26. Stopping rules. With more than ten times the largest number of 
    licenses the Commission has ever auctioned simultaneously, there is an 
    increased risk of an excessively prolonged auction if a significant 
    proportion of the licenses are auctioned simultaneously using a 
    simultaneous stopping rule. To reduce this risk and to promote 
    expeditious service to the public, while at the same time preserving 
    most of the efficiency benefits of a simultaneous stopping rule, the 
    Commission adopts a hybrid simultaneous/license-by-license stopping 
    rule. The hybrid rule has three phases. During Phase I, which lasts one 
    month, or 100 rounds, whichever comes later, the Commission will employ 
    its standard simultaneous stopping rule whereby bidding will remain 
    open on all licenses until bidding stops on every license. The auction 
    will close after one round passes in which no new valid bids or 
    proactive activity rule waivers are submitted. This provides bidders 
    some protection against the risk that bidding on a license will be 
    closed before they have sufficient information to start bidding on it 
    as a back up strategy. In Phase II, the Wireless Telecommunications 
    Bureau will assess the extent to which bidders are pursuing back up 
    strategies and implement a license-by-license stopping rule if the 
    Bureau determines that the use of back up strategies is minimal. Under 
    the license-by-license stopping rule, bidding on a license will close 
    whenever 10 consecutive rounds pass with no new valid bids for that 
    license. The remaining licenses will close according to the standard 
    simultaneous stopping rule--when a round passes
    
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    with no new valid bids on any license. Phase III begins after two 
    months and 100 rounds have passed. If the auction has not closed by 
    then, the Commission intends to implement the license-by-license 
    stopping rule that is discretionary in the second phase. This approach 
    balances concerns about the time to complete the paging auction and the 
    benefits of preserving back up strategies which give bidders the 
    flexibility to acquire licenses that are consistent with their business 
    plans. The Commission reserves the discretion not to employ this hybrid 
    stopping rule in future paging auctions based on its experience in this 
    auction and depending on the circumstances in future auctions with 
    respect to factors such as the number of licenses and degree that 
    licenses are encumbered.
        27. The Commission further retains the discretion, in Phase III, to 
    declare after 200 rounds that the auction will end after some specified 
    number of additional rounds. If this method is employed, bids will be 
    accepted only on licenses where the high bid has increased in the last 
    three rounds. This will provide the Commission with a mechanism to end 
    the auction in the unlikely event that a small number of bidders are 
    continuing to bid on a few low value licenses solely to delay the 
    closing of the auction. The Commission will declare the imminent end of 
    the auction only in the case of extremely dilatory bidding.
        28. Revealing bidders' identities. In the Competitive Bidding 
    Second Memorandum Opinion and Order, 59 FR 44272 (August 26, 1994), 
    because of the advantages of providing more information to bidders, and 
    the difficulties involved in ensuring that bidder identities remain 
    confidential, the Commission determined that it generally would release 
    the identities of bidders before each auction. However, the Commission 
    reserved the option to withhold bidder identities on an auction-by-
    auction basis if further experience showed that it would be feasible 
    and desirable to do so.
        29. In the case of the upcoming paging auctions, the Commission 
    believes that shielding certain information from the bidders will help 
    to speed the bidding since there will be less of an opportunity for 
    strategic gaming practices to occur. The Commission will announce by 
    Public Notice prior to the auction the precise information that will be 
    revealed to bidders during the auction. This information may be limited 
    to the high bids (no identities of bidders) and may also include the 
    total number of bids on each license. The loss of efficiency from 
    denying bidders the identities of likely winners of adjacent licenses 
    should be minimal because, in contrast to broadband personal 
    communications services, paging does not provide for roaming and there 
    is little uncertainty about technologies (i.e., GSM versus CDMA 
    technology).
        30. Activity Rule. The Commission will employ the Milgrom-Wilson 
    activity rules for the paging auctions. These rules discourage delay by 
    bidders and expedite simultaneous multiple round auctions in which a 
    simultaneous stopping rule is used. Under the Milgrom-Wilson rules, the 
    auction is divided into three stages and the minimum required activity 
    level, measured as a fraction of the bidder's eligibility in the 
    current round, will increase during the course of the auction.
        31. In each round of Stage One, a bidder that wishes to maintain 
    its current eligibility is required to be active on licenses 
    encompassing at least 60 percent of the activity units for which it is 
    currently eligible. The number of activity units for a given license is 
    calculated by multiplying the amount of spectrum (in MHz) by the 
    population of the market. A bidder's eligibility is determined by 
    multiplying the activity units by a specified monetary figure. Failure 
    to maintain the requisite activity level will result in a reduction in 
    the amount of activity units upon which a bidder will be eligible to 
    bid in the next round of bidding (unless an activity rule waiver is 
    used). During Stage One, if bidding activity is below the required 
    minimum level, eligibility in the next round will be calculated by 
    multiplying the current round activity by five-thirds (5/3). 
    Eligibility for each applicant at the start of the auction is 
    determined by the amount of the upfront payment received and the 
    licenses identified in its auction application.
        32. In each round of Stage Two, a bidder that wishes to maintain 
    its current eligibility is required to be active on at least 80 percent 
    of the activity units for which it is eligible in the current round. 
    During Stage Two, if activity is below the required minimum level, 
    eligibility in the next round will be calculated by multiplying the 
    current round activity by five-fourths (5/4).
        33. In each round of Stage Three, a bidder that wishes to maintain 
    its current eligibility must be active on licenses encompassing at 
    least 98 percent of the activity units for which it is eligible in the 
    current round. In Stage Three, if activity in the current round is 
    below 98 percent of current eligibility, eligibility in the next round 
    will be calculated by multiplying the current round activity by fifty 
    forty-ninths (50/49).
        34. The Commission reserves the discretion to set and, by 
    announcement before or during the auction, vary the requisite minimum 
    activity levels (and associated eligibility calculations) for each 
    auction stage. Retaining this flexibility will improve the Commission's 
    ability to control the pace of the auction and help ensure that the 
    auction is completed within a reasonable period of time.
        35. For paging auctions, the Commission will use the following 
    general transition guidelines. The auction will start in Stage One and 
    typically will move to Stage Two when the auction activity level is 
    below ten percent for three consecutive rounds in Stage One. In 
    general, the auction will move from Stage Two to Stage Three when the 
    auction activity level is below ten percent for three consecutive 
    rounds in Stage Two. In no case can the auction revert to an earlier 
    stage. The Commission retains the discretion to determine and announce 
    during the course of an auction when, and if, to move from one auction 
    stage to the next. These determinations will be based on a variety of 
    measures of bidder activity including, but not limited to, the auction 
    activity level defined above, the percentage of licenses (measured in 
    terms of activity units) on which there are new bids, the number of new 
    bids, and the percentage increase in revenue.
        36. To avoid the consequences of clerical errors and to compensate 
    for unusual circumstances that might delay a bidder's bid preparation 
    or submission in a particular round, bidders will be provided with five 
    activity rule waivers that may be used in any round during the course 
    of the auction. If a bidder's activity level is below the required 
    activity level, a waiver automatically will be applied. A waiver will 
    preserve current eligibility in the next round, but cannot be used to 
    correct an error in the amount bid. An activity rule waiver applies to 
    an entire round of bidding and not to a particular service area.
        37. Bidders will be afforded an opportunity to override the 
    automatic waiver mechanism when they place a bid, if they wish to 
    reduce their bidding eligibility and do not want to use a waiver to 
    retain their eligibility at its current level. If a bidder overrides 
    the automatic waiver mechanism, its eligibility permanently will be 
    reduced (according to the formulas specified above), and it will not be 
    permitted to regain its bidding eligibility from a previous round. An 
    automatic waiver invoked in a round in which there are no valid bids 
    will not keep the auction
    
    [[Page 11621]]
    
    open. Bidders will have the option to proactively enter an activity 
    rule waiver during the bid submission period. If a bidder submits a 
    proactive waiver in a round in which no other bidding activity occurs, 
    the auction will remain open.
        38. The Commission retains the discretion to issue additional 
    waivers during the course of an auction for circumstances beyond a 
    bidder's control. The Commission also retains the flexibility to 
    adjust, by Public Notice prior to an auction, the number of waivers 
    permitted, or to institute a rule that allows one waiver during a 
    specified number of bidding rounds or during specified stages of the 
    auction.
        39. Duration of bidding rounds. The Commission retains the 
    discretion to vary the duration of the bidding rounds or the interval 
    at which bids are accepted in order to move the auction to closure more 
    quickly. The duration of and intervals between bidding rounds will be 
    announced either by Public Notice prior to the auction or by 
    announcement during the auction.
    2. Procedural and Payment Issues
    a. Pre-auction Application Procedures
        40. The Commission will use the pre-auction application procedures 
    established in the Competitive Bidding Second Report and Order, 59 FR 
    22980 (May 4, 1994), for the paging services. A Public Notice 
    announcing the auction will specify the licenses to be auctioned and 
    the time and place of the auction in the event that mutually exclusive 
    applications are filed. The Public Notice will also specify, inter 
    alia, the short-form filing deadline.
        41. The Commission adopts the same general bidding procedures used 
    for the PCS, 900 MHz SMR, and Multipoint Distribution Service (MDS) 
    auctions. Under these procedures, bidders will be able to submit bids 
    remotely, either electronically or by telephone. The Commission has 
    established a schedule of fees that participants in the competitive 
    bidding process will be assessed for certain on-line computer services, 
    bidding software, and Bidder Information Packages. Bidders will be 
    permitted to bid electronically only if they have filed a short-form 
    application electronically. Bidders who file their short-form 
    applications manually may bid only telephonically.
    b. Short-form Applications
        42. Section 309(j)(5) of the Communications Act provides that no 
    person may participate in an auction unless such bidder ``submits such 
    information and assurances as the Commission may require to demonstrate 
    that such bidder's application is acceptable for filing.'' Moreover, 
    ``[n]o license shall be granted to an applicant selected pursuant to 
    this subsection unless the Commission determines that the applicant is 
    qualified pursuant to (section 309(a)) and sections 308(b) and 310'' of 
    the Communications Act. 47 U.S.C. 309(j)(5). The Commission will, 
    therefore, dismiss applications not meeting the requirements of its 
    rules prior to the auction.
        43. The Commission disagrees with commenters who state that it 
    should not permit bidders to apply for all market areas by checking the 
    ``all'' markets box on their FCC Form 175. The Commission believes 
    bidders should have the flexibility to pursue back-up strategies if 
    they are unable to obtain their first choice of licenses. Moreover, any 
    potential problems associated with so-called blanket bidding will be 
    cured through the Commission's eligibility rules and the submission of 
    a corresponding upfront payment. Finally, because the Commission has 
    permitted incumbents to expand their systems pending the commencement 
    of the auction, it believes that current application rules will have no 
    impact on planned expansions by incumbents. The Commission sees no 
    reason to change its current application procedures at this time.
        44. If only one application that is acceptable for filing is 
    received for a particular market, and thus there is no mutual 
    exclusivity, the Commission will issue a Public Notice cancelling the 
    auction for that license and establish a date for the filing of a long-
    form application, the acceptance of which will trigger the procedures 
    permitting petitions to deny.
    c. Amendments and Modifications
        45. Applicants for paging auctions will be provided with an 
    opportunity to correct minor defects in their short-form applications 
    prior to the auction. After review of the short-form applications, a 
    Public Notice will be issued listing all defective applications. 
    Applicants with minor defects in their applications will be given an 
    opportunity to cure them and resubmit a corrected version.
    d. Upfront Payments
        46. The Commission believes that a specific upfront payment amount 
    should be established for each license upon which bids are to be made. 
    It is important, as commenters point out, to deter speculation and 
    ensure, to the greatest extent practicable, that only sincere bidders 
    participate in the auction. The Commission delegates to the Wireless 
    Telecommunications Bureau the authority and discretion to determine an 
    appropriate upfront payment for each license being auctioned, taking 
    into account such factors as the population and the approximate amount 
    of unencumbered spectrum in each geographic license area. The 
    Commission expects that the Bureau will follow the guidelines laid out 
    in the Competitive Bidding Second Report and Order, and establish 
    upfront payments equal to approximately five percent of the expected 
    amounts of winning bids for the various licenses. In no event will the 
    upfront payment for any license be less than $2,500, the minimum 
    suggested in the Competitive Bidding Second Report and Order, and the 
    Bureau will retain the flexibility to modify this minimum if experience 
    demonstrates that a higher amount would better deter speculative 
    filings.
        47. Prior to a paging license auction, the Bureau will issue a 
    Public Notice listing the upfront payment amounts corresponding to the 
    licenses to be auctioned. The number of activity units determines the 
    amount of the upfront payment for a license. A prospective bidder must 
    submit an upfront payment equal to the largest combination of activity 
    units on which the bidder anticipates being active in any single round. 
    Although a bidder may file applications for every license being 
    auctioned, the total upfront payment submitted by each applicant will 
    determine the combinations on which the applicant will actually be 
    permitted to be active in any single round of bidding. Upfront payments 
    will be due by a date specified by Public Notice, but generally no 
    later than 14 days before the scheduled auction.
    e. Down Payments
        48. The Commission concludes that winning bidders (including 
    winners that are small businesses, as discussed below) must supplement 
    their upfront payments with a down payment sufficient to bring their 
    total deposits up to 20 percent of their winning bid(s). If the upfront 
    payment amount on deposit is greater than 20 percent of the winning bid 
    amount after deducting any bid withdrawal and default payments due, the 
    additional monies will be refunded. If a bidder has withdrawn a bid or 
    defaulted, but the amount of the withdrawal or default payment cannot 
    yet be determined, the bidder will be required to make a deposit of up 
    to 20 percent of the amount bid. When it becomes possible to calculate 
    and assess the payment, any excess deposit will be refunded. Monies on 
    account will be applied to bid withdrawal and default
    
    [[Page 11622]]
    
    payments due before being applied toward the bidder's down payment on 
    licenses the bidder has won and seeks to acquire.
        49. Winning bidders, except small businesses, must submit the 
    required down payment by cashier's check or by wire transfer to the 
    Commission's lock-box bank within 10 business days following release of 
    a Public Notice announcing the close of bidding. All auction winners, 
    except those that qualify for installment payments, will be required to 
    make full payment of the balance of their winning bids within 10 
    business days following Public Notice that licenses are ready for 
    grant.
    f. Bid Withdrawal, Default, and Disqualification
        50. The Commission will apply its general bid withdrawal, default, 
    and disqualification rules in paging license auctions. If a license is 
    re-offered by auction, the ``winning bid'' refers to the high bid in 
    the auction in which the license is re-offered. If a license is re-
    offered in the same auction, the ``winning bid'' refers to the high bid 
    amount made subsequent to the withdrawal in that auction. If a license 
    which is the subject of withdrawal or default is offered to the highest 
    losing bidders in the initial auction, as opposed to being re-
    auctioned, the ``winning bid'' refers to the bid of the highest bidder 
    who accepts the offer. In the unlikely event that there is more than 
    one bid withdrawal on the same license, the Commission will hold each 
    withdrawing bidder responsible for the difference between its withdrawn 
    bid and the amount of the winning bid the next time the licenses are 
    offered for auction. If a license winner defaults or is otherwise 
    disqualified after an auction is closed, the Commission will exercise 
    its discretion to hold a new auction or offer the license to the second 
    highest bidder.
        51. If a default or disqualification involves gross misconduct, 
    misrepresentation or bad faith by an applicant, the Commission may 
    declare the applicant and its principals ineligible to bid in future 
    auctions, and may take any other action that it deems necessary, 
    including institution of proceedings to revoke any existing licenses 
    held by the applicant.
        52. The Wireless Telecommunications Bureau has recently instituted 
    an additional procedure that warns bidders of the possibility of a 
    mistaken bid, and this procedure will be utilized in the paging license 
    auctions. The Commission also recently addressed the issue of how its 
    bid withdrawal payment provisions apply to bids that are mistakenly 
    placed and withdrawn. See Atlanta Trunking Associates, Inc. and MAP 
    Wireless L.L.C. Request to Waive Bid Withdrawal Payment Provisions, 61 
    FR 25807 (May 23, 1996), recon. pending.
    g. Long-form Applications
        53. In the Competitive Bidding Second Report and Order, the 
    Commission established rules requiring winning bidders to submit a 
    long-form application. These procedures, which are set forth in 
    Sec. 1.2107 of the Commission's rules, 47 CFR 1.2107, will be followed 
    if the winning bidder makes the down payment in a timely manner.
    h. Petitions to Deny and Limitations on Settlements
        54. The petition to deny procedures in Secs. 22.130 and 90.163 of 
    the Commission's rules, 47 CFR 22.130 and 90.163, will apply to the 
    paging services. A party filing a petition to deny against a paging 
    license application will be required to demonstrate standing and meet 
    all other applicable filing requirements. Sections 90.162 and 22.129 of 
    the Commission's rules, 47 CFR 90.162 and 22.129, prevent the filing of 
    speculative applications and pleadings for purposes of extracting money 
    from applicants. Thus, the Commission will limit the consideration that 
    an individual or entity is permitted to receive for agreeing to 
    withdraw an application or petition to deny to the legitimate and 
    prudent expenses of the withdrawing applicant or petitioner. To the 
    extent Secs. 22.129 and 90.162 conflict with Sec. 1.2105 of the 
    Commission's rules, 47 CFR 1.2105, these provisions should not apply to 
    paging licenses awarded through competitive bidding. Therefore, the 
    Commission will amend these provisions to prohibit agreements to 
    withdraw mutually exclusive applications, or pleadings filed by one 
    applicant against another applicant for a license in the same 
    geographic area, after the deadline for filing short-form applications.
    3. Regulatory Safeguards
    a. Anti-Collusion Rules
        55. The Commission will require paging licensees to comply with the 
    reporting requirements and rules prohibiting collusion embodied in 
    Secs. 1.2105 and 1.2107 of the Commission's rules, 47 CFR 1.2105 and 
    1.2107. Thus, after the FCC Form 175 filing deadline, applicants may 
    not discuss the substance of their bids or bidding strategies with 
    other applicants, other than those identified on their short-form 
    applications, that are bidding in the same license areas, even if they 
    are not bidding for the same spectrum blocks.
        56. Where specific instances of collusion in the competitive 
    bidding process are alleged during the petition to deny process, the 
    Commission may conduct an investigation or refer such complaints to the 
    United States Department of Justice for investigation. Bidders who are 
    found to have violated the antitrust laws, in addition to any penalties 
    they incur under the antitrust laws, or who are found to have violated 
    the Commission's rules in connection with their participation in the 
    auction process, may be subject to a variety of sanctions, including 
    forfeiture of their down payment or their full bid amount, revocation 
    of their license(s), and possible prohibition from participating in 
    future auctions.
    b. Transfer Disclosure Requirements
        57. Section 1.2111(a), 47 CFR 1.2111(a), will apply to all paging 
    licenses obtained through the competitive bidding process. The 
    Commission sees nothing disruptive in requiring the disclosure of this 
    information, and believes these disclosure requirements are necessary 
    to the enforcement of its unjust enrichment provisions. The Commission 
    also agrees with the Federal Trade Commission that speculation in 
    connection with the acquisition of paging licenses is a major concern. 
    By enabling the Commission to monitor license transfers, the disclosure 
    requirements of Secs. 1.2111(a), which implements section 309(j)(4)(E) 
    of the Communications Act, (47 U.S.C. 309(j)(4)(E)), will assist in 
    eliminating the problem of speculation while providing safeguards to 
    those who might otherwise fall victim to deceptive practices used to 
    induce them to invest in paging licenses.
    4. Treatment of Designated Entities
    a. Small Businesses
        58. Congress specifically cited the needs of small businesses in 
    enacting Sec. 309(j) of the Communications Act, 47 U.S.C. 309(j), 
    directing the Commission to promote economic opportunities for small 
    businesses. While a number of small businesses are successfully 
    participating in the paging industry, the Commission concludes that it 
    is appropriate to establish special provisions in its paging rules for 
    competitive bidding by small businesses.
    
    [[Page 11623]]
    
    b. Minority- and Women-Owned Businesses
        59. In the paging service, as in other auctionable services, the 
    Commission is committed to meeting the statutory objectives of 
    promoting economic opportunity and competition, of avoiding excessive 
    concentration of licenses, and of ensuring access to new and innovative 
    technologies by disseminating licenses among a wide variety of 
    applicants, including businesses owned by members of minority groups 
    and women. Commenters failed to provide record evidence sufficient to 
    support special provisions for minorities under the strict scrutiny 
    standard of judicial review, which applies to federal race-based 
    programs. The Commission is also concerned that the record would not 
    support gender-based provisions under intermediate scrutiny, which is 
    the standard of judicial review that applies to such provisions. 
    Balancing its obligation to provide opportunities for women- and 
    minority-owned businesses to participate in spectrum-based services 
    against its statutory duties to facilitate the rapid delivery of new 
    services to the American consumer and promote efficient use of the 
    spectrum, the Commission concludes that it should not delay the paging 
    service auctions for the amount of time it would take to adduce 
    sufficient evidence to support race- and gender-based provisions. 
    Moreover, the Commission believes that most minority- and women-owned 
    businesses will be able to take advantage of the specific provisions 
    adopted for small businesses.
    c. Bidding Credits
        60. While bidding credits do not guarantee the success of small 
    businesses, the Commission believes that they at least provide such 
    bidders with an opportunity to successfully compete against larger, 
    well-financed bidders. The Commission also concludes that it is 
    appropriate to adopt tiered bidding credits for paging auction 
    participants based on the size of the small business. Such an approach 
    will further the Commission's mandate under section 309(j) of the 
    Communications Act to disseminate licenses to a variety of applicants.
        61. The Commission therefore will define a small business as either 
    (1) an entity that, together with its affiliates and controlling 
    principals, has average gross revenues for the three preceding years of 
    not more than $3 million, or (2) an entity that, together with 
    affiliates and controlling principals, has average gross revenues for 
    the three preceding years of not more than $15 million. The Commission 
    will give small businesses that, together with affiliates and 
    controlling principals, have average gross revenues for the three 
    preceding years of not more than $3 million, a 15 percent bidding 
    credit. The Commission will give small businesses that, together with 
    affiliates and controlling principals, have average gross revenues for 
    the three preceding years of not more than $15 million, a bidding 
    credit of 10 percent. These bidding credits take into account the 
    difficulties smaller businesses have in accessing capital. Bidding 
    credits at these levels also achieve a reasonable compromise between 
    the arguments of commenters advocating greater credits and those of 
    commenters advocating no credits.
        62. For purposes of the definitions adopted here, the Commission 
    will consider the gross revenues of the applicant, all controlling 
    principals in the applicant, and affiliates of the applicant. The 
    Commission chooses not to impose specific equity requirements on 
    controlling principals but will require that, in order for an applicant 
    to qualify as a small business, qualifying small business principals 
    must maintain both de jure and de facto control of the applicant. For 
    this purpose, the Commission will borrow from certain Small Business 
    Administration (SBA) rules that are used to determine when a firm 
    should be deemed an affiliate of a small business. Typically, de jure 
    control is evidenced by ownership of 50.1 percent of an entity's voting 
    stock. De facto control is determined on a case-by-case basis. An 
    entity must demonstrate at least the following indicia of control to 
    establish that it retains de facto control of the applicant: (1) The 
    entity constitutes or appoints more than 50 percent of the board of 
    directors or partnership management committee; (2) the entity has 
    authority to appoint, promote, demote and fire senior executives that 
    control the day-to-day activities of the licensee; and (3) the entity 
    plays an integral role in all major management decisions. The 
    Commission cautions that while it is not imposing specific equity 
    requirements on small business principals, the absence of significant 
    equity could raise questions about whether the applicant qualifies as a 
    bona fide small business.
        63. Eligible small businesses will be permitted to form consortia 
    and not aggregate their gross revenues. Additionally, a small 
    corporation that has dispersed voting stock ownership and no 
    controlling affiliates will not be required to aggregate with its own 
    revenues the revenues of each shareholder for purposes of small 
    business status. Thus, the Commission clarifies that such an applicant 
    may qualify--even in the absence of identifiable control being held by 
    particular investors.
    d. Installment Payments and Down Payments
        64. The Commission adopts installment payments for small business 
    winners in the paging license auctions. The Commission recognizes that 
    small businesses, including those owned by women and minorities, face 
    capital access difficulties not encountered by other firms. Thus, they 
    require special measures to ensure their participation in the paging 
    service. Licensees who qualify as small businesses in paging license 
    auctions will be entitled to pay their winning bid amount in quarterly 
    installments over the term of the license, with interest charges to be 
    fixed at the time of licensing at a rate equal to the rate for ten-year 
    U.S. Treasury obligations plus 2.5 percent. The rate for ten-year U.S. 
    Treasury obligations will be determined by taking the coupon rate of 
    interest on the ten-year U.S. Treasury notes most recently auctioned by 
    the Treasury Department before licenses are conditionally granted. 
    These licensees will be able to make interest-only payments for the 
    first two years of the license term. Timely payment of all installments 
    will be a condition of the license grant, and failure to make such 
    timely payments will be grounds for revocation of the license.
        65. The Commission declines to adopt a second installment payment 
    plan with a longer interest-only period for small businesses with 
    average gross revenues of not more than $3 million. The Commission 
    believes that the two-year interest-only period in the single plan it 
    adopts will provide small businesses with the appropriate level of 
    financing to overcome difficulties in attracting capital. Given that it 
    is making additional financial assistance available to very small 
    businesses in the form of a 15 percent bidding credit, the Commission 
    does not think a longer interest-only period is justified.
        66. The Commission also concludes that it should provide for late 
    payment fees in connection with its installment payment plan for paging 
    licensees. Therefore, when licensees are more than fifteen days late in 
    their scheduled installment payments, a late payment fee equal to 5 
    percent of the amount of the past due payment will be charged. For 
    example, if a $50,000 payment is due on June 1, then on June 16 $2,500 
    is due in addition to the payment. Without such a fee licensees may not 
    have adequate financial incentives to
    
    [[Page 11624]]
    
    make installment payments on time and may attempt to maximize their 
    cash flow at the government's expense by paying late. The 5 percent 
    payment adopted is an approximation of late payment fees applied in 
    typical commercial lending transactions. Payments will be applied in 
    the following order: late charges, interest charges, principal 
    payments.
        67. The Commission believes that small businesses should be 
    required to pay a down payment of 20 percent. Such a requirement is 
    consistent with ensuring that winning bidders have the financial 
    capability of building out their systems and will provide the 
    Commission with stronger assurance against default than a 10 percent 
    down payment. Increasing the amount of the bidder's funds at risk in 
    the event of default discourages insincere bidding and therefore 
    increases the likelihood that licenses are awarded to parties who are 
    best able to serve the public. A 20 percent down payment should also 
    cover the required payments in the unlikely event of default. Thus, 
    small business licensees will be required to bring their deposit up to 
    ten percent of the winning bid within ten business days of the close of 
    the auction. Prior to licensing, they will be required to pay an 
    additional ten percent. Specific procedures for payment will be 
    provided in a Public Notice issued by the Wireless Telecommunications 
    Bureau. The Commission declines to adopt reduced upfront payment rules 
    for small businesses participating in paging license auctions. The 
    Commission believes a uniform upfront payment provision for all bidders 
    in the auction is necessary in order to deter speculation and to ensure 
    that only sincere bidders participate in the auction.
    e. Partitioning
        68. Based on the strong support expressed by commenters for 
    granting broad partitioning rights to paging licensees, the Commission 
    will permit all MTA and EA paging licensees to partition to any party 
    eligible to be a paging licensee. The Commission takes this action with 
    respect to partitioning because of its conclusion that allowing holders 
    of paging licenses to partition their geographic service areas will 
    facilitate the provision of services in small markets and rural areas. 
    Partitioning will also furnish providers of paging service with 
    operational flexibility that will serve to promote the most efficient 
    use of the spectrum and encourage participation by a wide variety of 
    service providers. The Commission will permit partitioning of paging 
    licenses awarded through competitive bidding based on any license area 
    defined by the parties.
        69. Due to the paucity of comments on the subject, and uncertainty 
    as to whether it is technically feasible, the Commission will not, at 
    this time, authorize spectrum disaggregation for the paging services. 
    Instead, the Commission seeks information regarding the technical 
    feasibility and appropriateness of spectrum disaggregation for the 
    paging services in a Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking.
        70. Providers of paging service will be permitted to acquire 
    partitioned licenses in either of two ways: (1) By forming bidding 
    consortia to participate in auctions, and then partitioning the 
    licenses won among consortium members; or (2) by acquiring partitioned 
    licenses from other licensees through private negotiation and agreement 
    either before or after the auction. Each member of a consortium will be 
    required to file a long-form application, following the auction, for 
    its respective mutually agreed-upon geographic area. With regard to 
    partitioning by small businesses, the Commission seeks comment in the 
    Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking regarding the treatment of 
    bidding credits and installment payments. In the event the Commission 
    receives applications requesting FCC consent to partitioning transfers 
    from small businesses to non-small businesses or to small businesses 
    that qualify for less favorable bidding credits, action on such 
    applications will be deferred until the adoption of rules governing the 
    treatment of bidding credits and installment payments.
    f. Unjust Enrichment Provisions for Full Transfers
        71. The Commission adopts unjust enrichment rules for paging. These 
    rules provide that, during the initial license term, licensees 
    utilizing bidding credits and seeking to assign or transfer control of 
    a license to an entity that does not meet the eligibility criteria for 
    bidding credits will be required to reimburse the government for the 
    value of the benefit conferred by the government, that is, the amount 
    of the bidding credit, plus interest at the rate imposed for 
    installment financing at the time the license was awarded, before the 
    assignment or transfer will be approved by the Commission. Licensees 
    utilizing a bidding credit and seeking to assign or transfer control of 
    a license to a small business that meets the eligibility standards for 
    a lower bidding credit will be required to reimburse the U.S. 
    government for the difference between the amount of the bidding credit 
    obtained by the original licensee and the bidding credit for which the 
    assignee, transferee or new licensee is eligible, plus interest at the 
    rate imposed for installment financing at the time the license was 
    awarded as a condition of Commission approval of such assignment or 
    transfer. If a licensee that utilizes bidding credits seeks to make any 
    change in ownership structure that would render the licensee ineligible 
    for bidding credits, or eligible only for a lower bidding credit, the 
    licensee must first seek Commission approval and reimburse the 
    government for the amount of the bidding credit, or the difference 
    between its original bidding credit and the bidding credit for which it 
    is eligible after the ownership change, plus interest at the rate 
    imposed for installment financing at the time the license was awarded. 
    The amount of this payment will be reduced over time as follows: (1) A 
    transfer in the first two years of the license term will result in a 
    forfeiture of 100 percent of the value of the bidding credit (or the 
    difference between the bidding credit obtained by the original licensee 
    and the bidding credit for which the new licensee is eligible); (2) in 
    year three of the license term the payment will be 75 percent; (3) in 
    year four the payment will be 50 percent, and (4) in year five the 
    payment will be 25 percent, after which there will be no required 
    payment. These payments will have to be paid to the U.S. Treasury as a 
    condition of approval of the assignment, transfer, or ownership change.
        72. In addition, if a licensee that qualifies for installment 
    payments seeks to assign or transfer control of its license during its 
    term to an entity that does not meet the small business definition, the 
    Commission will require payment of the remaining principal and any 
    interest accrued through the date of assignment as a condition of the 
    license assignment or transfer. Also, if an investor subsequently 
    purchases an interest in the business and, as a result, the gross 
    revenues of the business exceed the applicable financial caps, these 
    unjust enrichment provisions will apply. The Commission will apply 
    these payment requirements for the entire license term to ensure that 
    small businesses look first to other small businesses when deciding to 
    transfer their licenses. However, the Commission will not impose a 
    holding period or other transfer restrictions on these licensees.
    g. Spectrum Set-aside
        73. The Commission will not adopt an entrepreneurs' block for 
    paging licenses. The large number of licenses of different
    
    [[Page 11625]]
    
    sizes that will be available in the paging auctions should allow for 
    extensive participation of small businesses without an entrepreneurs' 
    block. Moreover, the special provisions for small businesses that the 
    Commission adopts, including installment payments and tiered bidding 
    credits, will give small businesses a significant opportunity to 
    acquire paging licenses through the auctions.
    
    III. Conclusion
    
        74. The Commission concludes that the paging rules and geographic 
    area licensing adopted in this Second Report and Order will facilitate 
    future development of paging systems and foster competition between 
    paging and other CMRS in general.
    
    IV. Procedural Matters and Ordering Clauses
    
    A. Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
    
        75. As required by section 603 of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 
    U.S.C. 603 (RFA), an Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) was 
    incorporated in the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) in WT Docket 
    No. 96-18. The Commission sought written public comment on the 
    proposals in the NPRM, including the IRFA. The Commission's Final 
    Regulatory Flexibility Analysis in this Second Report and Order 
    conforms to the RFA, as amended by the Contract With America 
    Advancement Act of 1996, Pub. L. 104-121, 110 Stat. 847 (1996). (CWAA, 
    Subtitle II of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act 
    of 1996 (SBREFA) codified at 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.)
    Need for and Purpose of This Action
        76. In the Second Report and Order, in WT Docket No. 96-18, the 
    Commission adopts rules to establish geographic area licensing and 
    competitive bidding for Common Carrier Paging (CCP) and exclusive 929 
    MHz Private Carrier Paging (PCP) services. These rules are adopted to 
    establish a flexible regulatory scheme for paging services, which will 
    promote efficient licensing and competition in the Commercial Mobile 
    Radio Services (CMRS) marketplace. The competitive bidding rules 
    adopted in the Second Report and Order are pursuant to section 309(j) 
    of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended (Communications Act), 
    which grants authority to the Commission to use auctions to select 
    among mutually exclusive applications for initial licenses for 
    subscriber-based services.
    Summary of Issues Raised in Response to the Initial Regulatory 
    Flexibility Analysis
        77. Several commenters submitted comments in response to the IRFA. 
    These commenters contend that the Commission did not assess how the 
    proposals for market area licensing and competitive bidding will impact 
    small businesses; that market area licensing will alleviate some 
    administrative burdens but the savings will mainly be seen by the 
    largest paging operators; and that market area licensing will impose 
    administrative burdens and additional costs on small businesses. In 
    addition to the comments specifically submitted in response to the 
    IRFA, several commenters raised issues in their comments to the NPRM 
    regarding the effects of the proposals in the NPRM on small businesses. 
    These commenters do not support geographic area licensing for the 
    exclusive 929 MHz and 931 MHz paging channels. These commenters contend 
    that geographic area licensing would be disruptive to existing 
    licensees, as well as to the public, without providing any overriding 
    benefit. The Commission addresses these issues in the Second Report and 
    Order, and concludes that geographic area licensing using Major Trading 
    Areas (MTAs) as the geographic area for these bands, is in the public 
    interest. The Commission also observes that small businesses will be 
    able to use bidding credits and installment payments in order to 
    compete with larger entities in the auction process.
        78. Additionally, several commenters are opposed to geographic area 
    licensing for the 35-36 MHz, 43-44 MHz, 152-159 MHz, and 454-460 MHz 
    bands and claim that geographic area licensing would prevent the 
    continued growth of small paging businesses. Several commenters are 
    also opposed to geographic area licensing for other services, such as 
    Basic Exchange Telecommunications Radio Service (BETRS). Commenters 
    argue that it is not in the public interest to use competitive bidding 
    to select between applications for BETRS and paging, as this may leave 
    some rural areas without any local exchange service. Commenters contend 
    that requiring local exchange carriers to bid for BETRS spectrum would 
    defy the requirements in the Communications Act for universal service 
    and would jeopardize the Commission's goal to increase subscriber 
    penetration. The Commission addresses these issues in the Second Report 
    and Order, and concludes that geographic area licensing, using Economic 
    Areas (EAs) as the geographic area for these bands, is in the public 
    interest. The Commission notes that EAs, which are smaller than MTAs, 
    will provide more opportunities for small paging businesses. The 
    Commission also observes that small businesses will be able to use 
    bidding credits and installment payments in order to compete with 
    larger entities in the auction process. The Commission concludes that 
    rural areas will not be deprived of service because existing BETRS 
    systems will remain in place and the new partitioning rules adopted in 
    the Second Report and Order will allow BETRS operators to enter into 
    partitioning agreements with the geographic area paging licensees. 
    Additionally, the Commission notes that BETRS operators will be able to 
    obtain additional sites on a secondary basis.
        79. Commenters are also opposed to geographic licensing for the 
    shared channels and request that the Commission maintain the present 
    system of site-by-site licensing for these channels. The commenters 
    observe that these channels are predominantly used by small businesses. 
    The Commission finds that the concerns raised by these commenters 
    regarding the shared channels are well-founded and therefore declines 
    to impose geographic area licensing for the shared channels.
    Description and Number of Small Entities Involved
        80. The rules adopted in this Second Report and Order will apply to 
    current paging operators and new entrants into the paging market. Under 
    these rules, exclusive 929 MHz paging licenses and licenses for all CCP 
    channels will be granted on a market area basis, instead of site-by-
    site, and mutually exclusive applications will be resolved through 
    competitive bidding procedures. In order to ensure the more meaningful 
    participation of small business entities in the auction for mutually 
    exclusive geographic area paging licenses the Commission has adopted a 
    two-tier definition of small businesses. A small business will be 
    defined for these purposes as either (1) an entity that, together with 
    its affiliates and controlling principals, has average gross revenues 
    for the three preceding years of not more than $3 million, or (2) an 
    entity that, together with affiliates and controlling principals, has 
    average gross revenues for the three preceding years of not more than 
    $15 million. The Small Business Administration (SBA) has not yet 
    approved this definition for paging services. The Commission will 
    utilize the SBA's definition applicable to radiotelephone companies, 
    i.e., an entity employing less than 1,500
    
    [[Page 11626]]
    
    persons. See 13 CFR 121.201, Standard Industrial Classification Code 
    4812.
        81. The Commission anticipates that a total of 16,630 non-
    nationwide geographic area licenses will be auctioned. The geographic 
    area licenses subject to auction will consist of 2,550 MTA licenses and 
    14,080 EA licenses. In addition to the 47 Rand McNally MTAs, the 
    Commission is adding three MTAs for the U.S. territories of (1) Guam 
    and the Northern Mariana Islands, (2) Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin 
    Islands, and (3) American Samoa. The Commission is also licensing 
    Alaska as a single MTA separate from the Seattle MTA. There will be a 
    total of 51 MTA licenses auctioned for each non-nationwide 931 MHz and 
    exclusive 929 MHz channel. Auctions of paging licenses have not yet 
    been held, and there is no basis to determine the number of licenses 
    that will be awarded to small entities. Given the fact that nearly all 
    radiotelephone companies have fewer than 1,000 employees, and that no 
    reliable estimate of the number of prospective paging licensees can be 
    made, the Commission assumes, for purposes of the evaluations and 
    conclusions in this Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, that all the 
    auctioned 16,630 geographic area paging licenses will be awarded to 
    small entities, as that term is defined by the SBA. See U.S. Bureau of 
    the Census, U.S. Department of Commerce, 1992 Census of Transportation, 
    Communications, and Utilities, UC 92-S-1, Subject Series, Establishment 
    and Firm Size, Table 5, Employment Size of Firms: 1992, SIC Code 4812 
    (issued May 1995).
    Summary of Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping and Other Compliance 
    Requirements
        82. Geographic area paging licensees may be required to report 
    information concerning the location of their transmission sites under 
    some circumstances, although generally they will not be required to 
    file applications on a site-by-site basis. Additionally, geographic 
    area license applicants will be subject to reporting and recordkeeping 
    requirements to comply with the competitive bidding rules. 
    Specifically, applicants will apply for paging license auctions by 
    filing a short-form application (FCC Form 175). Winning bidders will 
    file a long-form application (FCC Form 600) at the conclusion of the 
    auction. Additionally, entities seeking treatment as small businesses 
    will need to submit information pertaining to the gross revenues of the 
    small business applicant and its affiliates and controlling principals. 
    Such entities will also need to maintain supporting documentation at 
    their principal place of business.
        83. Section 309(j)(4)(E) of the Communications Act directs the 
    Commission to ``require such transfer disclosures and anti-trafficking 
    restrictions and payment schedules as may be necessary to prevent 
    unjust enrichment as a result of the methods employed to issue licenses 
    and permits.'' 47 U.S.C. 309(j)(4)(E). The Commission adopted 
    safeguards designed to ensure that the requirements of this section are 
    satisfied, including a transfer disclosure requirement for paging 
    licenses obtained through the competitive bidding process. An applicant 
    seeking approval for a transfer of control or assignment of a license 
    within three years of receiving a new license through a competitive 
    bidding procedure must, together with its application for transfer of 
    control or assignment, file with the Commission a statement indicating 
    that its license was obtained through competitive bidding. Such 
    applicant must also file with the Commission the associated contracts 
    for sale, option agreements, management agreements, or other documents 
    disclosing the total consideration that the applicant would receive in 
    return for the transfer or assignment of its license.
        84. With respect to small businesses, the Commission has adopted 
    unjust enrichment provisions to deter speculation and participation in 
    the licensing process by those who do not intend to offer service to 
    the public, or who intend to use the competitive bidding process to 
    obtain a license at a lower cost than they would otherwise have to pay 
    and to later sell it at a profit, and to ensure that large businesses 
    do not become the unintended beneficiaries of measures meant to help 
    small firms. Small business licensees seeking to transfer their 
    licenses to entities which do not qualify as small businesses (or which 
    qualify for a lower bidding credit), as a condition of approval of the 
    transfer, must remit to the government a payment equal to a portion of 
    the value of the benefit conferred by the government.
        85. Finally, applicants and licensees claiming eligibility for 
    competitive bidding as a small business are subject to audits by the 
    Commission. Selection for audit may be random, on information, or on 
    the basis of other factors. Consent to such audit is part of the 
    certification included in the short-form application (FCC Form 175).
    Steps Taken to Minimize Burdens on Small Entities
        86. Section 309(j)(3)(B) of the Communications Act, 47 U.S.C. 
    309(j)(3)(B), provides that in establishing eligibility criteria and 
    bidding methodologies the Commission shall, inter alia, promote 
    economic opportunity and competition and ensure that new and innovative 
    technologies are readily accessible by avoiding excessive concentration 
    of licenses and by disseminating licenses among a wide variety of 
    applicants, including small businesses, rural telephone companies, and 
    businesses owned by members of minority groups and women. Section 
    309(j)(4)(A) of the Communications Act, 47 U.S.C. 309(j)(4)(A), 
    provides that in order to promote such objectives, the Commission shall 
    consider alternative payment schedules and methods of calculation, 
    including lump sums or guaranteed installment payments, with or without 
    royalty payments, or other schedules or methods. In awarding geographic 
    area paging licenses the Commission is committed to meeting the 
    statutory objectives of promoting economic opportunity and competition, 
    of avoiding excessive concentration of licenses, and of ensuring access 
    to new and innovative technologies by disseminating licenses among a 
    wide variety of applicants, including small businesses, rural telephone 
    companies, and businesses owned by members of minority groups and 
    women. The Commission finds that it is appropriate to establish special 
    provisions in the paging rules for competitive bidding by small 
    businesses. The Commission believes that small businesses applying for 
    paging licenses should be entitled to bidding credits and should be 
    permitted to pay their bids in installments.
        87. In order to ensure the more meaningful participation of small 
    business entities in paging auctions, the Commission has adopted a two-
    tiered definition of small businesses. This approach will give 
    qualifying small businesses bidding flexibility. A small business will 
    be defined as either (1) an entity that, together with its affiliates 
    and controlling principals, has average gross revenues for the three 
    preceding years of not more than $3 million, or (2) an entity that, 
    together with affiliates and controlling principals, has average gross 
    revenues for the three preceding years of not more than $15 million. 
    The Commission will require that in order for an applicant to qualify 
    as a small business, qualifying small business principals must maintain 
    control of the applicant. The Commission has established bidding 
    credits consistent
    
    [[Page 11627]]
    
    with the two-tiered definition of a small business. Small businesses 
    that, together with affiliates and controlling principals, have average 
    gross revenues for the three preceding years of not more than $3 
    million will receive a 15 percent bidding credit. Small businesses 
    that, together with affiliates and controlling principals, have average 
    gross revenues for the three preceding years of not more than $15 
    million will receive a bidding credit of 10 percent.
        88. Additionally, licensees who qualify as small businesses in the 
    geographic area paging license auction will be entitled to pay their 
    winning bid amount in quarterly installments over the term of the 
    license, with interest charges to be fixed at the time of licensing at 
    a rate equal to the rate for ten-year U.S. Treasury obligations plus 
    2.5 percent. Licensees who qualify for this installment payment plan 
    will be permitted to make interest-only payments for the first two 
    years of the license term. Timely payment of all installments will be a 
    condition of the license grant, and failure to make such timely 
    payments will be grounds for revocation of the license.
        89. The Commission is also extending geographic partitioning of MTA 
    and EA license areas to all entities eligible to be paging licensees. 
    The Commission believes that this provision will allow paging licensees 
    to tailor their business strategies and allow them to use the spectrum 
    more efficiently, will allow more entities to participate in the 
    provision of paging services, and will facilitate market entry by small 
    entities that have the ability to provide service only to a limited 
    population. Additionally, the Commission is maintaining the current 
    site-by-site licensing procedure for the shared channels.
    Significant Alternatives Considered and Rejected
        90. The Commission considered and rejected a proposal for 
    geographic area licensing using MTAs for all licenses. Commenters 
    opposed this proposal, contending that MTAs were too large for the 
    smaller paging systems. The Commission believes that the advantages of 
    geographic area licensing--flexibility, enhanced regulatory symmetry 
    with other CMRS, and eliminating the inefficiencies in the licensing 
    process--are applicable to the UHF and VHF channels, particularly for 
    regional paging services offered on these bands. Based on the record in 
    this proceeding, the Commission concludes that EAs would be more 
    appropriate than MTAs for the paging channels below 931 MHz. The 
    Commission agrees with the commenters that the geographical definition 
    used should correspond as much as possible to the geographic area that 
    the paging licensees seek to serve, and concludes that EAs, which are 
    smaller than MTAs, would facilitate the ability of paging operators of 
    smaller systems to participate in geographic area licensing.
        91. Additionally, the Commission considered and rejected converting 
    all or some of the shared channels to exclusive use and implementing 
    geographic area licensing. The Commission also considered and rejected 
    limiting the number of licensees on the shared channels. In the NPRM, 
    the Commission asked for comment on whether to (1) convert the shared 
    channels to exclusive use and implement geographic licensing; (2) limit 
    the number of licenses per shared channel and use competitive bidding 
    to choose among applications once the limit is reached; or (3) retain 
    the status quo. Most commenters opposed geographic area licensing for 
    the shared channels, because paging systems on these channels are 
    smaller paging systems, not wide-area systems. The Commission observed 
    that smaller paging systems have been able to utilize these channels 
    effectively on a shared basis. Most of the commenters requested that 
    the Commission maintain the present system of site-by-site licensing. 
    The Commission noted that attempting to superimpose a geographic 
    licensing scheme on channels that have historically been shared could 
    cause significant disruption to existing operations. Additionally, the 
    Commission declined to adopt a cap on licensing shared channels, or to 
    convert certain shared channels to exclusive licensing. The difficulty 
    with a licensing cap, as noted by several commenters, is that it is the 
    amount of time a paging channel is used and the transmission equipment 
    and protocol used, not the number of licensees, that determines the 
    capacity limits of a channel. The Commission was also concerned that 
    picking certain shared channels to be designated as exclusive would 
    only cause greater pressure on the remaining shared channels and 
    therefore could limit opportunities for entry by smaller systems. The 
    Commission concluded that the shared channels should not be converted 
    to exclusive use, and the number of licensees should not be limited in 
    order to provide continued opportunities for paging operators, 
    particularly small businesses.
        92. With respect to competitive bidding rules, the Commission 
    considered using a market-by-market stopping rule, which many 
    commenters favored in order to facilitate bringing an earlier end to 
    the auction and permitting the earlier close of uncontested markets. 
    The Commission adopted instead a hybrid simultaneous/license-by-license 
    stopping rule, which combines the advantages of a simultaneous stopping 
    rule and a license-by-license stopping rule. This approach will prevent 
    the auction from being unreasonably long while also preserving bidders' 
    flexibility to pursue back up strategies and acquire licenses that are 
    consistent with their business plans.
        93. The Commission also considered allowing small businesses that 
    are winning bidders to pay a lower down payment than non-small 
    businesses. The Commission concluded, however, that all winning bidders 
    should pay a down payment of 20 percent of their winning bids. The 
    Commission believes that a substantial down payment is necessary to 
    ensure that winning bidders have the financial capability of building 
    out their systems, and will provide stronger assurance against defaults 
    than a reduced down payment. Increasing the amount of the bidder's 
    funds at risk in the event of default discourages insincere bidding and 
    therefore increases the likelihood that licenses are awarded to parties 
    who are best able to serve the public. The Commission also believes 
    that a 20 percent down payment should cover the required payments in 
    the unlikely event of default.
        94. The Commission requested comment on whether, in addition to 
    small business provisions, separate provisions should be adopted for 
    minority-and women-owned entities. Few comments were received on this 
    issue, and commenters failed to provide record evidence of 
    discrimination sufficient to support race-based provisions under the 
    strict scrutiny standard of judicial review. The Commission is also 
    concerned that the record would not support gender-based provisions 
    under intermediate scrutiny. Balancing its obligation to provide 
    opportunities for women- and minority-owned businesses to participate 
    in spectrum-based services against its statutory duties to facilitate 
    the rapid delivery of new services to the American consumer and promote 
    efficient use of the spectrum, the Commission concluded that it should 
    not delay paging service auctions for the amount of time it would take 
    to adduce sufficient evidence to support race- and gender-based 
    provisions. The Commission believes that most minority-and women-owned 
    businesses will be able to take advantage of the
    
    [[Page 11628]]
    
    specific provisions that it has adopted for small businesses.
        95. The Commission proposed, with respect to installment payments, 
    that small businesses with not more than $3 million in average gross 
    revenues for the preceding three years be permitted to make interest-
    only payments for the first five years of the license term, while small 
    businesses with not more than $15 million in average gross revenues for 
    the preceding three years be permitted to make interest-only payments 
    during the first two years. The Commission concluded, however, that all 
    licensees qualifying for installment payments should be allowed to make 
    interest-only payments only for the first two years of the license 
    term. The Commission declined to adopt a longer interest-only period 
    for small businesses with average gross revenues of not more than $3 
    million. The Commission believes that the two-year interest-only period 
    provides small businesses with the appropriate level of financing to 
    overcome difficulties in attracting capital. Given that additional 
    financial assistance is being made available to very small businesses 
    in the form of a 15 percent bidding credit, the Commission does not 
    think a longer interest-only period is needed.
        96. The Commission sought comment on the need, if any, for a 
    reduced upfront payment for entities qualifying as a small business. 
    The Commission did not, however, adopt reduced upfront payment rules 
    for small businesses participating in the paging license auction 
    because it believes that a uniform upfront payment provision for all 
    bidders in the auction is necessary in order to deter speculation and 
    to ensure that only sincere bidders participate in the auction.
        97. Finally, the Commission considered but elected not to adopt a 
    spectrum set-aside for entrepreneurs. In the NPRM, the Commission 
    tentatively concluded that it was not necessary to adopt an 
    entrepreneurs' block for paging license auctions, and most commenters 
    opposed the creation of an entrepreneurs' block or other form of 
    spectrum set-aside for paging license auctions. The Commission believes 
    that the large number of licenses of different sizes that will be 
    available in the paging auctions should allow for extensive 
    participation of small businesses without an entrepreneurs' block. 
    Moreover, the Commission believes that the special provisions for small 
    businesses that it has adopted, including installment payments and 
    tiered bidding credits, will give small businesses a significant 
    opportunity to acquire paging licenses through auctions.
    Report to Congress
        98. The Commission shall send a copy of this Final Regulatory 
    Flexibility Analysis, along with this Second Report and Order, in a 
    report to Congress pursuant to the Small Business Regulatory 
    Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
    
    B. Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        99. This collection of information requirements have been approved 
    by the Office of Management and Budget and assigned OMB control number 
    3060-0697. The FCC Form 175 is assigned OMB control number 3060-0600. 
    The FCC Form 600 is assigned OMB control number 3060-0623.
    
    C. Authority
    
        100. The above action is authorized under the Communications Act, 
    sections 4(i), 303(r), 309(c), 309(j), and 332, 47 U.S.C. 154(i), 
    303(r), 309(c), 309(j), and 332, as amended.
    
     D. Ordering Clauses
    
        101. Accordingly, it is ordered that, pursuant to the authority of 
    sections 4(i), 303(g), 303(r), and 332(a) of the Communications Act of 
    1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 154(i), 303(g), 303(r), and 332(a), part 22 
    of the Commission's rules, 47 CFR part 22, is amended as set forth 
    below.
        102. It is further ordered that, pursuant to the authority of 
    sections 4(i), 303(g), 303(r), and 332(a) of the Communications Act of 
    1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 154(i), 303(g), 303(r), and 332(a), part 90 
    of the Commission's rules, 47 CFR part 90, is amended as set forth in 
    below.
        103. It is further ordered that the rules adopted in this Second 
    Report and Order and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking will be 
    effective May 12, 1997.
        104. It is further ordered that, pursuant to 47 U.S.C. 155(c), the 
    Chief, Wireless Telecommunications Bureau, is granted delegated 
    authority to implement and modify auction procedures in the part 22 and 
    part 90 paging services, including the general design and timing of an 
    auction, the number and grouping of authorizations to be offered in any 
    particular auction, the manner of submitting bids, the amount of 
    minimum opening bids and bid increments, activity and stopping rules, 
    and application and payment requirements, including the amount of 
    upfront payments, and to announce such procedures by Public Notice.
        105. It is further ordered that, pursuant to 47 U.S.C. 155(c), the 
    Chief, Wireless Telecommunications Bureau, is granted delegated 
    authority to dismiss all mutually exclusive paging applications filed 
    as of the adoption date of this Second Report and Order and grant or 
    dismiss all non-mutually exclusive paging applications filed as of the 
    adoption date of this Second Report and Order.
    
    List of Subjects
    
    47 CFR Part 22
    
        Communication common carriers, Reporting and recordkeeping 
    requirements.
    
    47 CFR Part 90
    
        Common carriers, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    Federal Communications Commission.
    William F. Caton,
    Acting Secretary.
    
    Rules Changes
    
        1. Part 22 of Chapter I of Title 47 of the Code of Federal 
    Regulations is amended as follows:
    
    Part 22--PUBLIC MOBILE SERVICES
    
        The authority citation for Part 22 continues to read as follows:
    
        Authority: Secs. 4, 303, 309, and 332, 48 Stat. 1066, 1082, as 
    amended, 47 U.S.C 154, 303, 309, and 332, unless otherwise noted.
    
        Section 22.99 is revised by adding the following definitions (in 
    alphabetical order), and revising the definition for the term 
    ``unserved areas'', to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 22.99  Definitions.
    
    * * * * *
        Paging geographic area authorization. An authorization conveying 
    the exclusive right to establish and expand one or more stations 
    throughout a paging geographic area or, in the case of a partitioned 
    geographic area, throughout a specified portion of a paging geographic 
    area, on a specified channel allocated for assignment in the Paging and 
    Radiotelephone Service. These are subject to the conditions that no 
    interference may be caused to existing co-channel stations operated by 
    other licensees within the paging geographic area and that no 
    interference may be caused to existing or proposed co-channel stations 
    of other licensees in adjoining paging geographic areas.
        Paging geographic areas. Standard geographic areas used by the FCC 
    for administrative convenience in the licensing of stations to operate 
    on channels allocated for assignment in the
    
    [[Page 11629]]
    
    Paging and Radiotelephone Service. See Sec. 22.503(b).
    * * * * *
        Unserved areas. With regard to a channel block allocated for 
    assignment in the Cellular Radiotelephone Service: Geographic area in 
    the District of Columbia, or any State, Territory or possession of the 
    United States of America that is not within the CGSA of any cellular 
    system authorized to transmit on that channel block. With regard to a 
    channel allocated for assignment in the Paging and Radiotelephone 
    Service: Geographic area within the District of Columbia, or any State, 
    Territory or possession of the United States of America that is not 
    within the service contour of any base transmitter in any station 
    authorized to transmit on that channel.
    * * * * *
        The heading of Subpart B is revised to read as follows:
    
    Subpart B--Licensing Requirements and Procedures
    
        4. A new center heading preceding Sec. 22.101 is added to read as 
    follows:
    
    Applications and Notifications
    
        5. Section 22.115 is amended by revising the introductory text of 
    paragraph (a) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 22.115  Content of applications.
    
    * * * * *
        (a) Site-specific requirements. The following requirements apply to 
    all Public Mobile Service applications that involve specific 
    transmitting antenna sites.
    * * * * *
        6. Section 22.123 is amended by revising paragraphs (e)(1) and 
    (e)(2), to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 22.123  Classification of filings as major or minor.
    
    * * * * *
        (e) * * * 
        (1) Request that a paging geographic area authorization be issued 
    to the filer on a requested channel;
        (2) Request an authorization that would establish for the filer a 
    new fixed transmission path or service area (a new station) on a 
    requested channel, unless the new service area would be totally within 
    a paging geographic area for which the filer holds the paging 
    geographic area authorization for the requested channel;
    * * * * *
        7. Section 22.129 is amended by adding paragraph (e) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 22.129  Agreements to dismiss applications, amendments, and 
    pleadings.
    
    * * * * *
        (e) Notwithstanding the provisions of this section, any payments 
    made or received in exchange for withdrawing a short-form application 
    for an FCC authorization awarded through competitive bidding shall be 
    subject to the restrictions set forth in Sec. 1.2105(c) of this 
    chapter.
        8. Section 22.131 is amended by revising paragraphs (c)(4)(ii)(A) 
    and (c)(4)(ii)(B), and by adding a new paragraph (d)(2)(v), to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 22.131  Procedures for mutually exclusive applications.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) * * *
        (4) * * *
        (ii) * * *
        (A) If all of the mutually exclusive applications in a 30-day 
    notice and cut-off filing group are applications for initial 
    authorization, the FCC administers competitive bidding procedures in 
    accordance with Sec. 22.201 through Sec. 22.227 and subpart Q of part 1 
    of this chapter, as applicable. After such procedures, the application 
    of the successful bidder may be granted and the other applications may 
    be dismissed without prejudice.
        (B) If any of the mutually exclusive applications in a 30-day 
    notice and cut-off filing group is an application for modification, the 
    Commission may attempt to resolve the mutual exclusivity by 
    facilitating a settlement between the applicants. If a settlement is 
    not reached within a reasonable time, the FCC may designate all 
    applications in the filing group for comparative consideration in a 
    hearing. In this event, the result of the hearing disposes all of the 
    applications in the filing group.
    * * * * *
        (d) * * * 
        (2) * * * 
        (v) Any ``short-form'' application (filed on FCC Form 175) 
    requesting a new paging geographic area authorization.
    * * * * *
        9. Section 22.165 is amended by revising paragraph (d)(1) to read 
    as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 22.165  Additional transmitters for existing systems.
    
    * * * * *
        (d) * * * 
        (1) The interfering contours of the additional transmitter(s) must 
    be totally encompassed by the composite interfering contour of the 
    existing station (or stations under common control of the applicant) on 
    the same channel, except that this limitation does not apply to 
    nationwide network paging stations or in-building radiation systems.
    * * * * *
        10. A new center heading consisting of Secs. 22.201 through 22.227 
    is added to read as follows:
    
    Competitive Bidding Procedures
    
    Sec.
    22.201 Scope of competitive bidding rules.
    22.203 Competitive bidding design for paging licensing.
    22.205 Competitive bidding mechanisms.
    22.207 Withdrawal, default, and disqualification payments.
    22.209 Bidding applications (FCC Form 175 and 175-S short-form).
    22.211 Submission of upfront payments and down payments.
    22.213 Long-form applications (FCC Form 600).
    22.215 Authorization grant, denial, default, and disqualification.
    22.217 Bidding credits for small businesses.
    22.219 Installment payments for licenses won by small businesses.
    22.221 Eligibility for partitioned licenses.
    22.223 Definitions concerning competitive bidding process.
    22.225 Certifications, discolsures, records maintenance and audits.
    22.227 Petitions to deny and limitation on settlements.
    
    Competitive Bidding Procedures
    
    
    Sec. 22.201  Scope of competitive bidding rules.
    
        Sections 22.201 through 22.227, inclusive (and, unless otherwise 
    specified in this part, the procedures set forth in part 1, subpart Q, 
    of this chapter), apply only to competitive bidding (``auction'') 
    procedures for authorizations as follows:
        (a) Paging geographic area authorizations issued pursuant to this 
    part or to part 90 of this chapter.
        (b) [Reserved].
    
    
    Sec. 22.203  Competitive bidding design for paging licensing.
    
        A simultaneous multiple round auction will be used to choose from 
    among mutually exclusive initial applications for paging geographic 
    area authorizations, unless the FCC specifies otherwise by Public 
    Notice prior to the competitive bidding procedure.
    
    
    Sec. 22.205  Competitive bidding mechanisms.
    
        (a) Sequencing. The FCC will establish and may vary the sequence in 
    which paging geographic area authorizations are auctioned.
        (b) Grouping. The FCC will determine which licenses will be 
    auctioned simultaneously or in combination based on interdependency and 
    administrative circumstances.
    
    [[Page 11630]]
    
        (c) Minimum Bid Increments. The FCC may, by public announcement 
    before or during an auction, require minimum bid increments in dollar 
    or percentage terms.
        (d) Stopping Rules. The FCC may establish stopping rules before or 
    during an auction in order to terminate the auction within a reasonable 
    time.
        (e) Activity Rules. The FCC may establish activity rules which 
    require a minimum amount of bidding activity. In the event that the FCC 
    establishes an activity rule in connection with a simultaneous multiple 
    round auction, each bidder may request waivers of such rule during the 
    auction. The FCC may, by public announcement either before or during an 
    auction, specify or vary the number of waivers available to each 
    bidder.
    
    
    Sec. 22.207  Withdrawal, default, and disqualification payments.
    
        The FCC will impose payments on bidders who withdraw high bids 
    during the course of an auction, who default on payments due after an 
    auction terminates, or who are disqualified. When the FCC conducts a 
    simultaneous multiple round auction, payments will be calculated as set 
    forth in Secs. 1.2104(g) and 1.2109 of this chapter. When the amount of 
    such a payment cannot be determined, a deposit of up to 20 percent of 
    the amount bid on the license will be required.
    
    
    Sec. 22.209  Bidding applications (FCC Form 175 and 175-S Short-form).
    
        Each applicant to participate in competitive bidding for paging 
    geographic area authorizations must submit an application (FCC Forms 
    175 and 175-S) pursuant to the provisions of Sec. 1.2105 of this 
    chapter.
    
    
    Sec. 22.211  Submission of upfront payments and down payments.
    
        (a) The FCC will require applicants to submit an upfront payment 
    prior to the start of a paging auction. The amount of the upfront 
    payment for each geographic area license auctioned and the procedures 
    for submitting it will be set forth by the Wireless Telecommunications 
    Bureau in a Public Notice in accordance with Sec. 1.2106 of this 
    chapter.
        (b) Each winning bidder in a paging auction must submit a down 
    payment to the FCC in an amount sufficient to bring its total deposits 
    up to 20 percent of its winning bid. All winning bidders except small 
    businesses will be required to make such payment within ten business 
    days following the release of a Public Notice announcing the close of 
    bidding. Small businesses must bring their deposits up to 10 percent of 
    their winning bids within ten business days following the release of a 
    Public Notice announcing the close of bidding, and must pay an 
    additional 10 percent prior to licensing, by a date and time to be 
    specified by Public Notice.
    
    
    Sec. 22.213  Long-form applications (FCC Form 600).
    
        Each successful bidder for a paging geographic area authorization 
    must submit a ``long-form'' application (FCC Form 600) within ten 
    business days after being notified by Public Notice that it is the 
    winning bidder. Applications for paging geographic area authorizations 
    on FCC Form 600 must be submitted in accordance with Sec. 1.2107 of 
    this chapter, all applicable procedures set forth in the rules in this 
    part, and any applicable Public Notices that the FCC may issue in 
    connection with an auction. After an auction, the FCC will not accept 
    long-form applications for paging geographic area authorizations from 
    anyone other than the auction winners and parties seeking partitioned 
    licenses pursuant to agreements with auction winners under Sec. 22.221.
    
    
    Sec. 22.215  Authorization grant, denial, default, and 
    disqualification.
    
        (a) Each winning bidder, except those eligible for installment 
    payments, will be required to pay the full balance of its winning bid 
    within ten business days following Public Notice that the FCC is 
    prepared to award the authorization.
        (b) A bidder that withdraws its bid subsequent to the close of 
    bidding, defaults on a payment due, or is disqualified, is subject to 
    the payments specified in Sec. 22.207, Sec. 1.2104(g), or Sec. 1.2109 
    of this chapter, as applicable.
    
    
    Sec. 22.217  Bidding credits for small businesses.
    
        (a) A winning bidder that qualifies as a small business or a 
    consortium of small businesses as defined in Sec. 22.223(b)(1)(i) may 
    use a bidding credit of 15 percent to lower the cost of its winning 
    bid. A winning bidder that qualifies as a small business or a 
    consortium of small businesses as defined in Sec. 22.223(b)(1)(ii) may 
    use a bidding credit of ten percent to lower the cost of its winning 
    bid.
        (b) Unjust Enrichment:
        (1) If a small business that utilizes a bidding credit under this 
    section seeks to transfer control or assign an authorization to an 
    entity that is not a small business under Sec. 22.223(b)(1), or seeks 
    to make any other change in ownership that would result in the licensee 
    losing eligibility as a small business, the small business must seek 
    FCC approval and reimburse the U.S. government for the amount of the 
    bidding credit (plus interest at the rate imposed for installment 
    financing at the time the license was awarded), as a condition of 
    approval of such assignment, transfer, or other ownership change.
        (2) If a small business that utilizes a bidding credit under this 
    section seeks to transfer control or assign an authorization to a small 
    business meeting the eligibility standards for a lower bidding credit, 
    or seeks to make any other change in ownership that would result in the 
    licensee qualifying for a lower bidding credit under this section, the 
    licensee must seek FCC approval and reimburse the U.S. government for 
    the difference between the amount of the bidding credit obtained by the 
    licensee and the bidding credit for which the assignee, transferee, or 
    licensee is eligible under this section (plus interest at the rate 
    imposed for installment financing at the time the license was awarded), 
    as a condition of the approval of such assignment, transfer, or other 
    ownership change.
        (3) The amount of payments made pursuant to paragraphs (b)(1) and 
    (b)(2) of this section will be reduced over time as follows: A transfer 
    in the first two years of the license term will result in a forfeiture 
    of 100 percent of the value of the bidding credit (or the difference 
    between the bidding credit obtained by the original licensee and the 
    bidding credit for which the post-transfer licensee is eligible); in 
    year 3 of the license term the payment will be 75 percent; in year 4 
    the payment will be 50 percent; and in year 5 the payment will be 25 
    percent, after which there will be no assessment.
    
    
    Sec. 22.219  Installment payments for licenses won by small businesses.
    
        (a) Each licensee that qualifies as a small business under 
    Sec. 22.223(b)(1) may pay the remaining 80 percent of the net auction 
    price for the license in installment payments over the term of the 
    authorization. Interest charges shall be fixed at the time of licensing 
    at a rate equal to the rate for ten-year U.S. Treasury obligations plus 
    2.5 percent. An eligible licensee may make interest-only payments for 
    two years. Payments of interest and principal shall be amortized over 
    the remaining eight years of the license term.
        (b) Late Installment Payment.
        (1) Any licensee that submits a scheduled installment payment more 
    than 15 days late will be charged a late payment fee equal to 5 percent 
    of the amount of the past due payment.
    
    [[Page 11631]]
    
        (2) Payments will be applied in the following order: late charges, 
    interest charges, principal payments.
        (c) Unjust Enrichment:
        (1) If a licensee that utilizes installment financing under this 
    section seeks to assign or transfer control of its license to an entity 
    not meeting the eligibility standards for installment financing, the 
    licensee must seek FCC approval and make full payment of the remaining 
    unpaid principal and unpaid interest accrued through the date of 
    assignment or transfer as a condition of FCC approval.
        (2) If a licensee that utilizes installment financing under this 
    section seeks to make any change in ownership structure that would 
    result in the licensee losing eligibility for installment payments, the 
    licensee shall first seek FCC approval before making such a change in 
    ownership structure and must make full payment of the remaining unpaid 
    principal and unpaid interest accrued through the date of such change 
    in ownership structure as a condition of FCC approval.
    
    
    Sec. 22.221  Eligibility for partitioned licenses.
    
        If partitioned licenses are being applied for in conjunction with a 
    license(s) to be awarded through competitive bidding procedures--
        (a) The applicable procedures for filing short-form applications 
    and for submitting upfront payments and down payments contained in this 
    chapter shall be followed by the applicant, who must disclose as part 
    of its short-form application all parties to agreement(s) with or among 
    other entities to partition the license pursuant to this section, if 
    won at auction (see 47 CFR 1.2105(a)(2)(viii));
        (b) Each party to an agreement to partition the license must file a 
    long-form application (FCC Form 600) for its respective, mutually 
    agreed-upon geographic area together with the application for the 
    remainder of the MTA or EA filed by the auction winner.
        (c) If the partitioned license is being applied for as a partial 
    assignment of the MTA or EA license following grant of the initial 
    license, request for authorization for partial assignment of a license 
    shall be made pursuant to Sec. 22.137.
    
    
    Sec. 22.223  Definitions concerning competitive bidding process.
    
        (a) Scope. The definitions in this section apply to Secs. 22.201 
    through 22.227, unless otherwise specified in those sections.
        (b) Small business; consortium of small businesses. (1) A small 
    business is an entity that either:
        (i) Together with its affiliates and controlling principals has 
    average gross revenues that are not more than $3 million for the 
    preceding three years; or
        (ii) Together with its affiliates and controlling principals has 
    average gross revenues that are not more than $15 million for the 
    preceding three years.
        (2) For purposes of determining whether an entity meets either the 
    $3 million or $15 million average annual gross revenues size standard 
    set forth in paragraph (b)(1) of this section, the gross revenues of 
    the entity, its affiliates, and controlling principals shall be 
    considered on a cumulative basis and aggregated.
        (3) A consortium of small businesses is a conglomerate organization 
    formed as a joint venture between or among mutually independent 
    business firms, each of which individually satisfies the definition of 
    a small business in paragraph (b)(1) of this section. Each individual 
    member must establish its eligibility as a small business, as defined 
    in this section. Where an applicant (or licensee) is a consortium of 
    small businesses, the gross revenues of each small business shall not 
    be aggregated.
        (c) Gross Revenues. Gross revenues shall mean all income received 
    by an entity, whether earned or passive, before any deductions are made 
    for costs of doing business (e.g., cost of goods sold). Gross revenues 
    are evidenced by audited financial statements for the relevant number 
    of calendar or fiscal years preceding the filing of the applicant's 
    short-form application. If an entity was not in existence for all or 
    part of the relevant period, gross revenues shall be evidenced by the 
    audited financial statements of the entity's predecessor-in-interest 
    or, if there is no identifiable predecessor-in-interest, unaudited 
    financial statements certified by the applicant as accurate. When an 
    applicant does not otherwise use audited financial statements, its 
    gross revenues may be certified by its chief financial officer or its 
    equivalent.
        (d) Affiliate.--(1) Basis for Affiliation. An individual or entity 
    is an affiliate of an applicant if such individual or entity:
        (i) Directly or indirectly controls or has the power to control the 
    applicant, or
        (ii) Is directly or indirectly controlled by the applicant, or
        (iii) Is directly or indirectly controlled by a third party or 
    parties who also control or have the power to control the applicant, or
        (iv) Has an ``identity of interest'' with the applicant.
        (2) Nature of control in determining affiliation. (i) Every 
    business concern is considered to have one or more parties who directly 
    or indirectly control or have the power to control it. Control may be 
    affirmative or negative and it is immaterial whether it is exercised so 
    long as the power to control exists.
    
        Example for paragraph (d)(2)(i). An applicant owning 50 percent 
    of the voting stock of another concern would have negative power to 
    control such concern since such party can block any action of the 
    other stockholders. Also, the bylaws of a corporation may permit a 
    stockholder with less than 50 percent of the voting stock to block 
    any actions taken by the other stockholders in the other entity. 
    Affiliation exists when the applicant has the power to control a 
    concern while at the same time another person, or persons, are in 
    control of the concern at the will of the party or parties with the 
    power of control.
    
        (ii) Control can arise through stock ownership; occupancy of 
    director, officer or key employee positions; contractual or other 
    business relations; or combinations of these and other factors. A key 
    employee is an employee who, because of his/her position in the 
    concern, has a critical influence in or substantive control over the 
    operations or management of the concern.
        (iii) Control can arise through management positions if the voting 
    stock is so widely distributed that no effective control can be 
    established.
    
        Example for paragraph (d)(2)(iii). In a corporation where the 
    officers and directors own various size blocks of stock totaling 40 
    percent of the corporation's voting stock, but no officer or 
    director has a block sufficient to give him/her control or the power 
    to control and the remaining 60 percent is widely distributed with 
    no individual stockholder having a stock interest greater than 10 
    percent, management has the power to control. If persons with such 
    management control of the other entity are controlling principals of 
    the applicant, the other entity will be deemed an affiliate of the 
    applicant.
    
        (3) Identity of interest between and among persons. Affiliation can 
    arise between or among two or more persons with an identity of 
    interest, such as members of the same family or persons with common 
    investments. In determining if the applicant controls or is controlled 
    by a concern, persons with an identity of interest will be treated as 
    though they were one person.
        (i) Spousal affiliation. Both spouses are deemed to own or control 
    or have the power to control interests owned or controlled by either of 
    them, unless they are subject to a legal separation recognized by a 
    court of competent jurisdiction in the United States.
        (ii) Kinship affiliation. Immediate family members will be presumed 
    to own or control or have the power to control interests owned or 
    controlled by
    
    [[Page 11632]]
    
    other immediate family members. In this context ``immediate family 
    member'' means father, mother, husband, wife, son, daughter, brother, 
    sister, father- or mother-in-law, son- or daughter-in-law, brother- or 
    sister-in-law, step-father, or -mother, step-brother, or -sister, step-
    son, or -daughter, half-brother or -sister. This presumption may be 
    rebutted by showing that:
        (A) The family members are estranged,
        (B) The family ties are remote, or
        (C) The family members are not closely involved with each other in 
    business matters.
    
        Example for paragraph (d)(3)(ii). A owns a controlling interest 
    in Corporation X. A's sister-in-law, B, has a controlling interest 
    in a paging geographic area authorization application. Because A and 
    B have a presumptive kinship affiliation, A's interest in 
    Corporation X is attributable to B, and thus to the applicant, 
    unless B rebuts the presumption with the necessary showing.
    
        (4) Affiliation through stock ownership. (i) An applicant is 
    presumed to control or have the power to control a concern if he/she 
    owns or controls or has the power to control 50 percent or more of its 
    voting stock.
        (ii) An applicant is presumed to control or have the power to 
    control a concern even though he/she owns, controls, or has the power 
    to control less than 50 percent of the concern's voting stock, if the 
    block of stock he/she owns, controls, or has the power to control is 
    large as compared with any other outstanding block of stock.
        (iii) If two or more persons each owns, controls or has the power 
    to control less than 50 percent of the voting stock of a concern, such 
    minority holdings are equal or approximately equal in size, and the 
    aggregate of these minority holdings is large as compared with any 
    other stock holding, the presumption arises that each one of these 
    persons individually controls or has the power to control the concern; 
    however, such presumption may be rebutted by a showing that such 
    control or power to control, in fact, does not exist.
        (5) Affiliation arising under stock options, convertible 
    debentures, and agreements to merge. Stock options, convertible 
    debentures, and agreements to merge (including agreements in principle) 
    are generally considered to have a present effect on the power to 
    control the concern. Therefore, in making a size determination, such 
    options, debentures, and agreements will generally be treated as though 
    the rights held thereunder had been exercised. However, neither an 
    affiliate nor an applicant can use such options and debentures to 
    appear to terminate its control over another concern before it actually 
    does so.
    
        Example 1 for paragraph (d)(5). If company B holds an option to 
    purchase a controlling interest in company A, who holds a 
    controlling interest in a paging geographic area authorization 
    application, the situation is treated as though company B had 
    exercised its rights and had become owner of a controlling interest 
    in company A. The gross revenues of company B must be taken into 
    account in determining the size of the applicant.
        Example 2 for paragraph (d)(5). If a large company, BigCo, holds 
    70% (70 of 100 outstanding shares) of the voting stock of company A, 
    who holds a controlling interest in a paging geographic area 
    authorization application, and gives a third party, SmallCo, an 
    option to purchase 50 of the 70 shares owned by BigCo, BigCo will be 
    deemed to be an affiliate of company A, and thus the applicant, 
    until SmallCo actually exercises its options to purchase such 
    shares. In order to prevent BigCo from circumventing the intent of 
    the rule which requires such options to be considered on a fully 
    diluted basis, the option is not considered to have present effect 
    in this case.
        Example 3 for paragraph (d)(5). If company A has entered into an 
    agreement to merge with company B in the future, the situation is 
    treated as though the merger has taken place.
    
        (6) Affiliation under voting trusts. (i) Stock interests held in 
    trust shall be deemed controlled by any person who holds or shares the 
    power to vote such stock, to any person who has the sole power to sell 
    such stock, and to any person who has the right to revoke the trust at 
    will or to replace the trustee at will.
        (ii) If a trustee has a familial, personal or extra-trust business 
    relationship to the grantor or the beneficiary, the stock interests 
    held in trust will be deemed controlled by the grantor or beneficiary, 
    as appropriate.
        (iii) If the primary purpose of a voting trust, or similar 
    agreement, is to separate voting power from beneficial ownership of 
    voting stock for the purpose of shifting control of or the power to 
    control a concern in order that such concern or another concern may 
    meet the Commission's size standards, such voting trust shall not be 
    considered valid for this purpose regardless of whether it is or is not 
    recognized within the appropriate jurisdiction.
        (7) Affiliation through common management. Affiliation generally 
    arises where officers, directors, or key employees serve as the 
    majority or otherwise as the controlling element of the board of 
    directors and/or the management of another entity.
        (8) Affiliation through common facilities. Affiliation generally 
    arises where one concern shares office space and/or employees and/or 
    other facilities with another concern, particularly where such concerns 
    are in the same or related industry or field of operations, or where 
    such concerns were formerly affiliated, and through these sharing 
    arrangements one concern has control, or potential control, of the 
    other concern.
        (9) Affiliation through contractual relationships. Affiliation 
    generally arises where one concern is dependent upon another concern 
    for contracts and business to such a degree that one concern has 
    control, or potential control, of the other concern.
        (10) Affiliation under joint venture arrangements. (i) A joint 
    venture for size determination purposes is an association of concerns 
    and/or individuals, with interests in any degree or proportion, formed 
    by contract, express or implied, to engage in and carry out a single, 
    specific business venture for joint profit for which purpose they 
    combine their efforts, property, money, skill and knowledge, but not on 
    a continuing or permanent basis for conducting business generally. The 
    determination whether an entity is a joint venture is based upon the 
    facts of the business operation, regardless of how the business 
    operation may be designated by the parties involved. An agreement to 
    share profits/losses proportionate to each party's contribution to the 
    business operation is a significant factor in determining whether the 
    business operation is a joint venture.
        (ii) The parties to a joint venture are considered to be affiliated 
    with each other.
    
    
    Sec. 22.225  Certifications, disclosures, records maintenance and 
    audits.
    
        (a) Short-form applications: certifications and disclosure. In 
    addition to certifications and disclosures required by part 1, subpart 
    Q, of this chapter, each applicant for a paging license which qualifies 
    as a small business or consortium of small businesses shall append the 
    following information as an exhibit to its FCC Form 175:
        (1) The identity of the applicant's controlling principals and 
    affiliates, and, if a consortium of small businesses, the members in 
    the joint venture; and
        (2) The applicant's gross revenues, computed in accordance with 
    Sec. 22.223.
        (b) Long form applications: certifications and disclosure. Each 
    applicant submitting a long-form application for a paging geographic 
    area authorization and qualifying as a small
    
    [[Page 11633]]
    
    business shall, in an exhibit to its long-form application:
        (1) Disclose separately and in the aggregate the gross revenues, 
    computed in accordance with Sec. 22.223, for each of the following: the 
    applicant, the applicant's affiliates, the applicant's controlling 
    principals, and, if a consortium of small businesses, the members of 
    the joint venture;
        (2) List and summarize all agreements or other instruments (with 
    appropriate references to specific provisions in the text of such 
    agreements and instruments) that support the applicant's eligibility as 
    a small business under Secs. 22.217 through 22.223, including the 
    establishment of de facto and de jure control; such agreements and 
    instruments include, but are not limited to, articles of incorporation 
    and bylaws, shareholder agreements, voting or other trust agreements, 
    franchise agreements, and any other relevant agreements, including 
    letters of intent, oral or written; and
        (3) List and summarize any investor protection agreements, 
    including rights of first refusal, supermajority clauses, options, veto 
    rights, and rights to hire and fire employees and to appoint members to 
    boards of directors or management committees.
        (c) Records maintenance. All winning bidders qualifying as small 
    businesses shall maintain at their principal place of business an 
    updated file of ownership, revenue, and asset information, including 
    any documents necessary to establish eligibility as a small business 
    and/or consortium of small businesses under Sec. 22.223. Licensees (and 
    their successors-in-interest) shall maintain such files for the term of 
    the license. Applicants that do not obtain the license(s) for which 
    they applied shall maintain such files until the grant of such 
    license(s) is final, or one year from the date of the filing of their 
    short-form application (FCC Form 175), whichever is earlier.
        (d) Audits. (1) Applicants and licensees claiming eligibility as a 
    small business or consortium of small businesses under Secs. 22.217 
    through 22.223 shall be subject to audits by the Commission. Selection 
    for audit may be random, on information, or on the basis of other 
    factors.
        (2) Consent to such audits is part of the certification included in 
    the short-form application (FCC Form 175). Such consent shall include 
    consent to the audit of the applicant's or licensee's books, documents 
    and other material (including accounting procedures and practices) 
    regardless of form or type, sufficient to confirm that such applicant's 
    or licensee's representations are, and remain, accurate. Such consent 
    shall include inspection at all reasonable times of the facilities, or 
    parts thereof, engaged in providing and transacting business, or 
    keeping records regarding licensed paging service and shall also 
    include consent to the interview of principals, employees, customers 
    and suppliers of the applicant or licensee.
        (e) Definitions. The terms affiliate, small business, consortium of 
    small businesses, and gross revenues, used in this section are defined 
    in Sec. 22.223.
    
    
    Sec. 22.227  Petitions to deny and limitations on settlements.
    
        (a) Procedures regarding petitions to deny long-form applications 
    in the paging service will be governed by Secs. 1.2108(b) through 
    1.2108(d) of this chapter, Sec. 22.130, and Sec. 90.163.
        (b) The consideration that an individual or an entity will be 
    permitted to receive for agreeing to withdraw an application or a 
    petition to deny will be limited by the provisions set forth in 
    Sec. 22.129, Sec. 90.162, and Sec. 1.2105(c) of this chapter.
        11. Section 22.313 is amended by revising paragraphs (a)(4), (a)(5) 
    and adding new paragraph (a)(6) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 22.313  Station identification.
    
    * * * * *
        (a) * * *
        (4) Stations using Basic Exchange Telephone Radio Systems in the 
    Rural Radiotelephone Service;
        (5) Nationwide network paging stations operating on 931 MHz 
    channels; or,
        (6) Stations operating pursuant to paging geographic area 
    authorizations.
    * * * * *
        12. Section 22.352 is amended by revising the introductory 
    paragraph to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 22.352  Protection from interference.
    
        Public Mobile Service stations operating in accordance with FCC 
    rules that provide technical channel assignment criteria for the radio 
    service and channels involved, all other applicable FCC rules, and the 
    terms and conditions of their authorizations are normally considered to 
    be non-interfering. If the FCC determines, however, that interference 
    that significantly interrupts or degrades a radio service is being 
    caused, it may, in accordance with the provisions of sections 303(f) 
    and 316 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, (47 U.S.C. 
    303(f), 316), require modifications to any Public Mobile station as 
    necessary to eliminate such interference.
    * * * * *
        13. A new Sec. 22.503 is added, to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 22.503  Paging geographic area authorizations.
    
        The FCC considers applications for and issues paging geographic 
    area authorizations in the Paging and Radiotelephone Service in 
    accordance with the rules in this section. Each paging geographic area 
    authorization contains conditions requiring compliance with paragraphs 
    (h) and (i) of this section.
        (a) Channels. The FCC may issue a paging geographic area 
    authorization for any channel listed in Sec. 22.531 of this part or for 
    any channel pair listed in Sec. 22.561 of this part.
        (b) Paging geographic areas. The paging geographic areas are as 
    follows:
        (1) The Nationwide paging geographic area comprises the District of 
    Columbia and all States, Territories and possessions of the United 
    States of America.
        (2) The Major Trading Areas (MTAs) as defined in the Rand McNally 
    1992 Commercial Atlas & Marketing Guide, 123rd Edition, at pages 38-39, 
    with the following changes and additions:
        (i) The Seattle paging geographic area does not include Alaska.
        (ii) Alaska is a paging geographic area.
        (iii) Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands (combined) are a paging 
    geographic area.
        (iv) Puerto Rico and the United States Virgin Islands (combined) 
    are a paging geographic area.
        (v) American Samoa is a paging geographic area.
        (3) The Economic Areas (EAs), as defined by the Department of 
    Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis.
        (c) Availability. The FCC may determine whether to issue a paging 
    geographic area authorization for any specific channel or channel pair 
    in any specific paging geographic area. The FCC may replace existing 
    site specific authorizations for facilities on a channel or channel 
    pair located in a paging geographic area with a paging geographic area 
    authorization for that channel or channel pair, if in its sole 
    discretion, the FCC determines that the public interest would be served 
    by such replacement.
        (d) Filing windows. The FCC accepts applications for paging 
    geographic area authorizations only during filing windows. The FCC 
    issues Public Notices announcing in advance the dates of the filing 
    windows, and the
    
    [[Page 11634]]
    
    specific paging geographic areas and channels for which applications 
    may be accepted.
        (e) One grant per geographic area. The FCC may grant one and only 
    one application for a paging geographic area authorization for any 
    specific channel or channel pair in any specific paging geographic area 
    defined in paragraph (b) of this section. Selection from among mutually 
    exclusive applications for a paging geographic area authorization will 
    be made in accordance with the procedures in Secs. 22.131 and 22.200 
    through 22.299. If after the selection process but prior to filing a 
    ``long form'' application, a successful bidder decides to partition the 
    paging geographic area, the FCC may require and accept multiple ``long 
    form'' applications from the consortium members.
        (f) Exclusive right to expand. During the term of a paging 
    geographic area authorization, the FCC does not accept, from anyone 
    other than the paging geographic area licensee, any major application 
    for authorization to operate a facility that would serve unserved area 
    within the paging geographic area specified in that paging geographic 
    area authorization, on the channel specified in that paging geographic 
    area authorization, unless any extension of the interfering contour of 
    the proposed facility falls:
        (1) Within the composite interfering contour of another licensee; 
    or,
        (2) Into unserved area and the paging geographic area licensee 
    consents to such extension.
        (g) Subsequent applications not accepted. During the term of a 
    paging geographic area authorization, the FCC does not accept any 
    application for authorization relating to a facility that is or would 
    be located within the paging geographic area specified in that paging 
    geographic area authorization, on the channel specified in that paging 
    geographic area authorization, except in the following situations:
        (1) FCC grant of an application authorizing the construction of the 
    facility could have a significant environmental effect as defined by 
    Sec. 1.1307 of this chapter. See Sec. 22.115(a)(5).
        (2) Specific international coordination procedures are required, 
    prior to assignment of a channel to the facility, pursuant to a treaty 
    or other agreement between the United States government and the 
    government of Canada or Mexico. See Sec. 22.169.
        (3) The paging geographic area licensee or another licensee of a 
    system within the paging geographic area applies to assign its 
    authorization or for FCC consent to a transfer of control.
        (h) Adjacent geographic area coordination required. Before 
    constructing a facility for which the interfering contour (as defined 
    in Sec. 22.537 or Sec. 22.567, as appropriate for the channel involved) 
    would extend into another paging geographic area, a paging geographic 
    area licensee must obtain the consent of the relevant co-channel paging 
    geographic area licensee, if any, into whose area the interfering 
    contour would extend. In the event that there is no co-channel paging 
    geographic area licensee from whom to obtain consent in the area into 
    which the interfering contour would extend, the facility may be 
    constructed and operated subject to the condition that, at such time as 
    the FCC issues a paging geographic area license for that adjacent 
    geographic area, either consent must be obtained or the facility 
    modified or eliminated such that the interfering contour no longer 
    extends into the adjacent geographic area.
        (i) Protection of existing service. All facilities constructed and 
    operated pursuant to a paging geographic area authorization must 
    provide co-channel interference protection in accordance with 
    Sec. 22.537 or Sec. 22.567, as appropriate for the channel involved, to 
    all co-channel facilities of other licensees within the paging 
    geographic area that were authorized on May 12, 1997 and have remained 
    authorized continuously since that date.
        (j) Site location restriction. The transmitting antenna of each 
    facility constructed and operated pursuant to a paging geographic area 
    authorization must be located within the paging geographic area 
    specified in the authorization.
        (k) Coverage requirements. Failure by a paging geographic area 
    licensee to meet either of the coverage requirements in paragraphs 
    (k)(1) and (k)(2) of this section, or alternatively, the substantial 
    service requirement in paragraph (k)(3) of this section, may result in 
    automatic termination or non-renewal of a paging geographic area 
    license. For the purpose of this paragraph, to ``cover'' area means to 
    include geographic area within the composite of the service contour(s) 
    determined by the methods of Secs. 22.537 or 22.567, as appropriate for 
    the particular channel involved. Licensees may determine the population 
    of geographic areas included within their service contours using either 
    the 1990 census or the 2000 census, but not both.
        (1) No later than three years after the initial grant of a paging 
    geographic area authorization, the licensee must construct or otherwise 
    acquire and operate sufficient facilities to cover one third of the 
    population in the paging geographic area. The licensee must notify the 
    FCC (FCC Form 489), no later than 15 days after the end of the three 
    year period, either that it has satisfied this requirement or that it 
    plans to satisfy the alternative requirement to provide substantial 
    service in accordance with paragraph (k)(3) of this section.
        (2) No later than five years after the initial grant of a paging 
    geographic area authorization, the licensee must construct or otherwise 
    acquire and operate sufficient facilities to cover two thirds of the 
    population in the paging geographic area. The licensee must notify the 
    FCC (FCC Form 489), no later than 15 days after the end of the five 
    year period, either that it has satisfied this requirement or that it 
    has satisfied the alternative requirement to provide substantial 
    service in accordance with paragraph (k)(3) of this section.
        (3) As an alternative to the coverage requirements of paragraphs 
    (k)(1) and (k)(2) of this section, the paging geographic area licensee 
    may demonstrate that, no later than five years after the initial grant 
    of its paging geographic area authorization, it provides substantial 
    service to the paging geographic area. ``Substantial service'' means 
    service that is sound, favorable, and substantially above a level of 
    mediocre service that would barely warrant renewal.
        14. Section 22.507 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 22.507  Number of transmitters per station.
    
        This section concerns the number of transmitters licensed under 
    each station authorization in the Paging and Radiotelephone Service, 
    other than paging geographic area authorizations.
        (a) Operationally related transmitters. Each station must have at 
    least one transmitter. There is no limit to the number of transmitters 
    that a station may comprise. However, transmitters within a station 
    should be operationally related and/or should serve the same general 
    geographical area. Operationally related transmitters are those that 
    operate together as a system (e.g., trunked systems, simulcast 
    systems), rather than independently.
        (b) Split of large systems. The FCC may split wide-area systems 
    into two or more stations for administrative convenience. Except for 
    nationwide paging and other operationally related transmitters, 
    transmitters that are widely separated geographically are not licensed 
    under a single authorization.
        (c) Consolidation of separate stations. The FCC may consolidate 
    separately authorized stations upon request (FCC
    
    [[Page 11635]]
    
    Form 600) of the licensee, if appropriate under paragraph (a) of this 
    section.
        (d) Replacement of site-by-site authorizations with single 
    authorization. After a paging geographic area authorization for a 
    channel has been issued, the FCC may, on its own motion, replace the 
    authorization(s) of any other licensee (for facilities located within 
    that paging geographic area on that channel) with a single replacement 
    authorization.
        15. Section 22.529 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 22.529  Application requirements for the Paging and Radiotelephone 
    Service.
    
        In addition to information required by Subparts B and D of this 
    part, applications for authorization in the Paging and Radiotelephone 
    Service must contain the applicable information and data described in 
    this section.
        (a) Administrative information. The following information, 
    associated with Form FCC 600, Schedule A, is required as indicated. 
    Each application of any type, including applications for paging 
    geographic area authorizations, must contain one and only one Schedule 
    A.
        (1) The purpose of the filing is required for each application of 
    any type.
        (2) The geographic area designator, channel and geographic area 
    name are required only for each application for a paging geographic 
    area authorization.
        (3) The FCC control point number, if any, the location (street 
    address, city or town, state), the telephone number and an indication 
    of the desired database action are required only for each application 
    proposing to add or delete a control point.
        (4) The FCC location number, file number and location (street 
    address, city or town, state) of authorized facilities that have not 
    been constructed are required only for each application requesting an 
    extension of time to construct those facilities.
        (b) Technical data. The following data, associated with FCC Form 
    600, Schedule B, are required as indicated for each application that is 
    not an application for a paging geographic area authorization. 
    Applications for a paging geographic area authorization must not 
    contain Schedule B. Other type of applications may contain as many 
    Schedule Bs as are necessary for the intended purpose.
        (1) For each transmitting antenna site to be added, deleted or 
    modified, the following are required: An indication of the desired 
    database action, the FCC location number, if any, the street address or 
    other description of the transmitting antenna site, the city, county 
    and state, the geographical coordinates (latitude and longitude), 
    correct to 1 second, of the transmitting antenna site (NAD 
    27 required, NAD 83 optional), and in the case of a proposed relocation 
    of a transmitting antenna, the FCC location number and geographical 
    coordinates, correct to 1 second, of the current 
    transmitting antenna site, and an indication of the datum (NAD 27 or 
    NAD 83) to which the geographical coordinates of the current location 
    are referenced.
        (2) For each transmitting antenna site to be added, deleted or 
    modified, the following supplementary information is required: An 
    indication as to whether or not the transmitting antenna site is within 
    200 kilometers (124 miles) of the U.S.-Mexico border, and an indication 
    as to whether or not the transmitting antenna site is North of Line A 
    or East of Line C. Line A and Line C are defined in Sec. 2.1 of this 
    chapter. For each adjacent geographic area within 200 kilometers (124 
    miles) of each transmitting antenna site to be added, deleted or 
    modified, the geographic area designator and name, and the shortest 
    distance (in kilometers) to the boundary of that geographic area.
        (3) For each antenna to be added, deleted or modified, the 
    following is required: An indication of the desired database action, an 
    indication of whether the antenna already exists or is merely proposed, 
    the FCC antenna number, if any, the type of antenna (e.g., collinear, 
    Yagi, half-wave, corner reflector, panel, etc.), the name of the 
    antenna manufacturer and the model number of the antenna, the height 
    (in meters) above average terrain of the center of radiation of the 
    antenna, the beamwidth of the main lobe of the horizontal radiation 
    pattern of the electric field of the antenna, the height (in meters) to 
    the tip of the antenna above ground level, a polar plot of the 
    horizontal gain pattern of the antenna, the antenna gain in the maximum 
    lobe and the electric field polarization of the wave emitted by the 
    antenna when installed as proposed.
        (i) For each transmitter to be added, deleted or modified, the 
    following is required: the FCC transmitter number, if any, an 
    indication of the desired database action, the center frequency of the 
    requested channel, the transmitter classification (e.g. base, fixed 
    mobile), the designator for any non-standard emission type to be used, 
    including bandwidth and modulation type, and the maximum effective 
    radiated power.
        (ii) For each of the eight cardinal radials, the antenna height 
    above the average elevation along the radial, and the effective 
    radiated power of each transmitter in the direction of the radial.
        (iii) For each transmitter proposed to transmit on a channel 
    reserved for point-to-multipoint operation involving transmission to 
    four or more points of communications (i.e. base transmitters), the 
    following is required for each point of communication: an indication of 
    the desired database action, the FCC transmitter number or other key 
    indicator (e.g., I, II, III, IV), the location (city or town, state), 
    and the geographical coordinates (latitude and longitude, NAD 27).
        16. Section 22.531 is amended by revising the preceding centered 
    heading, the section heading and introductory text, and adding a new 
    paragraph (f), to read as follows:
    
    Paging Operation
    
    
    Sec. 22.531  Channels for paging operation.
    
        The following channels are allocated for assignment to base 
    transmitters that provide paging service, either individually or 
    collectively under a paging geographic area authorization. Unless 
    otherwise indicated, all channels have a bandwidth of 20 kHz and are 
    designated by their center frequencies in MegaHertz.
    * * * * *
        (f) For the purpose of issuing paging geographic area 
    authorizations, the paging geographic areas used for the UHF channels 
    are the MTAs (see Sec. 22.503(b)(2)), and the paging geographic areas 
    used for the low and high VHF channels are the EAs (see 
    Sec. 22.503(b)(3)).
        17. Section 22.539 is amended by revising paragraph (e) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 22.539  Additional channel policies.
    
    * * * * *
        (e) Additional transmitters on same channel. Notwithstanding other 
    provisions of this section, the following applications are not 
    considered to be requests for an additional paging channel:
        (1) Applications for transmitters to be located in the same 
    geographic area as an authorized station controlled by the applicant, 
    and to operate on the same paging channel;
        (2) Applications for transmitters to be located within a paging 
    geographic area for which the applicant holds the paging geographic 
    area authorization for the requested channel; and,
        (3) Applications for paging geographic area authorizations.
    * * * * *
        Section 22.551 is revised to read as follows:
    
    [[Page 11636]]
    
    Sec. 22.551  Nationwide network paging service.
    
        The rules in this section govern the application for and provision 
    of nationwide network paging service on the channels reserved 
    specifically for such service in Sec. 22.531(b).
        (a) Nationwide network providers; organizers. If and when a 
    nationwide network paging channel becomes available for assignment, the 
    FCC will issue a Public Notice inviting applications from eligibles 
    seeking to provide or organize a nationwide network paging service. The 
    Public Notice will provide complete details regarding application 
    requirements and procedures.
        (b) Licensing. The FCC may issue a paging geographic area 
    authorization to the nationwide network provider or organizer. All 
    transmissions of nationwide network messages on the channels reserved 
    for such service in Sec. 22.531(b) are authorized solely under the 
    authorization(s) of the nationwide network provider or organizer, 
    notwithstanding whether or not the messages pass through facilities 
    owned, operated or licensed to affiliated local carriers.
        Section 22.559 is amended by revising the heading and introductory 
    text to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 22.559  Paging application requirements.
    
        In addition to information required by Subparts B and D and 
    Sec. 22.529, applications for authorization to operate a paging 
    transmitter on the channels listed in Sec. 22.531, other than 
    applications for a paging geographic area authorization, must contain 
    the applicable supplementary information described in this section.
    * * * * *
        Section 22.561 is amended by revising the introductory text to read 
    as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 22.561  Channels for one-way or two-way mobile operation.
    
        The following channels are allocated for paired assignment to 
    transmitters that provide (or support other transmitters that provide) 
    one-way or two-way public land mobile service, either individually or 
    collectively under a paging geographic area authorization. The paging 
    geographic areas used for these channels are the EAs (see 
    Sec. 22.503(b)(3)). These channels may be assigned for use by mobile or 
    base transmitters as indicated, and or by fixed transmitters (including 
    control, repeater or other fixed transmitters). The mobile channels may 
    also be assigned for use by base or fixed transmitters under certain 
    circumstances (see Sec. 22.567(h)). Unless otherwise indicated, all 
    channels have a bandwidth of 20 kHz and are designated by their center 
    frequencies in MegaHertz.
    * * * * *
        Section 22.569 is amended by revising paragraph (d) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 22.569  Additional channel policies.
    
    * * * * *
        (d) Additional transmitters on same channel. Notwithstanding other 
    provisions of this section, the following applications are not 
    considered to be requests for an additional channel:
        (1) Applications for transmitters to be located in the same 
    geographic area as an authorized station controlled by the applicant, 
    and to operate on the same paging channel;
        (2) Applications for transmitters to be located within a paging 
    geographic area for which the applicant holds the paging geographic 
    area authorization for the requested channel; and,
        (3) Applications for paging geographic area authorizations.
    * * * * *
        Section 22.589 is amended by revising the introductory text to read 
    as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 22.589  One-way or two-way application requirements.
    
        In addition to information required by subparts B and D and 
    Sec. 22.529, applications for authorization to operate a paging 
    transmitter on the channels listed in Sec. 22.531, other than 
    applications for a paging geographic area authorization, must contain 
    the applicable supplementary information described in this section.
    * * * * *
    
    
    Sec. 22.717  [Amended]
    
        Section 22.717 is amended by removing paragraph (c).
        A new Sec. 22.721 is added to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 22.721  Geographic area authorizations.
    
        Eligible persons may apply for a paging geographic area 
    authorization in the Rural Radiotelephone Service, on the channel pairs 
    listed in Sec. 22.725, by following the procedures and requirements set 
    forth in Sec. 22.503 for paging geographic area authorizations.
        25. A new Sec. 22.723 is added to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 22.723  Secondary site-by-site authorizations.
    
        Authorizations for new facilities (including new sites and 
    additional channel pairs for existing sites) in the Rural 
    Radiotelephone Service (including BETRS facilities) may be granted 
    after May 12, 1997 only on the condition that such authorizations shall 
    be secondary to any existing or future co-channel paging geographic 
    area authorization in the Paging and Radiotelephone Service or the 
    Rural Radiotelephone Service. If the paging geographic area licensee 
    notifies the Rural Radiotelephone Service licensee that operation of a 
    co-channel secondary facility must be discontinued because it may cause 
    interference to existing or planned facilities, the Rural 
    Radiotelephone Service licensee must discontinue operation of that 
    facility on the particular channel pair involved no later than six 
    months after such notice.
        II. Part 90 of Chapter I of Title 47 of the Code of Federal 
    Regulations is amended as follows:
        1. The authority citation for part 90 continues to read as follows:
    
    PART 90--PRIVATE LAND MOBILE RADIO SERVICES
    
        Authority: Sec. 4, 303, 309, and 332, 48 Stat. 1066, 1082, as 
    amended; 47 U.S.C 154, 303, 309, and 332, unless otherwise noted.
    
        2. Section 90.162 is amended by adding paragraph (f) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 90.162  Agreements to dismiss applications, amendments, or 
    pleadings
    
    * * * * *
        (f) Notwithstanding the provisions of this section, any payments 
    made or received in exchange for withdrawing a short-form application 
    for an FCC authorization awarded through competitive bidding shall be 
    subject to the restrictions set forth in section Sec. 1.2105(c) of this 
    chapter.
        3. A new Sec. 90.493 is added to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 90.493  Paging operations on exclusive channels in the 929-930 MHz 
    band.
    
        Paging operations on the exclusive channels in the 929-930 MHz band 
    are subject to the rules set forth in this section.
        (a) Exclusive channels. The center frequencies of the channels in 
    the 929-930 MHz band that may be assigned on an exclusive basis are as 
    follows: 929.0125, 929.1125, 929.1375, 929.1875, 929.2125, 929.2375, 
    929.2875, 929.3125, 929.3375, 929.3625, 929.3875, 929.4125, 929.4375, 
    929.4625, 929.4875, 929.5125, 929.5375, 929.5625, 929.5875, 929.6125, 
    929.6375, 929.6625, 929.6875, 929.7125, 929.7375, 929.7625, 929.7875, 
    929.8125, 929.8375, 929.8625, 929.8875, 929.9125, 929.9375, 929.9625, 
    and 929.9875 MHz.
        (b) Part 22 licensing, construction and operation rules apply. 
    Licensing, construction and operation of paging stations on the 
    exclusive channels in the 929-930 MHz band are subject to the 
    application filing, licensing procedure, auction procedure, 
    construction, operation and notification rules and requirements that 
    are set forth in part 22
    
    [[Page 11637]]
    
    of this chapter for paging stations operating in the 931-932 MHz band, 
    instead of procedures elsewhere in this part.
        (c) Part 22 power limits apply; type acceptance required. Paging 
    operations on the exclusive channels in the 929-930 MHz band are 
    subject to the transmitting power limits set forth in part 22 of this 
    chapter for paging stations operating in the 931-932 MHz band, instead 
    of power limits elsewhere in this part. Transmitters used on the 
    exclusive channels in the 929-930 MHz band must be of a type accepted 
    under either part 22 of this chapter or this part (or both).
        4. Section 90.494 is amended by revising the heading, paragraphs 
    (a), (f) and (g), to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 90.494  Paging operations on shared channels in the 929-930 MHz 
    band.
    
        (a) This section applies to licensing of paging stations on the 
    shared (non-exclusive) channels in the 929-930 MHz band. The center 
    frequencies of these channels are listed in paragraph (b) of this 
    section.
    * * * * *
        (f) The effective radiated power for base stations providing paging 
    service on the shared channels must not exceed 3500 Watts.
        (g) Licenses may be granted on these shared paging channels only 
    for expansion (addition of new sites or relocation of existing sites) 
    or other modification, assignment or transfer of control of existing, 
    licensed private (including Special Emergency Radio Service) or 
    commercial paging systems, and for new private (including Special 
    Emergency Radio Service), internal-use paging systems. Any application 
    for authority to operate a new commercial paging system on any of these 
    shared channels is unacceptable for filing.
    
    
    Sec. 90.495  [Removed]
    
        5. Section 90.495 is removed.
    
    
    Sec. 90.496  [Removed]
    
        6. Section 90.496 is removed.
    [FR Doc. 97-6092 Filed 3-11-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6712-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
5/12/1997
Published:
03/12/1997
Department:
Federal Communications Commission
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
97-6092
Dates:
May 12, 1997.
Pages:
11616-11637 (22 pages)
Docket Numbers:
WT Docket No. 96-18, PP Docket No. 93-253, FCC 97-59
PDF File:
97-6092.pdf
CFR: (46)
47 CFR 22.223(b)(1)
47 CFR 22.503(b)(3))
47 CFR 1.2108(d)
47 CFR 1.1307
47 CFR 2.5
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