97-98. Geographic Partitioning and Spectrum Disaggregation by Commercial Mobile Radio Services Licensees; and Implementation of Section 257 of the Communications Act; Elimination of Market Entry Barriers  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 3 (Monday, January 6, 1997)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 653-662]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-98]
    
    
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    FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
    
    47 CFR Part 24
    
    [WT Docket No. 96-148; GN Docket No. 96-113; FCC 96-474]
    
    
    Geographic Partitioning and Spectrum Disaggregation by Commercial 
    Mobile Radio Services Licensees; and Implementation of Section 257 of 
    the Communications Act; Elimination of Market Entry Barriers
    
    AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: In this Report and Order in WT Docket No. 96-148, the 
    Commission adopts rules concerning geographic partitioning and spectrum 
    disaggregation by broadband personal communications service (PCS) 
    licensees. The rules adopted for broadband PCS will permit partitioning 
    and disaggregation by all broadband PCS licensees. This will provide 
    broadband PCS licensees with desirable flexibility to determine the 
    amount of spectrum they will occupy and the geographic area they will 
    serve. Such flexibility will: facilitate the efficient use of spectrum 
    by providing licensees with the flexibility to make offerings directly 
    responsive to market demands for particular types of service; increase 
    competition by allowing market entry by new entrants; and expedite the 
    provision of service to areas that otherwise may not receive broadband 
    PCS service in the near term.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: March 7, 1997.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Shaun A. Maher, Commercial Wireless 
    Division, Wireless Telecommunications Bureau at (202) 418-0620.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This Report and Order in WT Docket No. 96-
    148 and GN Docket No. 96-113, adopted on December 13, 1996, and 
    released December 20, 1996, is available for inspection and copying 
    during normal business hours in the FCC Reference Center, Room 234, 
    1919 M Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. The complete text may also be 
    purchased from the Commission's copy contractor, International 
    Transcription Service, Inc., 2100 M Street, N.W., Suite 140, 
    Washington, D.C. 20037, (202) 857-3800. Synopsis of Report and Order.
    
    I. Background
    
        1. The Commission's initial regulations and policies for broadband 
    PCS were adopted in the Broadband PCS Second Report and Order, 
    Amendment of the Commission's Rules to Establish New Personal 
    Communications Services, GEN Docket No. 90-314, Second Report and 
    Order, 58 FR 59174 (November 8, 1993) (Broadband PCS Second Report and 
    Order), and amended in the Broadband PCS Memorandum Opinion and Order, 
    Amendment of the Commission's Rules to Establish New Personal 
    Communications Services, GEN Docket No. 90-314, Memorandum Opinion and 
    Order, 59 FR 32830 (June 24, 1994) (Broadband PCS Memorandum Opinion 
    and Order). In the Broadband PCS Memorandum Opinion and Order, the 
    Commission declined to adopt unrestricted geographic partitioning for 
    broadband PCS based on its concern that licensees might use 
    partitioning as a means of circumventing construction requirements. 
    However, the Commission stated that it would consider the issue of 
    geographic partitioning for rural telephone companies (rural telcos) 
    and other designated entities in a future proceeding to establish 
    competitive bidding rules for broadband PCS. The Commission then 
    permitted broadband PCS geographic partitioning for rural telcos in the 
    Competitive Bidding Fifth Report and Order, Implementation of Section 
    309(j) of the Communications Act--Competitive Bidding, PP Docket No. 
    93-253, Fifth Report and Order, 59 FR 37566 (July 22, 1995) 
    (Competitive Bidding Fifth Report and Order). The Commission observed 
    that partitioning was one method to satisfy Congress' mandate to 
    provide an opportunity for rural telcos to participate in the provision 
    of broadband PCS. The Commission also found that rural telcos could 
    take advantage of their existing infrastructure to provide broadband 
    PCS services, thereby speeding service to rural areas. In the 
    Competitive Bidding Further Notice of Proposed Rule Making, 
    Implementation of Section
    
    [[Page 654]]
    
    309(j) of the Communications Act--Competitive Bidding, PP Docket No. 
    93-253, Further Notice of Proposed Rule Making, 59 FR 41426 (August 12, 
    1994) (Competitive Bidding Further Notice of Proposed Rule Making), the 
    Commission sought comment on whether to extend post-auction geographic 
    partitioning of broadband PCS licenses to women- and minority-owned 
    businesses.
        2. Section 24.229(c) of the Commission's rules permits a broadband 
    PCS licensee that has met its five-year construction requirement to 
    disaggregate its licensed PCS spectrum after January 1, 2000. In the 
    Broadband PCS Memorandum Opinion and Order, the Commission reasoned 
    that this limit on spectrum disaggregation for broadband PCS would 
    allow the PCS market to develop and prevent anti-competitive practices 
    with regard to disaggregation.
        3. The Commission believes that it is appropriate at this time to 
    liberalize its rules to allow partitioning and disaggregation for 
    broadband PCS. The rules adopted in the Report and Order will provide 
    licensees with the flexibility to use their spectrum more efficiently, 
    will increase opportunities for small businesses and other entities to 
    enter into the broadband PCS market, and will speed service to 
    underserved or unserved areas.
    
    II. Discussion
    
    A. Partitioning
    
    1. License Eligibility
        4. The Commission concludes that relaxing its PCS geographic 
    partitioning rules, as discussed herein, will help to (1) remove 
    potential barriers to entry thereby increasing competition in the PCS 
    marketplace; (2) encourage parties to use PCS spectrum more 
    efficiently; and (3) speed service to unserved and underserved areas. 
    Parties that were unsuccessful bidders or that did not participate in 
    the PCS auctions will be able to use partitioning as a method to 
    acquire PCS licenses after the auctions. Smaller or newly-formed 
    entities, for example, may enter the PCS market for the first time 
    through partitioning. Under the prior rules, such entities would have 
    been unable to qualify for partitioning because of the Commission's 
    rural telco restriction. By eliminating that restriction, these 
    entities will be able to negotiate for licenses for portions of the 
    original service area at a cost that is proportionately less than that 
    of the full geographic market.
        5. The Commission also finds that increasing the number of parties 
    that may obtain partitioned PCS licenses will lead to more efficient 
    use of PCS spectrum and will speed service to underserved or rural 
    areas. PCS licensees will be able to partition portions of their 
    markets to entities more willing to serve niche markets instead of 
    postponing service to those areas. The Commission believes that 
    retaining the existing partitioning restrictions, as recommended by the 
    rural telco commenters, would prevent additional small businesses and 
    other entities from using partitioning to enter the broadband PCS 
    market. In addition, restricting the number of parties that are 
    eligible for partitioned PCS licenses only serves to unreasonably 
    reduce the number of potential entrants into the PCS marketplace 
    without any corresponding public interest benefit.
        6. The rural telco commenters claim that changing the current 
    partitioning rules would be inconsistent with the mandate set forth in 
    Section 309(j)(3)(B) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended 
    (Communications Act), 47 U.S.C. 309(j)(3)(B), to ensure that licenses 
    are disseminated among a wide variety of applicants including rural 
    telcos. They contend that partitioning was the sole means by which the 
    Commission sought to fulfill the mandate of Section 309(j)(3)(B) of the 
    Communications Act, 47 U.S.C. 309(j)(3)(B) for rural telcos. The 
    Commission disagrees. Rural telcos are able to take advantage of the 
    special provision for small businesses the Commission designed in its 
    auction rules to obtain licenses in the entrepreneur block auctions. 
    Furthermore, Sections 309(j)(3)(A), (B), and (D) of the Communications 
    Act, 47 U.S.C. 309(j)(A), (B) & (D), direct the Commission to further 
    the rapid deployment of new technologies for the benefit of the public 
    including those residing in rural areas, to promote economic 
    opportunity and competition, and to ensure the efficient use of 
    spectrum. While encouraging rural telco participation in PCS service 
    offerings is an important element in meeting these goals, Congress did 
    not dictate that this should be the sole method of ensuring the rapid 
    deployment of service in rural areas. The Commission concludes that 
    allowing open partitioning will further the goals of Section 309(j)(3) 
    of the Communications Act, 47 U.S.C. 309(j)(3), by allowing PCS 
    licensees to partition to multiple entities within their markets rather 
    than limiting partitioning to a small number of rural telcos.
        7. The rural telcos argue further that they will not be able to 
    compete for partitioned PCS licenses unless the Commission retains its 
    current restriction because PCS licensees will be unwilling to 
    partition their licenses to rural telcos and will choose to partition 
    to Commercial Mobile Radio Service (CMRS) providers with greater 
    financial resources. The rural telco commenters also argue that they 
    relied to their detriment upon the current partitioning restrictions 
    when devising their business plans and that many of them chose not to 
    participate in the broadband PCS auctions because they believed that 
    they would be the only parties that could obtain partitioned PCS 
    licenses. The Commission is unpersuaded that its action herein will 
    harm the rural telcos' business plans. Under the new rules adopted 
    herein, rural telcos will be fully able to obtain partitioned PCS 
    licenses, as they were previously. Moreover, in many instances, rural 
    telcos are likely to be in a superior position to obtain partitioned 
    licenses.
        8. The Commission declines to adopt the rural telcos' proposal to 
    require a right of first refusal. Granting the rural telcos a right of 
    first refusal would limit the number of parties that could obtain 
    partitioned PCS licenses which would be at odds with the Commission's 
    goals of encouraging participation in the PCS marketplace by as many 
    parties as possible and reducing barriers to entry for small 
    businesses. The Commission finds that increasing the number of 
    potential entities that can acquire partitioned PCS licenses will 
    result in better service and increased competition which may result in 
    lower prices for PCS service.
        9. The Commission also finds that the right of first refusal would 
    be difficult to administer and could discourage partitioning. The area 
    proposed in a partitioning agreement may not coincide exactly with the 
    area for which a rural telco would have a right of first refusal or a 
    single partitioning transaction may encompass more than one rural 
    telcos' service area. In those cases, the consent of multiple rural 
    telcos would be required before a partitioning transaction could be 
    consummated. Additionally, a partitioning agreement may be part of a 
    larger assignment transaction. If a rural telco were to exercise its 
    right of first refusal to acquire the partitioned area, it may not be 
    possible to separate out the partitioning agreement to stand on its own 
    and the entire assignment transaction could not be consummated.
    
    [[Page 655]]
    
    2. Available License Area, Restrictions on Timing of Partitioning, and 
    Matters Related to Entrepreneur Block Licensees
        a. License Area. 10. The Commission is persuaded by the commenters' 
    arguments that limiting geographic partitioning of PCS licenses to 
    those areas defined by county lines may not be reflective of market 
    realities and may otherwise inhibit partitioning. As the commenters 
    note, parties seeking a partitioned license may not desire to serve an 
    entire county but rather a smaller niche market. The Commission 
    believes that permitting partitioning along any service area defined by 
    the partitioner and partitionee is the most logical approach, provided 
    they submit sufficient information to the Commission to maintain its 
    licensing records. This will be the rule for all parties, including 
    rural telcos.
        11. Partitioning applicants will be required to submit, as separate 
    attachments to the partial assignment application, a description of the 
    partitioned service area and a calculation of the population of the 
    partitioned service area and licensed market. The partitioned service 
    area must be defined by coordinate points at every 3 seconds along the 
    partitioned service area agreed to by both parties, unless either (1) 
    an FCC-recognized service area is utilized (i.e., Major Trading Area, 
    Basic Trading Area, Metropolitan Service Area, Rural Service or 
    Economic Area) or (2) county lines are followed. These geographical 
    coordinates must be specified in degrees, minutes and seconds to the 
    nearest second of latitude and longitude, and must be based upon the 
    1927 North American Datum (NAD27). Applicants may also supply 
    geographical coordinates based on 1983 North American Datum (NAD83) in 
    addition to those required based on NAD27. This coordinate data should 
    be supplied as an attachment to the partial assignment application, and 
    maps need not be supplied. In cases where an FCC recognized service 
    area or county lines are being utilized, applicants need only list the 
    specific area(s) (through use of FCC designations) or counties that 
    make up the newly partitioned area. Allowing partitioning along any 
    agreed-upon service area will provide an opportunity for PCS licensees 
    to design flexible and efficient partitioning agreements. By providing 
    such flexibility to licensees for determining partitioned areas, the 
    Commission will permit the market to decide the most suitable service 
    areas.
        b. Non-entrepreneur block licenses. 12. The Commission concludes 
    that the public interest will be served by allowing non-entrepreneur 
    block licensees to freely partition their licenses to any other 
    qualifying entity following the issuance of the license. Since non-
    entrepreneur block licensees are permitted to assign their entire 
    license after grant, the Commission finds they should be able to assign 
    a portion of their license following the issuance of their license. PCS 
    licensees will be permitted to partition their licensed market areas 
    without limitation on the overall size of the partitioned areas 
    consistent with the Commission's rules.
        c. Entrepreneur block licenses. 13. The Commission will permit 
    entrepreneur block PCS licensees to partition at any time to other 
    parties that would be eligible for licenses in those blocks. 
    Partitioning of entrepreneur block license areas to non-entrepreneurs 
    will not be permitted for the first five years of an entrepreneur block 
    license term. This restriction is necessary in order to ensure that 
    entrepreneurs do not circumvent the Commission's restrictions on full 
    license transfers by attempting to immediately partition a portion of 
    their licenses to non-entrepreneurs.
        14. The Commission finds that its unjust enrichment requirements 
    should be applied if an entrepreneur block licensee partitions a 
    portion of its license area to a non-entrepreneur, after the initial 
    five-year license term. The Commission will apply its unjust enrichment 
    rules to transactions where entrepreneurs obtain partitioned licenses 
    from other entrepreneurs and subsequently seek to assign their 
    partitioned license to a non-entrepreneur. The Commission will also 
    apply the unjust enrichment provisions to an entrepreneur block 
    licensee that qualifies as a small business who partitions to an entity 
    that satisfies the entrepreneur block eligibility criteria but is not a 
    small business that would be eligible for bidding credits or 
    installment payments.
        15. The Commission will use population as the objective measure to 
    calculate the relative value of the partitioned area for determining 
    all of its unjust enrichment obligations. Population will be calculated 
    based upon the latest census data.
        16. In partitioning cases involving installment payments, the 
    Commission finds that separating the payment obligations and default 
    provisions of the original licensee and partitionee is the best 
    approach because it reduces each party's risk and creates payment 
    obligations that can be enforced separately against the defaulting 
    party without adversely affecting the other licensee. The Commission 
    adopts the following rules to address the various combinations of 
    parties and the relative obligations for each in the event an 
    entrepreneur seeks to partition its license:
        (a) No Continued Installment Payments. When an entrepreneur block 
    licensee with installment payments partitions its license after the 
    five-year holding period to a party that would not qualify for 
    installment payments under our rules or to an entity that does not 
    desire to pay for its share of the license with installment payments, 
    the Commission will first apportion the percentage of the remaining 
    government obligation (including accrued and unpaid interest calculated 
    on the date the partial assignment application is filed) between the 
    partitionee and original licensee based upon the ratio of the 
    population of the partitioned area to the population of the entire 
    original licensed area. Under this procedure, both parties will be 
    responsible to the U.S. Treasury for their proportionate share of the 
    balance due including accrued and unpaid interest calculated on the 
    date the partial assignment application is filed. The Commission will 
    require, as a condition of grant of the partial assignment application, 
    that the partitionee pay its entire pro rata amount within 30 days of 
    Public Notice conditionally granting the partial assignment 
    application. Failure to meet this condition will result in the 
    automatic cancellation of the grant of the partial assignment 
    application. The partitioner will receive new financing documents 
    (promissory note and security agreement) with a revised payment 
    obligation, based on the remaining amount of time on the original 
    installment payment schedule. These financing documents will replace 
    the partitioner's existing financing documents which will be marked 
    ``superseded'' and returned to the licensee upon receipt of the new 
    financing documents. The original interest rate, established at the 
    time of the issuance of the initial license in the market, will 
    continue to be applied to the partitioner's portion of the remaining 
    government obligation. The Commission will require, as a further 
    condition to approval of the partial assignment application, that the 
    partitioner execute and return to the U.S. Treasury the new financing 
    documents within 30 days of the Public Notice conditionally granting 
    the partial assignment application. Failure to meet this condition will 
    result in the automatic cancellation of the grant of the partial 
    assignment application. A
    
    [[Page 656]]
    
    default on an obligation will only affect that portion of the market 
    area held by the defaulting party. The payments to the U.S. Treasury 
    are required notwithstanding any additional terms and conditions agreed 
    to between or among the parties.
        (b) Partitioning With Continued Installment Payments. Where both 
    parties to the partitioning arrangement qualify for installment 
    payments under Sec. 24.720(b)(1), 47 CFR 24.720(b)(1), the Commission 
    will permit the partitionee to make installment payments on its portion 
    of the remaining government obligation. Partitionees are free, however, 
    to make a lump sum payment of their pro rata portion of the remaining 
    government obligation within 30 days of the Public Notice conditionally 
    granting the partial assignment application. Should a partitionee 
    choose to make installment payments, the Commission will require, as a 
    condition to approval of the partial assignment application, that both 
    parties execute financing documents (promissory note and security 
    agreement) agreeing to pay the U.S. Treasury their pro rata portion of 
    the balance due (including accrued and unpaid interest on the date the 
    partial assignment application is filed) based upon the installment 
    payment terms for which they would qualify. These documents must be 
    executed and returned to the U.S. Treasury within 30 days of the Public 
    Notice conditionally granting the partial assignment application. 
    Either party's failure to meet this condition will result in the 
    automatic cancellation of the grant of the partial assignment 
    application. The original interest rate, established at the time of the 
    issuance of the initial license in the market, will apply to both 
    parties' portion of the remaining government obligation. Each party 
    will receive a license for its portion of the market area and each 
    party's financing documents will provide that a default on its 
    obligation would only affect their portion of the market area. These 
    payments to the U.S. Treasury are required notwithstanding any 
    additional terms and conditions agreed to between or among the parties.
    3. Construction Requirements
        17. The Commission will adopt two alternative construction options 
    for broadband PCS partitioning. Under the first option, the partitionee 
    certifies that it will satisfy the same construction requirements as 
    the original licensee. The partitionee then must meet the same five- 
    and ten-year service requirements as the original 10 MHz or 30 MHz 
    licensee in its partitioned area, while the partitioner remains 
    responsible for meeting those requirements in the area it has retained. 
    Under the second option, the partitioner certifies that it has already 
    met or will meet its five-year construction requirement and that it 
    will meet the ten-year construction requirement for the entire market. 
    Because the partitioner retains the responsibility for meeting the 
    construction requirements for the entire market, the partitionee will 
    only be required to meet the substantial service requirement for its 
    partitioned area at the end of the ten-year license term. The 
    definition of substantial service will be that definition found at 
    Sec. 24.16(a) of the rules, 47 CFR 24.16(a). If a partitionee fails to 
    meet its construction requirements, the license for the partitioned 
    area will automatically cancel without further Commission action.
        18. At the five- and ten-year benchmarks, partitionees are required 
    to file supporting documentation showing compliance with the 
    construction requirements. Licensees failing to meet the coverage 
    requirements will be subject to forfeiture, license cancellation, or 
    other penalties.
    
    B. Disaggregation
    
    1. Timing of Disaggregation
        19. The Commission concludes that disaggregation of broadband PCS 
    spectrum should be allowed prior to January 1, 2000, and that the 
    condition that the licensee must first satisfy the five-year build out 
    requirement before disaggregating should be eliminated. To the extent 
    that disaggregation would enable other entities to provide broadband 
    PCS within geographic market areas, the Commission finds that allowing 
    immediate disaggregation would encourage rather than impede competition 
    by enabling the entry of new competitors. Moreover, the current 
    prohibition on disaggregation may constitute a barrier to entry for 
    small businesses that lacked the resources to participate successfully 
    at auction for 30 MHz and 10 MHz spectrum blocks. In furtherance of the 
    mandate prescribed by Section 257 of the Communications Act, the 
    Commission is eliminating such market entry barriers by permitting non-
    entrepreneur block (A, B, D, and E block) PCS licensees to disaggregate 
    spectrum at any time to other entities with minimum eligibility 
    qualifications. Entrepreneur block (C and F block) licensees may 
    disaggregate at any time to other entrepreneurs, or to non-
    entrepreneurs after a five-year holding period. While the Commission 
    concludes that disaggregation should generally be allowed, it 
    emphasizes that all proposed disaggregation agreements, like 
    partitioning agreements, will be subject to Commission review and 
    approval under the public interest standard of Section 310 of the Act. 
    In addition, as discussed below, disaggregatees will be subject to the 
    CMRS spectrum cap to ensure that disaggregation is not used to 
    accumulate large amounts of spectrum in order to preclude entry by 
    other competitors.
    2. Amount of Spectrum to Disaggregate
        20. The Commission concludes that there should be no restriction on 
    the amount of broadband PCS spectrum that can be disaggregated. 
    Providing the flexibility to allow parties to decide the exact amount 
    of spectrum to be disaggregated is preferable because it will encourage 
    more efficient use of spectrum and will permit the deployment of a 
    broader mix of service offerings, leading to a more competitive 
    wireless marketplace. The Commission finds that requiring parties to 
    obtain disaggregated spectrum in a predetermined amount, such as a 
    block of 1 MHz, may result in parties obtaining more spectrum they 
    need, leaving some spectrum unused, and may foreclose some parties from 
    using disaggregation as a means of obtaining the spectrum they need to 
    provide their service offerings. Therefore, the Commission will not 
    restrict the amount of broadband PCS spectrum that can be 
    disaggregated. Similarly, it will not require the disaggregator to 
    retain a minimum amount of spectrum.
        21. The Commission is not adopting a limit on the maximum amount of 
    spectrum that licensees may disaggregate, provided that the 
    disaggregatee complies with the CMRS spectrum cap. The Commission finds 
    no evidence at this time that a maximum limitation for disaggregation 
    is necessary. PCS licensees shall be permitted to disaggregate spectrum 
    without limitation on the overall size of the disaggregation as long as 
    such disaggregation is otherwise consistent with the rules.
    3. Matters Relating to Entrepreneur Block Licensees
        22. In keeping with the proposals the Commission is adopting for 
    partitioning, it will permit entrepreneur block licensees to 
    disaggregate at any time to other parties that qualify as 
    entrepreneurs. Disaggregation to entities that do not qualify as 
    entrepreneurs is not permitted for the first five years of a license 
    term. Allowing unrestricted entrepreneur block disaggregation
    
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    would be inconsistent with the five-year restriction on full license 
    transfers to non-entrepreneurs which was designed to ensure that 
    entrepreneurs do not take advantage of special entrepreneur block 
    provisions by immediately seeking to transfer their licenses to non-
    entrepreneurs. The Commission believes the same rationale would apply 
    to entrepreneur block disaggregation, as licensees who have benefited 
    from such provisions could immediately disaggregate spectrum to parties 
    that would not qualify for such benefits.
        23. The Commission declines to permit entrepreneur block licensees 
    to swap equivalent blocks of entrepreneur spectrum with non-
    entrepreneurs within the same market area. The administrative burden of 
    keeping track of such arrangements would far outweigh any benefit to 
    the public.
        24. The Commission will follow the approach outlined for 
    partitioning and apply unjust enrichment payments to entrepreneur block 
    licensees that disaggregate to non-entrepreneurs after the five-year 
    holding period and to entrepreneur block licensees that qualified for 
    bidding credits and installment payments and that disaggregate to other 
    entrepreneurs that would not have qualified for such benefits. All such 
    unjust enrichment payments will be calculated based upon the ratio of 
    the amount of spectrum disaggregated to the amount of spectrum retained 
    by the original licensee. With respect to disaggregation from an 
    entrepreneur block licensee to another entrepreneur that would also 
    qualify for installment payments, the Commission adopts an approach 
    similar to the one it adopted for partitioning. The Commission will 
    apportion the payment obligations between the disaggregator and 
    disaggregatee based upon the amount of spectrum disaggregated and 
    require separate payment obligations, promissory notes and default 
    liabilities for each party.
    4. Construction Requirements
        25. The Commission concludes that the proposed construction 
    requirements for disaggregation set forth in the NRPM would be 
    inconsistent with the approach adopted in its partitioning rules, and 
    that a more flexible approach is appropriate. Because the rules do not 
    dictate a minimum level of spectrum usage by the original PCS licensee, 
    the Commission believes it would be inconsistent to impose separate 
    construction requirements on both disaggregator and disaggregatee for 
    their respective spectrum portions. At the same time, the Commission 
    wishes to ensure that the parties do not use disaggregation to 
    circumvent its underlying construction requirements. Therefore, the 
    Commission adopts a flexible approach analogous to its approach in the 
    partitioning context: to retain the underlying five- and ten-year 
    construction requirements for the spectrum block as a whole, but allow 
    either party to meet the requirements on its disaggregated portion. 
    Thus, a PCS licensee who disaggregates a portion of its spectrum may 
    elect to retain responsibility for meeting the five- and ten-year 
    coverage requirements, or it may negotiate a transfer of this 
    obligation to the disaggregatee. In either case, the rules ensure that 
    the spectrum will be developed to at least the same degree that was 
    required prior to disaggregation.
        26. To ensure compliance with the rules, the Commission will 
    require that parties seeking Commission approval of a disaggregation 
    agreement include a certification as to which party will be responsible 
    for meeting the applicable five- and ten-year construction 
    requirements. Parties may also propose to share the responsibility for 
    meeting the construction requirements. The specific requirements to be 
    met will depend on whether the spectrum being disaggregated was 
    originally licensed as a 30 MHz block or a 10 MHz block. In the event 
    that only one party agrees to take responsibility for meeting the 
    construction requirement and later fails to do so, that party's license 
    will be subject to forfeiture, but the other party's license will not 
    be affected. Should both parties agree to share the responsibility for 
    meeting the construction requirements and either party later fails to 
    do so, both parties' licenses will be subject to forfeiture. So that 
    the CMRS rules remain consistent and competitively neutral, 
    disaggregatees that already hold a broadband PCS license or other CMRS 
    license in the same geographic market will be subject to the same 
    coverage requirements as disaggregatees who do not hold other licenses 
    for disaggregated spectrum.
    
    C. Related Matters
    
    1. Combination of Partitioning and Disaggregation
        27. To allow parties flexibility to design the types of agreements 
    they desire, the Commission will permit combined partitioning and 
    disaggregation. For example, this will allow a party to obtain a 
    license for a single county of an A block market with only 15 MHz of 
    spectrum. In the event that there is a conflict in the application of 
    the partitioning and disaggregation rules, the partitioning rules 
    should prevail. For the purpose of applying the unjust enrichment 
    requirements and/or for calculating obligations under installment 
    payment plans, when a combined partitioning and disaggregation is 
    proposed, the Commission will use a combination of both population of 
    the partitioned area and amount of spectrum disaggregated to make these 
    pro rata calculations.
    2. Licensing
        28. The Commission will follow existing partial assignment 
    procedures for broadband PCS licenses in reviewing requests for 
    geographic partitioning, disaggregation, or a combination of both. Such 
    applications will be placed on Public Notice and will be subject to 
    petitions to deny. A licensee will be required to file an FCC Form 490 
    that is signed by both the licensee and the qualifying entity. With 
    respect to partitioning, the FCC Form 490 must include the attachment 
    defining the partitioned license area and an attachment demonstrating 
    the population of the partitioned license area. Partial assignment 
    applications that are filed seeking partitioning or disaggregation in 
    the entrepreneur blocks must include an attachment demonstrating 
    compliance with the five year entrepreneur block holding period. The 
    qualifying entity will also be required to file an FCC Form 430 unless 
    a current FCC Form 430 is already on file with the Commission. An FCC 
    Form 600 must be filed by the qualifying entity to receive 
    authorization to operate in the market area being partitioned or to 
    operate the disaggregated spectrum or to modify an existing license of 
    the qualifying entity to include the new/additional market area being 
    partitioned or the spectrum that is disaggregated. Any requests for a 
    partitioned license or disaggregated spectrum must contain the FCC 
    Forms 490, 430, and 600 and be filed as one package under cover of the 
    FCC Form 490.
        29. The 45 MHz CMRS spectrum cap contained in Section 20.6 of the 
    rules applies to partitioned license areas and disaggregated spectrum.
    3. License Term
        30. The Commission will allow partitionees and disaggregatees to 
    hold their licenses for the remainder of the original licensee's ten-
    year license term. Partitionees and disaggregatees may also earn a 
    renewal expectancy on the same basis as other PCS licensees.
        31. The Commission will not permit an existing broadband PCS 
    licensee acquiring a partitioned license or disaggregated spectrum in a 
    market in
    
    [[Page 658]]
    
    which it is already a licensee to apply its original license term to 
    the partitioned license or spectrum. Such a proposal would be 
    burdensome to administer because the processing staff would be required 
    to determine the licensee's other licenses in the market and calculate 
    the correct expiration date for the partitioned or disaggregated 
    license. The Commission finds that such an administrative burden would 
    outweigh the benefit that may result from such a proposal.
    4. Technical Rules
        32. The Commission finds that its existing technical rules are 
    sufficient for application in the partitioning and disaggregation 
    contexts and that no additional technical rules are required at this 
    time. Should technical difficulties arise, however, the Commission will 
    take whatever action is necessary to alleviate any technical or 
    interference problems that result from partitioning or disaggregation, 
    including appropriate modifications to its technical rules.
    5. Microwave Relocation
        33. The Commission concludes that partitionees and disaggregatees 
    should be treated the same as all other PCS licensees with respect to 
    microwave relocation issues. In particular, partitionees will have the 
    same rights and obligations as other broadband PCS licensees under the 
    cost-sharing plan adopted in Amendment of the Commission's Rules 
    Regarding a Plan for Sharing the Costs of Microwave Relocation, WT 
    Docket No. 95-157, Report and Order and Further Notice of Proposed 
    Rulemaking, 61 FR 24470 (May 15, 1996). Thus, partitionees and 
    disaggregatees may seek reimbursement under the plan if they relocate 
    incumbents and they will be required to pay their share of microwave 
    relocation costs if they benefit from the spectrum-clearing efforts of 
    another party, according to the cost-sharing formula adopted by the 
    Commission.
        34. The Commission declines to require that the original PCS 
    licensee guarantee payments under the cost-sharing plan by the 
    partitionee or disaggregatee. To require licensees to guarantee such 
    payments would be unfair because the original licensees would have no 
    control over the actions of the partitionees and disaggregatees.
    6. Clearinghouse for Spectrum
        35. The Commission declines to create a Commission-based resource 
    of information, but will continue to make available, in a user-friendly 
    manner, information contained in its existing databases, concerning 
    geographic areas open to partitioning and spectrum that would be 
    available through disaggregation. Although a few entities offered to 
    serve as commercial clearinghouses of PCS spectrum information, the 
    Commission declines to establish an official Commission clearinghouse.
    
    VI. Conclusion
    
        36. The partitioning and disaggregation proposals the Commission 
    has adopted are consistent with a pro-competitive policy framework. 
    These rules will eliminate barriers to entry for small businesses 
    seeking to enter the PCS marketplace and will promote the rapid 
    creation of a competitive market for the provision of PCS services. 
    These rules also meet the Congressional objectives to further the rapid 
    development of new technologies for the benefit of the public including 
    those residing in rural areas, without administrative delay, to promote 
    economic opportunity and competition, and to ensure that new 
    technologies are available by avoiding excessive concentration of 
    licenses.
    
    VII. Procedural Matters and Ordering Clauses
    
    A. Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
    Summary
        As required by Section 603 of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), 
    5 U.S.C. 603 (RFA), an Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) 
    was incorporated in the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NRPM) in WT 
    Docket No. 96-148. The Commission sought written public comment on the 
    proposals in the NPRM, including the IRFA. The Commission's Final 
    Regulatory Flexibility Analysis in this Report and Order conforms to 
    the RFA, as amended by the Contract With America Advancement Act of 
    1996.
    Need for and Purpose of this Action
        In this Report and Order the Commission modifies the broadband PCS 
    rules to permit partitioning and disaggregation for all Part 24 
    licenses. The proposals adopted herein also implement Congress' goal of 
    giving small businesses the opportunity to participate in the provision 
    of spectrum-based services in accordance with 47 U.S.C. 309(j)(4)(D) 
    and to reduce entry barriers for small businesses in accordance with 47 
    U.S.C. 257. With more open partitioning and disaggregation, additional 
    entities, including small businesses, may participate in the provision 
    of broadband PCS service without needing to acquire wholesale an 
    existing license (with all of the bundle of rights currently associated 
    with the existing license). Acquiring less than the current license 
    will presumably be a more flexible and less expensive alternative for 
    entities desiring to enter these services.
    Summary of Issues Raised in Response to the Initial Regulatory 
    Flexibility Analysis
        Only one commenter, National Telephone Cooperative Association 
    (NTCA), submitted comments that were specifically in response to the 
    IRFA. NTCA argues that the Commission is required under the RFA to 
    identify significant alternatives to the proposed rules in order to 
    accomplish the stated objectives of Sections 309(j) and 257 of the 
    Communications Act of 1934, as amended (Communications Act). 
    Specifically, NTCA argues that the Commission must consider the right 
    of first refusal approach suggested by some commenters as an 
    alternative to allowing open partitioning of PCS licenses and how it 
    might minimize significant economic impacts on rural telcos. NTCA 
    contends that, for the purposes of determining which businesses are to 
    be included in an RFA analysis, the Commission should adopt the U.S. 
    Small Business Administration's (SBA) definition of small business, 
    which is any company with fewer than 1,500 employees.
        In the Report and Order, significant alternatives were identified 
    and considered in order to further the mandates of Sections 309(j) and 
    257 of the Communications Act. In addition, significant consideration 
    was given to the rural telcos' right of first refusal approach for 
    partitioning; however, the Commission concluded that such an approach 
    was unworkable and would actually discourage partitioning. Finally, the 
    Commission declined to adopt NTCA's suggestion to utilize the SBA 
    definition of small business (businesses with fewer than 1,500 
    employees). As noted below, the existing definition of small business 
    (firms with revenues of less than $40 million in each of the last three 
    years) was used in the PCS C-Block auction and was approved by the SBA. 
    The Commission also notes that it has found incumbent LECs to be 
    ``dominant in their field of operation'' since the early 1980's, and it 
    has consistently certified under the RFA that incumbent LECs are not 
    subject to regulatory flexibility analyses because they are not small 
    businesses. The Commission has made similar determinations in other 
    areas.
    
    [[Page 659]]
    
    Description and Number of Small Entities Involved
        The rules adopted in the Report and Order will affect all small 
    businesses which avail themselves of these rule changes, including 
    small businesses currently holding broadband PCS licenses who choose to 
    partition and/or disaggregate, and small businesses who may acquire 
    licenses through partitioning and/or disaggregation. The rules will 
    also affect rural telephone companies which, under the current rules, 
    have the exclusive right to obtain partitioned broadband PCS licenses. 
    Small businesses will be defined for these purposes as firms that have 
    revenues of less than $40 million in each of the last three calendar 
    years. This definition was used in the PCS C-Block auction and approved 
    by the SBA. The definition of rural telephone company shall be that 
    definition found at Sec. 24.720(e) of the rules, 47 CFR 24.720(e).
        The broadband PCS spectrum is divided into six frequency blocks 
    designated A through F. The Commission has auctioned broadband PCS 
    licenses in blocks A, B, and C. The Commission does not have sufficient 
    information to determine whether any small businesses within the SBA-
    approved definition bid successfully for licenses in the A or B block 
    PCS auctions. There were 89 winning bidders that qualified as small 
    businesses in the C block PCS auctions. Based upon this information, 
    the Commission concludes that the number of broadband PCS licensees 
    affected by the rules adopted herein includes the 89 winning bidders 
    that qualified as small entities in the block C broadband PCS auctions.
        The Commission anticipates that a total of 10,370 PCS licensees or 
    potential licensees could take the opportunity to partition or 
    disaggregate a license or obtain a license through partitioning and/or 
    disaggregation. This estimate is based on the total number of broadband 
    PCS licenses auctions and subject to auction, 2,074, and the 
    Commission's estimate that each license would probably not be 
    partitioned and/or disaggregated to more than five parties. Currently, 
    the C and F block licensees and potential licensees (holding a total of 
    986 licenses) must be small businesses or entrepreneurs with average 
    gross revenues over the past three years of less than $125 million. 
    Under the rules adopted in the Report and Order, they will be permitted 
    to partition and/or disaggregate to other qualified entrepreneurs at 
    any time and to non-entrepreneurs after the first five years of their 
    license term. The A, B, D, and E block licensees and potential 
    licensees (holding a total of 1,088 licenses) will also be permitted 
    under the proposed rules to partition and/or disaggregate to small 
    businesses.
        The Commission is presently conducting auctions for the D, E, and F 
    blocks of broadband PCS spectrum. The Commission anticipates that a 
    total of 1,479 licenses will be awarded in the D, E, and F block PCS 
    auctions. Eligibility for the F block licenses is limited to 
    entrepreneurs with average revenues of less than $125 million. It is 
    not possible to estimate the number of licenses that will be awarded to 
    small businesses in the F block nor is it possible to estimate how many 
    small businesses will win the D or E block licenses. The Commission 
    believes that it is possible that small businesses will constitute a 
    significant number of the up to 10,370 PCS licensees or potential 
    licensees who could take the opportunity to partition and/or 
    disaggregate or who could obtain a license through partitioning and/or 
    disaggregation.
    Summary of Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping and Other Compliance 
    Requirements
        The rules adopted in the Report and Order will impose reporting and 
    recordkeeping requirements on small businesses seeking licenses through 
    partitioning and disaggregation. The information requirements will be 
    used to determine whether the licensee is a qualifying entity to obtain 
    a partitioned license or disaggregated spectrum. This information will 
    be given in a one-time filing by any applicant requesting such a 
    license. The information will be submitted on the FCC Form 490 (or 430 
    and/or 600 filed as one package under cover of the Form 490) which are 
    currently in use and have already received OMB clearance. The 
    Commission estimates that the average burden on the applicant is three 
    hours for the information necessary to complete these forms. The 
    Commission estimates that 75 percent of the respondents (which may 
    include small businesses) will contract out the burden of responding. 
    The Commission estimates that it will take approximately 30 minutes to 
    coordinate information with those contractors. The remaining 25 percent 
    of respondents (which may include small businesses) are estimated to 
    employ in-house staff to provide the information.
    Steps Taken To Minimize Burdens on Small Entities
        The rules adopted in the Report and Order are designed to implement 
    Congress' goal of giving small businesses, as well as other entities, 
    the opportunity to participate in the provision of spectrum-based 
    services and are consistent with the Communications Act's mandate to 
    identify and eliminate market entry barriers for entrepreneurs and 
    small businesses in the provision and ownership of telecommunications 
    services.
        Allowing non-restricted partitioning of PCS licenses will 
    facilitate market entry by parties who may lack the financial resources 
    for participation in PCS auctions, including small businesses. Some 
    small businesses may have been unable to be winning bidders at the PCS 
    auctions due to high bidding and would have been unable to qualify for 
    partitioning because of our current restriction which permits 
    partitioning of PCS licenses to only rural telephone companies (rural 
    telcos). By eliminating this restriction, small businesses will be able 
    to obtain partitioned PCS licenses for smaller service areas at 
    presumably reduced costs, thereby providing a method for small 
    businesses to enter the PCS marketplace.
        Similarly, allowing immediate disaggregation of PCS licenses will 
    facilitate the entry of new competitors to the provision of PCS 
    services, many of whom will be small businesses seeking to acquire a 
    smaller amount of PCS spectrum at a reduced cost.
        Allowing geographic partitioning of PCS licenses by services areas 
    defined by the parties rather than only by county lines will provide an 
    opportunity for small businesses to obtain partitioned PCS license 
    areas designed to serve smaller, niche markets. This will permit small 
    businesses to enter the PCS marketplace by reducing the overall cost of 
    acquiring a partitioned PCS license.
        Allowing disaggregation of spectrum in any amount will also promote 
    participation by small businesses who may seek to acquire a smaller 
    amount of PCS spectrum tailored to meet the needs of their proposed 
    service.
        The Commission's proposals to allow non-entrepreneur block 
    licensees to partition or disaggregate to any party and to allow 
    entrepreneurs to partition or disaggregate to other entrepreneurs at 
    any time and to non-entrepreneurs after a five year holding period will 
    significantly increase the opportunities for small businesses to enter 
    the PCS marketplace. Allowing entrepreneur partitionees and 
    disaggregatees to pay their proportionate share of the remaining 
    government obligation through installment payments will provide a 
    further opportunity for small
    
    [[Page 660]]
    
    businesses to participate in the provision of PCS services.
        The Commission's decision to allow partitioning parties to choose 
    between two construction requirements will provide small businesses 
    with more flexibility to construct their systems at a rate that is 
    determined by market forces, thus allowing them to conserve their 
    resources.
    Significant Alternatives Considered and Rejected
        The Commission considered and rejected a number of alternative 
    proposals concerning partitioning and disaggregation.
        The rural telephone companies (rural telcos) argued that the 
    Commission should either retain the current partitioning restriction or 
    adopt a right of first refusal approach that would require partitioning 
    parties to notify the rural telco and offer it the partitioned license 
    area under similar terms and conditions. The Commission found that 
    retaining the current partitioning restriction would prevent small 
    businesses from using partitioning to enter the broadband PCS market. 
    Since retaining the partitioning restriction would constitute a 
    significant barrier to entry for small businesses, the Commission 
    declined to continue to limit partitioning to rural telcos.
        The Commission found that the right of first refusal would be 
    difficult to implement and could discourage partitioning. Areas 
    proposed in partitioning agreements may not coincide exactly with areas 
    for which a rural telco may have a right of first refusal. A single 
    partitioning transaction may encompass more than one rural telco's 
    service area, or a partitioning agreement may be part of a larger 
    assignment transaction. Parties would be unwilling to enter into 
    partitioning agreements not knowing how much of an area would 
    ultimately be partitioned or whether they could consummate the 
    transaction. This determination will make it easier for non-rural-
    telcos, including some small business entities, to enter partitioning 
    agreements.
        The Commission declined to adopt the proposal set forth in the NPRM 
    to limit partitioning to areas defined by county lines. The Commission 
    was convinced by the majority of commenters that geographic 
    partitioning along county lines is too restrictive. The Commission 
    found that parties seeking a partitioned license may not desire to 
    serve an entire county but rather a smaller niche market. Therefore, 
    the Commission found that allowing partitioning along service areas 
    defined by the parties would allow the parties to design flexible 
    partitioning agreements.
        The Commission rejected proposals to permit partitioning and 
    disaggregation during the first five years of an entrepreneur's license 
    term. While allowing entrepreneurs to immediately partition or 
    disaggregate to non-entrepreneurs may have resulted in additional 
    entities participating in the provision of PCS services, the Commission 
    concluded that the five year holding period restriction is necessary in 
    order to ensure that entrepreneurs do not take advantage of the special 
    entrepreneur block benefits by immediately partitioning a portion of 
    their licenses or disaggregating a portion of their spectrum to parties 
    that would not have qualified at auction, on their own merits, for such 
    benefits. Furthermore, limiting partitioning and disaggregation during 
    the first five years of an entrepreneur's license term will increase 
    the possibility that small businesses will be able to acquire PCS 
    licenses.
        The Commission declined to adopt proposals to apply a new license 
    term to partitioned license areas and disaggregated spectrum. Under 
    this approach, entities obtaining partitioned licenses or disaggregated 
    spectrum would receive a new ten-year license term beginning from the 
    date the Commission approved the partitioning or disaggregation. The 
    Commission found that permitting parties to ``re-start'' their license 
    term would effectively allow a licensee to extend its license term and 
    could lead to circumvention of our license term rules.
        The Commission rejected the proposal to require disaggregation of 
    broadband PCS spectrum in blocks of 1 MHz of paired frequencies (500 
    kHz plus 500 kHz). The Commission found that requiring parties to 
    obtain that large a block of spectrum could act as a barrier to entry 
    for entities that do not require that much spectrum to provide service.
        Finally, the Commission declined the proposal put forth by some 
    commenters that PCS licensees be required to assume the obligations and 
    responsibilities for microwave relocation costs for their entire 
    license area and spectrum block even if they partition a portion of 
    their license area or disaggregate a portion of their spectrum to 
    another party. The Commission found that requiring licensees to 
    guarantee the payments of partitionees and disaggregatees would be 
    unfair because licensees would not have control over the actions of 
    partitionees and disaggregatees and because there was no reason to 
    treat those parties differently than other late-entrant PCS licensees 
    with respect to microwave relocation costs.
    Report to Congress:
        The Commission shall include a copy of this Final Regulatory 
    Flexibility Analysis, along with this Report and Order, in a report to 
    be sent to Congress pursuant to the Small Business Regulatory 
    Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A). A copy of this 
    Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis will also be published in the 
    Federal Register.
    
    B. Ordering Clauses
    
        Accordingly, it is ordered That, pursuant to the authority of 
    Sections 4(i), 257, 303(g), 303(r) and 332(a) of the Communications Act 
    of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 154(i), 257, 303(g), 303(r), and 332(a), 
    Part 24 of the Commission's Rules, 47 CFR 24, is amended as set forth 
    below.
        It is further ordered That the rules adopted herein will become 
    effective March 7, 1997. This action is taken pursuant to 4(i), 303(r) 
    and 332(a) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 
    154(i), 303(r), and 332(a).
    
    List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 24
    
        Communications common carriers, Reporting and recordkeeping 
    requirements.
    
    Federal Communications Commission.
    William F. Caton,
    Acting Secretary.
    
    Rule Changes
    
        Part 24 of Chapter I of Title 47 of the Code of Federal Regulations 
    is amended as follows:
    
    PART 24--PERSONAL COMMUNICATIONS SERVICES
    
        1. The authority citation for Part 24 continues to read as follows:
    
        Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 301, 302, 303, 309, and 332, unless 
    otherwise noted.
    
    
    Sec. 24.229   [Amended]
    
        2. Section 24.229 is amended by removing paragraph (c).
    
    
    Sec. 24.707   [Amended]
    
        3. Section 24.707 is amended by removing the phrase from the third 
    sentence: ``(and applicants seeking partitioned licenses pursuant to 
    agreements with auction winners under Sec. 24.714).''
        4. Section 24.714 is revised to read as follows:
    
    [[Page 661]]
    
    Sec. 24.714   Partitioned licenses and disaggregated spectrum.
    
        (a) Eligibility. (1) Parties seeking approval for partitioning and 
    disaggregation shall request an authorization for partial assignment of 
    a license pursuant to Sec. 24.839.
        (2) Broadband PCS licensees in spectrum blocks A, B, D, and E may 
    apply to partition their licensed geographic service area or 
    disaggregate their licensed spectrum at any time following the grant of 
    their licenses.
        (3) Broadband PCS licensees in spectrum blocks C and F may not 
    partition their licensed geographic service area or disaggregate their 
    licensed spectrum for the first five years of the license term unless 
    it is to an entity that meets the eligibility criteria set forth in 
    Sec. 24.709 at the time the request for partial assignment of license 
    is filed or to an entity that holds license(s) for frequency blocks C 
    and F that met the eligibility criteria set forth in Sec. 24.709 at the 
    time of receipt of such license(s). Partial assignment applications 
    seeking partitioning or disaggregation of broadband PCS licenses in 
    spectrum blocks C and F must include an attachment demonstrating 
    compliance with this section.
        (b) Technical standards--(1) Partitioning. In the case of 
    partitioning, requests for authorization for partial assignment of a 
    license must include, as attachments, a description of the partitioned 
    service area and a calculation of the population of the partitioned 
    service area and the licensed geographic service area. The partitioned 
    service area shall be defined by coordinate points at every 3 seconds 
    along the partitioned service area unless an FCC recognized service 
    area is utilized (i.e., Major Trading Area, Basic Trading Area, 
    Metropolitan Service Area, Rural Service Area or Economic Area) or 
    county lines are followed. The geographic coordinates must be specified 
    in degrees, minutes, and seconds to the nearest second of latitude and 
    longitude and must be based upon the 1927 North American Datum (NAD27). 
    Applicants may supply geographical coordinates based on 1983 North 
    American Datum (NAD83) in addition to those required (NAD27). In the 
    case where an FCC recognized service area or county lines are utilized, 
    applicants need only list the specific area(s) (through use of FCC 
    designations or county names) that constitute the partitioned area.
        (2) Disaggregation. Spectrum may be disaggregated in any amount.
        (3) Combined partitioning and disaggregation. The Commission will 
    consider requests for partial assignment of licenses that propose 
    combinations of partitioning and disaggregation.
        (c) Unjust enrichment--(1) Installment payments. Licensees in 
    frequency Blocks C and F making installment payments that partition 
    their licenses or disaggregate their spectrum to entities not meeting 
    the eligibility standards for installment payments, will be subject to 
    the provisions concerning unjust enrichment as set forth in 
    Secs. 1.2111 of this chapter and 24.716(d).
        (2) Bidding credits. Licensees in frequency Blocks C and F that 
    received a bidding credit and partition their licenses or disaggregate 
    their spectrum to entities not meeting the eligibility standards for 
    such a bidding credit, will be subject to the provisions concerning 
    unjust enrichment as set forth in Secs. 1.2110(f) of this chapter and 
    24.717(c).
        (3) Apportioning unjust enrichment payments. Unjust enrichment 
    payments for partitioned license areas shall be calculated based upon 
    the ratio of the population of the partitioned license area to the 
    overall population of the license area and by utilizing the most recent 
    census data. Unjust enrichment payments for disaggregated spectrum 
    shall be calculated based upon the ratio of the amount of spectrum 
    disaggregated to the amount of spectrum held by the licensee.
        (d) Installment payments--(1) Apportioning the balance on 
    installment payment plans. When a winning bidder elects to pay for its 
    license through an installment payment plan pursuant to Secs. 1.2110(e) 
    of this chapter or 24.716, and partitions its licensed area or 
    disaggregates spectrum to another party, the outstanding balance owed 
    by the licensee on its installment payment plan (including accrued and 
    unpaid interest) shall be apportioned between the licensee and 
    partitionee or disaggregatee. Both parties will be responsible for 
    paying their proportionate share of the outstanding balance to the U.S. 
    Treasury. In the case of partitioning, the balance shall be apportioned 
    based upon the ratio of the population of the partitioned area to the 
    population of the entire original license area calculated based upon 
    the most recent census data. In the case of disaggregation, the balance 
    shall be apportioned based upon the ratio of the amount of spectrum 
    disaggregated to the amount of spectrum allocated to the licensed area.
        (2) Parties not qualified for installment payment plans. (i) When a 
    winning bidder elects to pay for its license through an installment 
    payment plan, and partitions its license or disaggregates spectrum to 
    another party that would not qualify for an installment payment plan or 
    elects not to pay for its share of the license through installment 
    payments, the outstanding balance owed by the licensee (including 
    accrued and unpaid interest) shall be apportioned according to 
    Sec. 24.714(d)(1).
        (ii) The partitionee or disaggregatee shall, as a condition of the 
    approval of the partial assignment application, pay its entire pro rata 
    amount within 30 days of Public Notice conditionally granting the 
    partial assignment application. Failure to meet this condition will 
    result in a rescission of the grant of the partial assignment 
    application.
        (iii) The licensee shall be permitted to continue to pay its pro 
    rata share of the outstanding balance and shall receive new financing 
    documents (promissory note, security agreement) with a revised payment 
    obligation, based on the remaining amount of time on the original 
    installment payment schedule. These financing documents will replace 
    the licensee's existing financing documents which shall be marked 
    ``superseded'' and returned to the licensee upon receipt of the new 
    financing documents. The original interest rate, established pursuant 
    to Sec. 1.2110(e)(3)(i) of this chapter at the time of the grant of the 
    initial license in the market, shall continue to be applied to the 
    licensee's portion of the remaining government obligation. We will 
    require, as a further condition to approval of the partial assignment 
    application, that the licensee execute and return to the U.S. Treasury 
    the new financing documents within 30 days of the Public Notice 
    conditionally granting the partial assignment application. Failure to 
    meet this condition will result in the automatic cancellation of the 
    grant of the partial assignment application.
        (iv) A default on the licensee's payment obligation will only 
    affect the licensee's portion of the market.
        (3) Parties qualified for installment payment plans. (i) Where both 
    parties to a partitioning or disaggregation agreement qualify for 
    installment payments, the partitionee or disaggregatee will be 
    permitted to make installment payments on its portion of the remaining 
    government obligation, as calculated according to Sec. 24.714(d)(1).
        (ii) Each party will be required, as a condition to approval of the 
    partial assignment application, to execute separate financing documents 
    (promissory note, security agreement) agreeing to pay their pro rata 
    portion of
    
    [[Page 662]]
    
    the balance due (including accrued and unpaid interest) based upon the 
    installment payment terms for which they qualify under the rules. The 
    financing documents must be returned to the U.S. Treasury within thirty 
    (30) days of the Public Notice conditionally granting the partial 
    assignment application. Failure by either party to meet this condition 
    will result in the automatic cancellation of the grant of the partial 
    assignment application. The interest rate, established pursuant to 
    Sec. 1.2110(e)(3)(i) of this chapter at the time of the grant of the 
    initial license in the market, shall continue to be applied to both 
    parties' portion of the balance due. Each party will receive a license 
    for their portion of the partitioned market or disaggregated spectrum.
        (iii) A default on an obligation will only affect that portion of 
    the market area held by the defaulting party.
        (iv) Partitionees and disaggregatees that qualify for installment 
    payment plans may elect to pay some of their pro rata portion of the 
    balance due in a lump sum payment to the U.S. Treasury and to pay the 
    remaining portion of the balance due pursuant to an installment payment 
    plan.
        (e) License term. The license term for a partitioned license area 
    and for disaggregated spectrum shall be the remainder of the original 
    licensee's license term as provided for in Sec. 24.15.
        (f) Construction requirements--(1) Requirements for partitioning. 
    Parties seeking authority to partition must meet one of the following 
    construction requirements:
        (i) The partitionee may certify that it will satisfy the applicable 
    construction requirements set forth in Sec. 24.203 for the partitioned 
    license area; or
        (ii) The original licensee may certify that it has or will meet its 
    five-year construction requirement and will meet the ten-year 
    construction requirement, as set forth in Sec. 24.203, for the entire 
    license area. In that case, the partitionee must only satisfy the 
    requirements for ``substantial service,'' as set forth in 
    Sec. 24.16(a), for the partitioned license area by the end of the 
    original ten-year license term of the licensee.
        (iii) Applications requesting partial assignments of license for 
    partitioning must include a certification by each party as to which of 
    the above construction options they select.
        (iv) Partitionees must submit supporting documents showing 
    compliance with the respective construction requirements within the 
    appropriate five- and ten-year construction benchmarks set forth in 
    Sec. 24.203.
        (v) Failure by any partitionee to meet its respective construction 
    requirements will result in the automatic cancellation of the 
    partitioned or disaggregated license without further Commission action.
        (2) Requirements for disaggregation. Parties seeking authority to 
    disaggregate must submit with their partial assignment application a 
    certification signed by both parties stating which of the parties will 
    be responsible for meeting the five- and ten-year construction 
    requirements for the PCS market as set forth in Sec. 24.203. Parties 
    may agree to share responsibility for meeting the construction 
    requirements. Parties that accept responsibility for meeting the 
    construction requirements and later fail to do so will be subject to 
    license forfeiture without further Commission action.
    
    [FR Doc. 97-98 Filed 1-3-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6712-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
3/7/1997
Published:
01/06/1997
Department:
Federal Communications Commission
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
97-98
Dates:
March 7, 1997.
Pages:
653-662 (10 pages)
Docket Numbers:
WT Docket No. 96-148, GN Docket No. 96-113, FCC 96-474
PDF File:
97-98.pdf
CFR: (8)
47 CFR 24.16(a)
47 CFR 24.714(d)(1)
47 CFR 1.2110(e)(3)(i)
47 CFR 24.203
47 CFR 24.229
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