99-33005. Local Multipoint Distribution Service  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 244 (Tuesday, December 21, 1999)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 71373-71377]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-33005]
    
    
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    FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
    
    47 CFR Part 101
    
    [CC Docket No. 92-297; FCC 99-379]
    
    
    Local Multipoint Distribution Service
    
    AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission
    
    ACTION: Notice of proposed rule making.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Commission's rules for the Local Multipoint Distribution 
    Service (LMDS) prohibit an incumbent local exchange carrier (LEC) or 
    incumbent cable company, or any entity with an attributable interest in 
    these incumbents, from having an attributable interest in an A-block 
    LMDS license whose geographic service area significantly overlaps the 
    incumbent's service area. This LMDS eligibility rule will sunset on 
    June 30, 2000, unless the Commission extends it. This document seeks 
    comment on whether to allow the restriction to sunset, or to extend the 
    restriction.
    
    DATES: Submit comments on or before January 21, 2000; submit reply 
    comments on or before February 11, 2000.
    
    ADDRESSES: Send comments and reply comments to the Office of the 
    Secretary, Federal Communications Commission, 445 12th St SW, 
    Washington, DC 20554. See Supplementary Information for information 
    about electronic filing.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Stacy Jordan or John Spencer, 202-418-
    1310.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Commission's Sixth 
    Notice of Proposed Rule Making (Sixth NPRM) in CC Docket No. 92-297 
    (including the associated Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis), FCC 
    99-379, adopted December 1, 1999, and released December 13, 1999. The 
    complete text of the Sixth NPRM and Initial Regulatory Flexibility 
    Analysis is available on the Commission's Internet site, at 
    www.fcc.gov. It is also available for inspection and copying during 
    normal business hours in the FCC Reference Information Center, 
    Courtyard Level, 445 12th Street, SW, Washington, DC, and may be 
    purchased from the Commission's copy contractor, International 
    Transcription Services, Inc., CY-B400, 445 12th Street SW, Washington, 
    DC. Comments may be sent as an electronic file via the Internet to 
    http://www.fcc.gov/e-file/ecfs.html, or by e-mail to ecfs@fcc.gov.
    
    Synopsis of the Sixth NPRM
    
        1. The LMDS allocation consists of two primary blocks of spectrum: 
    an A block consisting of 850 MHz at 27.5 GHz, 150 MHz at 29 GHz, and 
    150 MHz at 31 GHz; and a B block consisting of 150 MHz at 31 GHz. The 
    LMDS allocation is unusual in both the size of the allocation and the 
    extent to which the spectrum is unencumbered.
        2. When the Commission adopted final LMDS rules in 1997, it assumed 
    that the LMDS spectrum allocation provided a rare opportunity for 
    facilities-based providers of local exchange services, multi-channel 
    video programming distribution (MVPD) services, broadband data 
    services, or all of the above. In order to foster competition, the 
    Commission imposed in 47 CFR 101.1003 a short-term ownership 
    eligibility rule prohibiting incumbent local exchange carriers (LECs) 
    or cable companies from having an attributable interest in an LMDS A-
    block license that overlaps with ten percent or more of the population 
    in their service areas. This decision was based on four considerations: 
    the most likely uses for LMDS; the then-current market structure for 
    local exchange services and MVPD services, and whether the incumbent 
    operators in these markets would have the incentive to attempt to 
    forestall competition in their respective markets; whether an 
    eligibility restriction would be the best means to promote competition; 
    and whether efficiencies would be lost if the LMDS spectrum were 
    operated by
    
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    providers other than the incumbent cable operators and local exchange 
    carriers.
        3. The first LMDS products are just now becoming available in the 
    United States, and LMDS remains a nascent market whose evolution is 
    uncertain. Our research suggests that in the near term, LMDS may be 
    used primarily to provide high-speed data and Internet services to 
    small and medium-sized businesses rather than to provide services, 
    especially MVPD services, to single-family residences. Possible other 
    services include: video conferencing, tele-medicine, distance learning, 
    closed-circuit applications, and backhaul or backbone applications. An 
    industry segment aiming to provide service akin to typical landline 
    service (including lifeline telephone service with directory 
    assistance) has yet to emerge. CLEC holders of LMDS licenses plan to 
    bundle local exchange services with high-speed data and Internet access 
    services.
        4. A number of factors may affect the development and deployment of 
    these markets and the types of services offered using the LMDS 
    spectrum. The characteristics of LMDS spectrum and equipment help 
    determine the uses to which it will be put. Due to propagation 
    limitations, LMDS will likely be used not as a stand-alone network, but 
    as a ``roof-top'' means to complement or extend other existing 
    networks. Compared to fiber, LMDS's lower cost and shorter deployment 
    time make it an effective means of reaching the last mile. At the end 
    of that last mile are likely to be small and medium-sized businesses in 
    urban and suburban areas, as the propagation characteristics of LMDS 
    favor taller buildings.
        5. While multiple dwelling units may be served by LMDS in three to 
    five years, there is a significant question whether the cost of the 
    customer premises equipment (CPE) will forestall a business case for 
    single-family homes for many years. Estimates for the cost of the CPE 
    range from $5,000 to $7,000. The radio frequency hazard potential of a 
    microwave service like LMDS may always require professional 
    installation, precluding cost-saving consumer installation. The 
    subscribers would also have to generate enough revenue to establish a 
    hub from which their remote would receive a signal. The costs to 
    establish a hub range from $300,000 to $400,000, which could become 
    prohibitive given that the range for LMDS is limited to one-to-three 
    miles.
        6. Service affordability is another issue for the residential 
    market. A residential market demand for broadband services at prices 
    profitable to LMDS licensees may not exist if consumers are unwilling 
    to pay substantially higher prices for the advantages of broadband. 
    Early cable broadband services have experienced low penetration rates, 
    which may indicate a reluctance of residential consumers to pay a high 
    subscriber fee for high-speed Internet access. However, these early 
    figures may underestimate the actual residential market for high-speed 
    data and Internet access.
        7. Deployment of LMDS systems could be delayed or hampered by lack 
    of building access. LMDS licensees are encountering difficulties 
    negotiating roof right-of-way agreements and overcoming inside-wiring 
    issues. Another possible source of delay is the lack of equipment for 
    the 150 MHz LMDS B block and the upper 300 MHz of the LMDS A block. The 
    A-and B-block allocations are unique to the U.S. The lack of 
    international frequency harmonization and the potential interference 
    between the A and B blocks have been blamed for increased equipment 
    development time and costs. Once production commences, the shorter 
    production runs on specialized equipment may frustrate the attainment 
    of scale economies.
        8. Finally, several competing technologies are capable of 
    delivering broadband services. Most residential and small business 
    consumers access the Internet via the ILEC and relatively slow modems. 
    The residential market is beginning to see high-speed services via 
    coaxial cable, ILEC xDSL, and satellite. The rules for LMDS, MMDS, 24 
    GHz, and 39 GHz allow point-to-point and point-to-multipoint services, 
    and these licensees appear to be targeting the same populations, small 
    and medium-sized businesses. These frequencies, however, vary somewhat 
    in their propagation characteristics, distance limitations, and 
    spectrum allocations.
        9. The Sixth NPRM seeks comment broadly on the question whether the 
    LMDS restriction should be allowed to sunset on June 30, 2000, or 
    should be extended. The rule provides that the restriction will 
    terminate unless we ``extend its applicability based on a determination 
    that incumbent LECs or incumbent cable companies continue to have 
    substantial market power in the provision of local telephony or cable 
    television services.'' Consistent with our findings that incumbent LECs 
    and cable television providers continue to hold dominant positions in 
    the local telephony and MVPD services markets, this standard would 
    suggest that we extend the applicability of the eligibility 
    restriction. We have significant questions, however, about whether this 
    standard remains the appropriate one for evaluating whether we should 
    extend the restriction, or whether a different standard is more 
    appropriate.
        10. We therefore seek comment generally on the standard that we 
    should apply in making this decision, as well as on alternative 
    standards. For example, our analysis in the LMDS Report and Order \1\ 
    suggests that the true harm to competition may lie not in the incumbent 
    local exchange carriers' or cable companies' power in their respective 
    markets, but in the incumbents' incentive and ability to foreclose LMDS 
    as a source of competition in their own or related markets. Thus, we 
    could extend the sunset of the eligibility rule upon a finding that the 
    incumbent local exchange carriers and cable companies possess the 
    incentive and ability to purchase the LMDS block to prevent entry of a 
    competitor. Alternatively, we seek comment on whether we should use the 
    test adopted in the 39 GHz Report and Order.\2\ There, we ``inquired 
    whether open eligibility poses a significant likelihood of substantial 
    competitive harm in specific markets, and, if so, whether eligibility 
    restrictions are an effective way to address that harm.'' We seek 
    comment on whether we should require that this test be met before 
    extending the LMDS eligibility restriction. Finally, we seek comment on 
    the sufficiency of case-by-case review of license transfers and 
    assignments to safeguard against anti-competitive acquisition of LMDS 
    licenses if the eligibility rule is allowed to sunset.
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        \1\ 62 FR 23148, Apr. 29, 1997.
        \2\ 63 FR 3075, Jan. 21, 1998.
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        11. We seek comment on the likely course of LMDS market 
    development, particularly LMDS licensees' and equipment manufacturers' 
    current expectations for LMDS and the markets most likely to be 
    targeted by the licensees. More specifically, we seek comment on the 
    characteristics, technical and otherwise, of the services most likely 
    to be provided over LMDS. We seek comment on whether LMDS will be used 
    to provide typical landline service in some geographic areas and to 
    what consumer groups. We seek comment on whether LMDS licensees expect 
    to use LMDS to deliver MVPD services to single-dwelling residential 
    customers and/or multi-dwelling residential customers in any geographic 
    areas. Further, we seek comment on the characteristics of the consumers 
    to which these services will be directed. Finally, we seek comment on 
    what broadband applications, if any, are
    
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    likely to be provided by LMDS licensees, and the characteristics of the 
    consumers that will be targeted.
        12. We also plan to evaluate whether we should extend the 
    eligibility restriction to avert the possibility of incumbent LECs and 
    cable companies acquiring LMDS to forestall new facilities-based 
    competition for broadband services. The net benefits of extending the 
    eligibility restriction will depend on a number of factors, including 
    whether the LMDS A block can serve as a facilities-based medium for 
    broadband services, and whether this spectrum is unique in both its 
    size and extent to which it is unencumbered. We seek comment on whether 
    the net benefits of extending the eligibility restriction may be 
    greater than the net benefits of permitting the incumbents to acquire 
    the LMDS A block.
        13. We seek comment on the extent and robustness of residential 
    consumer demand for broadband services. We invite comment on the extent 
    the cost and line-of-sight limitations of LMDS might hamper the ability 
    of LMDS to provide effective competition to either the ILECs' or the 
    cable operators' broadband means of access into the home or very small 
    businesses. We seek comment on whether technological advances and 
    increasing deployment will improve equipment range and lower equipment 
    costs. We also seek comment on the extent to which affordability 
    enhancing innovations like equipment leasing may emerge as an 
    alternative to outright equipment purchase, particularly for CPE.
        14. We seek comment on whether the capability of LMDS to provide 
    high-speed data and Internet telecommunications would give incumbents a 
    strategic incentive to acquire LMDS spectrum to forestall the use of 
    LMDS as a means of access for another facilities-based provider of 
    broadband services, and whether we should retain the LMDS eligibility 
    restriction for at least some period in order to prevent such a result. 
    With respect to cable, if the cable industry primarily serves 
    residential areas and likely LMDS service will be to small-and medium-
    sized businesses, we seek comment on whether we should restrict 
    incumbent cable companies' use of the LMDS spectrum to serve business 
    needs for high-speed data and Internet access.
        15. We invite comment about the extent to which LMDS, MMDS, 24 GHz, 
    39 GHz, and other media that might offer consumers broadband access are 
    substitutable. We seek comment on the degree to which LMDS, MMDS, 24 
    GHz, 39 GHz, and other frequencies could be used to offer consumers 
    similar services at similar prices; whether the size of the LMDS 
    allocation and its lack of encumbrances provide advantages to the 
    license holder over alternative frequencies; and whether the 
    limitations and the cost of LMDS will hamper the ability of LMDS to 
    provide effective competition for services provided by either the 
    incumbent LECs or cable operators. We seek comment on the limitations 
    (capacity, rain fade, and line of sight) of these other wireless 
    services relative to LMDS. We seek comment on the extent to which the 
    time-to-market leads of the 24 MHz and 39 MHz licensees yield 
    competitive advantages in high-speed data and Internet access that 
    could handicap LMDS licensees. Given the similarities between LMDS and 
    24 GHz and 39 GHz spectrum, we seek comment on the implications of the 
    lack of eligibility restrictions at the latter two frequencies.
        16. We seek comment on whether the broadband offerings by ILECs and 
    incumbent cable operators justifies extending the restriction to either 
    ILECs or incumbent cable companies, or both. We seek comment on the 
    likelihood that LMDS, if used for broadband, will provide effective 
    competition against incumbent LECs' and cable operators' broadband 
    offerings. Specifically, we invite comments on the incumbent LECs' and 
    cable operators' most likely footprints for broadband services. Cable 
    operators' current coverage areas do not lend themselves to providing 
    broadband access to businesses. We invite comment on the present reach 
    of cable networks and the ease with which these networks could be 
    extended to reach business subscribers. In addition, we seek comment on 
    whether the ILECs are likely to provide xDSL services to a large 
    segment of residential or business customers. We seek comment on 
    whether the equipment cost and deployment cost of LMDS relative to 
    ILECs' T-1 leased lines or xDSL will disadvantage LMDS in the market. 
    To the extent LMDS and a T-1 line are substitutes, the falling prices 
    for T-1 leased lines may diminish the profitability of LMDS service.
        17. We seek comment on the significance of uncertainty in the 
    market for the eligibility restriction. There are uncertainties 
    regarding how LMDS equipment will continue to evolve; how fast LMDS 
    equipment costs will fall; how much difficulty licensees will encounter 
    negotiating roof right-of-way agreements, interconnection agreements, 
    and other necessary negotiations to provide services; and how the 
    domestic LMDS market will develop. These uncertainties may have led 
    firms to hold off investments until there is less uncertainty in the 
    market, and may warrant delaying the sunset of the eligibility 
    restriction. We seek comment on these concerns and on whether the 
    Commission should extend the eligibility restriction to allow the 
    market more time to reveal how LMDS and competing media will be 
    marketed and deployed.
        18. Finally, we note that uncertainty in the market impacts bond 
    and stock market activity. The uncertainty surrounding LMDS may spill 
    over into the capital markets and impede the efforts of LMDS licensees 
    to raise debt and equity capital. We seek comment on the effect of 
    extending, or not extending, the eligibility restriction on LMDS 
    licensees' access to capital. While extending the eligibility 
    restriction might encourage investment, lifting the restriction could 
    have a similar effect: that is, large investors currently prohibited 
    from doing so might acquire significant stakes in LMDS licensees, 
    stimulating investment therein. We seek comment on both scenarios. We 
    also seek comment on the concerns of small entities on the various 
    issues discussed above.
    
    Summary of Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
    
        19. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA),\3\ the 
    Commission has prepared an Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis 
    (IRFA) of the possible economic impact on small entities by the 
    policies and rules suggested in this Sixth NPRM. Written public 
    comments are requested on the IRFA. Comments should be identified as 
    responses to the IRFA, and must be filed by the deadlines for comments 
    on the Sixth NPRM provided above. The Commission will send a copy of 
    the Sixth NPRM, including this IRFA, to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy 
    of the Small Business Administration (SBA).
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        \3\ U.S.C. 603. The RFA, 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq., has been amended 
    by the Contract with America Advancement Act, Pub. L. 104-121, 110 
    Stat. 847 (1996) (CWAAA). Title II of the CWAAA is the Small 
    Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (SBREFA).
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        20. Need for and Objectives of the Proposed Rule: In this Sixth 
    NPRM, the Commission seeks comment on whether to allow the eligibility 
    restriction for the Local Multipoint Distribution Service (LMDS) set 
    out in 47 CFR 101.1003(a) to sunset as scheduled, or to extend the 
    restriction. As discussed in detail above, various policy reasons might 
    dictate action for or against the sunset.
        21. Legal Basis: See Authority section, below.
        22. Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities to 
    Which the
    
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    Actions Taken May Apply: The RFA directs agencies to provide a 
    description of and, where feasible, an estimate of the number of small 
    entities that may be affected by the action taken. The RFA generally 
    defines the term ``small entity'' as having the same meaning as the 
    terms ``small business,'' ``small organization,'' and ``small 
    governmental jurisdiction.'' \4\ In addition, the term ``small 
    business'' has the same meaning as the term ``small business concern'' 
    under the Small Business Act.\5\ A small business concern is one that: 
    (1) Is independently owned and operated; (2) Is not dominant in its 
    field of operation; and (3) Satisfies any additional criteria 
    established by the Small Business Administration (SBA).\6\ Below, we 
    further describe and estimate the number of small business concerns 
    that may be affected by the actions taken in this Sixth NPRM.
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        \4\ 5 U.S.C. 601(6).
        \5\ U.S.C. 601(3) (incorporating by reference the definition of 
    ``small business concern'' in 15 U.S.C. 632). Pursuant to the RFA, 
    the statutory definition of a small business applies ``unless an 
    agency, after consultation with the Office of Advocacy of the Small 
    Business Administration and after opportunity for public comment, 
    establishes one or more definitions of such term which are 
    appropriate to the activities of the agency and publishes such 
    definition(s) in the Federal Register.'' 5 U.S.C. 601(3).
        \6\ Small Business Act, 15 U.S.C. 632.
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        23. The SBA has defined a small business for Standard Industrial 
    Classification (SIC) categories 4812 (Radiotelephone Communications) 
    and 4813 (Telephone Communications, Except Radiotelephone) to be small 
    entities when they have no more than 1,500 employees.\7\ We first 
    discuss the number of small telecommunications entities falling within 
    these SIC categories, then attempt to refine further those estimates to 
    correspond with the categories of telecommunications companies that are 
    commonly used under our rules, and that may be affected by this Sixth 
    NPRM.
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        \7\ 13 CFR 121.201.
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        24. Total Number of Telecommunications Entities Affected. The 
    Census Bureau reports that, at the end of 1992, there were 3,497 firms 
    engaged in providing telephone services, as defined therein, for at 
    least one year.\8\ This number contains a variety of different 
    categories of entities, including local exchange carriers, 
    interexchange carriers, competitive access providers, cellular 
    carriers, mobile service carriers, operator service providers, pay 
    telephone operators, PCS providers, covered SMR providers, and 
    resellers. It seems certain that some of those 3,497 telephone service 
    firms may not qualify as small entities or small incumbent LECs because 
    they are not ``independently owned and operated.'' For example, a PCS 
    provider that is affiliated with an interexchange carrier having more 
    than 1,500 employees would not meet the definition of a small business. 
    It seems reasonable to conclude, therefore, that fewer than 3,497 
    telephone service firms are small entity telephone service firms or 
    small incumbent LECs that may be affected by the actions taken in this 
    Second Report and Order.
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        \8\ 1992 Census of Transportation, Communications, and 
    Utilities: Establishment and Firm Size, Bureau of the Census, U.S. 
    Dept. of Commerce, at Firm Size 1-123 (1995) (1992 Census).
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        25. The most reliable source of current information regarding the 
    total numbers of common carrier and related providers nationwide, 
    including the numbers of commercial wireless entities, appears to be 
    data the Commission publishes annually in its Carrier Locator report, 
    derived from filings made in connection with the Telecommunications 
    Relay Service (TRS).\9\ According to data in the most recent report, 
    there are 3,604 interstate carriers. These include, inter alia, local 
    exchange carriers, wireline carriers and service providers, 
    interexchange carriers, competitive access providers, operator service 
    providers, pay telephone operators, providers of telephone toll 
    service, providers of telephone exchange service, and resellers.
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        \9\ Carrier Locator: Interstate Service Providers, Fig. 1 (Jan. 
    1999) (Carrier Locator). See also 47 CFR 64.601-.608.
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        26. We have included small incumbent local exchange carriers (LECs) 
    in this RFA analysis. As noted above, a ``small business'' under the 
    RFA is one that, inter alia, meets the pertinent small business size 
    standard (e.g., a telephone communications business having 1,500 or 
    fewer employees), and ``is not dominant in its field of operation.'' 
    The SBA's Office of Advocacy contends that, for RFA purposes, small 
    incumbent LECs are not dominant in their field of operation because any 
    such dominance is not ``national'' in scope.\10\ We have therefore 
    included small incumbent LECs in this RFA analysis, although we 
    emphasize that this RFA action has no effect on FCC analyses and 
    determinations in other, non-RFA contexts.
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        \10\ Letter from Jere W. Glover, Chief Counsel for Advocacy, 
    SBA, to William E. Kennard, Chairman, FCC (May 27, 1999). The Small 
    Business Act contains a definition of ``small business concern,'' 
    which the RFA incorporates into its own definition of ``small 
    business.'' See 15 U.S.C. 632(a) (Small Business Act); 5 U.S.C. 
    601(3) (RFA). SBA regulations interpret ``small business concern'' 
    to include the concept of dominance on a national basis. 13 CFR 
    121.102(b). Since 1996, out of an abundance of caution, the 
    Commission has included small incumbent LECs in its regulatory 
    flexibility analyses. Implementation of the Local Competition 
    Provisions of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, CC Docket No. 96-
    98, First Report and Order, 11 FCC Rcd 15499, 16144-45 (1996).
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        27. Wireline Carriers and Service Providers (SIC 4813). The Census 
    Bureau reports that there were 2,321 telephone communications companies 
    other than radiotelephone companies in operation for at least one year 
    at the end of 1992.\11\ All but 26 of the 2,321 non-radiotelephone 
    companies listed by the Census Bureau were reported to have fewer than 
    1,000 employees. Thus, even if all 26 of those companies had more than 
    1,500 employees, there would still be 2,295 non-radiotelephone 
    companies that might qualify as small entities or small incumbent LECs. 
    Although it seems certain that some of these carriers are not 
    independently owned and operated, we are unable at this time to 
    estimate with greater precision the number of wireline carriers and 
    service providers that would qualify as small business concerns under 
    SBA's definition. Consequently, we estimate that there are fewer than 
    2,295 small entity telephone communications companies other than 
    radiotelephone companies that may be affected by the actions taken in 
    this Sixth NPRM.
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        \11\ 1992 Census, supra, at Firm Size 1-123.
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        28. Local Exchange Carriers. Neither the Commission nor SBA has 
    developed a definition of small LECs. The closest applicable definition 
    for these carrier-types under SBA rules is for telephone communications 
    companies other than radiotelephone (wireless) companies.\12\ The most 
    reliable source of information regarding the number of these carriers 
    nationwide of which we are aware appears to be the data that we collect 
    annually in connection with the TRS. According to our most recent data, 
    there are 1,410 LECs. Although it seems certain that some of these 
    carriers are not independently owned and operated, or have more than 
    1,500 employees, we are unable at this time to estimate with greater 
    precision the number of these carriers that would qualify as small 
    business concerns under SBA's definition. Consequently, we estimate 
    that there are fewer than 1,410 small entity LECs or small incumbent 
    LECs that may be affected by the actions taken in this Sixth NPRM.
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        \12\ 13 CFR 121.210, SIC Code 4813.
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        29. A-Block LMDS Providers. The total number of A-block LMDS 
    licenses is limited to 493, one for each Basic
    
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    Trading Area.\13\ The Commission has held auctions for all 493 
    licenses, in which it defined ``very small business'' (average gross 
    revenues for the three preceding years of not more than $15 million), 
    ``small business'' (more than $15 million but not more than $40 
    million), and ``entrepreneur'' (more than $40 but not more than $75 
    million) bidders.\14\ There have been 99 winning bidders that qualified 
    in these categories in these auctions, all of which may be affected by 
    the actions taken in this Sixth NPRM.
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        \13\ 47 CFR 101.1005, 101.1007.
        \14\ 47 CFR 101.1107(a)-(c), 101.1112.
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        30. Cable Services or Systems. The SBA has developed a definition 
    of small entities for cable and other pay television services, which 
    includes all such companies generating $11 million or less in revenue 
    annually.\15\ This definition includes cable systems operators, closed 
    circuit television services, direct broadcast satellite services, 
    multipoint distribution systems, satellite master antenna systems and 
    subscription television services. According to the Census Bureau data 
    from 1992, there were 1,788 total cable and other pay television 
    services and 1,423 had less than $11 million in revenue.
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        \15\ 13 CFR 121.201, SIC 4841.
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        31. The Commission has developed its own definition of a small 
    cable system operator for the purposes of rate regulation. Under the 
    Commission's rules, a ``small cable company'' is one serving fewer than 
    400,000 subscribers nationwide.\16\ Based on our most recent 
    information, we estimate that there were 1,439 cable operators that 
    qualified as small cable system operators at the end of 1995. Since 
    then, some of those companies may have grown to serve over 400,000 
    subscribers, and others may have been involved in transactions that 
    caused them to be combined with other cable operators. Consequently, we 
    estimate that there are fewer than 1,439 small entity cable system 
    operators.
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        \16\ 47 CFR 76.901(e). The Commission developed this definition 
    based on its determination that a small cable system operator is one 
    with annual revenues of $100 million or less. Implementation of 
    Sections of the 1992 Cable Act: Rate Regulation, Sixth Report and 
    Order and Eleventh Order on Reconsideration, 10 FCC Rcd 7393 (1995), 
    60 FR 10,534 (Feb. 27, 1995).
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        32. The Communications Act also contains a definition of a small 
    cable system operator, which is ``a cable operator that, directly or 
    through an affiliate, serves in the aggregate fewer than 1 percent of 
    all subscribers in the United States and is not affiliated with any 
    entity or entities whose gross annual revenues in the aggregate exceed 
    $250,000,000.'' \17\ The Commission has determined that there are 66 
    million subscribers in the United States. Therefore, we found that an 
    operator serving fewer than 660,000 subscribers shall be deemed a small 
    operator, if its annual revenues, when combined with the total annual 
    revenues of all of its affiliates, do not exceed $250 million in the 
    aggregate.\18\ Based on available data, we find that the number of 
    cable operators serving 660,000 subscribers or less totals 1,450. We do 
    not request nor do we collect information concerning whether cable 
    system operators are affiliated with entities whose gross annual 
    revenues exceed $250 million, and thus are unable at this time to 
    estimate with greater precision the number of cable system operators 
    that would qualify as small cable operators under the definition in the 
    Communications Act. It should be further noted that recent industry 
    estimates project that there will be a total of 66 million subscribers.
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        \17\ 47 U.S.C. 543(m)(2).
        \18\ 47 U.S.C. 76.1403(b).
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        33. Description of Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping and Other 
    Compliance Requirements: In this Sixth NPRM we seek comment on whether 
    to allow the existing LMDS eligibility restriction to sunset. These 
    actions impose no reporting, recordkeeping or other compliance 
    requirements.
        34. Steps Taken to Minimize Significant Economic Impact on Small 
    Entities, and Significant Alternatives Considered: This Sixth NPRM is a 
    broad inquiry into whether there continues to be a need for an LMDS 
    ownership restriction. It seeks comment on the present and likely 
    future nature of the marketplace for various services that may be 
    offered using LMDS spectrum, the costs and benefits of a restriction, 
    and appropriate criteria for evaluating whether to extend the 
    restriction. It also seeks the views of small businesses on the various 
    issues raised.
        35. Federal Rules That May Overlap, Duplicate, or Conflict with the 
    Proposed Rules: There are no federal rules that overlap, duplicate or 
    conflict with 47 CFR 101.1003(a).
        36. Report to Congress: The Commission will send a copy of this 
    Sixth NPRM, including this IRFA, in a report to Congress pursuant to 
    the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996.\19\ In 
    addition, the Commission will send a copy of this Sixth NPRM, including 
    this IRFA, to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business 
    Administration. Summaries of this Sixth NPRM and IRFA will be published 
    in the Federal Register.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \19\ See 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 101
    
        Communications, local multipoint distribution service.
    
    Federal Communications Commission.
    Magalie Roman Salas,
    Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 99-33005 Filed 12-20-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6712-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
12/21/1999
Department:
Federal Communications Commission
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Notice of proposed rule making.
Document Number:
99-33005
Dates:
Submit comments on or before January 21, 2000; submit reply comments on or before February 11, 2000.
Pages:
71373-71377 (5 pages)
Docket Numbers:
CC Docket No. 92-297, FCC 99-379
PDF File:
99-33005.pdf
CFR: (1)
47 CFR 101