96-3509. The Future Development of SMR Systems in the 800 MHz Frequency Band  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 33 (Friday, February 16, 1996)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 6138-6164]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-3509]
    
    
    
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    FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
    47 CFR Part 90
    
    [PR Docket No. 93-144; PP Docket No. 93-253; FCC 95-501]
    
    
    The Future Development of SMR Systems in the 800 MHz Frequency 
    Band
    
    AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: In this First Report and Order in PR Docket No. 93-144, and 
    Eighth Report and Order in PP Docket No. 93-253, the Commission adopts 
    final service and competitive bidding rules for the ``upper 10 MHz 
    block'' of 800 MHz Specialized Mobile Radio (SMR) spectrum and adopts 
    rules which streamline the licensing process for SMR services in the 
    800 MHz band.
        In this First Report and Order (``First R&O''), the Commission 
    designates a portion of 800 MHz SMR spectrum for wide-area licensing 
    using license areas defined by the Economic Areas (EAs) established by 
    the U.S. Department of Commerce Bureau of Economic Analysis. Under this 
    wide-area licensing plan the Commission has allocated three channel 
    blocks, one 120-channel block, one 60-channel block, and one 20-channel 
    block.
        In this Eighth Report and Order (``Eighth R&O''), the Commission 
    reiterated that competitive bidding is an appropriate licensing tool 
    for the 800 MHz SMR service. The Commission also adopts specific 
    auction rules for the upper 10 MHz block, including rules pertaining to 
    competitive bidding design, license grouping, bidding procedures, and 
    treatment of ``designated entities'' (that is, small businesses, 
    businesses owned by minorities and/or women, and rural telephone 
    companies). The intended effect of this action is to facilitate future 
    deployment of SMR systems in the 800 MHz band through licensing 
    procedures and the use of competitive bidding.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: March 18, 1996.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: David Furth or Lisa Warner at (202) 
    418-0620.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This First Report and Order in PR Docket No. 
    93-144, and this Eighth Report and Order in PP Docket No. 93-253, 
    adopted December 15, 1995, and released December 15, 1995, is available 
    for inspection and copying during normal business hours in the FCC 
    Dockets Branch, Room 230, 1919 M Street N.W., Washington, D.C. The 
    complete text may be purchased from the Commission's copy contractor, 
    International Transcription Service, Inc., 2100 M Street, N.E., Suite 
    140, Washington, D.C. 20037 (telephone (202) 857-3800).
        Synopsis of First Report and Order and Eighth Report and Order:
    
    I. Background
    
        1. The Commission's current rules for the 800 MHz Specialized 
    Mobile Radio (SMR) service were designed primarily to license dispatch 
    radio systems on a transmitter-by-transmitter basis in local markets. 
    In recent years, however, some SMR licenses have been authorized 
    through waivers and extended implementation rules to expand the 
    geographic scope of their services and aggregate large numbers of 
    channels to provide service more directly comparable to that provided 
    by cellular operators and that envisioned for Personal Communications 
    Services (PCS). While the 800 MHz SMR rules have proven sufficiently 
    flexible to permit such expansion, the licensing process remains 
    cumbersome because of the need to license each SMR transmitter site 
    individually. In May 1993, the Commission adopted a Notice of Proposed 
    Rule Making in PR Docket No. 93-144, 58 FR 33062 (June 15, 1993) 
    (``Notice''), proposing wide-area licensing of the 800 MHz SMR service. 
    In August of 1993, Congress amended the Communications Act of 1934 to 
    modify the regulatory treatment of mobile services. In the Second 
    Report and Order in GN Docket No. 93-252, 59 FR 18493 (April 19, 1994) 
    (``CMRS Second R&O''), the Commission reclassified all mobile services 
    into two statutorily-defined categories: commercial mobile radio 
    services (CMRS) and private mobile radio services (PMRS). The 
    Commission concluded that all SMR systems providing or authorized to 
    provide interconnected service would be reclassified as CMRS.
        2. In the Third Report and Order in GN Docket No. 93-252, 59 FR 
    59945 (November 21, 1994) (``CMRS Third R&O''), the Commission 
    concluded that 800 MHz SMR licensees either compete or have the 
    potential to compete with other CMRS providers. As a result, the 
    Commission determined that the technical and operational requirements 
    for the 800 MHz SMR service should be made comparable, to the extent 
    feasible, to those applicable to other CMRS providers. In this 
    connection, the Commission concluded that: (1) wide-area licensing 
    should be implemented in the 800 MHz SMR service; and (2) licensing of 
    the 800 MHz SMR spectrum should be accomplished through competitive 
    bidding procedures.
        3. On October 20, 1994, the Commission adopted a Further Notice of 
    Proposed Rule Making in PR Docket No. 93-144, 59 FR 60111 (November 22, 
    1994) (``Further Notice''), proposing a new framework for licensing of 
    800 MHz SMR systems. Specifically, the Commission proposed to assign 10 
    MHz of SMR spectrum (consisting of 200 contiguous channels) in defined 
    market-based service areas to facilitate the development of wide-area, 
    multi-channel SMR systems, while the remaining 4 MHz of spectrum 
    (consisting of 80 non-contiguous 
    
    [[Page 6139]]
    channels) would be designated for continued licensing on a local basis 
    to accommodate the needs of smaller SMR systems primarily seeking to 
    provide local, more dispatch-oriented service.
    
    II. First Report and Order
    
    A. Wide-Area SMR Licensing in the 800 MHz Band
    
    1. Spectrum Designated for Wide-Area Licensing
        4. In the CMRS Third R&O, the Commission determined that assigning 
    contiguous spectrum, where feasible, is likely to enhance the 
    competitive potential of wide-area SMR providers. The Commission 
    indicated its belief that contiguous spectrum is essential to the 
    competitive viability of a wide-area SMR system, because it permits use 
    of spread spectrum and other broadband technologies that are available 
    to other CMRS providers but unavailable to systems operating on non-
    contiguous spectrum. In the Further Notice, the Commission proposed to 
    designate the upper 10 MHz block of 800 MHz SMR spectrum for wide-area 
    SMR licensing.
        5. In the First R&O, the Commission concludes that the 800 MHz SMR 
    spectrum most suitable to be designated primarily for wide-area use is 
    the upper 10 MHz block, as it is the only contiguous SMR spectrum in 
    the 800 MHz band. The Commission further concludes that the entire 10 
    MHz block should be used, rather than a portion thereof, because it is 
    equivalent in size to the smallest amount of spectrum presently 
    authorized for broadband PCS.
    2. Service Areas
        6. In the CMRS Third R&O, the Commission concluded that the use of 
    service areas based on Rand McNally Major Trading Areas (MTAs), 
    identical to those adopted for broadband PCS, would be preferable for 
    wide-area licensing of the 800 MHz SMR service. The Commission noted 
    that allowing licensees to operate over MTAs as opposed to smaller 
    areas, such as Rand McNally Basic Trading Areas (BTAs), would enhance 
    their ability to invest in technology and to re-use channels more 
    effectively.
        7. In this First R&O, the Commission determines that, despite its 
    previous conclusion in the CMRS proceeding that MTAs appear to be the 
    most suitable building blocks for 800 MHz SMR licensees seeking to 
    construct wide-area systems, a broad range of commenters expressed 
    support for Economic Areas (EAs) established by the U.S. Department of 
    Commerce Bureau of Economic Analysis rather than MTAs. The Commission 
    agrees with the majority of commenters that EAs reflect the actual 
    coverage provided by 800 MHz SMR systems and concludes that use of EAs 
    will further the public interest because it will result in the 
    dissemination of licenses among a variety of applicants as anticipated 
    by Section 309(j) of the Communications Act. The Commission further 
    concludes that use of these smaller geographic areas ultimately will 
    result in a more diverse group of prospective bidders, because small 
    and medium-sized operatives will have incentives to seek EA licenses.
        8. Thus, 800 MHz SMR wide-area licenses in the upper 10 MHz block 
    will be based on the 172 EAs covering the continental United States and 
    Alaska, and three additional licensing regions covering the five U.S. 
    possessions, Guam, Northern Marina Islands, Puerto Rico, U.S. Virgin 
    Islands, and American Samoa.
    3. EA Spectrum Blocks
        9. In the CMRS Third R&O, the Commission observed that most 
    commenters agreed that wide-area SMR systems must have the ability to 
    use (and reuse) a large number of channels, preferably on contiguous 
    frequencies, to compete successfully with cellular and broadband PCS. 
    Based on the record established earlier in the 800 MHz SMR proceeding 
    and the comments submitted in the CMRS proceeding, the Further Notice 
    proposed to divide the upper 10 MHz block of 800 MHz SMR spectrum into 
    four blocks of 2.5 MHz, corresponding to 50 channels per block, under 
    the Commission's existing frequency allocation rules. In addition, the 
    Commission chose not to propose to issue a single license covering the 
    entire 10 MHz upper block of 800 MHz SMR spectrum because it determined 
    that a single 10 MHz license would preclude licensing of multiple wide-
    area licensees in each market.
        10. In this First R&O, the Commission concludes that dividing the 
    upper 10 MHz block into multiple spectrum blocks is both feasible and 
    desirable. The Commission concludes that allocating varying size blocks 
    will accomplish its goal of creating opportunities for wide-area SMR 
    providers with differing spectrum needs. Thus, the Commission adopts a 
    licensing plan which allocates one 120-channel block, one 60-channel 
    block, and one 20-channel block for each EA. The Commission believes 
    that these channel block sizes will provide opportunities for a variety 
    of licensees of different sizes to participate in the provision of 
    wide-area service.
    4. 800 MHz SMR Spectrum Aggregation Limit
        11. In the CMRS Third R&O, the Commission concluded that a 45 MHz 
    limit on aggregation of broadband PCS, cellular, and SMR spectrum, 
    combined with existing service-specific caps for cellular and PCS, was 
    sufficient to maintain a competitive CMRS market. In light of this 
    conclusion, in the Further Notice, the Commission concluded that an 
    additional aggregation limit within the 800 MHz SMR service was 
    unnecessary.
        12. The Commission concludes in this First R&O that allowing 
    unrestricted aggregation of 800 MHz SMR spectrum would not impede CMRS 
    competition. The Commission expresses concern that limiting aggregation 
    of 800 MHz SMR spectrum may result in a competitive disadvantage to SMR 
    licensees as potential competitors to broadband PCS and cellular 
    providers. Thus, the Commission further concludes that SMR licensees 
    will be permitted to seek and (if they are the high bidders for all EA 
    licenses) obtain all three of the EA licenses in a particular license 
    area. The Commission reiterates, however, that even though it has 
    declined to adopt a spectrum aggregation limit specific to the 800 MHz 
    SMR service, such licensees remain subject to the 45 MHz CMRS spectrum 
    aggregation limit and to the competitive component of the public 
    interest standard.
    5. Licensing in Mexican and Canadian Border Areas
        13. In the Further Notice, the Commission tentatively concluded 
    that attempting to create different allocations in border areas would 
    be administratively unworkable, and, thus, proposed to license wide-
    area spectrum blocks on a uniform basis without distinguishing border 
    from non-border areas. The Commission further proposed to license the 
    channels in border areas not contained in the wide-area spectrum block 
    on a channel-by-channel basis under the same rules it ultimately adopts 
    for the lower 80 channels in non-border areas.
        14. The Commission concludes that EA spectrum blocks should be 
    licensed on a uniform basis, without distinguishing border from non-
    border areas. EA licenses will be entitled to use any available border 
    area channels within their spectrum blocks, subject to international 
    assignment and coordination of such channels. The Commission also 
    concludes that the limited channel availability and other operating 
    restrictions in the border areas are matters to be assessed by EA 
    
    [[Page 6140]]
    applicants in their valuation of EA spectrum blocks for competitive 
    bidding purposes. The Commission, however, defers a decision regarding 
    treatment of 800 MHz SMR channels licensed in border areas, but not 
    included within the EA spectrum blocks, until the resolution of the 
    Second Further Notice of Proposed Rule Making in PR Docket No. 93-144.
    
    B. Rights and Obligations of EA Licensees
    
    1. Operational Flexibility
        15. In the Further Notice, the Commission tentatively concluded 
    that wide-area SMR licensees in the 800 MHz band should be authorized 
    to construct stations at any available site and on any available 
    channel within their respective spectrum blocks. In addition, the 
    Commission proposed to allow wide-area licensees to ``self-coordinate'' 
    system modifications within their service areas--that is, to add, 
    subtract, move, and otherwise modify their base station facilities 
    without prior Commission consent, provided they notify the Commission 
    of the coordinates and certify compliance with its co-channel 
    interference protection and emission requirements.
        16. The Commission concludes that grant of EA licenses will provide 
    licensees with: (1) the right to construct at any available site within 
    the EA, and to add, subtract, or move site locations within the EA 
    during the license term, on a ``self-coordinated'' basis; and (2) the 
    right to use any available spectrum within the EA licensee's designated 
    spectrum block on a self-coordinated basis, including full discretion 
    over channelization of available spectrum within the block (provided 
    that emission mask requirements are met, and co-channel interference 
    protection is afforded to incumbent licensees and co-channel EA 
    licensees in neighboring EAs). The Commission further concludes that 
    simplified initial licensing and subsequent system modification 
    substantially will reduce the existing administrative burden on both 
    SMR licensees and the Commission, and will establish greater 
    consistency with its cellular and PCS licensing rules.
    2. Spectrum Management Rights--Acquisition and Recovery of Channels 
    Within Spectrum Blocks
        17. In the Further Notice, the Commission recognized that the 
    operational flexibility afforded to wide-area 800 MHz SMR licensees 
    would be limited by the large number of systems already authorized and 
    operating in the band, particularly in major markets. The Commission 
    noted that even if wide-area licensees do not immediately obtain clear 
    spectrum comparable to its allocations for cellular or broadband PCS, 
    wide-area licensing should confer other valuable rights that would 
    enhance a licensee's ability to establish wide-area service. Thus, the 
    Commission proposed to assist wide-area licensees in consolidating 
    spectrum within their respective blocks by providing that (1) if an 
    incumbent fails to construct, discontinues operations, or otherwise has 
    its license terminated by the Commission, the spectrum covered by the 
    incumbent's authorization automatically reverts to the wide-area 
    licensee; and (2) if a wide-area licensee negotiates to acquire an 
    incumbent system by assignment or transfer, the assignment or transfer 
    presumptively will be considered in the public interest.
        18. In this First R&O, the Commission concludes that an EA licensee 
    has the right to use any spectrum within the EA block that is recovered 
    by the Commission. In addition, the Commission determines that 
    assignments from incumbents operating in an EA spectrum block to the 
    respective EA licensee generally will be presumed to be in the public 
    interest. The Commission concludes that granting these rights to EA 
    licensees will give them greater flexibility in managing their 
    spectrum, establish greater consistency with its cellular and PCS 
    rules, and reduce regulatory burdens on both licensees and the 
    Commission with respect to future management of the spectrum within the 
    wide-area blocks. The Commission also eliminates all waiting lists for 
    SMR Category channels within the upper 10 MHz block, and dismisses all 
    applications on such waiting lists. The Commission determines that 
    continuing such lists would be inconsistent with the wide-area 
    licensing scheme it has adopted.
        19. With respect to the impact of these rights on the finders' 
    preference program, the Commission concludes that successful applicants 
    for a finders' preference program will be considered an ``incumbent'' 
    within the meaning of the rules adopted in the First R&O. In addition, 
    the Commission no longer will accept finders' preference requests 
    following the adoption of this First R&O. As a result, the EA licensee 
    will have the exclusive right to recover unconstructed or non-
    operational channels on blocks for which it is licensed.
    3. License Term and Renewal Expectancy
        20. In the CMRS Third R&O, the Commission determined that every 
    Part 90 licensee that is reclassified and treated as a CMRS licensee 
    when its current license term expires thereafter shall have a ten-year 
    license term and be afforded a renewal expectancy, provided it is able 
    to demonstrate that it: (1) has provided ``substantial'' service during 
    the license term; and (2) has complied with applicable Commission rules 
    and policies, and the Communications Act. Furthermore, the Commission 
    determined that ``grandfathered'' Part 90 licensees, because they 
    retain their ``private'' status until August 10, 1996, would not be 
    afforded either the ten-year license term or the renewal expectancy 
    during the statutory transition period.
        21. In this First R&O, the Commission determines that EA licenses 
    should be granted for a ten-year license term. In addition, EA 
    licensees generally will be afforded a renewal expectancy as determined 
    in the CMRS Third R&O.
    
    C. Treatment of Incumbent Systems
    
    1. Mandatory Relocation
        22. In the Further Notice, the Commission tentatively concluded 
    that incumbent SMR systems should not be subject to mandatory 
    relocation to new frequencies pursuant to Nextel's band-clearing 
    proposal. The Commission also expressed concern that mandatory 
    relocation could impose significant costs and disruption on incumbent 
    licensees.
        23. The Commission concludes in this First R&O that, based on the 
    record in this proceeding, a smooth and expedient transition to the new 
    licensing framework for 800 MHz SMR service cannot be accomplished 
    without some form of mandatory relocation. Thus, the Commission has 
    created a two-phase mandatory relocation mechanism under which there is 
    a fixed one-year period for voluntary negotiations between EA licensees 
    and incumbents and a two-year period for mandatory negotiations. Under 
    this mechanism, if an EA licensee and an incumbent licensee fail to 
    reach an agreement by the conclusion of the mandatory negotiation 
    period, then the EA licensee may request involuntary relocation of the 
    incumbent's system provided that it: (1) guarantees payment of all 
    costs of relocating the incumbent to a comparable facility; (2) 
    completes all activities necessary for placing the new facilities into 
    operation, including engineering and frequency coordination, if 
    necessary; and (3) builds and tests the 
    
    [[Page 6141]]
    new system. Specifically, any relocation of an incumbent must be 
    conducted in such a fashion that there is a ``seamless'' transition 
    from the incumbent's ``old'' frequency to its ``relocated'' frequency 
    (that is, there is no significant disruption in the incumbent's 
    operations). In connection with this mandatory relocation mechanism, EA 
    licensees will be required to notify incumbents operating on 
    frequencies included in their spectrum block of their intention to 
    relocate such incumbents within 90 days of the release of the Public 
    Notice commencing the voluntary negotiation period. If an applicant 
    does not receive timely notification of relocation, the EA licensee 
    loses the right to require that incumbent to relocate.
        24. The Commission also initiates a partial lifting of the freeze 
    on acceptance of new applications for SMR and General Category channels 
    to permit those assignments and transfers of control that involve 
    modifications to licensed facilities, provided such assignments and 
    transfers are designed to accommodate market-driven, voluntary 
    relocation arrangements between incumbents and potential EA applicants, 
    and do not change the 22dBu service contour of the facilities to be 
    relocated. This option is not available for purposes of relocating 
    incumbents from one part of the upper 10 MHz block to another. 
    Moreover, potential EA applicants and relocating incumbents utilizing 
    this option must be completely unaffiliated. Processing of these 
    assignments and transfers will continue until the date the Commission 
    releases the Public Notice announcing the upper 10 MHz auction.
    2. Incumbent Operation Flexibility
        25. In the Further Notice, the Commission tentatively concluded 
    that in those situations in which incumbents are allowed to continue 
    operating on already-licensed facilities, incumbent systems should not 
    be allowed to expand beyond their existing service areas on those 
    channels designated for wide-area licensing, without the consent of the 
    wide-area licensee.
        26. The Commission concludes that allowing non-EA licensees to 
    expand their systems at will after wide-area licensing has occurred 
    would diminish substantially the value of the EA license and would 
    create continuing uncertainty for EA applicants and licensees alike. 
    The Commission recognizes, however, that there may be circumstances in 
    which an EA licensee should be required to permit incumbents to make 
    minor alterations to their service areas to preserve the viability of 
    their systems. Thus, the Commission granted operational flexibility to 
    incumbent SMR licensees to add, subtract, or move site locations within 
    their current 22 dBu contours, on a ``self-coordinated'' basis. The 
    incumbent must, however, still comply with the short-spacing criteria 
    in Section 90.621(b) of the Commission's rules, even if its 
    modifications do not extend its 22 dBu interference contour. Incumbent 
    licensees will be required to notify the Commission of any changes in 
    technical parameters or additional stations constructed, including 
    agreements with an EA licensee to expand beyond their signal strength 
    contour, through a minor modification of their license.
    
    D. Co-channel Interference Protection
    
    1. Incumbent SMR Systems
        27. In the CMRS Third R&O, the Commission concluded that, as a 
    general matter, it would retain its existing co-channel protection 
    rules for CMRS licensees. Under the current rules, a wide-area licensee 
    would be required to afford protection to incumbents, either by 
    locating its stations at least 113 km (70 mi) from the facilities of 
    any incumbent, or by complying with the co-channel separation standards 
    set forth in its ``short-spacing'' rule if it seeks to operate stations 
    located less than 113 km (70 mi) from an incumbent licensee's 
    facilities.
        28. In this First R&O, the Commission determines to require EA 
    licensees to afford interference protection to incumbent SMR systems, 
    as provided in Section 90.621 of the Commission's rules. As a result, 
    an EA licensee will be able to satisfy its co-channel protection 
    obligations with respect to incumbents in one of three ways: (1) by 
    locating its stations at least 113 km (70 miles) from any incumbent's 
    facilities; (2) by complying with the short-spacing rule if it seeks to 
    operate stations less than 113 km from an incumbent's facilities; or, 
    (3) by negotiating an even shorter distance with the incumbent 
    licensee. The Commission concludes that these requirements will ensure 
    adequate protection of incumbent operations, without hampering the 
    ability of EA licensees to construct stations throughout their 
    authorized service areas. The Commission believes that this rule will 
    afford maximum flexibility to EA licensees, allow incumbents to fill in 
    ``dead spots,'' and protect incumbent licensees from actual 
    interference.
    2. Adjacent EA Licensees
        29. In the CMRS Third R&O, the Commission concluded that the co-
    channel interference protection obligations of geographic-area 
    licensees with respect to other geographic-area licensees would be 
    similar to those imposed in the cellular and PCS services. In the 
    Further Notice, the Commission tentatively concluded, therefore, that 
    wide-area SMR licensees in the 800 MHz band should not be allowed to 
    exceed a signal level of 22 dBuV/m at their service area boundaries 
    (unless they negotiate a different signal strength limit with all 
    potentially affected adjacent licensees).
        30. In this First R&O, the Commission prohibits EA licensees from 
    exceeding a signal level of 40 dBuV/m at their service area boundaries, 
    unless all bordering EA licensees agree to a higher field strength. The 
    Commission requires coordination of frequency use between co-channel 
    adjacent EA licensees and all other affected parties. This approach 
    provides EA licensees with a signal strength level sufficient to 
    operate their systems up to the borders of their EAs, while also 
    providing protection to adjacent operations. As an exception to this 
    requirement, when a single entity obtains licenses for adjacent EAs on 
    the same spectrum block, it will not be required to coordinate its 
    operations in this manner.
    3. Emission Masks
        31. To protect against adjacent channel interference, the 
    Commission has emission mask rules in most mobile radio services to 
    restrict transmitter emissions on the spectrum adjacent to the 
    licensee's assigned channel. In the CMRS Third R&O, the Commission 
    affirmed its out-of-band emission rules for CMRS services and 
    determined that out-of-band emission rules should apply only where 
    emissions have the potential to affect other licensees' operations. 
    With respect to licensees that have exclusive use of a block of 
    contiguous channels, the Commission concluded that out-of-band emission 
    rules would be applied only to the extent necessary to protect 
    operations outside of the licensee's authorized spectrum.
        32. The Commission concludes that out-of-band emission rules should 
    apply only to the ``outer'' channels included in an EA license and to 
    spectrum adjacent to interior channels used by incumbents. The 
    Commission believes that these channels alone have the potential to 
    affect operations outside of the EA licensee's authorized bandwidth. 
    The Commission also believes that this requirement will facilitate dual 
    mode 
    
    [[Page 6142]]
    SMR/cellular operation, similar to that in the PCS/cellular context, 
    which ultimately will add capacity to the systems operated by the EA 
    licensees.
    
    E. Construction Requirements
    
    1. EA Licensees
        33. In the CMRS Third R&O, the Commission determined that the 
    record in the CMRS proceeding generally supported use of longer 
    construction periods, combined with interim coverage requirements, to 
    ensure that wide-area CMRS licensees provide service to portions of 
    their service area before the construction period expires. In the 
    Further Notice, the Commission noted that such an approach has been 
    used for cellular service and recently was adopted for both broadband 
    and narrowband PCS. In the Further Notice, the Commission tentatively 
    concluded that wide-area SMR licensees should have five years to 
    construct their systems.
        34. In this First R&O, the Commission concludes that EA licensees 
    should have a five-year construction period. While this construction 
    period is shorter than that imposed for PCS systems, we agree with the 
    majority of commenters that it is the most appropriate time period for 
    the 800 MHz SMR service. In addition, given the substantial 
    construction of 800 MHz SMR systems (including wide-area systems) to 
    date, the ten-year construction period applicable to PCS appears 
    excessive for the service. Although a five-year construction period may 
    give some EA licensees more time to construct certain facilities than 
    otherwise might have been allowed, the Commission believes that EA 
    licensees should have this flexibility. Furthermore, the Commission 
    believes that use of competitive bidding to select geographic-area 
    licensees provides ample incentives for rapid system construction, 
    since this permits license winners to recover their bidding expenses.
    2. Extended Implementation Authority
        35. The Commission noted in the Further Notice that some existing 
    SMR licensees have been granted extended implementation periods of up 
    to five years to construct their systems, pursuant to either a waiver 
    of its construction and loading rules or Section 90.629 of its Rules. 
    The Commission's rules require SMR licensees with extended 
    implementation authority to submit annual certifications of compliance 
    with their yearly station construction commitments. Moreover, if the 
    Commission concludes, at any time, that the licensee has failed to meet 
    such construction commitments, it may terminate extended implementation 
    authority and give the licensee six months from the termination date to 
    complete construction of the system.
        36. Following the Commission's adoption of the Further Notice, some 
    SMR licensees filed requests for extended implementation authority, 
    which remain pending. With respect to two such requests filed by 
    Chadmoore and PCC Management Corp., the Wireless Telecommunications 
    Bureau (``Bureau'') released a Public Notice seeking comment on whether 
    the requests should be granted. In its extended implementation 
    authority request, Chadmoore sought three years to construct a non-
    contiguous ``wide-area'' SMR system that will extend from the 
    southeastern United States through the upper Midwest and use new 
    technology. Chadmoore argued that grant of its extended implementation 
    request was warranted on four grounds: (a) Chadmoore's principals have 
    demonstrated expertise in SMR sales and service; (b) Chadmoore 
    previously has demonstrated its ability to acquire and construct those 
    licenses granted to SMR ``investors;'' (c) Chadmoore's proposal would 
    assist those licensees ``who have, as yet, not constructed'' their 
    stations, and who are in danger of losing their investment once their 
    already extended deadline has expired; and, (d) grant of Chadmoore's 
    proposal would promote competition in the SMR equipment manufacturing 
    market. Similarly, PCC sought a period of three years to construct a 
    regional, and ultimately nationwide, network of SMR systems. PCC's 
    proposed system would include 2,181 channels, 849 conventional channels 
    and 269 trunked channels, encompassing 1,118 licenses. PCC argued that 
    grant of its extended implementation request was warranted for the 
    following reasons: (a) climatic conditions for the region(s) in which 
    the SMR systems are located preclude construction during certain 
    seasons of the year; (b) grant of PCC's proposal would assist licensees 
    who have not yet constructed their authorized facilities; (c) PCC's 
    implementation plan would result in a more cost-effective build-out for 
    the stations included in its proposal; and (d) grant of PCC's proposal 
    would facilitate the implementation of an integrated nationwide 
    network.
        37. The Commission initially established extended implementation 
    authority for SMRs to facilitate construction of wide-area systems. In 
    the First R&O, the Commission concludes that the availability of 
    extended implementation authority in the 800 MHz SMR service is no 
    longer necessary. In fact, the Commission is concerned that both 
    existing and future grants of extended implementation authority would 
    be contrary to the underlying goals of this proceeding. Specifically, 
    the Commission believes that allowing licensees to retain extended 
    implementation authority of up to five years after adoption of the 
    wide-area licensing approach detailed in this First R&O would impinge 
    upon the construction requirements imposed on EA licensees. Thus, the 
    Commission believes that it is necessary not only to cease acceptance 
    of requests for extended implementation authority but also to 
    accelerate the termination date of existing implementation periods so 
    that EA licensees will not be unnecessarily hampered in their efforts 
    to comply with the construction requirements associated with their 
    authorizations.
        38. In addition, several licensees and commenters contend that such 
    extended implementation grants have resulted in spectrum warehousing. 
    To address these spectrum warehousing concerns, the Commission will 
    require all incumbent 800 MHz SMR licensees who have received extended 
    implementation authority to demonstrate that allowing them extended 
    time to construct their facilities is warranted and furthers the public 
    interest. Specifically, a licensee seeking to retain extended 
    implementation authority must: (a) indicate the duration of its 
    extended implementation period (including commencement and termination 
    date); (b) provide a copy of its implementation plan, as originally 
    submitted and approved by the Commission, and any Commission-approved 
    modifications thereto; (c) demonstrate its compliance with Section 
    90.629 of its rules if authority was granted pursuant to that 
    provision, including confirmation that it has filed annual 
    certifications regarding fulfillment of its implementation plan; and 
    (d) certify that all facilities covered by the extended implementation 
    authority proposed to be constructed as of the adoption date of this 
    First R&O are fully constructed and that service to subscribers has 
    commenced as defined in the CMRS Third R&O. These showings must be 
    submitted within 90 days from the effective date of this First R&O. The 
    Commission notes that all of the information to be included in the 
    showing presently is required by Section 90.629 of its Rules. The 
    Commission delegated to the Bureau the authority to review and take 
    appropriate action upon such showings.
        39. If a licensee's extended implementation authority showing is 
    approved by the Bureau, such licensee 
    
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    will be afforded a construction period of two years or the remainder of 
    its current extended implementation period, whichever is shorter. The 
    Commission recognizes that some licensees were initially granted 
    extended implementation periods which exceed this two-year period. In 
    those instances where a licensee demonstrates that it has fully 
    complied with the requirements of Section 90.629 of the Commission's 
    rules and that its system cannot reasonably be completed within the 
    two-year period, the Commission will entertain requests for the minimum 
    period of time necessary to complete implementation of the licensee's 
    proposal provided that the licensee explains why the two-year period is 
    an insufficient amount of time. The Commission anticipates that such 
    explanation would entail the same type of public interest showing 
    associated with a request for waiver of the Commission's rules under 
    Section 1.3 of the rules.
        40. Upon the termination of this two-year period, authorizations 
    for facilities that remain unconstructed will cancel automatically. If 
    a licensee either fails to submit the showing described above within 
    the designated time frame or submits an insufficient or incomplete 
    showing, such licensee will have six months from the last day on which 
    it could timely file such a showing or six months from the denial of 
    its request to construct the remaining facilities covered under its 
    implementation plan. After this six-month period, authorizations for 
    facilities still unconstructed will cancel automatically.
        41. With respect to pending requests for extended implementation 
    authority, the Commission determines that grant of these requests would 
    conflict with its goal of uniformly implementing wide-area licensing. 
    It also reiterates that parties that remain interested in obtaining 
    extended implementation authority are free to apply for an EA license 
    under the Commission's new rules.
    3. Interim Coverage Requirements
        42. In the CMRS Third R&O, the Commission concluded that 800 MHz 
    wide-area SMR licensees should be subject to interim coverage 
    requirements that are similar to those in the cellular and PCS rules. 
    In the Further Notice, the Commission proposed that geographic-area 
    licensees be required to provide coverage to one-third of the 
    population within their license area within three years of initial 
    license grant, and to two-thirds of the population by the end of their 
    five-year construction period.
        43. In the CMRS Third R&O, the Commission noted that any interim 
    coverage requirements for wide-area SMR systems must account for the 
    fact that geographic-area licensees may be required to provide co-
    channel protection to incumbent systems within their service area. In 
    the Further Notice, the Commission indicated its belief that when a 
    licensee acquires a wide-area license, it assumes the responsibility of 
    obtaining the right to use sufficient spectrum to provide coverage if 
    such spectrum is not already available. The Commission further 
    indicated its expectation that coverage be achieved directly by 
    constructing facilities on available spectrum authorized to the wide-
    area licensee or acquiring such spectrum through buy-outs of incumbent 
    licensees within its authorized spectrum block. To the extent that the 
    Further Notice could be read to propose that coverage could be met 
    through use of resale or similar agreements, the Commission clarifies 
    its intention that the wide-area licensee is free to engage in resale 
    activities, but must satisfy its construction requirements through use 
    of its facilities and not capacity acquired from others through resale.
        44. The Commission will require EA licensees to provide coverage to 
    one-third of the population of their respective EAs within three years 
    of initial license grant and to two-thirds by the end of their five-
    year construction period. This requirement is consistent with the 
    Commission's 900 MHz SMR rules. Unlike its approach in the 900 MHz SMR 
    context, the Commission is not adopting a ``substantial service'' 
    benchmark for the upper 10 MHz block as an alternative to the 
    population coverage criteria. Given the already extensive licensing in 
    the upper 10 MHz block, the Commission believes it is unlikely that an 
    EA licensee could provide substantial service without buying incumbent 
    systems or relocating incumbents. Similarly, the Commission did not 
    adopt a ``substantial service'' standard in the Multipoint Distribution 
    Service (MDS) because of extensive incumbent presence in that spectrum.
    4. Channel Use Requirement
        45. Given the extensive licensing of the upper 10 MHz block, the 
    Commission shares the concern of several commenters that interim 
    coverage requirements alone may not ensure efficient spectrum use 
    unless a channel use requirement is added. Specifically, the Commission 
    is concerned that an EA licensee potentially could satisfy the interim 
    coverage requirements by constructing only one channel in its spectrum 
    block. This would result in inefficient use of 800 MHz SMR spectrum, 
    for which there is great demand. In addition, unlike the 900 MHz SMR 
    service and other lightly encumbered auctionable services, the 
    substantial incumbent presence in the 800 MHz SMR service presents the 
    potential for a bidder who is incapable of building out a wide-area 
    system to participate in the auction solely to restrict a competing 
    incumbent licensee's ability to expand. Accordingly, the Commission 
    will require EA licensees to construct 50 percent of the total channels 
    included in their spectrum blocks in at least one location in their 
    respective EAs within three years of initial license grant. Although 
    the Commission does not impose an additional channel use requirement at 
    the fifth year, EA licensees nonetheless are required to maintain their 
    compliance with the initial channel usage requirement for the remainder 
    of their construction period.
    5. Non-compliance With Interim Coverage Requirements
        46. The Commission concluded that an EA licensee's failure to meet 
    either the three-year or five-year coverage requirements or the channel 
    usage requirement will result in forfeiture of the entire EA license. 
    Forfeiture of the EA license, however, will not result in the loss of 
    any constructed facilities authorized to the licensee prior to the 
    auction.
    
    F. EA License Application Issues
    
    1. Initial Eligibility
        47. In the CMRS Third R&O and the Further Notice, the Commission 
    tentatively concluded that the initial application process for wide-
    area SMR licenses should be open to any qualified applicant. The 
    Commission also sought comment on whether it was necessary to restrict 
    eligibility for EA licenses to incumbent licensees (or to restrict 
    eligibility based on other criteria) if competitive bidding procedures 
    are used in the upper 10 MHz block.
        48. In this First R&O, the Commission concludes that restrictions 
    on eligibility for EA licenses are not warranted, except that EA 
    applicants will be presumptively classified as CMRS, and therefore will 
    be required to comply with the alien ownership requirements specified 
    in Section 310 of the Act. The Commission has adopted specific 
    provisions in the service rules for the upper 10 MHz block to address 
    these concerns, e.g., imposition of construction periods combined with 
    
    [[Page 6144]]
    interim coverage and channel use requirements. Moreover, the Commission 
    believes that the competitive bidding process itself will deter 
    speculation by those not genuinely interested in providing service to 
    the public. In addition, the Commission believes that open eligibility 
    for the EA licensees will be pro-competitive and potentially will 
    result in a diverse group of entities providing wide-area SMR service 
    in the upper 10 MHz block.
        49. With respect to foreign ownership, all applicants will be 
    subject to Section 310(b) of the Communications Act, except to the 
    extent they have received waiver of preexisting ownership interests. In 
    the CMRS docket, the Commission established specific procedures for 
    private mobile services licensees reclassified as CMRS to file waiver 
    petitions to retain existing foreign ownership interests. Thus, any 
    reclassified private mobile services licensees that have levels of 
    alien ownership or control that would be prohibited when these 
    licensees assume CMRS status must already have filed a petition seeking 
    to have such interests grandfathered.
    2. Regulatory Classification of EA Licensees
        50. In the CMRS Second R&O, the Commission determined that SMR 
    licensees would be classified as CMRS if they offered interconnected 
    service and as PMRS if they did not offer such service. In the Further 
    Notice, the Commission indicated its view that most, if not all, EA 
    licensees will be classified as CMRS, because they are likely to 
    provide interconnected service as part of their service offering. As a 
    result, the Commission proposed to classify all EA licensees 
    presumptively as CMRS providers. The Commission also proposed that EA 
    applicants or licensees who do not intend to provide CMRS service would 
    be able to overcome this presumption by demonstrating that their 
    service does not fall within the CMRS definition. The Commission 
    further proposed that the statutory grandfathering period also would 
    apply with respect to the operation of this presumption. As a result, 
    entities licensed in the SMR service as of August 10, 1993, would not 
    be subject to CMRS regulation, other than foreign ownership 
    restrictions, until August 10, 1996.
        51. The Commission reiterates its conclusion that EA licensees will 
    be classified presumptively as CMRS providers. The Commission also 
    concluded that EA applicants and licensees, like other CMRS providers 
    (such as broadband PCS applicants and licensees), will be able to 
    overcome this presumption if they demonstrate that their service does 
    not fall within the CMRS definition provided in Section 332(d)(1) of 
    the Communications Act.
    
    G. Redesignation of Other 800 MHz Spectrum--General Category Channels 
    and Inter-Category Sharing
    
        52. Currently, 800 MHz SMR systems may be licensed on the General 
    Category channels or licensed under its inter-category sharing rules on 
    100 channels in the Industrial/Land Transportation and Business 
    Categories (collectively, ``Pool Channels''). In the Further Notice, 
    the Commission indicated that although it believes that SMR licensees 
    with existing operations on the General Category or Pool Channels 
    should be allowed to operate on such channels, the Commission also 
    believes that some restriction on future SMR applications for General 
    Category or Pool Channels might be appropriate.
    1. General Category Channels
        53. In the Further Notice, the Commission asked commenters to 
    address whether the entire General Category or some portion thereof 
    should be designated for future licensing exclusively to SMR 
    applicants. The Commission's licensing records indicate that the 
    overwhelming majority of General Category channels are used for SMR as 
    opposed to non-SMR service. As a result, the Commission concludes that 
    the demand for additional spectrum by SMR providers is significantly 
    greater than the demand by non-SMR services. In addition, given the 
    already extensive licensing on the upper 10 MHz block and the mandatory 
    relocation established in this First R&O, as part of its wide-area 
    licensing for the 800 MHz SMR service, the Commission expects that 
    demand for additional SMR spectrum will increase, as EA licensees seek 
    frequencies for relocation of incumbents. The Commission believes that 
    by prohibiting SMR eligibility on the Pool Channels it will relieve 
    much of the pressure on such frequencies. The Commission concludes that 
    the most efficient use of the General Category channels is to 
    redesignate them exclusively for SMR use.
    2. Inter-Category Sharing
        54. In the Further Notice, the Commission noted that the Pool 
    Channels are intended for non-commercial internal use by Business and 
    Industrial/Land Transportation licensees, and their availability for 
    SMR licensees was to be on a limited basis only. After the release of 
    the Further Notice, the Bureau placed a freeze on inter-category 
    sharing.
        55. The Commission is concerned that continuing to allow SMR 
    applications for the Pool Channels could cause a scarcity of 
    frequencies for PMRS uses. Specifically, if these channels remain 
    available to SMR licensees, but are not subject to auctions, demand for 
    the channels by SMR applicants seeking to avoid auctions may render 
    them unavailable to other eligible Part 90 services. Thus, the 
    Commission revises current eligibility rules for inter-category sharing 
    of the Pool Channels to eliminate the risk of SMR encroachment on 
    spectrum allocated for PMRS purposes. SMR licensees no longer will be 
    eligible to apply for Pool Channels on an inter-category sharing basis.
        56. In light of its elimination of SMR eligibility for the Pool 
    Channels, the Commission concludes that non-SMR licensees no longer 
    will be eligible for SMR channels, including the General Category 
    channels. With respect to the upper 10 MHz block, the Commission 
    concludes that non-SMR incumbent licensees, like SMR incumbent 
    licensees, will receive the operational rights extended to incumbents 
    and will be subject to the mandatory relocation mechanism.
    
    III. Eighth Report and Order
    
    A. Auctionability of the Upper 10 MHz Block of 800 MHz SMR Spectrum
    
        57. Section 309(j) of the Communications Act, permits auctions only 
    where: (1) mutually exclusive applications for initial licenses or 
    construction permits are accepted for filing by the Commission; (2) the 
    principal use of the spectrum will involve or is reasonably likely to 
    involve the receipt by the licensee of compensation from subscribers in 
    return for enabling those subscribers to receive or transmit 
    communications signals; and, (3) the objectives set forth in Section 
    309(j)(3) would be promoted.
        58. In the Second Report and Order in PP Docket No. 93-253, 59 FR 
    22980 (May 4, 1994) (Competitive Bidding Second R&O), the Commission 
    concluded that SMR as a class of service, including 800 MHz SMR, would 
    satisfy the Section 309(j) criteria for auctionability. The Commission 
    noted that its rules explicitly contemplate and expect that SMR 
    licensees will provide service to eligible subscribers for 
    compensation. The Commission concluded that the use of competitive 
    bidding will speed the development and rapid deployment of SMR service, 
    including service in rural areas, with minimal administrative or 
    judicial 
    
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    delays, as required by Section 309(j)(3)(A). The Commission also 
    determined that competitive bidding would promote the objectives of 
    Section 309(j)(3)(C) in the SMR service by recovering for the public a 
    portion of the value of SMR spectrum made available for commercial use, 
    and avoiding unjust enrichment.
        59. In the CMRS Third R&O, the Commission concluded that it 
    generally should use competitive bidding procedures to select among 
    mutually exclusive CMRS applications where it has the authority to do 
    so and where the Commission find such processing to be in the public 
    interest. The Commission specifically concluded that competitive 
    bidding procedures should be used to select between mutually exclusive 
    initial applications in the 800 MHz SMR service. The Commission also 
    concluded that, because the number of mutually exclusive applications 
    in future licensing in the 800 MHz SMR service may be considerable, the 
    use of competitive bidding will ensure that the qualified applicants 
    who place the highest value on the available spectrum will prevail in 
    the selection process.
        60. The Commission reiterates its conclusion that competitive 
    bidding is an appropriate licensing tool for the 800 MHz SMR service. 
    The Commission emphasizes that the use of auctions will apply only to 
    issuance of initial licenses in the upper 10 MHz block, the EA 
    licenses. These EA licenses previously have not been issued by the 
    Commission, and include certain rights and obligations that previously 
    were not granted to or required of licensees. Significantly, its 
    granting of these EA licenses does not affect rights afforded to 
    licensees under existing authorizations, because incumbent licensees 
    will be able to continue to operate their systems. Even though 
    incumbents will be subject to mandatory relocation under certain 
    circumstances, their existing operations will be protected. 
    Furthermore, auctions will be used only in the event that there are 
    competing applications for the same EA license.
        61. The Commission concludes that use of competitive bidding in the 
    upper 10 MHz block is authorized by Section 309(j) of the 
    Communications Act. The Commission affirmed its previous conclusion 
    that 800 MHz SMR, as a service, satisfies the criteria set forth by 
    Congress for determining when competitive bidding should be used. SMR 
    licenses are used to provide service to subscribers for compensation, 
    so a precondition to competitive bidding under Section 309(j)(2)(A) is 
    met. Moreover, competitive bidding will further the public interest 
    requirements of Section 309(j)(3), by promoting rapid development of 
    service, fostering competition, recovering a portion of the value of 
    the spectrum for the public, and encouraging efficient spectrum use. 
    Where competitive bidding is utilized, a diverse group of entities, 
    including incumbent licensees and potential new entrants, will be able 
    to participate in the auction process, because the Commission has 
    decided not to restrict eligibility for these EA licenses, an outcome 
    which furthers the goals of Section 309(j)(3)(B) of the Communications 
    Act.
        62. Additionally, the Commission believes that competitive bidding 
    procedures will minimize administrative or judicial delays in 
    licensing, particularly when compared to other licensing alternatives--
    comparative hearings, lotteries (which specifically are prohibited 
    since the 800 MHz SMR service is auctionable), or first-come, first-
    served procedures. The Commission employed first-come, first-served 
    procedures in the 800 MHz SMR service prior to its implementation of 
    the Budget Act. The Commission's experience is that such procedures 
    have resulted in processing delays. By contrast, the Commission expects 
    that use of competitive bidding will allow interested parties to obtain 
    expeditious access to 800 MHz SMR spectrum and to use such spectrum 
    efficiently. The Commission concludes that this result furthers both 
    Section 309(j)(3)(A) and Section 309(j)(3)(D) of the Communications 
    Act.
        63. The Commission disagrees with those commenters who argue that 
    the Commission's competitive bidding authority does not extend to 
    existing services. Section 309(j) of the Communications Act does not 
    distinguish between new services (such as PCS) and existing services in 
    terms of whether initial licenses in a given service should be subject 
    to competitive bidding. Accordingly, the Commission concludes that its 
    determination that the 800 MHz SMR service is auctionable is fully 
    consistent with Section 309(j) of the Communications Act.
    
    B. Competitive Bidding Methodology for Upper 10 MHz Block
    
    1. Competitive Bidding Design
        64. Simultaneous Multiple Round Auctions. Based on the record in 
    this proceeding and the Commission's successful experience conducting 
    simultaneous multiple round auctions for other CMRS services (e.g., 
    narrowband and broadband PCS), the Commission believes a simultaneous 
    multiple round auction is the most appropriate competitive bidding 
    design for the 10 MHz upper block of 800 MHz SMR spectrum. The 
    Commission has developed and successfully conducted auctions with 
    software capable of handling numerous licenses in a simultaneous 
    multiple round auction. Thus, this methodology will afford the 
    Commission administrative convenience and enable it to hold an auction 
    quickly and efficiently. For certain bidders, the value of these 
    licenses will be significantly interdependent because of the 
    desirability of aggregation across geographic regions. Given this high 
    degree of interdependency among licenses, the Commission rejects SBA's 
    suggestion that single round sealed bidding is a more appropriate 
    competitive bidding design for licensing the upper 10 MHz SMR spectrum 
    blocks. The Commission believes that simultaneous multiple round 
    bidding will generate more information about license values during the 
    course of the auction and provide bidders with more flexibility to 
    pursue back-up strategies, than if the licenses were auctioned 
    separately or through sealed bidding. As the Commission decided in the 
    900 MHz SMR service, the Bidder Information Package for the 10 MHz 
    upper block licenses will provide all the information about incumbent 
    licensees that is available in its licensing records as of 60 days 
    prior to the filing deadline for participation in the auction. In this 
    connection, upon release of the Public Notice announcing the date of 
    the auction for the upper 10 MHz block of 800 MHz SMR spectrum, all 
    pending applications for frequencies within this spectrum will be 
    returned without prejudice to the applicants. These applicants then 
    will be able to seek licenses for these frequencies through the 
    competitive bidding process. In addition, the Commission encourages all 
    potential bidders to examine these records carefully and do their own 
    independent investigation regarding existing licensees' operations in 
    each EA in which they intend to bid in order to maximize their success 
    in the auction. The Commission will hold a seminar for prospective 
    bidders to acquaint them with this competitive bidding design. The 
    Commission will announce the date and location for such seminar by 
    Public Notice. The Commission concludes, therefore, that simultaneous 
    multiple round bidding is most likely to award licenses to the bidders 
    who value them the most highly and to provide bidders with the greatest 
    likelihood of obtaining the license 
    
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    combinations that best satisfy their service needs.
        65. Stopping Rules. The Commission will adopt a simultaneous 
    stopping rule for the upper 10 MHz block 800 MHz SMR auction. The 
    simultaneous stopping rule is designed to allow bidders to decide how 
    long the auction will run, based on bidding strategy and demand for 
    each license. Under a simultaneous stopping rule, bidding will remain 
    open on all licenses in an auction until bidding stops on every 
    license. In this Eighth R&O, the Commission concludes that the 
    substitutability between licenses within the same EA and the ability to 
    pursue back-up strategies support the use of a simultaneous stopping 
    rule.
        66. As a result, the upper 10 MHz block 800 MHz SMR auction will 
    close after one round passes in which no new valid bids or proactive 
    activity rule waivers are submitted. The Commission retains the 
    discretion to keep the auction open even if no new acceptable bids and 
    no proactive waivers are submitted in a single round. In the event that 
    the Commission exercise this discretion, the effect will be the same as 
    if a bidder has submitted a proactive waiver. The Commission also 
    retains the discretion to announce market-by-market closings.
        67. The Commission further retains the discretion to declare after 
    40 rounds that the auction will end after some specified number of 
    additional rounds. Bids will be accepted only on licenses where the 
    high bid has increased in the last three rounds. This will deter 
    bidders from continuing to bid on a few low value licenses solely to 
    delay the closing of the auction. It also will enable the Commission to 
    end the auction when it determines that the benefits of terminating the 
    auction and issuing licenses exceed the likely benefits of continuing 
    to allow bidding. The Commission will announce by Public Notice the 
    number of remaining rounds and other final bidding procedures. In this 
    Eighth R&O, the Commission delegates authority to the Bureau to issue 
    such Public Notices.
        68. Activity Rules. In the Further Notice, the Commission proposed 
    that if simultaneous multiple round auctions are used for the upper 10 
    MHz block, the Commission would use activity rules the same as or 
    similar to those used in simultaneous multiple round bidding for MTA-
    based PCS licenses. The Commission has used the Milgrom-Wilson activity 
    rule to award broadband and narrowband PCS licenses. In the Competitive 
    Bidding Fifth R&O, the Commission permitted broadband PCS bidders one 
    ``automatic'' waiver from the activity rule during each stage of an 
    auction. An automatic waiver is exercised by the Commission if a bidder 
    fails to bid and fails to submit a ``proactive'' waiver, unless the 
    bidder chooses to override the automatic waiver process to 
    intentionally decrease eligibility: a ``proactive'' waiver is one which 
    can be submitted by the bidder when it chooses not to bid in a round 
    and wishes to maintain its current eligibility level. With respect to 
    broadband PCS auctions, the Commission initially determined that only 
    proactive waivers, and not automatic waivers, would keep an auction 
    open. In that context, however, the Commission later modified the rule 
    by retaining the discretion to keep an auction open even if no new 
    acceptable bids and no proactive waivers are submitted in a single 
    round. The Commission will employ the Milgrom-Wilson activity rule in 
    conjunction with the simultaneous stopping rule. Under the Milgrom-
    Wilson approach, the minimum activity level, measured as a fraction of 
    the bidder's eligibility in the current round, increases during the 
    course of the auction. The three-stage Milgrom-Wilson approach 
    encourages bidders to participate in early rounds by limiting their 
    maximum participation to some multiple of their minimum participation 
    level.
        69. Absent waivers, a bidder's eligibility (in terms of activity 
    units) in the current round is determined by the bidder's activity 
    level and eligibility in the previous round. In the first round, 
    however, eligibility is determined by the bidder's upfront payment and 
    is equal to the upfront payment divided by $0.02 per activity unit.
        70. In each round of Stage I, a bidder who wishes to maintain its 
    current eligibility must be active on licenses encompassing at least 
    one-half (50 percent) of the activity units for which it currently is 
    eligible. Failure to maintain the requisite activity level will result 
    in a reduction in the amount of activity units upon which a bidder will 
    be eligible to bid in the next round of bidding (unless an activity 
    rule waiver is used). During Stage I, if bidding activity is below the 
    required minimum level, eligibility in the next round will be 
    calculated by multiplying the current round activity by two. 
    Eligibility for each applicant in the first round of the auction is 
    determined by the amount of the upfront payment received and the 
    licenses identified in its auction application. In each round of Stage 
    II, a bidder who wishes to maintain its current eligibility in the next 
    round is required to be active on at least 75 percent of the activity 
    units for which it is eligible in the current round. During Stage II, 
    if activity is below the required minimum level, eligibility in the 
    next round will be calculated by multiplying the current round activity 
    by four-thirds (\4/3\). In each round of Stage III, a bidder who wishes 
    to maintain its current eligibility must be active on licenses 
    encompassing at least 95 percent of the activity units for which it is 
    eligible in the current round. In Stage III, if activity in the current 
    round is below 95 percent of current eligibility, eligibility in the 
    next round will be calculated by multiplying the current round activity 
    by twenty nineteenths (\20/19\). The Commission reserve the discretion 
    to set and, by announcement before or during the auction, vary the 
    requisite minimum activity levels (and associated eligibility 
    calculations) for each auction stage. Retaining this flexibility will 
    improve the Commission's ability to control the pace of the auction and 
    help ensure that the auction is completed within a reasonable period of 
    time.
        71. As in prior auctions, the Commission will determine the 
    transition from one stage to the next in the 800 MHz SMR auction by the 
    aggregate level of bidding activity, subject to its discretion. The 
    transition rule also may be defined in terms of the ``auction activity 
    level''--the sum of activity units of those licenses whose high bid 
    increased in the current round, as a percentage of the total activity 
    units of all licenses in that auction. The auction will start in Stage 
    I and move to Stage II when the auction activity level is below ten 
    percent for three consecutive rounds in Stage I. The auction will move 
    from Stage II to Stage III when the auction activity level is below 
    five percent for three consecutive rounds in Stage II. In no case can 
    the auction revert to an earlier stage. The Commission retains the 
    discretion, however, to determine and announce during the course of an 
    auction when, and if, to move from one auction stage to the next. These 
    determinations will be based on a variety of measures of bidder 
    activity including, but not limited to, the auction activity level 
    defined above, the percentage of licenses (measured in terms of 
    activity units) on which there are new bids, the number of new bids, 
    and the percentage increase in revenue.
        72. To avoid the consequences of clerical errors and to compensate 
    for unusual circumstances that might delay a bidder's bid preparation 
    or submission on a particular day, the Commission will provide bidders 
    with five activity rule waivers that may be used in any round during 
    the course of the auction. 
    
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    If a bidder's activity level is below the required activity level a 
    waiver automatically will be applied. That is, if a bidder fails to 
    submit a bid in a round, and its activity level from any ``standing'' 
    high bids (i.e., high bids at the end of the bid withdrawal period in 
    the previous round) falls below its required activity level, a waiver 
    automatically will be applied. A waiver will preserve current 
    eligibility in the next round, but cannot be used to correct an error 
    in the bid amount. An activity rule waiver applies to an entire round 
    of bidding and not to a particular EA service area.
        73. Bidders will be afforded an opportunity to override the 
    automatic waiver mechanism when they place a bid, if they wish to 
    reduce their bidding eligibility and do not want to use a waiver to 
    retain their eligibility at its current level. If a bidder overrides 
    the automatic waiver mechanism, its eligibility permanently will be 
    reduced, and it will not be permitted to regain its bidding eligibility 
    from a previous round. An automatic waiver invoked in a round in which 
    there are no valid bids will not keep the auction open. Bidders will 
    have the option to enter a ``proactive'' waiver during the bid 
    submission period. If a bidder submits a proactive waiver in a round in 
    which no other bidding activity occurs, the auction will remain open.
        74. The Commission retains the discretion to issue additional 
    waivers during the course of an auction for circumstances beyond a 
    bidder's control. The Commission also retains the flexibility to 
    adjust, by Public Notice prior to an auction, the number of waivers 
    permitted, or to institute a rule that allows one waiver during a 
    specified number of bidding rounds or during specified stages of the 
    auction. In this Eighth Report and Order, the Commission delegated to 
    the Bureau the discretion to issue additional waivers or restrict the 
    use of such waivers.
    2. License Grouping
        75. In the Further Notice, the Commission tentatively concluded 
    that if simultaneous multiple round auctions were used for the 800 MHz 
    SMR wide-area spectrum blocks, the wide-area licenses covering these 
    spectrum blocks should be auctioned simultaneously, because of the 
    relatively high value and significant interdependence of the licenses.
        76. The Commission believes that the licenses for the upper 10 MHz 
    band are significantly interdependent. The Commission believes that 
    grouping interdependent licenses and putting them up for bid at the 
    same time will facilitate awarding licenses to bidders who value them 
    most highly by providing bidders with information about the prices of 
    complementary and substitutable licenses during the course of an 
    auction. Because potential bidders may be interested in aggregating 
    spectrum across geographic areas as well as across spectrum blocks, the 
    Commission disagrees with Cellcall's suggestion to auction each 
    geographic area individually. As a result, the Commission concludes 
    that all EA licenses for the upper 10 MHz block should be auctioned 
    simultaneously. The Commission further concludes that holding a single 
    auction for all 176 EAs in the 800 MHz SMR band will be the fairest, 
    fastest, and most efficient means of distributing these licenses.
    3. Bidding Issues for Upper 10 MHz Block of 800 MHz SMR Spectrum
        77. Bidding Procedures. In the Further Notice, the Commission 
    proposed that if simultaneous multiple round auctions are used for 
    wide-area SMR licenses, the Commission would use the same or similar 
    bidding procedures to those used in simultaneous multiple round bidding 
    for broadband PCS licenses. The Commission adopts the same bidding 
    procedures used for MTA-based PCS licenses. Under these procedures, 
    bidders will be able to submit bids via remote bidding, using special 
    bidding software, or via telephone. The Commission has established a 
    schedule of fees that participants in the competitive bidding process 
    will be assessed for certain on-line computer services, bidding 
    software, and for Bidder Information Packages. In addition, bidders 
    will be permitted to bid electronically only if they have filed a 
    short-form application electronically. Bidders who file their short-
    form manually may bid only telephonically. When submitting bids 
    telephonically, bidders may utilize the Internet to learn the round-by-
    round results of the auction. Online services such as CompuServe, 
    Prodigy, and America Online provide Internet access at a reasonable 
    cost. Bidders also may, at negligible cost, use a computerized bulletin 
    board service, accessible by telephone lines, from which auction 
    results can be downloaded to a personal computer. The Commission 
    intends to hold a seminar for prospective bidders to acquaint them with 
    these bidding procedures.
        78. Bid Increments. In the Further Notice, the Commission proposed 
    that if simultaneous multiple round auctions are used for the upper 10 
    MHz block, the Commission would use the same or similar procedures for 
    bid increments as those used in simultaneous multiple round bidding for 
    MTA-based PCS licenses.
        79. The Commission will announce, by Public Notice prior to the 
    auction, the general guidelines for bid increments. The Commission 
    retains the discretion to set and, by announcement before or during the 
    auction, vary the minimum bid increments for individual licenses or 
    groups of licenses over the course of the auction.
        80. Duration of Bidding Rounds. In simultaneous multiple round 
    auctions, the Commission recognize that bidders may need a significant 
    amount of time to evaluate back-up strategies and develop their bidding 
    plans. The Commission delegated to the Bureau the discretion to vary 
    the duration of the bidding rounds or the interval at which bids are 
    accepted (e.g., to run more than one round per day) in order to move 
    the auction to closure more quickly. The Bureau will announce any 
    changes to the duration of and intervals between bidding rounds, either 
    by Public Notice prior to the auction or by announcement during the 
    auction.
    4. Procedural and Payment Issues
        81. Pre-Auction Application Procedures. In the Competitive Bidding 
    Second R&O, the Commission determined that it should require only a 
    short-form application (FCC Form 175) prior to auction, and that only 
    winning bidders should be required to submit a long-form license 
    application (FCC Form 600) after the auction. In this connection, the 
    Commission determined that such a procedure would fulfill the statutory 
    requirements and objectives and adequately protect the public interest. 
    In the Further Notice, the Commission proposed to treat all wide-area 
    applicants as initial applicants for public notice, application 
    processing, and competitive bidding purposes, regardless of whether 
    they already are incumbent licensees in the 800 MHz band. In addition 
    in the Further Notice, the Commission proposed to require applicants 
    for wide-area SMR licenses to file an initial ``short-form'' 
    application in order to qualify for competitive bidding.
        82. The Commission will extend the pre-auction application 
    procedures established in the Competitive Bidding Second R&O to the 
    competitive bidding process for the upper 10 MHz block. With respect to 
    the definition of ``initial'' application in the upper 10 MHz block of 
    800 MHz SMR spectrum, the Commission believes that the most appropriate 
    basis for this determination is an evaluation of the nature of the EA 
    license. As EA licensees will gain use of 
    
    [[Page 6148]]
    a large geographic area and the freedom to locate base stations 
    anywhere within that larger geographic region, they differ from the 
    existing 800 MHz SMR licensees that essentially are confined to smaller 
    geographic areas, are site-specific, and do not encompass a large 
    number of frequencies. Accordingly, the Commission will treat all EA 
    applicants as initial applicants for public notice, application 
    processing, and auction purposes, regardless of whether they already 
    are incumbent operators.
        83. Prior to the start of the 800 MHz SMR auction, the Commission 
    will release an initial Public Notice announcing the auction. The 
    initial Public Notice will specify the licenses to be auctioned and the 
    time and place of the auction in the event that mutually exclusive 
    applications are filed. The Public Notice will specify the method of 
    competitive bidding to be used, applicable bid submission procedures, 
    stopping rules, activity rules, the deadline by which short-form 
    applications must be filed, and the amounts and deadlines for 
    submitting upfront payments. The Commission will not accept 
    applications filed before or after the dates specified in the Public 
    Notice. Applications submitted before the release of the Public Notice 
    will be returned as premature. Likewise, applications submitted after 
    the deadline specified by the Public Notice will be dismissed, with 
    prejudice, as untimely.
        84. Soon after the release of the initial Public Notice, a Bidder 
    Information Package will be made available to prospective bidders. The 
    Bidder Information Package for the 800 MHz SMR service will contain 
    information on the incumbents occupying blocks on which bidding will be 
    available.
        85. Section 309(j)(5) provides that no party may participate in an 
    auction ``unless such bidder submits such information and assurances as 
    the Commission may require to demonstrate that such bidder's 
    application is acceptable for filing.'' Moreover, ``[n]o license shall 
    be granted to an applicant selected pursuant to this subsection unless 
    the Commission determines that the applicant is qualified pursuant to 
    Section 309(a), Section 308(b), and Section 310'' of the Communications 
    Act. As the legislative history of Section 309(j) makes clear, the 
    Commission may require that bidders' applications contain all 
    information and documentation sufficient to demonstrate that the 
    application is not in violation of the Commission's rules, and the 
    Commission will dismiss applications not meeting those requirements 
    prior to the auction.
        86. Thus, all bidders will be required to submit short-form 
    applications on FCC Form 175 (and FCC Form 175-S, if applicable), by 
    the date specified in the initial Public Notice. Applicants are 
    encouraged to file FCC Form 175 electronically. Detailed instructions 
    regarding electronic filing will be contained in the Bidder Information 
    Package. Those applicants filing manually will be required to submit 
    one paper original and one diskette original of their application, as 
    well as two diskette copies. In addition, applicants filing manually 
    will not be permitted to bid electronically. The short-form 
    applications will require applicants to provide the information 
    required by Section 1.2105(a)(2) of the Commission's rules. 
    Specifically, each applicant will be required to specify on its FCC 
    Form 175 application certain identifying information, including its 
    status as a designated entity, its classification (i.e., individual, 
    corporation, partnership, trust, or other), the EAs and spectrum blocks 
    for which it is applying, and, assuming that the licenses will be 
    auctioned, the names of persons authorized to place or withdraw a bid 
    on its behalf. The Commission requests applicants indicate their 
    designated entity status in order to assist us in analyzing the 
    applicant pool and the auction results to determine whether the 
    Commission has accomplished substantial participation by minorities, 
    women, small businesses, and rural telephone companies. In this 
    connection, the Commission notes that Section 309(j) of the 
    Communications Act requires us to prepare a report on the participation 
    of designated entities in the auction and in the provision of spectrum-
    based services.
        87. As the Commission indicated in the Competitive Bidding Second 
    R&O, if it receives only one application that is acceptable for filing 
    for a particular license, and thus there is no mutual exclusivity, the 
    Commission will issue a Public Notice cancelling the auction for this 
    license and establishing a date for the filing of a long-form 
    application, the acceptance of which will trigger the procedures 
    permitting petitions to deny. If no petitions to deny are filed, the 
    application will be grantable after 30 days. By ensuring that bidders 
    and license winners are serious, qualified applicants, these rules will 
    minimize the need to re-auction licenses and will prevent delays in the 
    provision of 800 MHz SMR service to the public. In response to those 
    commenters concerned about the ability of unsuccessful bidders to 
    participate in geographic-area licensing, the Commission reiterated its 
    decision in the First R&O that incumbents, post-auction, will be able 
    to trade-in their multiple licenses for a single authorization in a 
    particular area, provided certain conditions are satisfied.
        88. Amendments and Modifications. The Commission will adopt the 
    following procedures for amendments to and modifications of short-form 
    applications in the 800 MHz SMR service. Upon reviewing the short-form 
    applications, the Commission will issue a Public Notice listing all 
    defective applications, and applicants with minor defects will be given 
    an opportunity to cure them and resubmit a corrected version. By the 
    resubmission date, all applicants will be required to submit an upfront 
    payment to the Commission, as discussed below, to the Commission's 
    lock-box by the date specified in the Public Notice, which should be no 
    later than 14 days before the scheduled auction. After the Commission 
    receives from its lock-box bank the names of all applicants who have 
    submitted timely upfront payments, the Commission will issue a second 
    Public Notice announcing the names of all applicants that have been 
    determined to be qualified to bid. An applicant who fails to submit a 
    sufficient upfront payment to qualify it to bid on any license being 
    auctioned will not be identified on this Public Notice as a qualified 
    bidder. Each applicant listed on this Public Notice will be issued a 
    bidder identification number and further information and instructions 
    regarding auction procedures.
        89. On the date set for submission of corrected applications, 
    applicants that on their own have discovered minor errors in their 
    applications (e.g., typographical errors, incorrect license 
    designations, etc.) will be permitted to file corrected applications. 
    The Commission also will waive the ex parte rules as they apply to the 
    submission of amended short-form applications for the 800 MHz SMR 
    auctions, to maximize applicants' opportunities to seek Commission 
    staff advice on making such amendments. Applicants will not be 
    permitted to make any major modifications to their applications, 
    including, but not limited to, changes in license areas and changes in 
    control of the applicant, or additions of other bidders into the 
    bidding consortia, until after the auction. Applicants also may modify 
    their short-form applications to reflect formation of consortia or 
    changes in ownership at any time before or during an auction, provided 
    such changes will not result in a change in de jure or de facto control 
    of the applicant, 
    
    [[Page 6149]]
    and provided that the parties forming consortia or entering into 
    ownership agreements have not applied for licenses in any of the same 
    geographic license areas, i.e., EAs. In addition, applications that are 
    not signed will be dismissed as unacceptable for filing, as will 
    applications in which no market designations are made.
        90. In addition, a single member of a bidding consortium may 
    withdraw from a consortium only in a particular EA(s), but otherwise 
    remain in the consortium for purposes of bidding on all other markets 
    specified on the short-form application. However, such arrangements to 
    assign the member's interests in particular licenses to other 
    consortium members after the auction must be disclosed on an original 
    or amended short-form application, and a request to transfer or assign 
    the license also must be filed in conjunction with the long-form 
    application.
    5. Upfront Payments
        91. In the Competitive Bidding Second R&O, the Commission 
    established a minimum upfront payment of $2,500 and stated that this 
    amount could be modified on a service-specific basis. In the Further 
    Notice, the Commission proposed to require 800 MHz SMR auction 
    participants to tender in advance to the Commission a substantial 
    upfront payment, $0.02 per activity unit for the largest combination of 
    activity units on which a bidder anticipates bidding in any round, as a 
    condition of bidding in order to ensure that only serious, qualified 
    bidders participate in auctions, and to ensure payment of the monetary 
    assessment in the event of bid withdrawal or default. The Commission 
    also sought comment on the upfront payment formula and minimum upfront 
    payment most appropriate for the 800 MHz SMR service.
        92. The Commission adopts the standard $0.02 per activity unit 
    formula to calculate the upfront payment. The Commission also adopts a 
    minimum upfront payment of $2,500 for the 800 MHz SMR service. In the 
    initial Public Notice issued prior to the auction, the Commission will 
    announce population information corresponding to each license and the 
    upfront payment amount for each EA license. In general, population 
    coverage for each channel block in each EA will be based on a formula 
    that takes into account the presence of incumbent licensees.
        93. Upfront payments will be due by a date specified by Public 
    Notice, but generally no later than 14 days before a scheduled auction. 
    Each qualified bidder will be issued a bidder identification number and 
    further information and instructions regarding the auction procedures. 
    During the auction, bidders will be required to provide their bidding 
    identification numbers when submitting bids.
    6. Down Payments and Full Payments
        94. Down Payments. In the Competitive Bidding Second R&O, the 
    Commission generally required successful bidders to tender a 20 percent 
    down payment on their bids to discourage default between the auction 
    and licensing, and to ensure payment of the monetary assessment if such 
    default occurs. In the Further Notice, the Commission proposed to 
    require the winning bidders for 800 MHz SMR licenses to supplement 
    their upfront payments with a down payment sufficient to bring their 
    total deposits up to 20 percent of their winning bid(s).
        95. The Commission concludes that winning bidders must supplement 
    their upfront payments with a down payment sufficient to bring their 
    total deposits up to 20 percent of their winning bid(s). If the upfront 
    payment already tendered by a winning bidder, after deducting any bid 
    withdrawal and default payments due, amounts to 20 percent or more of 
    its winning bids, no additional deposit will be required. If the 
    upfront payment amount on deposit is greater than 20 percent of the 
    winning bid amount after deducting any bid withdrawal and default 
    payments due, the additional monies will be refunded. If a bidder has 
    withdrawn a bid or defaulted, but the amount of the payment cannot yet 
    be determined, the bidder will be required to make a deposit of 20 
    percent of the amount bid on such licenses. When it becomes possible to 
    calculate and assess the payment, any excess deposit will be refunded. 
    Upfront payments will be applied to such deposits, and to bid 
    withdrawal and default assessments due, before being applied toward the 
    bidder's down payment on licenses the bidder has won and seeks to 
    acquire.
        96. The Commission also will require winning bidders to submit the 
    required down payment by cashier's check or wire transfer to its lock-
    box bank by a date and time to be specified by Public Notice, generally 
    within five business days following the close of bidding. The 
    Commission will hold the down payment until the high bidder is awarded 
    the license and has paid the remaining balance due on such license, or 
    until the winning bidder is found unqualified to be a licensee or has 
    defaulted, in which case it will be returned, less applicable monetary 
    assessments. All auction winners generally will be required to make 
    full payment of the balance of their winning bids within five business 
    days following Public Notice that the Commission is prepared to award 
    the license. The Commission generally will grant uncontested licenses 
    within ten business days after receiving full payment. During the 
    period that deposits are held pending the ultimate award of the 
    license, the interest that accrues, if any, will be retained by the 
    U.S. Treasury.
        97. Long-Form Applications. The Commission will follow these 
    procedures if the winning bidder makes the down payment in a timely 
    manner: A long-form application filed on FCC Form 600 must be filed by 
    a date specified by Public Notice, generally within ten business days 
    after the close of bidding. After the Commission receives the winning 
    bidder's down payment and long-form application, the Commission will 
    review the long-form application to determine if it is acceptable for 
    filing. Upon acceptance for filing of the long-form application, the 
    Commission will issue a Public Notice announcing this fact, triggering 
    the filing window for petitions to deny. If the Commission denies all 
    petitions to deny, and otherwise is satisfied that the applicant is 
    qualified, the license(s) will be granted to the auction winner.
        98. Petitions to Deny and Limitations on Settlements. A party 
    filing a petition to deny against an 800 MHz SMR application will be 
    required to demonstrate standing and meet all other applicable filing 
    requirements. The restrictions in Section 90.162 were established to 
    prevent the filing of speculative applications and pleadings (or 
    threats of the same) designed to extract money from 800 MHz SMR 
    applicants. Thus, the Commission will limit the consideration that an 
    applicant or petitioner is permitted to receive for agreeing to 
    withdraw an application or petition to deny to the legitimate and 
    prudent expenses of the withdrawing applicant or petitioner.
        99. With respect to petitions to deny, the Commission need not 
    conduct a hearing before denying an application if it determines that 
    an applicant is not qualified and no substantial and material issue of 
    fact exists concerning that determination. In the event the Commission 
    identifies substantial and material issues of fact, Section 309(i)(2) 
    of the Communications Act permits the submission of all or part of 
    evidence in written form in any hearing and allows employees other than 
    administrative law judges to preside over the taking of written 
    evidence. 
    
    [[Page 6150]]
    
        100. Bid Withdrawal, Default, and Disqualification. In the Further 
    Notice, the Commission proposed to adopt bid withdrawal, default, and 
    disqualification rules for the 800 MHz SMR service, based on the 
    procedures established in its general competitive bidding rules.
        101. The Commission believes that forfeiture of the entire upfront 
    payment is too extreme for the bidder who withdraws only one bid. Since 
    commenters have not stated why the 800 MHz SMR service differs in this 
    respect from the narrowband and broadband PCS services, there is no 
    justification for departing from the already tested narrowband and 
    broadband PCS withdrawal, default, and disqualification assessments. 
    Therefore, the Commission believes applying Section 1.2104(g)(1) of its 
    Rules to the 800 MHz SMR auction is more equitable and is consistent 
    with its practice in prior auctions. Section 1.2104(g)(1) provides that 
    any bidder that withdraws a high bid during an auction before the 
    Commission declares bidding closed will be required to reimburse the 
    Commission in the amount of the difference between its high bid and the 
    amount of the winning bid the next time the license is offered by the 
    Commission, if this subsequent winning bid is lower than the withdrawn 
    bid.
        102. If a license is re-offered by auction, the ``winning bid'' 
    refers to the high bid in the auction in which the license is re-
    offered. If a license is re-offered in the same auction, the winning 
    bid refers to the high bid amount, made subsequent to the withdrawal, 
    in that auction. If the subsequent high bidder also withdraws its bid, 
    that bidder will be required to pay an assessment equal to the 
    difference between its withdrawn bid and the amount of the subsequent 
    winning bid the next time the license is offered by the Commission. If 
    a license which is the subject of withdrawal or default is not re-
    auctioned, but instead is offered to the highest losing bidders in the 
    initial auction, the ``winning bid'' refers to the bid of the highest 
    bidder who accepts the offer. Losing bidders will not be required to 
    accept the offer, i.e., they may decline without penalty. The 
    Commission wish to encourage losing bidders in simultaneous multiple 
    round auctions to bid on other licenses, and therefore the Commission 
    will not hold them to their losing bids on a license for which a bidder 
    has withdrawn a bid or on which a bidder has defaulted.
        103. After bidding closes, the Commission will apply Section 
    1.2104(g)(2) of its Rules to assess a defaulting auction winner an 
    additional payment of three percent of the subsequent winning bid or 
    three percent of the amount of the defaulting bid, whichever is less. 
    The additional three percent payment is designed to encourage bidders 
    who wish to withdraw their bids to do so before bidding ceases. The 
    Commission will hold deposits made by defaulting or disqualified 
    auction winners until full payment is made. In the unlikely event that 
    there is more than one bid withdrawal on the same license, the 
    Commission will hold each withdrawing bidder responsible for the 
    difference between its withdrawn bid and the amount of the winning bid 
    the next time the licenses are offered for auction by the Commission.
        104. These payment requirements will discourage default and ensure 
    that bidders meet all eligibility and qualification requirements. If a 
    default or disqualification involves gross misconduct, 
    misrepresentation or bad faith by an applicant, the Commission may 
    declare the applicant and its principals ineligible to bid in future 
    auctions, and may take any other action that it deems necessary, 
    including institution of proceedings to revoke any existing licenses 
    held by the applicant.
        105. If the EA license winner defaults, is otherwise disqualified 
    after having made the required down payment, or the license is 
    terminated or revoked, then the Commission will re-auction the license. 
    If the default occurs within five business days after the bidding has 
    closed, the Commission retains the discretion to offer the license to 
    the second highest bidder at its final bid level, or if that bidder 
    declines the offer, to offer the license to other bidders (in 
    descending order of their bid amounts) at the final bid levels. If only 
    a short time has passed since the initial auction, the Commission may 
    choose to offer the license to the highest losing bidders if the cost 
    of running another auction exceeds the benefits.
    7. Regulatory Safeguards
        106. Rules Prohibiting Collusion. The Commission's rules prevent 
    parties from agreeing in advance to bidding strategies that divide the 
    market according to their strategic interests and/or disadvantage other 
    bidders. Bidders will be required to (i) disclose all parties with whom 
    they have entered into any agreement that relates to the competitive 
    bidding process, and (ii) certify they have not entered into any 
    explicit or implicit agreements, arrangements, or understandings with 
    any parties, other than those identified, regarding the amount of their 
    bid, bidding strategies, particular properties on which they will or 
    will not bid or any similar agreement.
        107. The Commission will subject 800 MHz SMR licensees to the 
    reporting requirements and rules prohibiting collusion embodied in 
    Sections 1.2105 and 1.2107 of the Commission's rules. Bidders will be 
    required by Section 1.2105(a)(2) to identify on their FCC Form 175 
    applications all parties with whom they have entered into any 
    consortium arrangements, joint ventures, partnerships or other 
    agreements or understandings which relate to the competitive bidding 
    process. If parties agree in principle on all material terms, those 
    parties must be identified on the short-form application, even if the 
    agreement has not been reduced to writing. Only at such level of 
    agreement can it be fairly stated that the parties have entered into a 
    bidding consortium or other joint bidding arrangement. If the parties 
    have not agreed in principle by the short-form filing deadline, an 
    applicant would not include the names of those parties on its 
    application, and may not continue negotiations with those parties. 
    Bidders will be required to certify that they have not entered and will 
    not enter into any explicit or implicit agreements, arrangements or 
    understandings with any parties, other than those identified, regarding 
    the amount of their bid, bidding strategies or the particular 
    properties on which they will or will not bid. In this connection, any 
    communications between EA bidders and incumbent licensees should take 
    place prior to the deadline for filing FCC Form 175 applications.
        108. After the FCC Form 175 filing deadline, applicants may not 
    discuss the substance of their bids or bidding strategies with bidders, 
    other than those identified on their FCC Form 175 application, that are 
    bidding in the same license areas, i.e., EAs. This prohibition on 
    discussions extends to providing indirect information that affects bids 
    or bidding strategy. For example two applicants not listed on each 
    other's FCC Form 175 applications for the 800 MHz SMR auctions may not 
    discuss bids or bidding strategies with each other if they are bidding 
    for licenses in any of the same EAs, even if they are not bidding for 
    the same spectrum blocks.
        109. Section 1.2105(c) of the Commission's rules, however, provides 
    certain exceptions to the rule prohibiting discussions with other 
    applicants after the filing of the short-form application. First, 
    applicants may make agreements to bid jointly for licenses, so long as 
    the applicants have not applied for licenses in any of the same license 
    areas. Second, an applicant 
    
    [[Page 6151]]
    may modify its short-form application to reflect formation of bidding 
    agreements or changes in ownership at any time before or during the 
    auction, as long as the changes do not result in change of de jure or 
    de facto control of the applicant, and the parties forming the bidding 
    agreement have not applied for licenses in any of the same license 
    areas. Finally, a holder of a non-controlling attributable interest in 
    an applicant may acquire an ownership interest in, or enter into a 
    bidding agreement with other applicants in the same license area, if 
    (1) the owner of the attributable interest certifies that it has not 
    communicated and will not communicate bids or bidding strategies of 
    more than one of the applicants in which it holds an attributable 
    interest or with which it has a bidding agreement; and (2) the 
    arrangements do not result in any change of control of the applicant. 
    However, once the short-form application has been filed, a party with 
    an attributable interest in once bidder may not acquire a controlling 
    interest in another bidder bidding for licenses in any of the same 
    license areas.
        110. Where the applicant does not meet one of these exceptions, it 
    may not discuss matters relating to bidding with other applicants. Even 
    when an applicant has withdrawn its application after the short-form 
    filing deadline, the applicant may not enter into a bidding agreement 
    with another applicant bidding on authorizations in the license areas 
    from which the first applicant withdrew.
        111. If an applicant has the high bid for a license, Section 
    1.2107(d) of the Commission's rules requires the applicant to include 
    with its long-form application a detailed explanation of the terms and 
    conditions and parties involved in any bidding consortia, joint 
    venture, partnership or other agreement or arrangement it had entered 
    into relating to the competitive bidding process prior to the time 
    bidding was completed. Under the Commission's rules prohibiting 
    collusion, the term ``applicant'' includes the entity submitting the 
    application, owners of 5 percent or more of the entity, and all 
    officers and directors of such entity.
        112. The Commission noted that even where the applicant discloses 
    parties with whom it has reached on agreement on the short-form 
    application, thereby permitting discussions with those parties, the 
    applicant nevertheless is subject to existing antitrust laws. As 
    discussed in the Competitive Bidding Fourth Memorandum Opinion & Order 
    in PP Docket No. 93-253, 59 FR 53364 (October 24, 1994) (``Competitive 
    Bidding MO&O''), under the antitrust laws, the parties to an agreement 
    may not discuss bid prices if they have applied for licenses in the 
    same license area. In addition, agreements between actual or potential 
    competitors to submit collusive, non-competitive or rigged bids are per 
    se violations of Section One of the Sherman Antitrust Act. Further, 
    actual or potential competitors may not agree to divide territories 
    horizontally in order to minimize competition, regardless of whether 
    they split a license area in which they both do business, or whether 
    they merely reserve one license area for one and another for the other.
        113. The Commission noted that where specific instances of 
    collusion in the competitive bidding process are alleged during the 
    petition to deny process, the Commission may conduct an investigation 
    or refer such complaints to the United States Department of Justice for 
    investigation. Bidders who are found to have violated the antitrust 
    laws, in addition to any penalties they incur under the antitrust laws, 
    or who are found to have violated the Commission's rules in connection 
    with their participation in the auction process may be subject to a 
    variety of sanctions, including forfeiture of their down payment or 
    their full bid amount, revocation of their license(s), and may be 
    prohibited from participating in future auctions.
        114. Transfer Disclosure Requirements. In Section 309(j)(4)(E) of 
    the Communications Act, Congress directed the Commission to ``require 
    such transfer disclosures and anti-trafficking restrictions and payment 
    schedules as may be necessary to prevent unjust enrichment as a result 
    of the methods employed to issue licenses and permits.'' In the 
    Competitive Bidding Second R&O, the Commission adopted safeguards 
    designed to ensure that the requirements of Section 309(j)(4)(E) are 
    satisfied. The Commission decided that it was important to monitor 
    transfers of licenses awarded by competitive bidding to accumulate the 
    necessary data to evaluate its auction designs and to judge whether 
    ``licenses [have been] issued for bids that fall short of the true 
    market value of the license.'' Therefore, the Commission imposed a 
    transfer disclosure requirement on licenses obtained through the 
    competitive bidding process, whether such licenses were held by a 
    designated entity or not. The Commission proposed in the Further Notice 
    to adopt the transfer disclosure requirements of Section 1.2111(a) of 
    its Rules to all 800 MHz SMR licenses obtained through the competitive 
    bidding process.
        115. The Commission believes that a three-year holding period is 
    unnecessary. In other auctionable services, the Commission has required 
    holding periods only in limited circumstances. For example, the 
    Commission's broadband PCS rules require those successful bidders 
    benefitting from special provisions for designated entities to hold 
    their licenses for a certain period of time and restrict the type of 
    transfers and assignments of such licenses during that time. The 
    Commission is not adopting special provisions for designated entities 
    on the upper 10 MHz block of 800 MHz SMR spectrum. When the Commission 
    has not established special provisions for designated entities in other 
    auctionable services, the Commission generally has required only 
    disclosure of certain information regarding transfers or assignments 
    within the first three years after initial license grant. The 
    Commission concludes that this is the most appropriate course of action 
    here. Thus, the Commission will apply Section 1.2111(a) to all 800 MHz 
    SMR licenses obtained through the competitive bidding process. 
    Generally, licensees transferring their licenses within three years 
    after the initial license grant will be required to file, together with 
    their transfer applications, the associated contracts for sale, option 
    agreements, management agreements, and all other documents disclosing 
    the total consideration received in return for the transfer of their 
    licenses. The Commission will give particular scrutiny to auction 
    winners who have not yet begun commercial service and who seek approval 
    for a transfer of control or assignment of their licenses within three 
    years after the initial license grant, so that the Commission may 
    determine if any unforeseen problems relating to unjust enrichment have 
    arisen.
        116. Performance Requirements. The Communications Act requires the 
    Commission to ``include performance requirements, such as appropriate 
    deadlines and penalties for performance failures, to ensure prompt 
    delivery of service to rural areas, to prevent stockpiling or 
    warehousing of spectrum by licensees or permittees, and to promote 
    investment in and rapid deployment of new technologies and services.'' 
    In the Competitive Bidding Second R&O, the Commission decided it was 
    unnecessary and undesirable to impose additional performance 
    requirements, beyond those already provided in the service rules, for 
    all auctionable services. In the Further Notice, the Commission did not 
    propose 
    
    [[Page 6152]]
    to adopt any additional performance requirements for competitive 
    bidding purposes.
        117. The service rules for the upper 10 MHz block contain specific 
    performance requirements, such as the requirement to construct within a 
    specific period of time, channel construction requirements, and interim 
    coverage requirements. Because the failure to meet these requirements 
    will result in automatic cancellation of the EA license, the Commission 
    believes this is a sufficient incentive to promote prompt service and 
    prevent spectrum warehousing. Thus, the Commission will not adopt any 
    performance requirements for the 800 MHz SMR service beyond those 
    required by Section 90.685 of the Rules.
    8. Treatment of Designated Entities
        118. Overview, Objectives, and the Impact of Adarand Constructors 
    v. Pena. The Communications Act provides that, in developing 
    competitive bidding procedures, the Commission shall consider various 
    statutory objectives and consider several alternative methods for 
    achieving them. Specifically, the statute provides that in establishing 
    eligibility criteria and bidding methodologies the Commission shall 
    ``promot[e] economic opportunity and competition and ensur[e] that new 
    and innovative technologies are readily accessible to the American 
    people by avoiding excessive concentration of licenses and by 
    disseminating licenses among a wide variety of applicants, including 
    small businesses, rural telephone companies, and businesses owned by 
    members of minority groups and women.'' Small businesses, rural 
    telephone companies and businesses owned by minorities and/or women are 
    collectively referred to as ``designated entities.'' Section 
    309(j)(4)(A) provides that in order to promote the Communications Act's 
    objectives, the Commission shall ``consider alternative payment 
    schedules and methods of calculation, including lump sums or guaranteed 
    installment payments, with or without royalty payments, or other 
    schedules or methods * * * and combinations of such schedules and 
    methods.'' The Communications Act also requires the Commission to 
    ``ensure that small businesses, rural telephone companies, and 
    businesses owned by members of minority groups and women are given the 
    opportunity to participate in the provision of spectrum-based 
    services.''
        119. To meet the statutory objectives of providing opportunities 
    for designated entities, the Commission has employed a wide range of 
    special provisions and eligibility criteria in other spectrum-based 
    services. The measures adopted thus far for each service were 
    established after closely examining the specific characteristics of the 
    service and determining whether any particular barriers to accessing 
    capital impeded opportunities for designated entities. After examining 
    the record in the Competitive Bidding proceeding in PP Docket 93-253, 
    the Commission established provisions to enable designated entities to 
    overcome the barriers to accessing capital in each particular service. 
    Moreover, these provisions were designed to increase the likelihood 
    that designated entities who win licenses in the auctions become strong 
    competitors in the provision of wireless services.
        120. Impact of Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Pena. In the broadband 
    PCS docket, the Commission determined that, on separate entrepreneurs' 
    blocks, the bidding credits would vary according to the type of 
    designated entity that applied (i.e., a small business would receive a 
    10 percent bidding credit, a business owned by minorities or women 
    would receive a 15 percent bidding credit, and a small business owned 
    by women or minorities would receive an aggregated bidding credit of 25 
    percent), and all entrepreneurs' block licensees would be eligible for 
    varying degrees of installment payments. The Commission adopted special 
    provisions for businesses owned by members of minority groups or women 
    and analyzed their constitutionality using the ``intermediate 
    scrutiny'' standard of review articulated in Metro Broadcasting v. FCC, 
    because, as in Metro Broadcasting, the proposed provisions involved 
    Congressionally-mandated benign race- and gender-conscious measures.
        121. After the release of the Further Notice, the Supreme Court 
    decided Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Pena, which overruled Metro 
    Broadcasting ``to the extent that Metro Broadcasting is inconsistent 
    with'' the holding in Adarand that ``all racial classifications . . . 
    must be analyzed by a reviewing court under strict scrutiny.'' As a 
    result of the Adarand decision, the constitutionality of any federal 
    program that makes distinctions on the basis of race must serve a 
    compelling governmental interest and must be narrowly tailored to serve 
    that interest. In this connection, the Bureau issued a Public Notice 
    requesting further comment on the effect of the decision in Adarand on 
    the proposals made in the Further Notice in order to supplement the 
    record in the 800 MHz SMR proceeding.
        122. Special Provisions for Designated Entities. In instructing the 
    Commission to ensure the opportunity for designated entities to 
    participate in auctions and provision of spectrum-based services, 
    Congress was well aware of the problems that designated entities would 
    have in competing against large, well-capitalized companies in auctions 
    and the difficulties these bidders encounter in accessing capital. For 
    example, the legislative history accompanying Congress's grant of 
    auction authority states generally that the Commission's regulations 
    ``must promote economic opportunity and competition,'' and ``[t]he 
    Commission will realize these goals by avoiding excessive concentration 
    of licenses and by disseminating licenses among a wide variety of 
    applicants, including small businesses and businesses owned by members 
    of minority groups and women.'' The House Report states that the House 
    Committee was concerned that, ``unless the Commission is sensitive to 
    the need to maintain opportunities for small businesses, competitive 
    bidding could result in a significant increase in concentration in the 
    telecommunications industries.'' More specifically, the House Committee 
    was concerned that adoption of competitive bidding should not have the 
    effect of ``excluding'' small businesses from the Commission's 
    licensing procedures, and anticipated that the Commission would adopt 
    regulations to ensure that small businesses would ``continue to have 
    opportunities to become licensees.''
        123. Consistent with Congress's concern that auctions not operate 
    to exclude small businesses, the provisions relating to installment 
    payments clearly were intended to assist small businesses. The House 
    Report states that these related provisions were drafted to ``ensure 
    that all small businesses will be covered by the Commission's 
    regulations, including those owned by members of minority groups and 
    women.'' It also states that the provisions in Section 309(j)(4)(A) 
    relating to installment payments were intended to promote economic 
    opportunity by ensuring that competitive bidding does not inadvertently 
    favor incumbents with deep pockets ``over new companies or start-ups.''
        124. In addition, with regard to access to capital, Congress 
    previously made specific findings in the Small Business Credit and 
    Business Opportunity Enhancement Act of 1992, that ``small business 
    concerns, which represent higher degrees of risk in financial markets 
    than do large businesses, are 
    
    [[Page 6153]]
    experiencing increased difficulties in obtaining credit.'' As a result 
    of these difficulties, Congress resolved to consider carefully 
    legislation and regulations ``to ensure that small business concerns 
    are not negatively impacted'' and to give priority to passage of 
    ``legislation and regulations that enhance the viability of small 
    business concerns.''
        125. In the 800 MHz SMR service, as in other auctionable services, 
    the Commission is committed to meeting the statutory objectives of 
    promoting economic opportunity and competition, of avoiding excessive 
    concentration of licenses, and of ensuring access to new and innovative 
    technologies by disseminating licenses among a wide variety of 
    applicants, including small businesses, rural telephone companies, and 
    businesses owned by members of minority groups and women. Accordingly, 
    in balancing the objectives set forth in the Communications Act, the 
    Further Notice proposed bidding credits and a tax certificate program 
    for businesses owned by women and minorities and installment payments 
    for small businesses on all 800 MHz SMR channel blocks in each MTA.
        126. The Commission concludes that special provisions for small 
    businesses are appropriate for the 800 MHz SMR service because build-
    out of an EA license may require a significant amount of capital. 
    Although the Commission believes that the 800 MHz SMR service is less 
    capital intensive than PCS, the Commission also believes that it is 
    more capital-intensive than the 900 MHz SMR service. The Commission 
    further believes that small entities may be disadvantaged in their 
    efforts of acquiring 800 MHz SMR licenses if required to bid against 
    existing large companies. For instance, if one or more of these big 
    firms targets a market for strategic reasons, there is almost no 
    likelihood that it could be outbid by a small business. The Commission 
    will address this potential outcome in two ways. First, for the upper 
    10 MHz block, the Commission will adopt the same ``tiered'' installment 
    payments approach adopted in the 900 MHz SMR service. Specifically, 
    licensees who qualify for installment payments will be entitled to pay 
    their winning bid amount in quarterly installments over the term of the 
    license, with interest charges to be fixed at the time of licensing at 
    a rate equal to the rate for ten-year U.S. Treasury obligations plus 
    2.5 percent. Small businesses with gross revenues less than $15 million 
    will be required to pay interest only for the first two years of the 
    license term at the same interest rate as set forth above. Interest 
    will accrue at the Treasury note rate plus 2.5 percent. Small 
    businesses with gross revenues less that $3 million will be able to 
    make interest-only payments for five years. Interest will accrue at the 
    Treasury note rate without the additional 2.5 percent. Timely payment 
    of all quarterly installments will be a condition of the license grant, 
    and failure to make such timely payment will be grounds for revocation 
    of the license. As the Commission have noted previously, allowing 
    installment payments reduces the amount of private financing needed by 
    prospective small business licensees and therefore mitigates the effect 
    of limited access to capital by small businesses. In determining 
    eligibility for these installment payment plans, the Commission will 
    not attribute gross revenues of investors that hold less than a 20 
    percent interest in the applicant, but the Commission will include the 
    gross revenues of the applicant's affiliates and investors with 
    ownership interests of 20 percent or more in the applicant. As has been 
    the case in prior auctions where special provisions for small 
    businesses have been made, it also is the Commission's expectation that 
    a qualifying small business or principals of a qualifying small 
    business will retain de facto and de jure control of the applicant. In 
    determining attribution when 800 MHz SMR licensees are held indirectly 
    through intervening corporate entities, the Commission will use the 
    same multiplier employed for the 900 MHz SMR service.
        127. Second, the Commission has proposed additional special 
    provisions for small businesses seeking licenses for the lower 80 and 
    General Category channels in the Second Further Notice of Proposed Rule 
    Making in PR Docket No. 93-144, because the Commission believes that 
    most, if not all, of the incumbent licensees relocated will qualify as 
    small businesses under its proposed definition, and the lower 80 and 
    General Category channels will be the spectrum to which they most 
    likely will be relocated. This approach is consistent with the 
    Commission's approach in the broadband PCS context in which the 
    Commission designated certain frequency blocks as ``entrepreneurs' 
    blocks'' and restricted eligibility based on size limitations. The 
    Commission also believes that the service areas and spectrum blocks for 
    the upper 10 MHz block the Commission adopted in the First R&O will 
    permit operators of smaller SMR systems to participate in the upper 10 
    MHz block auction.
        128. At this time the Commission concludes that there is an 
    insufficient record to support the adoption of special provisions 
    solely benefitting minority- and women-owned businesses (regardless of 
    size) for the upper 10 MHz block auction. The Commission notes, 
    however, that in the Second Further Notice of Proposed Rule Making, the 
    Commission is seeking comment on this issue with respect to the lower 
    80 and General Category channels. Moreover, the Commission believes 
    that most minority- and women-owned businesses will be able to take 
    advantage of the installment plan described above. The Commission 
    expects that the vast majority of minority- and women-owned businesses 
    will be able to qualify as small businesses under any definition the 
    Commission adopts.
        129. Partitioning. In the Further Notice, the Commission did not 
    propose any special provisions for rural telephone companies, on the 
    basis that: (1) they, like other wireline carriers, then were 
    ineligible to hold SMR licenses; (2) even if wireline entry into SMR 
    was permitted, the Commission questioned whether special bidding 
    provisions would be necessary to ensure the participation of rural 
    telephone companies in the provision of SMR service given the 
    relatively modest build-out costs involved to serve rural areas; and 
    (3) in view of the fact that rural telephone companies may use their 
    existing infrastructure to support integrated 800 MHz SMR service in 
    their rural service areas, the Commission anticipated that they would 
    have ample opportunity to participate in 800 MHz SMR.
        130. Since adoption of the Further Notice, rural telephone 
    companies have gained eligibility to hold SMR licenses. Thus, the 
    Commission concludes that rural telephone companies will be permitted 
    to acquire partitioned EA licenses in either of two ways: (1) They may 
    form bidding consortia to participate in auctions, and then partition 
    the licenses won among consortia participants; and (2) they may acquire 
    partitioned 800 MHz SMR licenses from other licensees through private 
    negotiation and agreement either before or after the auction. Each 
    member of a consortium will be required to file a long-form 
    application, following the auction, for its respective mutually agreed-
    upon geographic area. Partitioned areas must conform to established 
    geo-political boundaries (such as county lines), and each area must 
    include all portions of the wireline service area of the rural 
    telephone company applicant that lie within the EA service area. The 
    Commission also will use the definition for rural telephone companies 
    used in its 
    
    [[Page 6154]]
    broadband PCS and 900 MHz SMR rules. Thus, rural telephone companies 
    will be defined as ``local exchange carriers having 100,000 or fewer 
    access lines, including all affiliates.'' In the Second Further Notice 
    of Proposed Rule Making, the Commission seeks comment on its proposal 
    to extend the partitioning option to SMR licensees generally.
        131. Set-Aside Spectrum. In the Further Notice, the Commission 
    expressed its concern, based on its experience with PCS, that 
    designated entities may have difficulties competing for 800 MHz SMR 
    licenses against large firms with significant financial resources. The 
    Commission tentatively concluded, however, that it would not be 
    feasible to designate a wide-area spectrum block as an entrepreneurs' 
    block because the large number of incumbents already licensed 
    throughout the spectrum designated for wide-area licensing make it 
    virtually impossible to identify a suitable block.
        132. The Commission does not adopt an entrepreneurs' block in the 
    upper 10 MHz block of 800 MHz SMR spectrum. The Commission concluded 
    that an entrepreneur's block in this portion of 800 MHz SMR spectrum is 
    not feasible, given the substantial number of licensees already 
    licensed on such spectrum. However, the Commission is interested in 
    ensuring that small businesses have a meaningful opportunity to 
    continue to participate in the provision of 800 MHz SMR service. Thus, 
    in the Second Further Notice of Proposed Rule Making the Commission 
    seeks additional comment on whether designation of an entrepreneurs' 
    block for other 800 MHz spectrum would be feasible.
    
    IV. Procedural Matters and Ordering Clauses
    
    A. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
    
        133. With respect to this First Report and Order and Eighth Report 
    and Order, pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, an 
    Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) was incorporated in the 
    Further Notice of Proposed Rule Making in PR Docket No. 93-144. Written 
    comments on the IRFA were requested. The Commission's final analysis is 
    as follows:
        Need for and purpose of the action. The rule making proceeding has 
    implemented Sections 332 and 3(n), respectively, of the Communications 
    Act of 1934, as amended. The rules adopted herein will carry out 
    Congress's intent to establish a consistent framework for all 
    commercial mobile radio services (CMRS).
        Issues raised in response to the IRFA. No comments were submitted 
    in response to the IRFA.
        Significant alternatives considered and rejected. All significant 
    alternatives have been addressed in the First Report and Order in PR 
    Docket No. 93-144, the Third Report and Order in GN Docket No. 93-252, 
    and the Eighth Report and Order in PP Docket No. 93-253.
    
    B. Paperwork Reduction Act
    
    SUMMARY: The Federal Communications Commission, as part of its 
    continuing effort to reduce paperwork burden, invites the general 
    public and other Federal agencies to take this opportunity to comment 
    on the following proposed and/or continuing information collections, as 
    required by the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, Public Law 104-13. 
    Comments are requested concerning (a) whether the proposed collection 
    of information is necessary for the proper performance of the functions 
    of the Commission, including whether the information shall have 
    practical utility; (b) the accuracy of the Commission's burden 
    estimates; (c) ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the 
    information collected; and (d) ways to minimize the burden of the 
    collection of information on the respondents, including the use of 
    automated collection techniques or other forms of information 
    technology.
    
    DATES: Written comments should be submitted on or before April 16, 
    1996. If you anticipate that you will be submitting comments but find 
    it difficult to do so within the period of time allowed by this notice, 
    you should advise the contact listed below as soon as possible.
    
    ADDRESSES: Direct all comments to Dorothy Conway, Federal 
    Communications Commission, Room 234, 1919 M St., NW., Washington, DC 
    20554, or via Internet to dconway@fcc.gov; and Timothy Fain, OMB Desk 
    Officer, 10236 NEOB, 725 17th St., NW., Washington, DC 20503, or via 
    Internet to fain__t@al.eop.gov.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dorothy Conway, (202) 418-0217, or via 
    Internet at dconway@fcc.gov.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
        Title: Amendment to the Commission's Rules to Facilitate Future 
    Development of SMR Systems in the 800 MHz Frequency Band.
        Type of Review: Revised collection.
        Respondents: Individuals or households; Business or other for-
    profit; Not-for-profit institutions; State, Local or Tribal Government.
        Number of Respondents: 9,570.
        Estimated Time Per Response: Approximately 2 hours.
        Total Annual Burden: Approximately 17,254 hours.
        Total Annual Cost: $6,468,260 this includes the costs for filing 
    the information electronically or mailing submissions and hiring 
    consultants that may be necessary to respond the requests.
        Needs and Uses: The information will be used by the Commission for 
    the following purposes: (a) To determine if the grant or retention of 
    an extended implementation schedule is warranted; (b) to update the 
    Commission's licensing database and thereby facilitate the successful 
    coexistence of EA licensees and incumbents in the upper 10 MHz block of 
    800 MHz SMR spectrum; (c) to ensure that incumbents are timely notified 
    of possible relocation thus allowing relocation to occur in an orderly, 
    efficient, and expedient manner; and (d) to determine whether an 
    applicant is eligible for special provisions for small businesses 
    provided for applicants in the 800 MHz SMR service.
    
    C. Ex Parte Rules--Non-Restricted Proceeding
    
        This is a non-restricted notice and comment rulemaking proceeding. 
    Ex parte presentations are permitted except during the Sunshine Agenda 
    period, provided they are disclosed as provided in the Commission's 
    rules, 47 CFR Secs. 1.1202, 1.1203, 1.1206(a).
    
    D. Authority
    
        The legal authority for this proposed information collection 
    includes 47 U.S.C. Sections 154(i), 303(c), 303(f), 303(g), 303(r), 
    309(j) and 332 47 U.S.C. Secs. 154(i), 303(c), 303(f), 303(g), 303(r), 
    309(j), 332, as amended. The information collection would not affect 
    any FCC forms. The proposed collection would increase minimally the 
    burden on 800 MHz SMR service applicants.
    
    E. Ordering Clauses
    
        It is ordered that the rule changes made herein will become 
    effective March 18, 1996. This action is taken pursuant to Sections 
    4(i), 303(r), and 309(j) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 
    47 U.S.C. Secs. 154(i), 303(r), and 309(j).
        It is further ordered that all requests for extended implementation 
    authority for the 800 MHz SMR service filed pursuant to Section 90.629 
    of the Commission's rules and currently pending before the Commission 
    are denied.
        It is further ordered that the Secretary shall send a copy of this 
    First Report 
    
    [[Page 6155]]
    and Order and Eighth Report and Order to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy 
    of the Small Business Administration.
    
    List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 90
    
        Common carriers, Radio, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    Federal Communications Commission.
    William F. Caton,
    Acting Secretary.
    
    Rule Changes
    
        Part 90 of Chapter I of Title 47 of the Code of Federal Regulations 
    is amended as follows:
    
    PART 90--PRIVATE LAND MOBILE RADIO SERVICES
    
        The authority citation for Part 90 is revised to read as follows:
    
        Authority: 47 U.S.C. Secs. 154, 303, and 332, unless otherwise 
    noted.
    
        Section 90.7 is amended by adding the definitions for ``EA-based or 
    EA license'' and ``Economic Areas (EAs)'' in alphabetical order to read 
    as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 90.7  Definitions.
    
    * * * * *
        EA-based or EA license. A license authorizing the right to use a 
    specified block of SMR spectrum within one of the 175 Economic Areas 
    (EAs) as defined by the Department of Commerce Bureau of Economic 
    Analysis. The EA Listings and the EA Map are available for public 
    inspection at the Wireless Telecommunications Bureau's public reference 
    room, Room 5608, 2025 M St. NW, Washington, DC 20554 and Office of 
    Operations--Gettysburg, 1270 Fairfield Road, Gettysburg, PA 17325.
        Economic Areas (EAs). A total of 175 licensing regions based on the 
    United States Department of Commerce Bureau of Economic Analysis 
    Economic Areas available from the Bureau of Economic Analysis at (202-
    606-3700) defined as of February 1995, with the following exceptions:
        (1) Guam and Northern Mariana Islands are licensed as a single EA-
    like area
        (2) Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands are licensed as a 
    single EA-like area
        (3) American Samoa is licensed as a single EA-like area
    * * * * *
        3. Section 90.155 is amended by revising paragraph (a) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 90.155  Time in which station must be placed in operation.
    
        (a) All stations authorized under this part, except as provided in 
    paragraphs (b) and (d) of this section and in Secs. 90.629, 90.631(f), 
    90.665, and 90.685, must be placed in operation within eight (8) months 
    from the date of grant or the authorization cancels automatically and 
    must be returned to the Commission.
    * * * * *
        4. Section 90.173 is amended by revising paragraph (k) and adding a 
    new paragraph (n) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 90.173  Policies governing the assignment of frequencies.
    
    * * * * *
        (k) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this part, any eligible 
    person may seek a dispositive preference for a channel assignment on an 
    exclusive basis in the 220-222 MHz, 470-512 MHz, and 800/900 MHz 
    (except on frequencies designated exclusively for SMR service) bands by 
    submitting information that leads to the recovery of channels in these 
    bands. Recovery of such channels must result from information provided 
    regarding the failure of existing licensees to comply with the 
    provisions of Secs. 90.155, 90.157, 90.629, 90.631 (e) or (f), or 
    90.633 (c) or (d). Any recovered channels in the 900 MHz SMR service 
    will revert automatically to the MTA licensee.
    * * * * *
        (n) Any recovered channels in the 800 MHz SMR service will revert 
    automatically to the holder of the EA license within which such 
    channels are included. If there is no EA licensee for recovered 
    channels, such channels will be retained by the Commission for future 
    licensing.
        Section 90.210 is amended by adding a new footnote 3 to the entry 
    for ``806-821/851-866'' in the introductory paragraph table to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 90.210  Emission masks.
    
    * * * * *
    
                            Applicable Emission Masks                       
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                            
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Frequency Band MHz..............  Mask for equipment  Mask for equipment
                                       with audio low      without audio low
                                       path filter.        path filter.     
                                                                            
                      *        *        *        *        *                 
    806-821/851-866 \3\.............  B.................  G.                
                                                                            
                      *        *        *        *        *                 
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \3\ Equipment used in this band licensed to EA systems shall comply with
      the emission mask provisions of Sec.  90.691.                         
    
    * * * * *
        6. Section 90.609 is amended by revising paragraphs (c) and (d) 
    introductory text to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 90.609  Special limitations on amendment of applications for 
    assignment or transfer of authorizations for radio systems above 800 
    MHz.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) Licensees of constructed systems in any category other than 
    Spectrum Block D frequencies in the 800 MHz SMR service (formerly 
    General Category) are permitted to make partial assignments of an 
    authorized grant to an applicant proposing to create a new system or to 
    an existing licensee that has loaded its system to 70 mobiles per 
    channel and is expanding that system. An applicant authorized to expand 
    an existing system or to create a new system with frequencies from any 
    category other than Spectrum Block D frequencies in the 800 MHz SMR 
    service obtained through partial assignment will receive the assignor's 
    existing license expiration date and loading deadline for the 
    frequencies that are assigned. A licensee that makes a partial 
    assignment of a station's frequencies will not be authorized to obtain 
    additional frequencies for that station for a period of one year from 
    the date of the partial assignment.
        (d) A constructed system originally licensed in the General 
    Category that is authorized to operate in the conventional mode may be 
    combined with an existing SMR system above 800 MHz authorized to 
    operate in the trunked mode by assignment of an authorized grant of the 
    General Category station to the SMR station.
    * * * * *
        7. Section 90.611 is amended by revising paragraphs (a) and (c) and 
    by removing and reserving paragraph (d) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 90.611  Processing of applications.
    
    * * * * *
        (a) All applications will first be considered to determine whether 
    they are substantially complete and acceptable for filing. If so, 
    except as otherwise specifically provided for in this subpart, they 
    will be assigned a file number and put in pending status. If not, they 
    will be returned to the applicant.
    * * * * *
        (c) Each application will be reviewed to determine whether it can 
    be granted. Applicants must specify the intended frequency (or 
    frequencies) of operation.
    * * * * *
        8. Section 90.615 is revised to read as follows: 
        
    [[Page 6156]]
    
    
    
    Sec. 90.615  Frequencies available in Spectrum Block D in the 800 MHz 
    SMR service (formerly General Category).
    
        (a) Except as indicated in Sec. 90.619, as of March 18, 1996, 
    frequencies in the 800 MHz Spectrum Block D (Channels 1-150) previously 
    designated as General Category channels are re-allocated for use 
    exclusively by the SMR service for either trunked or conventional 
    operations. The frequencies are available to SMR licensees in areas 
    farther than 110 km (68.4 miles) from the U.S./Mexico border and 
    farther than 140 km (87 miles) from the U.S./Canada border.
        (b) Non-SMR stations that were authorized to transmit on these 
    frequencies prior to March 18, 1996 and have remained so authorized 
    continuously since that time may continue to operate in accordance with 
    their current authorizations. Such authorizations may be renewed 
    unchanged or with minor modifications as described in Sec. 90.693.
        9. Section 90.617 is amended by revising introductory paragraphs 
    (b) and (c) (the Tables remain unchanged), paragraph (d) and Table 4A 
    of paragraph (d) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 90.617  Frequencies in the 809.750-824/854.750-869 MHz, and 896-
    901/935-940 MHz bands available for trunked or conventional system use 
    in non-border areas.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) The channels listed in Table 2A are available to eligible 
    applicants in the Industrial/Land Transportation Category (consisting 
    of the Power, Petroleum, Forest Products, Film and Video Production, 
    Relay Press, Special Industrial, Manufacturers, Telephone Maintenance, 
    Motor Carrier, Railroad, Taxicab and Automobile Emergency Radio 
    Services). These frequencies are available in areas farther than 110 km 
    (68.4 miles) from the U.S./Mexico border and farther than 140 km (87.0 
    miles) from the U.S./Canada border. Specialized Mobile Radio (SMR) 
    systems will not be authorized on these frequencies. These channels are 
    available for inter-category sharing as indicated in Sec. 90.621(g).
    * * * * *
        (c) The channels listed in Table 3A are available to eligible 
    applicants in the Business Radio Category. This category does not 
    include Specialized Mobile Radio Systems as defined in Sec. 90.7. These 
    frequencies are available in areas farther than 110 km (68.4 miles) 
    from the U.S./Mexico border and farther than 140 km (87.0 miles) from 
    the U.S./Canada border. Specialized Mobile Radio Systems will not be 
    authorized on these frequencies. These channels are available for 
    inter-category sharing as indicated in Sec. 90.621(g).
    * * * * *
        (d) The channels listed in Tables 4A and 4B are available only to 
    eligibles in the SMR category which consists of Specialized Mobile 
    Radio (SMR) stations and eligible end users. The frequencies listed in 
    Table 4A are available to SMR eligibles desiring to be authorized for 
    EA-based service areas in accordance with Sec. 90.681. SMR licensees 
    licensed on Channels 401-600 on or before March 18, 1996 may continue 
    to utilize these frequencies within their existing service areas, 
    subject to the mandatory relocation provisions of Sec. 90.699. Systems 
    licensed on the channels listed in Table 4A as Spectrum Block D or E 
    Channels will be licensed on a site-specific basis. This paragraph 
    deals with the assignment of frequencies only in areas farther than 110 
    km (68.4 miles) from the U.S./Mexico border and farther than 140 km 
    (87) miles from the U.S./Canada border. See Sec. 90.619 for the 
    assignment of SMR frequencies in these border areas. For stations 
    located within 113 km (70 miles) of Chicago, channels 401-600 will be 
    assigned in blocks as outlined in Table 4C.
    
            Table 4A.--SMR Category 806-821/851-866 MHz Band Channels       
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                  Spectrum block                         Channel No.        
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    EA-Based SMR Category Systems (200                                      
     channels):                                                             
        A.....................................  401-420.                    
        B.....................................  421-480.                    
        C.....................................  481-600.                    
    SMR Category (230 channels):                                            
        D.....................................  1-150.                      
        E.....................................  201-208, 221-228, 241-248,  
                                                 261-268, 281-288, 301-308, 
                                                 321-328, 341-348, 361-368, 
                                                 381-388.                   
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    * * * * *
        10. Section 90.619 is amended by revising introductory paragraph 
    (a)(3), the introductory text of paragraph (a)(5) and Table 4A of 
    paragraph (a)(5), Table 12 in paragraph (b)(8), Table 16 in paragraph 
    (b)(9), Table 20 in paragraph (b)(10), and Table 24 in paragraph 
    (b)(11) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 90.619  Frequencies available for use in the U.S./Mexico and U.S./
    Canada border areas.
    
        (a) * * *
        (3) Tables 2A and 2B list the channels that are available for 
    assignment to eligible applicants in the Industrial/Land Transportation 
    Category (consisting of the Power, Petroleum, Forest Products, Video 
    Production, Relay Press, Special Industrial, Manufacturers, Telephone 
    Maintenance, Motor Carrier, Railroad, Taxicab and Automobile Emergency 
    Radio Services). New applications for Specialized Mobile Radio systems 
    will not be accepted for these channels after March 18, 1996.
    * * * * *
        (5) Tables 4A and 4B list the channels that are available for 
    assignment for the SMR Category (consisting of Specialized Mobile Radio 
    systems as defined in Sec. 90.7). These channels are not available for 
    inter-category sharing.
    
     Table 4A.--United States-Mexico Border Area, SMR Category 806-821/851- 
                           866 MHZ Band (95 Channels)                       
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Spectrum block                     Offset channel No.      
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    EA-Based SMR Category (30 Channels):                                    
      A....................................  None.                          
      B....................................  429, 431, 433, 435, 437,439,   
                                              469, 471, 473, 475, 477, 479. 
      C....................................  509, 511, 513, 515, 517, 519,  
                                              549, 551, 553, 555, 557, 559, 
                                              589, 591, 593, 595, 597, 599. 
    SMR Category (65 Channels):                                             
      D....................................  None.                          
      E....................................  None.                          
      Other................................  228-240, 268-280, 308-320, 348-
                                              360, 388-400.                 
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (8) * * *
    
                      Table 12.--SMR Category--95 Channels                  
                              [Regions 1, 4, 5, 6]                          
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Spectrum block                        Channel No.          
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    EA-Based SMR Category (90 Channels):                                    
      A....................................  None.                          
      B....................................  463-480.                       
      C....................................  493-510, 523-540, 553-570, 583-
                                              600.                          
    SMR Category (5 Channels):                                              
    
    [[Page 6157]]
                                                                            
      D....................................  30, 60, 90, 120, 150.          
      E....................................  None.                          
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    
    
        (9) * * *
    
                      Table 16.--SMR Category--60 Channels                  
                                   [Region 2]                               
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Spectrum block                        Channel No.          
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    EA-Based SMR Category (55 Channels):                                    
      A....................................  None.                          
      B....................................  None.                          
      C....................................  518-528, 536-546, 554-564, 572-
                                              582, 590-600.                 
    SMR Category (5 Channels):                                              
      D....................................  18, 36, 54, 72, 90.            
      E....................................  None.                          
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (10) * * *
    
                      Table 20.--SMR Category--135 Channels                 
                                   [Region 3]                               
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Spectrum block                        Channel No.          
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    EA-Based SMR Category (120 Channels):                                   
      A....................................  417-420.                       
      B....................................  421-440, 457-480.              
      C....................................  497-520, 537-560, 577-600.     
    SMR Category (15 Channels):                                             
      D....................................  38, 39, 40, 78, 79, 80, 118,   
                                              119, 120.                     
      E....................................  None.                          
      Other................................  158, 159, 160, 198, 199, 200.  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (11) * * *
    
              Table 24.--(Regions 7, 8) SMR Category--190 Channels          
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Spectrum block                        Channel No.          
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    EA-Based SMR Category (80 Channels):                                    
      A....................................  None.                          
      B....................................  425-440, 465-480.              
      C....................................  505-520, 545-560, 585-600.     
    SMR Category (110 Channels):                                            
      D....................................  35-40, 75-80, 115-120.         
      E....................................  225-228, 265-268, 305-308, 345-
                                              348, 385-388.                 
      Other................................  155-160, 195-200, 229-240, 269-
                                              280, 309-320, 349-360, 389-   
                                              400.                          
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    * * * * *
        11. Section 90.621 is amended by revising paragraphs (a) 
    introductory text, (a)(1)(iii), (b) introductory text, (c), and (e) 
    introductory text, removing paragraph (a)(1)(iv), and removing and 
    reserving paragraphs (e)(2), (e)(3), and (e)(4) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 90.621  Selection and assignment of frequencies.
    
        (a) Applicants for frequencies in the Public Safety, Industrial/
    Land Transportation, and Business Categories must specify on the 
    application the frequencies on which the proposed system will operate 
    pursuant to a recommendation by the applicable frequency coordinator. 
    Applicants for frequencies in the SMR Category must request specific 
    frequencies by including in their applications the frequencies 
    requested.
        (1) * * *
        (iii) There are no limitations on the number of frequencies that 
    may be trunked. Authorizations for non-SMR stations may be granted for 
    up to 20 trunked frequency pairs at a time in accordance with the 
    frequencies listed in Secs. 90.615, 90.617, and 90.619.
    * * * * *
        (b) Stations authorized on frequencies listed in this subpart, 
    except for those stations authorized pursuant to paragraph (g) of this 
    section and EA-based and MTA-based SMR systems, will be afforded 
    protection solely on the basis of fixed distance separation criteria. 
    The separation between co-channel systems will be a minimum of 113 km 
    (70 mi) with the following exceptions:
    * * * * *
        (c) Conventional systems authorized on frequencies in the Public 
    Safety (except for those systems that have participated in a formal 
    regional planning process as described in Sec. 90.16), Industrial/Land 
    Transportation, Business, and Spectrum Block D frequencies in the 800 
    MHz SMR service (formerly General) Categories which have not met the 
    loading levels necessary for channel exclusivity will not be afforded 
    co-channel protection.
    * * * * *
        (e) Frequencies in the 806-821/851-866 MHz bands listed as 
    available for eligibles in the Public Safety, Industrial/Land 
    Transportation, and Business Categories are available for inter-
    category sharing under the following conditions:
    * * * * *
        12. Section 90.629 is amended by adding a new paragraph (e) to read 
    as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 90.629  Extended implementation period.
    
    * * * * *
        (e) As of March 18, 1996, Specialized Mobile Radio systems are not 
    eligible for extended implementation periods under this section. 
    Additionally, all 800 MHz SMR licensees that are operating under 
    extended implementation authority as of March 18, 1996 must, by May 16, 
    1996, demonstrate that continuing to allow them to have an extended 
    period of time to construct their facilities is warranted and furthers 
    the public interest. If a licensee's extended implementation authority 
    showing is approved by the Bureau, such licensee will be afforded an 
    extended implementation of two years or the remainder of its current 
    extended implementation period, whichever is shorter. Upon the 
    termination of this period, the authorizations for those facilities 
    that remain unconstructed will terminate automatically. If a licensee 
    with a current extended implementation period fails to submit the 
    showing mentioned above within the designated timeframe or submits an 
    insufficient or incomplete showing, such licensee will have six months 
    from the last day on which it could timely file such a showing or from 
    the disapproval of its request to construct the remaining facilities 
    covered under its implementation plan to construct any unconstructed 
    facilities for which it is authorized. The authorizations for those 
    facilities remaining unconstructed after this six-month period will 
    terminate automatically.
        13. Section 90.631(b) is amended by removing the words ``General 
    Category'' and adding in their place ``Spectrum Block D frequencies in 
    the 800 MHz SMR service (formerly General Category)''.
        14. Subpart S is amended by adding a new centered heading following 
    Section 90.671 to read as follows:
    
    [[Page 6158]]
    
    
    Policies Governing the Licensing and Use of EA-Based SMR Systems in the 
    816-821/861-866 Band
    
        15. A new Sec. 90.681 is added to Subpart S to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 90.681  EA-based SMR service areas.
    
        EA licenses for SMR spectrum blocks in the 816-821/861-866 band 
    listed in Table 4A of Sec. 90.617(d) are available in 175 Economic 
    Areas (EAs) as defined in Sec. 90.7.
        16. A new Sec. 90.683 is added to Subpart S to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 90.683  EA-Based SMR system operations.
    
        (a) EA-based licensees authorized in the 816-821/861-866 MHz band 
    pursuant to Sec. 90.681 may construct and operate base stations using 
    any of the base station frequencies identified in their spectrum block 
    anywhere within their authorized EA, provided that:
        (1) The EA licensee affords protection, in accordance with 
    Sec. 90.621(b), to all previously authorized co-channel stations that 
    are not associated with another EA license;
        (2) The EA licensee complies with any rules and international 
    agreements that restrict use of frequencies identified in their 
    spectrum block, including the provisions of Sec. 90.619 relating to 
    U.S./Canadian and U.S./Mexican border areas;
        (3) The EA licensee limits the field strength of its base stations 
    at any location on the border of the EA service area in accordance with 
    Sec. 90.689;
        (4) The EA licensee notifies the Commission within 30 days of the 
    completion of the addition, removal, relocation or modification of any 
    of its facilities within the EA. Such notification must be made by 
    submitting an FCC Form 600 and must include the appropriate filing fee, 
    if any; and
        (5) For any construction or alteration that would exceed the 
    requirements of Sec. 17.7 of this chapter, licensees must notify the 
    appropriate Regional Office of the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA 
    Form 7460-1) and file a request for antenna height clearance and 
    obstruction marking and lighting specifications (FCC Form 854) with the 
    FCC, WTB, Support Services Branch, Gettysburg, PA 17325.
        (6) Any additional transmitters placed in operation must not have a 
    significant environmental effect as defined by Secs. 1.1301 through 
    1.1319 of this chapter.
        (b) In the event that the authorization for a previously authorized 
    co-channel station within the EA licensee's spectrum block is 
    terminated or revoked, the EA licensee's co-channel obligations to such 
    station will cease upon deletion of the facility from the Commission's 
    official licensing records, and the EA licensee then will be able to 
    construct and operate without regard to that previous authorization.
        17. A new Sec. 90.685 is added to Subpart S to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 90.685  Authorization, construction and implementation of EA 
    licenses.
    
        (a) EA licenses in the 816-821/861-866 MHz band will be issued for 
    a term not to exceed ten years. Additionally, EA licensees generally 
    will be afforded a renewal expectancy only for those stations put into 
    service after August 10, 1996.
        (b) EA licensees in the 816-821/861-866 band will be permitted five 
    years to construct their stations. This five-year period will commence 
    with the issuance of the EA-based license and will apply to all of the 
    licensee's stations within the EA spectrum block, including any 
    stations that may have been subject to an earlier construction deadline 
    arising from a pre-existing authorization.
        (c) EA licensees in the 816-821/861-866 MHz band must, within three 
    years, construct and place into operation a sufficient number of base 
    stations to provide coverage to at least one-third of the population of 
    its EA-based service area. Further, each EA licensee must provide 
    coverage to at least two-thirds of the population of the EA-based 
    service area within five years.
        (d) Channel use requirement. In addition to the population coverage 
    requirements described in this section, we will require EA licensees to 
    construct 50 percent of the total channels included in their spectrum 
    block in at least one location in their respective EA-based service 
    area within three years of initial license grant and to retain such 
    channel usage for the remainder of the construction period.
        (e) An EA licensee's failure to meet the population coverage 
    requirements of paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section, will result in 
    forfeiture of the entire EA license. Forfeiture of the EA license, 
    however, would not result in the loss of any constructed facilities 
    authorized to the licensee prior to the date of the commencement of the 
    auction for the EA licenses.
        18. A new Sec. 90.687 is added to Subpart S to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 90.687  Special provisions regarding assignments and transfers of 
    authorizations for incumbent SMR licensees in the 816-821/861-866 MHz 
    band.
    
        An SMR licensee initially authorized on any of the channels listed 
    in Table 4A of Sec. 90.617 may transfer or assign its channel(s) to 
    another entity subject to the provisions of Secs. 90.153 and 90.609(b). 
    If the proposed transferee or assignee is the EA licensee for the 
    spectrum block to which the channel is allocated, such transfer or 
    assignment presumptively will be deemed to be in the public interest. 
    However, such presumption will be rebuttable.
        19. A new Sec. 90.689 is added to Subpart S to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 90.689  Field strength limits.
    
        (a) For purposes of implementing Secs. 90.689 through 90.699, 
    predicted 40 dBuV/m contours shall be calculated using Figure 10 of 
    Sec. 73.699 of this chapter with a correction factor of -9 dB, and 
    predicted 22 dBuV/m contours shall be calculated using Figure 10a of 
    Sec. 73.699 of this chapter with a correction factor of -9 dB.
        (b) The predicted or measured field strength at any location on the 
    border of the EA-based service area for EA licensees must not exceed 40 
    dBuV/m unless all bordering EA licensees agree to a higher field 
    strength. In the event that this standard conflicts with the EA 
    licensee's obligation to provide co-channel protection to incumbent 
    licensees pursuant to Sec. 90.621(b), the requirements of 
    Sec. 90.621(b) shall prevail.
        20. A new Sec. 90.691 is added to Subpart S to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 90.691  Emission mask requirements for EA-based systems.
    
        (a) Out-of-band emission requirement shall apply only to the 
    ``outer'' channels included in an EA license and to spectrum adjacent 
    to interior channels used by incumbent licensees. The emission limits 
    are as follows:
        (1) For any frequency removed from the EA licensee's frequency 
    block by up to and including 37.5 kHz, the power of any emission shall 
    be attenuated below the transmitter power (P) in watts by at least 116 
    Log10(f/6.1) decibels or 50 + 10 Log10(P) decibels or 80 
    decibels, whichever is the lesser attenuation, where f is the frequency 
    removed from the center of the outer channel in the block in kilohertz 
    and where f is greater than 12.5 kHz.
        (2) For any frequency removed from the EA licensee's frequency 
    block greater than 37.5 kHz, the power of any emission shall be 
    attenuated below the transmitter power (P) in watts by at least 43 + 
    10Log10(P) decibels or 80 decibels, whichever is the lesser 
    attenuation, where f is the frequency removed from the center of the 
    outer channel in the block in kilohertz and where f is greater than 
    37.5 kHz. 
    
    [[Page 6159]]
    
        (b) When an emission outside of the authorized bandwidth causes 
    harmful interference, the Commission may, at its discretion, require 
    greater attenuation than specified in this section.
        21. A new Sec. 90.693 is added to Subpart S to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 90.693  Grandfathering provisions for incumbent licensees in 
    spectrum blocks A, B, and C.
    
        (a) These provisions apply to ``incumbent licensees'', all 800 MHz 
    SMR licensees who obtained licenses or filed applications on or before 
    December 15, 1995. An incumbent licensee's service area shall be 
    defined by its originally-licensed 40 dBu field strength contour and 
    its interference contour shall be defined as its originally-licensed 22 
    dBu field strength contour. Incumbent licensees are permitted to add, 
    remove or modify transmitter sites within this existing service area 
    without prior notification to the Commission so long as their original 
    22 dBu field strength contour is not expanded and the station complies 
    with the Commission's short-spacing criteria in Secs. 90.621(b)(4) 
    through 90.621(b)(6). The incumbent licensee must, however, notify the 
    Commission within 30 days of the completion of any changes in technical 
    parameters or additional stations constructed through a minor 
    modification of their license. Such notification must be made by 
    submitting an FCC Form 600 and must include the appropriate filing fee, 
    if any. These minor modification applications are not subject to public 
    notice and petition to deny requirements or mutually exclusive 
    applications.
        (b) Incumbent licensees operating at multiple sites may, after 
    grant of EA licenses has been completed, exchange multiple site 
    licenses for a single license, authorizing operations throughout the 
    contiguous and overlapping 40 dBu field strength contours of the 
    multiple sites. Incumbents exercising this license exchange option must 
    submit specific information for each of their external base sites after 
    the close of the 800 MHz SMR auction.
        22. A new Sec. 90.699 is added to Subpart S to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 90.699  Transition of the upper 200 channels in the 800 MHz band 
    to EA licensing.
    
        In order to facilitate provision of service throughout an EA, an EA 
    licensee may relocate incumbent licensees in its EA by providing 
    ``comparable facilities'' on other frequencies in the 800 MHz band. 
    Such relocation is subject to the following provisions:
        (a) EA licensees may negotiate with incumbent licensees as defined 
    in Sec. 90.693 operating on frequencies in Spectrum Blocks A, B, and C 
    for the purpose of agreeing to terms under which the incumbents would 
    relocate their operations to other channels in the 800 MHz band, or 
    alternatively, would accept a sharing arrangement with the EA licensee 
    that may result in an otherwise impermissible level of interference to 
    the incumbent licensee's operations. EA licensees may also negotiate 
    agreements for relocation of the incumbents' facilities within Spectrum 
    Blocks A, B or C in which all interested parties agree to the 
    relocation of the incumbent's facilities elsewhere within these bands. 
    ``All interested parties'' includes the incumbent licensee, the EA 
    licensee requesting and paying for the relocation, and any EA licensee 
    of the spectrum to which the incumbent's facilities are to be 
    relocated.
        (b) The relocation mechanism consists of two phases that must be 
    completed before an EA licensee may proceed to request the involuntary 
    relocation of an incumbent licensee.
        (1) Voluntary period. There is a one year voluntary period during 
    which an EA licensee and an incumbent may negotiate any mutually 
    agreeable relocation agreement. The Commission will announce the 
    commencement of the first phase voluntary period by Public Notice. EA 
    licensees must notify incumbents operating on frequencies included in 
    their spectrum block of their intention to relocate such incumbents 
    within 90 days of the release of the Public Notice that commences the 
    voluntary negotiation period. Failure on the part of the EA licensee to 
    notify the incumbent licensee during this 90 period of its intention to 
    relocate the incumbent will result in the forfeiture of the EA 
    licensee's right to request involuntary relocation of the incumbent at 
    any time in the future.
        (2) Mandatory period. If no agreement is reached by the end of the 
    voluntary period, a two-year mandatory period will begin during which 
    both the EA licensee and the incumbent must negotiate in ``good 
    faith''. Failure on the part of the EA licensee to negotiate in good 
    faith during this mandatory period will result in the forfeiture of the 
    EA licensee's right to request involuntary relocation of the incumbent 
    at any time in the future.
        (c) If no agreement is reached during either the voluntary or 
    mandatory negotiating periods, the EA licensee may request involuntary 
    relocation of the incumbent's system. In such a situation, the EA 
    licensee must:
        (1) Guarantee payment of all costs of relocating the incumbent to a 
    comparable facility;
        (2) Complete all activities necessary for placing the new 
    facilities into operation; and
        (3) Build and test the new system.
        (d) If an EA licensee cannot provide comparable facilities to an 
    incumbent licensee as defined in this section, the incumbent licensee 
    may continue to operate its system on a primary basis in accordance 
    with the provisions of this part.
        23. A new Subpart V, Sections 90.901 through 90.913, is added to 
    read as follows:
    
    Subpart V--Competitive Bidding Procedures for 800 MHz Specialized 
    Mobile Radio Service
    
    Sec. 90.901  800 MHz SMR spectrum subject to competitive bidding.
    Sec. 90.902  Competitive bidding design for 800 MHz SMR licensing.
    Sec. 90.903  Competitive bidding mechanisms.
    Sec. 90.904  Aggregation of EA licenses for spectrum blocks A, B, 
    and C.
    Sec. 90.905  Withdrawal, default and disqualification payments.
    Sec. 90.906  Bidding application (FCC Form 175 and 175-S Short-
    form).
    Sec. 90.907  Submission of upfront payments and down payments.
    Sec. 90.908  Long-form applications.
    Sec. 90.909  License grant, denial, default, and disqualification 
    for spectrum blocks A, B, and C.
    Sec. 90.910  Installment payments for licenses for spectrum blocks 
    A, B, and C.
    Sec. 90.911  Procedures for partitioned licenses in spectrum blocks 
    A, B, and C.
    Sec. 90.912  Definitions for spectrum blocks A, B, and C.
    Sec. 90.913  Eligibility for small business status for spectrum 
    blocks A, B, and C.
    
    
    Sec. 90.901.  800 MHz SMR spectrum subject to competitive bidding.
    
        Mutually exclusive initial applications for Spectrum Blocks A, B, 
    and C in the 800 MHz band are subject to competitive bidding 
    procedures. The general competitive bidding procedures provided in part 
    1, subpart Q of this chapter will apply unless otherwise indicated in 
    this subpart.
    
    
    Sec. 90.902  Competitive bidding design for 800 MHz SMR licensing.
    
        The Commission will employ a simultaneous multiple round auction 
    design when selecting from among mutually exclusive initial 
    applications for EA licenses for Spectrum Blocks A, B, and C in the 800 
    MHz band, unless otherwise specified by the Wireless Telecommunications 
    Bureau before the auction. 
    
    [[Page 6160]]
    
    
    
    Sec. 90.903  Competitive bidding mechanisms.
    
        (a) Sequencing. The Wireless Telecommunications Bureau will 
    establish and may vary the sequence in which 800 MHz SMR licenses for 
    Spectrum Blocks A, B, and C will be auctioned.
        (b) Grouping. All EA licenses for Spectrum Blocks A, B, and C will 
    be auctioned simultaneously, unless the Wireless Telecommunications 
    Bureau announces, by Public Notice prior to the auction, an alternative 
    competitive bidding design.
        (c) Minimum Bid Increments. The Wireless Telecommunications Bureau 
    will, by announcement before or during an auction, require minimum bid 
    increments in dollar or percentage terms.
        (d) Stopping Rules. The Wireless Telecommunications Bureau will 
    establish stopping rules before or during the multiple round auctions 
    in order to terminate an auction within a reasonable time.
        (e) Activity Rules. The Wireless Telecommunications Bureau will 
    establish activity rules which require a minimum amount of bidding 
    activity. In the event that the Commission establishes an activity rule 
    in connection with a simultaneous multiple round auction, each bidder 
    will be entitled to request and will be automatically granted a certain 
    number of waivers of such rule during the auction.
    
    
    Sec. 90.904  Aggregation of EA licenses for spectrum blocks A, B, and 
    C.
    
        The Commission will license each Spectrum Block A, B, and C in the 
    800 MHz band separately. Applicants may aggregate across spectrum 
    blocks within the limitations specified in Sec. 20.6 of this chapter.
    
    
    Sec. 90.905  Withdrawal, default and disqualification payments.
    
        (a) During the course of an auction conducted pursuant to 
    Sec. 90.902, the Commission will impose payments on bidders who 
    withdraw high bids during the course of an auction, who default on 
    payments due after an auction closes, or who are disqualified.
        (b) Bid withdrawal prior to close of auction. A bidder who 
    withdraws a high bid during the course of an auction will be subject to 
    a payment equal to the difference between the amount bid and the amount 
    of the winning bid the next time the license is offered by the 
    Commission. No withdrawal payment would be assessed if the subsequent 
    winning bid exceeds the withdrawn bid. This payment amount will be 
    deducted from any upfront payments or down payments that the 
    withdrawing bidder has deposited with the Commission.
        (c) Default or disqualification after close of auction. If a high 
    bidder defaults or is disqualified after the close of such an auction, 
    the defaulting bidder will be subject to the payment in paragraph (b) 
    of this section plus an additional monetary asssessment equal to three 
    (3) percent of the subsequent winning bid. If the subsequent winning 
    bid exceeds the defaulting bidder's bid amount, the 3 percent payment 
    will be calculated based on the defaulting bidder's bid amount. These 
    amounts will be deducted from any upfront payments or down payments 
    that the defaulting or disqualified bidder has deposited with the 
    Commission. If the default occurs within five (5) business days after 
    the bidding has closed, the Commission retains the discretion to offer 
    the license to the second highest bidder at its final bid level, or if 
    that bidder declines the offer, to offer the license to other bidders 
    (in descending order of their bid amounts) at the final bid levels.
    
    
    Sec. 90.906  Bidding application (FCC Form 175 and 175-S Short-form).
    
        All applicants to participate in competitive bidding for 800 MHz 
    SMR licenses in Spectrum Blocks A, B, and C must submit applications on 
    FCC Forms 175 and 175-S pursuant to the provisions of Sec. 1.2105 of 
    this chapter. The Wireless Telecommunications Bureau will issue a 
    Public Notice announcing the availability of these 800 MHz SMR licenses 
    and, in the event that mutually exclusive applications are filed, the 
    date of the auction for those licenses. This Public Notice also will 
    specify the date on or before which applicants intending to participate 
    in a 800 MHz SMR auction must file their applications in order to be 
    eligible for that auction, and it will contain information necessary 
    for completion of the application as well as other important 
    information such as the materials which must accompany the Forms, any 
    filing fee that must accompany the application or any upfront payment 
    that will need to be submitted, and the location where the application 
    must be filed. In addition to identifying its status as a small 
    business or rural telephone company, each applicant must indicate 
    whether it is a minority-owned entity and/or a women-owned entity, as 
    defined in Sec. 90.912(e).
    
    
    Sec. 90.907  Submission of upfront payments and down payments.
    
        (a) Bidders in the 800 MHz SMR auction for Spectrum Blocks A, B, 
    and C will be required to submit an upfront payment of $0.02 per 
    activity unit, in accordance with Sec. 1.2106 of this chapter.
        (b) Winning bidders in a 800 MHz SMR auction for Spectrum Blocks A, 
    B, and C must submit a down payment to the Commission in an amount 
    sufficient to bring their total deposits up to 20 percent of their 
    winning bids within five (5) business days after the auction closes, 
    and the remaining balance due on the license shall be paid within five 
    (5) business days after Public Notice announcing that the Commission is 
    prepared to award the license.
    
    
    Sec. 90.908  Long-form applications.
    
        Each winning bidder will be required to submit a long-form 
    application on FCC Form 600 within ten (10) business days after being 
    notified by Public Notice that it is the winning bidder. Applications 
    on FCC Form 600 shall be submitted pursuant to the procedures set forth 
    in Sec. 90.119 of this part and any associated Public Notices. Only 
    auction winners (and rural telephone companies seeking partitioned 
    licenses pursuant to agreements with auction winners under Sec. 90.911) 
    will be eligible to file applications on FCC Form 600 for initial 800 
    MHz SMR licenses in the event of mutual exclusivity between applicants 
    filing FCC Form 175.
    
    
    Sec. 90.909  License grant, denial, default, and disqualification for 
    spectrum blocks A, B, and C.
    
        (a) Except with respect to entities eligible for installment 
    payments (see Sec. 90.912) each winning bidder will be required to pay 
    the balance of its winning bid in a lump sum payment within five (5) 
    business days following Public Notice that the license is ready for 
    grant. The Commission will grant the license within ten (10) business 
    days after receipt of full and timely payment of the winning bid 
    amount.
        (b) A bidder who withdraws its bid subsequent to the close of 
    bidding, defaults on a payment due, or is disqualified, will be subject 
    to the payments specified in Sec. 90.905 or Sec. 1.2109 of this 
    chapter, as applicable.
        (c) EA licenses pursued through competitive bidding procedures will 
    be granted pursuant to the requirements specified in Sec. 90.166.
    
    
    Sec. 90.910  Installment payments for licenses for spectrum blocks A, 
    B, and C.
    
        (a) Each licensee for Spectrum Blocks A, B, and C that qualifies as 
    a small business may pay the remaining 90 percent of the net auction 
    price for the license in quarterly installment payments pursuant to 
    Sec. 1.2110(e) of this chapter. Licensees who qualify for installment 
    payments are entitled to pay 
    
    [[Page 6161]]
    their winning bid amount in installments over the term of the license, 
    with interest charges to be fixed at the time of licensing at a rate 
    equal to the rate for ten-year U.S. Treasury obligations plus 2.5 
    percent. Payments shall include both principal and interest amortized 
    over the term of the license. An EA license issued to an eligible small 
    business that elects installment payments will be conditioned on the 
    full and timely performance of the license holder's quarterly payments. 
    The additional following terms apply:
        (1) An eligible licensee qualifying as a small business under 
    Sec. 90.912(b)(1)(i) may make interest-only payments for five years. 
    Interest will accrue at the Treasury note rate. Payments of interest 
    and principal shall be amortized over the remaining five years of the 
    license term.
        (2) An eligible licensee qualifying as a small business under 
    Sec. 90.912(b)(1)(ii) may make interest-only payments for the first two 
    years of the license term. Interest will accrue at the Treasury note 
    rate plus an additional 2.5 percent. Payments of interest and principal 
    shall be amortized over the remaining eight years of the license term.
        (b) Unjust enrichment. (1) If a licensee that utilizes installment 
    financing under this section seeks to assign or transfer control of its 
    license to an entity not meeting the eligibility standards for 
    installment payments, the licensee must make full payment of the 
    remaining unpaid principal and any unpaid interest accrued through the 
    date of assignment or transfer as a condition of approval.
        (2) If a licensee that utilizes installment financing under this 
    section seeks to make any change in ownership structure that would 
    result in the licensee losing eligibility for installment payments, the 
    licensee shall first seek Commission approval and must make full 
    payment of the remaining unpaid principal and any unpaid interest 
    accrued through the date of such change as a condition of approval.
        (3) If a licensee that utilizes installment financing under this 
    section seeks to assign or transfer control of a license to an entity 
    that does not qualify for as favorable an installment payment plan, the 
    installment payment plan for which the acquiring entity qualifies will 
    become effective immediately upon transfer.
    
    
    Sec. 90.911  Procedures for partitioned licenses in spectrum blocks A, 
    B, and C.
    
        (a) Notwithstanding Sec. 90.661, a rural telephone company, as 
    defined in Sec. 90.912, may be granted a 800 MHz SMR license that is 
    geographically partitioned from a separately licensed EA, so long as 
    the EA applicant or licensee has voluntarily agreed (in writing) to 
    partition a portion of the license to the rural telephone company.
        (b) If partitioned licenses are being applied for in conjunction 
    with a license(s) to be awarded through competitive bidding 
    procedures--
        (1) The applicable procedures for filing short-form applications 
    and for submitting upfront payments and down payments contained in this 
    part and part 1 of this chapter shall be followed by the applicant, who 
    must disclose as part of its short-form application all parties to 
    agreement(s) with or among other entities to partition the license 
    pursuant to this section, if won at auction (see 
    Sec. 1.2105(a)(2)(viii) of this chapter);
        (2) Each rural telephone company that is a party to an agreement to 
    partition the license shall file a long-form application for its 
    respective, mutually agreed-upon geographic area together with the 
    application for the remainder of the EA filed by the auction winner.
        (c) If the partitioned license is being applied for as a partial 
    assignment of the EA license following grant of the initial license, 
    request for authorization for partial assignment of a license shall be 
    made pursuant to Sec. 90.153.
        (d) Each application for a partitioned area (long-form initial 
    application or partial assignment application) shall contain a 
    partitioning plan that must propose to establish a partitioned area to 
    be licensed that meets the following criteria:
        (1) Conforms to established geopolitical boundaries (such as county 
    lines);
        (2) Includes the wireline service area of the rural telephone 
    company applicant; and
        (3) Is reasonably related to the rural telephone company's wireline 
    service area.
    
        Note to paragraph (d)(3): A partitioned service area will be 
    presumed to be reasonably related to the rural telephone company's 
    wireline service area if the partitioned service area contains no 
    more than twice the population overlap between the rural telephone 
    company's wireline service area and the partitioned area.
    
        (e) Each licensee in each partitioned area will be responsible for 
    meeting the construction requirements in its area set forth in 
    Sec. 90.685.
    
    
    Sec. 90.912  Definitions for spectrum blocks A, B, and C.
    
        (a) Scope. The definitions in this section apply to Secs. 90.910 
    and 90.911, unless otherwise specified in those sections.
        (b) Small business: Consortium of small businesses.
        (1) A small business is an entity that either:
        (i) Together with its affiliates, persons or entities that hold 
    attributable interests in such entity, and their affiliates, has 
    average gross revenues that are not more than $3 million for the three 
    preceding years; or
        (ii) Together with its affiliates, persons, or entities that hold 
    attributable interests in such entity, and their affiliates, has 
    average gross revenues that are not more than $15 million for the 
    preceding three years.
        (2) For purposes of determining whether an entity meets the $3 
    million or $15 million average annual gross revenues size standard set 
    forth in paragraph (b)(1) of this section, the gross revenues of the 
    entity, its affiliates, persons, or entities holding interests in the 
    entity and their affiliates shall be considered on a cumulative basis 
    and aggregated, subject to the exceptions set forth in Sec. 90.912(h).
        (3) A small business consortium is conglomerate organization formed 
    as a joint venture between or among mutually-independent business 
    firms, each of which individually satisfies the definition of a small 
    business in paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(2) of this section. In a 
    consortium of small businesses, each individual member must establish 
    its eligibility as a small business, as defined in this section.
        (c) Rural telephone company. A rural telephone company is a local 
    exchange carrier having 100,000 or fewer access lines, including all 
    affiliates.
        (d) Gross revenues. For applications filed after December 31, 1994, 
    gross revenues shall be evidenced by audited financial statements for 
    the preceding relevant number of calendar or fiscal years. If an entity 
    was not in existence for all or part of the relevant period, gross 
    revenues shall be evidenced by the audited financial statements of the 
    entity's predecessor-in-interest or, if there is no identifiable 
    predecessor-in-interest, unaudited financial statements certified by 
    the applicant as accurate.
        (e) Businesses owned by members of minority groups and/or women. A 
    business owned by members of minority groups and/or women is one in 
    which minorities and/or women who are U.S. citizens control the 
    applicant, have at least 50.1 percent equity ownership and, in the case 
    of a corporate applicant, a 50.1 percent voting interest. For 
    applicants that are partnerships, every general partner either must be 
    a minority and/or woman (or minorities and/or women) who are U.S. 
    citizens and who individually or together own at 
    
    [[Page 6162]]
    least 50.1 percent of the partnership equity, or an entity that is 100 
    percent owned and controlled by minorities and/or women who are U.S. 
    citizens. The interests of minorities and women are to be calculated on 
    a fully-diluted basis; agreements such as stock options and convertible 
    debentures shall be considered to have a present effect on the power to 
    control an entity and shall be treated as if the rights thereunder 
    already have been fully exercised. However, upon a demonstration that 
    options or conversion rights held by non-controlling principals will 
    not deprive the minority and female principals of a substantial 
    financial stake in the venture or impair their rights to control the 
    designated entity, a designated entity may seek a waiver of the 
    requirement that the equity of the minority and female principals must 
    be calculated on a fully-diluted basis.
        (f) Members of minority groups. Members of minority groups includes 
    Blacks, Hispanics, American Indians, Alaskan Natives, Asians, and 
    Pacific Islanders.
        (g) Attributable interests. Partnership and other ownership 
    interests and any stock interest amounting to 20 percent or more of the 
    equity, or outstanding stock, or outstanding voting stock of a licensee 
    or applicant will be attributable.
    
        Note to paragraph (g): Ownership interests that are held 
    indirectly by any party through one or more intervening corporations 
    will be determined by successive multiplication of the ownership 
    percentages for each link in the vertical ownership chain and 
    application of the relevant attribution benchmark to the resulting 
    product, except that if the ownership percentages for an interest in 
    any link in the chain exceeds 50 percent or represents actual 
    control, it shall be treated as if it were a 100 percent interest.
    
        (h) Affiliate. (1) Basis for affiliation. An individual or entity 
    is an affiliate of an applicant or of a person holding an attributable 
    interest in an applicant (both referred to herein as ``the applicant'') 
    if such individual or entity:
        (i) Directly or indirectly controls or has the power to control the 
    applicant;
        (ii) Is directly or indirectly controlled by the applicant;
        (iii) Is directly or indirectly controlled by a third party or 
    parties that also controls or has the power to control the applicant; 
    or
        (iv) Has an ``identity of interest'' with the applicant.
        (2) Nature of control in determining affiliation. (i) Every 
    business concern is considered to have one or more parties who directly 
    or indirectly control or have the power to control it. Control may be 
    affirmative or negative and it is immaterial whether it is exercised so 
    long as the power to control exists.
    
        Example for paragraph (h)(2)(i). An applicant owning 50 percent 
    of the voting stock of another concern would have negative power to 
    control such concern since such party can block any action of the 
    other stockholders. Also, the bylaws of a corporation may permit a 
    stockholder with less than 50 percent of the voting to block any 
    actions taken by the other stockholders in the other entity. 
    Affiliation exists when the applicant has the power to control a 
    concern while at the same time another person, or persons, are in 
    control of the concern at the will of the party or parties with the 
    power of control.
    
        (ii) Control can arise through stock ownership; occupancy of 
    director, officer or key employee positions; contractual or other 
    business relations; or combinations of these and other factors. A key 
    employee is an employee who, because of his/her position in the 
    concern, has a critical influence in or substantive control over the 
    operations or management of the concern.
        (iii) Control can arise through management positions where a 
    concern's voting stock is so widely distributed that no effective 
    control can be established.
    
        Example for paragraph (h)(2)(iii). In a corporation where the 
    officers and directors own various size blocks of stock totaling 40 
    percent of the corporation's voting stock, but no officer or 
    director has a block sufficient to give him or her control or the 
    power to control and the remaining 60 percent is widely distributed 
    with no individual stockholder having a stock interest greater than 
    10 percent, management has the power to control. If persons with 
    such management control of the other entity are persons with 
    attributable interests in the applicant, the other entity will be 
    deemed an affiliate of the applicant.
    
        (3) Identity of interest between and among persons. Affiliation can 
    arise between or among two or more persons with an identity of 
    interest, such as members of the same family or persons with common 
    investments. In determining if the applicant controls or is controlled 
    by a concern, persons with an identity of interest will be treated as 
    though they were one person.
    
        Example 1. Two shareholders in Corporation Y each have 
    attributable interests in the same SMR application. While neither 
    shareholder has enough shares to individually control Corporation Y, 
    together they have the power to control Corporation Y. The two 
    shareholders with these common investments (or identity of interest) 
    are treated as though they are one person and Corporation Y would be 
    deemed an affiliate of the applicant.
        Example 2. One shareholder in Corporation Y, shareholder A, has 
    an attributable interest in a SMR application. Another shareholder 
    in Corporation Y, shareholder B, has a nonattributable interest in 
    the same SMR application. While neither shareholder has enough 
    shares to individually control Corporation Y, together they have the 
    power to control Corporation Y. Through the common investment of 
    shareholders A and B in the SMR application, Corporation Y would 
    still be deemed an affiliate of the applicant.
    
        (i) Spousal affiliation. Both spouses are deemed to own or control 
    or have the power to control interests owned or controlled by either of 
    them, unless they are subject to a legal separation recognized by a 
    court of competent jurisdiction in the United States.
        (ii) Kinship affiliation. Immediate family members will be presumed 
    to own or control or have the power to control interests owned or 
    controlled by other immediate family members. In this context 
    ``immediate family member'' means father, mother, husband, wife, son, 
    daughter, brother, sister, father- or mother-in-law, son- or daughter-
    in-law, brother- or sister-in-law, step-father, or -mother, step-
    brother, or -sister, step-son, or -daughter, half brother or sister. 
    This presumption may be rebutted by showing that
        (A) The family members are estranged,
        (B) The family ties are remote, or
        (C) The family members are not closely involved with each other in 
    business matters.
    
        Example for paragraph (h)(3)(ii). A owns a controlling interest 
    in Corporation X. A's sister-in-law, B, has an attributable interest 
    in an SMR application. Because A and B have a presumptive kinship 
    affiliation, A's interest in Corporation X is attributable to B, and 
    thus to the applicant, unless B rebuts the presumption with the 
    necessary showing.
    
        (4) Affiliation through stock ownership. (i) An applicant is 
    presumed to control or have the power to control a concern if he or she 
    owns or controls or has the power to control 50 percent or more of its 
    voting stock.
        (ii) An applicant is presumed to control or have the power to 
    control a concern even though he or she owns, controls or has the power 
    to control less than 50 percent of the concern's voting stock, if the 
    block of stock he or she owns, controls or has the power to control is 
    large as compared with any other outstanding block of stock.
        (iii) If two or more persons each owns, controls or has the power 
    to control less than 50 percent of the voting stock of a concern, such 
    minority holdings are equal or approximately equal in size, and the 
    aggregate of these minority holdings is large as compared with any 
    other stock holding, the presumption arises that each one of these 
    persons 
    
    [[Page 6163]]
    individually controls or has the power to control the concern; however, 
    such presumption may be rebutted by a showing that such control or 
    power to control, in fact, does not exist.
        (5) Affiliation arising under stock options, convertible 
    debentures, and agreements to merge. Stock options, convertible 
    debentures, and agreements to merge (including agreements in principle) 
    are generally considered to have a present effect on the power to 
    control the concern. Therefore, in making a size determination, such 
    options, debentures, and agreements will generally be treated as though 
    the rights held thereunder had been exercised. However, neither an 
    affiliate nor an applicant can use such options and debentures to 
    appear to terminate its control over another concern before it actually 
    does so.
    
        Example 1 for paragraph (h)(5). If company B holds an option to 
    purchase a controlling interest in company A, who holds an 
    attributable interest in an SMR application, the situation is 
    treated as though company B had exercised its rights and had become 
    owner of a controlling interest in company A. The gross revenues of 
    company B must be taken into account in determining the size of the 
    applicant.
        Example 2 for paragraph (h)(5). If a large company, BigCo, holds 
    70% (70 of 100 outstanding shares) of the voting stock of company A, 
    who holds an attributable interest in an SMR application, and gives 
    a third party, SmallCo, an option to purchase 50 of the 70 shares 
    owned by BigCo, BigCo will be deemed to be an affiliate of company, 
    and thus the applicant, until SmallCo actually exercises its options 
    to purchase such shares. In order to prevent BigCo from 
    circumventing the intent of the rule which requires such options to 
    be considered on a fully diluted basis, the option is not considered 
    to have present effect in this case.
        Example 3 for paragraph (h)(5). If company A has entered into an 
    agreement to merge with company B in the future, the situation is 
    treated as though the merger has taken place.
    
        (6) Affiliation under voting trusts. (i) Stock interests held in 
    trust shall be deemed controlled by any person who holds or shares the 
    power to vote such stock, to any person who has the sole power to sell 
    such stock, and to any person who has the right to revoke the trust at 
    will or to replace the trustee at will.
        (ii) If a trustee has a familial, personal or extra-trust business 
    relationship to the grantor or the beneficiary, the stock interests 
    held in trust will be deemed controlled by the grantor or beneficiary, 
    as appropriate.
        (iii) If the primary purpose of a voting trust, or similar 
    agreement, is to separate voting power from beneficial ownership of 
    voting stock for the purpose of shifting control of or the power to 
    control a concern in order that such concern or another concern may 
    meet the Commission's size standards, such voting trust shall not be 
    considered valid for this purpose regardless of whether it is or is not 
    recognized within the appropriate jurisdiction.
        (7) Affiliation through common management. Affiliation generally 
    arises where officers, directors, or key employees serve as the 
    majority or otherwise as the controlling element of the board of 
    directors and/or the management of another entity.
        (8) Affiliation through common facilities. Affiliation generally 
    arises where one concern shares office space and/or employees and/or 
    other facilities with another concern, particularly where such concerns 
    are in the same or related industry or field of operations, or where 
    such concerns were formerly affiliated, and through these sharing 
    arrangements one concern has control, or potential control, of the 
    other concern.
        (9) Affiliation through contractual relationships. Affiliation 
    generally arises where one concern is dependent upon another concern 
    for contracts and business to such a degree that one concern has 
    control, or potential control, of the other concern.
        (10) Affiliation under joint venture arrangements. (i) A joint 
    venture for size determination purposes is an association of concerns 
    and/or individuals, with interests in any degree or proportion, formed 
    by contract, express or implied, to engage in and carry out a single, 
    specific business venture for joint profit for which purpose they 
    combine their efforts, property, money, skill and knowledge, but not on 
    a continuing or permanent basis for conducting business generally. The 
    determination whether an entity is a joint venture is based upon the 
    facts of the business operation, regardless of how the business 
    operation may be designated by the parties involved. An agreement to 
    share profits/losses proportionate to each party's contribution to the 
    business operation is a significant factor in determining whether the 
    business operation is a joint venture.
        (ii) The parties to a joint venture are considered to be affiliated 
    with each other.
    
    
    Sec. 90.913  Eligibility for small business status for spectrum blocks 
    A, B, and C.
    
        (a) Short-form applications: Certifications and disclosure. Each 
    applicant for an EA license for Spectrum Blocks A, B, or C which 
    qualifies as a small business or consortium of small businesses shall 
    append the following information as an exhibit to its short-form 
    application (FCC Form 175):
        (1) The identity of the applicant's affiliates, persons or entities 
    that hold attributable interests in such entity, and their affiliates, 
    and, if a consortium of small businesses, the members of the joint 
    venture; and
        (2) The applicant's gross revenues, computed in accordance with 
    Sec. 90.912.
        (b) Long-form applications: Certifications and disclosure. In 
    addition to the requirements in this subpart, each applicant submitting 
    a long-form application for license(s) for Spectrum Blocks A, B, or C 
    and qualifying as a small business shall, in an exhibit to its long-
    form application:
        (1) Disclose separately and in the aggregate the gross revenues, 
    computed in accordance with Sec. 90.912, for each of the following: the 
    applicant, the applicant's affiliates, the applicant's attributable 
    investors, affiliates of its attributable investors, and, if a 
    consortium of small businesses, the members of the joint venture;
        (2) List and summarize all agreements or other instruments (with 
    appropriate references to specific provisions in the text of such 
    agreements and instruments) that support the applicant's eligibility as 
    a small business under Secs. 90.910 and 90.911, including the 
    establishment of de facto and de jure control; such agreements and 
    instruments include articles of incorporation and bylaws, shareholder 
    agreements, voting or other trust agreements, franchise agreements, and 
    any other relevant agreements (including letters of intent), oral or 
    written; and
        (3) List and summarize any investor protection agreements, 
    including rights of first refusal, supermajority clauses, options, veto 
    rights, and rights to hire and fire employees and to appoint members to 
    boards of directors or management committees.
        (c) Records maintenance. All winning bidders qualifying as small 
    businesses, shall maintain at their principal place of business an 
    updated file of ownership, revenue and asset information, including any 
    document necessary to establish eligibility as a small business and/or 
    consortium of small businesses under Sec. 90.912. Licensees (and their 
    successors in interest) shall maintain such files for the term of the 
    license.
        (d) Audits. (1) Applicants and licensees claiming eligibility as a 
    small business and/or consortium of small businesses under Secs. 90.910 
    and 90.911 shall be subject to audits by the Commission, using in-house 
    and 
    
    [[Page 6164]]
    contract resources. Selection for audit may be random, on information, 
    or on the basis of other factors.
        (2) Consent to such audits is part of the certification included in 
    the short-form application (FCC Form 175). Such consent shall include 
    consent to the audit of the applicant's or licensee's books, documents 
    and other material (including accounting procedures and practices) 
    regardless of form or type, sufficient to confirm that such applicant's 
    or licensee's representations are, and remain, accurate. Such consent 
    shall include inspection at all reasonable times of the facilities, or 
    parts thereof, engaged in providing and transacting business, or 
    keeping records regarding licensed 800 MHz SMR service and shall also 
    include consent to the interview of principals, employees, customers 
    and suppliers of the applicant or licensee.
        (3) Definitions. The terms affiliate, attributable interests, 
    consortium of small businesses, gross revenues, small business used in 
    this section are defined in Sec. 90.912.
    
    [FR Doc. 96-3509 Filed 2-13-96; 5:06 pm]
    BILLING CODE 6712-01-P
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
3/18/1996
Published:
02/16/1996
Department:
Federal Communications Commission
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
96-3509
Dates:
March 18, 1996.
Pages:
6138-6164 (27 pages)
Docket Numbers:
PR Docket No. 93-144, PP Docket No. 93-253, FCC 95-501
PDF File:
96-3509.pdf
CFR: (38)
47 CFR 1.2105(a)(2)(viii)
47 CFR 90.621(b)
47 CFR 90.912(b)(1)(i)
47 CFR 90.912(b)(1)(ii)
47 CFR 1.2110(e)
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