96-2843. Review of the Pioneer's Preference Rules  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 28 (Friday, February 9, 1996)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 4916-4918]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-2843]
    
    
    
    =======================================================================
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
    
    47 CFR Parts 0 and 1
    
    [ET Docket No. 93-266; FCC 95-493]
    
    
    Review of the Pioneer's Preference Rules
    
    AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: By this Memorandum Opinion and Order (MO&O), the Commission 
    denies the petition for reconsideration filed by Qualcomm Incorporated 
    (Qualcomm) to the Second Report and Order (Second R&O) in this 
    proceeding, and grants the petition for reconsideration filed by Celsat 
    America, Inc. (Celsat) to the Third Report and Order (Third R&O). The 
    Commission finds that there is no need to reconsider its determination 
    of what constitutes innovative technology, as requested by Qualcomm; 
    and finds that it is desirable to reconsider its decision to apply 
    certain new pioneer's preference regulations to pioneer's preference 
    requests accepted for filing on or before September 1, 1994, as 
    requested by Celsat. This action is intended to affirm the Commission's 
    pioneer's preference policies, consistent with Congressional 
    directives.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: March 11, 1996.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Rodney Small, (202) 418-2452, Office 
    of Engineering and Technology, Federal Communications Commission, 
    Washington, DC 20554.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Commission's MO&O 
    adopted December 8, 1995, and released January 30, 1996. This action 
    will not add to or decrease the public reporting burden. The full text 
    of the Commission decision is available for inspection and copying 
    during regular business hours in the FCC Reference Center (Room 239), 
    1919 M Street, NW, Washington, DC. The complete text of this decision 
    also may be purchased from the Commission's duplication contractor, 
    International Transcription Service, Inc., (202) 857-3800, 2100 M 
    Street, NW, Suite 140, Washington, DC 20037.
    
    Summary of MO&O
    
        1. The pioneer's preference program provides preferential treatment 
    in the Commission's licensing processes for parties that make 
    significant contributions to the development of a new service or to the 
    development of a new technology that substantially enhances an existing 
    service. The program was established to foster new communications 
    services and technologies and to encourage parties to submit innovative 
    proposals in a timely manner. Under the pioneer's preference rules, a 
    necessary condition for the award of a preference is that an applicant 
    demonstrate that it has developed the capabilities or possibilities of 
    a new technology or service, or has brought the technology or service 
    to a more advanced or effective state. The applicant must also 
    demonstrate that the new service or technology is technically feasible 
    by submitting either the summarized results of an experiment or a 
    technical showing. Finally, a preference is granted only if the service 
    rules adopted are a reasonable outgrowth of the applicant's proposal 
    and lend themselves to grant of a preference. A pioneer's preference 
    recipient's license application is not subject to mutually exclusive 
    applications.
        2. The Second R&O, 60 FR 13636 (March 14, 1995), addressed 
    proposals set forth in the Notice of Proposed Rule Making, 58 FR 57578 
    (October 26, 1993), in this proceeding and modified certain rules 
    regarding the Commission's pioneer's preference program. Specifically, 
    the Second R&O provided pioneers with a discount on license charges in 
    services in which licenses are awarded by competitive bidding, and it 
    also modified several administrative rules. In addition, the Second R&O 
    also held that, where an ``innovative technology'' has developed or 
    enhanced more than one service, the grant of a pioneer's preference in 
    only one such service is sufficient incentive to encourage pioneering 
    proposals to be submitted.
        3. Qualcomm states that the Commission should reconsider its 
    determination of what constitutes ``innovative technology.'' Qualcomm 
    contends that four aspects of the Second R&O are not clearly defined. 
    First, Qualcomm maintains that a technology should not be considered 
    ineligible for a pioneer's preference merely because that technology 
    could be used in an existing service; second, it requests that the 
    Commission clarify that an innovative technology that can be applied to 
    more than one new service should be eligible for a preference in all 
    services that are not existing services; third, it requests that an 
    innovator who develops a new technology that both significantly 
    improves an existing service and that may also be used to provide a new 
    service in a different band be eligible for a preference in the new 
    service; and fourth, it requests that the Commission clarify what it 
    means by a ``new service'' operating in a higher band. Qualcomm states 
    that there may be some confusion on this point with respect to 
    broadband Personal Communications Services (PCS). No party filed 
    comments on Qualcomm's petition.
        4. Legislation implementing domestically the General Agreement on 
    Tariffs and Trade (GATT) was enacted on December 8, 1994, and contained 
    an amendment to the Communications Act relating to the pioneer's 
    preference program. Included in this amendment was Section 
    309(j)(13)(D), which specified new requirements regarding criteria, 
    peer review, and unjust enrichment for pioneer's preference requests 
    that were accepted for filing after September 1, 1994. In the Third 
    R&O, 60 FR 32116 (June 20, 1995), the Commission implemented the new 
    requirements specified in Section 309(j)(13)(D) and extended them to 
    pioneer's preference requests filed on or before September 1, 1994 in 
    proceedings that have not reached the tentative decision stage. The 
    Commission stated that such action would further its 
    
    [[Page 4917]]
    pioneer's preference policy in an auction environment. Also, the 
    Commission imposed the requirement that pending pioneer's preference 
    requests must be amended so as to conform to the new requirements--
    including an additional requirement adopted in the Third R&O and a 
    requirement adopted in the Second R&O--no later than 30 days from the 
    effective date of the rules established by the Third R&O (i.e., by 
    September 20, 1995).
        5. In its petition, Celsat requests that the Commission reconsider 
    its decision to apply the new requirements regarding criteria, peer 
    review, and unjust enrichment to pioneer's preference requests that 
    were accepted for filing on or before September 1, 1994. Celsat also 
    requests that the Commission defer the deadline for filing amendments 
    to pioneer's preference requests until 30 days after the effective date 
    of the Order that responds to its petition. No party filed comments on 
    Celsat's petition or its request for deferral.
        6. The Commission emphasizes that the pioneer's preference program 
    was established ``to foster a host of valuable new technologies and 
    services to the public'' and ``to induce innovators to present their 
    proposals to the Commission in a timely manner.'' To the extent that 
    new technologies are being developed and presented to the Commission in 
    a timely manner for use in existing services independently of the 
    pioneer's preference program, the Commission sees no need to award 
    preferences based upon the additional use of those technologies in new 
    services. Therefore, it finds unpersuasive Qualcomm's argument that a 
    technology that is first used in an existing service independently of 
    the pioneer's preference program should be eligible for a preference in 
    the new service. With respect to Qualcomm's argument regarding the 
    eligibility of an innovative technology to multiple new services, it 
    does not intend to reward the same technology with a preference in more 
    than one service. Further, the Commission believes that such a 
    technology should be eligible for a pioneer's preference only in the 
    first new service that is proposed (provided that the technology has 
    not previously been implemented in an existing service). To permit an 
    applicant to use the same technology as the basis for a pioneer's 
    preference in more than one new service would be administratively 
    burdensome, because there may be numerous new services in which an 
    innovative technology can be used and a party could repeatedly apply 
    for a preference using that technology. Finally, with respect to new 
    services operating in higher bands, Qualcomm does not present a valid 
    reason to believe that there is confusion as to what constitutes a new 
    service. Accordingly, the Commission finds no need to clarify its rules 
    regarding new services.
        7. With regard to Celsat's petition, the Commission finds that 
    applying the new pioneer's preference requirements regarding criteria, 
    peer review, and unjust enrichment to pioneer's preference requests 
    that were accepted for filing on or before September 1, 1994 is 
    unnecessary to evaluate these requests and would be administratively 
    burdensome on the Commission and on the applicants. The Commission 
    believes that it has sufficient information on each of these requests 
    to determine whether they are entitled to a pioneer's preference. 
    Accordingly, it will not apply the new requirements regarding criteria, 
    peer review, and unjust enrichment to these requests.
        8. The Commission notes, however, that all pending pioneer's 
    preference applicants except Celsat in proceedings that have not 
    reached the tentative decision stage were required by the Third R&O to 
    submit by September 20, 1995 amended filings pertaining to these and 
    other new pioneer's preference requirements adopted in the Second R&O 
    and Third R&O. Even though a number of pending applicants supplemented 
    their preference requests by that date, the Office of Management and 
    Budget (OMB) has not yet approved a new information collection for 
    pioneer's preference requests pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act. 
    Accordingly, pursuant to that statute, the Commission is ordering that 
    subsequent to approval by OMB of the new collection, the Chief, Office 
    of Engineering and Technology announce a new date for the submission of 
    amended pioneer's preference requests and publish that date in the 
    Federal Register. Therefore, Celsat and other parties who may wish to 
    amend their pioneer's preference requests will not be required to do so 
    prior to the new filing date. On that date, a party that has not 
    previously filed an amended pioneer's preference request will be 
    required to do so by submitting a filing pertaining to the new 
    requirements adopted in the Second R&O and Third R&O. Specifically, a 
    party that filed a pioneer's preference request on or before September 
    1, 1994, must submit a statement that a new allocation of spectrum is 
    necessary for its innovation to be implemented. Further, if the 
    applicant relied on experimental results to demonstrate the technical 
    feasibility of its innovation, it must submit a summary of those 
    experimental results. Additionally, for pioneer's preference requests 
    filed after September 1, 1994, an applicant must submit a showing 
    demonstrating that the Commission's public rulemaking process inhibits 
    it from capturing the economic rewards of its innovation unless it is 
    granted a pioneer's preference license; i.e., the applicant must show 
    that it may lose its intellectual property protection because of the 
    Commission's public process; that the damage to its intellectual 
    property is likely to be more significant than in other contexts, such 
    as the patent process; and that the guarantee of a license is a 
    significant factor in its ability to capture the rewards from its 
    innovation. Failure by any party to amend in a timely manner will 
    result in the dismissal of its request.
        9. Accordingly, it is ordered that Parts 0 and 1 of the 
    Commission's Rules are amended as specified below, effective March 11, 
    1996. It is further ordered that the petition for reconsideration filed 
    by Qualcomm Incorporated is denied. It is further ordered that the 
    petition for reconsideration filed by Celsat America, Inc. is granted. 
    It is further ordered that the request for deferral filed by Celsat 
    America, Inc. is dismissed as moot. It is further ordered that the 
    Chief, Office of Engineering and Technology announce a new date for the 
    submission of amended pioneer's preference requests and publish that 
    date in the Federal Register, subsequent to approval from the Office of 
    Management and Budget of the new information collection for pioneer's 
    preference requests. This action is taken pursuant to Sections 4(i), 
    7(a), 303(g), and 303(r), of the Communications Act of 1934, as 
    amended, 47 U.S.C. Sections 154(i), 157(a), 303(g), and 303(r).
    
    List of Subjects
    
    47 CFR Part 0
    
        Organization and functions (Government agencies).
    
    47 CFR Part 1
    
        Pioneer's preference, Radio.
    
    Federal Communications Commission
    William F. Caton,
    Acting Secretary.
    
    Amendatory Text
    
        Parts 0 and 1 of Chapter I of Title 47 of the Code of Federal 
    Regulations are amended as follows:
    
    PART 0--COMMISSION ORGANIZATION
    
        1. The authority citation for Part 0 continues to read as follows:
    
     
    [[Page 4918]]
    
        Authority: Sec. 5, 48 Stat. 1068, as amended; 47 U.S.C. 155, 
    225, unless otherwise noted.
    
        2. Section 0.241 is amended by revising paragraph (f) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 0.241  Authority delegated.
    
    * * * * *
        (f) For pioneer's preference requests accepted for filing after 
    September 1, 1994, the Chief, Office of Engineering and Technology 
    (OET) is authorized to select, in appropriate cases on his/her own 
    initiative or upon request by a pioneer's preference applicant or other 
    interested person, a panel of experts consisting of persons who are 
    knowledgeable about the specific technology set forth in a pioneer's 
    preference request and who are neither employed by the Commission nor 
    by any applicant seeking a pioneer's preference in the same or similar 
    communications service. In consultation with the General Counsel, the 
    Chief, OET, shall also impose other conflict-of-interest requirements 
    that are necessary in the interest of attaining impartial, expert 
    advice regarding the particular pioneer's preference request or 
    requests.
    
    PART 1--PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE
    
        1. The authority citation for Part 1 continues to read as follows:
    
        Authority: Secs. 4, 303, 48 Stat. 1066, 1082, as amended; 47 
    U.S.C. 154, 303; Implement, 5 U.S.C. 552 and 21 U.S.C. 853a, unless 
    otherwise noted.
    
        2. Section 1.402 is amended by revising paragraphs (h) and (i) to 
    read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1.402  Pioneer's preference.
    
    * * * * *
        (h) For pioneer's preference requests accepted for filing after 
    September 1, 1994, an opportunity for review and verification of the 
    requests by experts who are not Commission employees will be provided 
    by the Commission. The Chief, Office of Engineering and Technology 
    (OET) may select a panel of experts consisting of persons who are 
    knowledgeable about the specific technology set forth in a pioneer's 
    preference request and who are neither employed by the Commission nor 
    by any applicant seeking a pioneer's preference in the same or similar 
    communications service. The panel of experts will generally be granted 
    a period of up to 90 days, but no more than 180 days, to present their 
    findings to the Commission. The Commission will generally establish, 
    conduct, and seek the consensus of the panel pursuant to the Federal 
    Advisory Committee Act, and will evaluate its recommendations in light 
    of all the submissions and comments in the record. Panelists will have 
    the authority to seek further information pertaining to preference 
    requests and to perform field evaluations, as deemed appropriate by the 
    Chief, OET.
        (i) For pioneer's preference requests accepted for filing after 
    September 1, 1994, in order to qualify for a pioneer's preference in 
    services in which licenses are awarded by competitive bidding, an 
    applicant must demonstrate that the Commission's public rulemaking 
    process inhibits it from capturing the economic rewards of its 
    innovation unless it is granted a pioneer's preference license. The 
    applicant must show that it may lose its intellectual property 
    protection because of the Commission's public process; that the damage 
    to its intellectual property is likely to be more significant than in 
    other contexts, such as the patent process; and that the guarantee of a 
    license is a significant factor in its ability to capture the rewards 
    from its innovation. This demonstration will be required even if the 
    Commission has not determined at the time a pioneer's preference 
    request is filed whether assignments in the proposed service will be 
    made by competitive bidding.
    * * * * *
    [FR Doc. 96-2843 Filed 2-8-96; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6712-01-P
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
3/11/1996
Published:
02/09/1996
Department:
Federal Communications Commission
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
96-2843
Dates:
March 11, 1996.
Pages:
4916-4918 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
ET Docket No. 93-266, FCC 95-493
PDF File:
96-2843.pdf
CFR: (2)
47 CFR 0.241
47 CFR 1.402