The Rural Utilities Service opened the window Friday for applications for broadband stimulus funds for projects using satellites to increase the reach of broadband. The request for proposals (RFP) was printed in Friday’s Federal Register and outlines the application process for rural library broadband and technical assistance projects as well. The satellite broadband funds are part of the second round of broadband stimulus fund distribution through RUS’s Broadband Initiatives Program (BIP). The agency will accept applications for funds through June 7, it said.
Tim Warren
Timothy Warren is Executive Managing Editor of Communications Daily. He previously led the International Trade Today editorial team from the time it was purchased by Warren Communications News in 2012 through the launch of Export Compliance Daily and Trade Law Daily. Tim is a 2005 graduate of the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts and lives in Maryland with his wife and three kids.
Subscription contributions for telecom companies that sell DirecTV services are slowing as TV competition intensifies and reliance on land lines declines, the company said in its Q1 earnings call. Generally sold as part of a bundle with telephone services and/or Internet, contributions have fallen to under 20 percent from about 25 percent, said DirecTV Chief Financial Officer Patrick Doyle. The continued roll out of Verizon’s FiOS and AT&T’s U-verse have contributed to the slide, he said.
SES said it’s considering several different in-orbit maneuvers to mitigate interference on subsidiary SES World Skies’ AMC-11 satellite from the nearby Intelsat Galaxy 15 satellite that’s unresponsive and continuing to transmit while slowly drifting outside its slot (CD April 9 p10). The amount of interference created by the proximity of the two C-band payloads is hard to estimate, but the company is considering a number of movements that should keep interference at a minimum as Galaxy 15 passes through AMC-11’s orbital spot at 129 degrees west, said a company spokesman.
The military is moving toward using long-term bandwidth contracts for satellite communications in place of annual leases, Bruce Bennett, the director of satellite communications at the Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA) said at the Military Satellites Summit in Vienna, Va. DISA has wanted longer contracts for years, but the holders of congressional purse-strings have resisted. But “Congress is weakening,” as DISA and industry have increased lobbying for changes in the system, he said. Longer contracts are part of a major effort to modernize satellite communications networks and acquisition, Bennett said.
The FCC’s proposed rule changes for the wireless communications band probably would fail legal challenge, and the commission should reject the proposal, Sirius XM told the commission in comments. The rules wouldn’t survive under the Administrative Procedure Act, and adopting them would violate Section 316 of the Communications Act because they improperly change Sirius XM’s licenses without individual hearing procedures, the company said. WCS spectrum should be reauctioned to avoid denying “the U.S. taxpayer the fair proceeds reflecting the true value of the spectrum,” since the changes would dramatically increase the spectrum’s worth, it said.
Dish Network and DirecTV said they'll work together on a new advertising platform meant to increase sales to national advertisers. The platform, called the Advanced Satellite Advertising Platform (ASAP), will give advertisers access to almost 30 million households, a major selling point. The platform will be interactive and it allows regional locators, product information and requests for additional information, the companies said Monday.
Wireless communications band licensees have long hoarded their spectrum without any serious effort toward deploying services and waited for regulatory relief to make service in the band possible, Sirius XM told the FCC in comments on potential buildout requirements for users of the band. The licensees have no reason to justify the inaction and have simply disregarded the buildout obligations when the spectrum was acquired in 1997 for $13.6 million, it said. “Simply put, WCS licensees have been egregious spectrum warehousers whose actions and words demonstrate a disregard for their buildout obligations, not to mention for the Commissions’ processes,” the company said in comments.
Recent claims from Artel, Globecomm Systems, CapRock and Spacenet that Intelsat engages in anticompetitive behavior were filed in the wrong FCC proceeding and should be dismissed, Intelsat said. Intelsat’s comments to the FCC responded to those filed there as part of the Open-Market Reorganization for the Betterment of International Telecommunications (ORBIT) Act, which requires the agency to provide annual reports to the House and Senate Commerce and Foreign Relations committees on the effect of the privatization of Intelsat and Inmarsat. CapRock, Artel, Globecomm and Spacenet complained Intelsat was using its size and access to its satellites to win contracts while stunting competition (CD April 12 p6). The FCC ORBIT Act report is due to Congress by June 15.
Many aerospace officials consider Defense Secretary Robert Gates’ announcement of an overhaul of export control, to be led by the executive branch, the most significant development in years for what some consider a broken and antiquated system. But a full-fledged revamp has several steps to got to be a full fix, they said. Many in the space industry have said the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR), which restrict the movements and sales of satellites, caused lower international sales for U.S. satellite and component makers.
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. -- Satellite executives see broadband, access to the mass market, and the blurring of civil, military, and commercial services as the source of future growth in the industry, they said at the National Space Symposium. The executives, from different parts of the satellite industry, spoke on a panel about emerging applications.