February 03, 2008 11:55am
28m
The FCC 700 MHz Spectrum AuctionIntro: In this podcast we discuss the in-progress FCC 700 MHz spectrum auction.Gordon:
Mike, you are the reigning Global Wireless Education Consortium
Educator of the year so you know about this stuff - what exactly is
this spectrum the FCC is auctioning and where did it come from?Back in 2005 Congress passed a law that requires all U.S. TV
stations to convert to all digital broadcasts and give up analog
spectrum in the 700 MHz frequency band. This law will free up 62 MHz of
spectrum in the 700 MHz band and effectively eliminate channels between
52 and 69. This
conversion, which has a deadline of February 18, 2009, has freed up spectrum that is being split up by the FCC into five blocks.Gordon: What so interesting about this block of spectrum?Cell coverage, required cell-site density and cost (total network cost and cost per customer).I understand each
spectrum block in the 700 MHz auction, except for the national public
safely D-Block, has been assigned an area designation by the FCC. Could you
describe those areas included in the 700 MHz auction using
FCC definitions.
Economic AreasBoth
the A-Block (12 MHz) and the E-Block (6 MHz) are being auctioned using
the Economic Area (BEA) service areas established by the Regional
Economic Analysis Division, Bureau of Economic Analysis, U.S.
Department of Commerce. Included are Guam and the Northern Mariana
Islands, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, American Samoa and
the Gulf of Mexico. There are a total of 176 Economic Area service
areas designated by the FCC.BEA services include General
Wireless Communications Service (GWCS), Specialized Mobile Radio (SMR)
and Location and Monitoring Service (LMS).
Cellular Market AreasThe
B-Block (12 MHz) is being auctioned using the Cellular Market Area
(CMA) service areas. The 734 CMAs are broken down as follows:
Areas 1-305: Created from the Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs)
defined by the Office of Management and Budget (1-305) Area 306: The Gulf of MexicoAreas
307-734: Rural Service Areas (RSAs) established by the FCC which do not
cross state borders including parts of Puerto Rico not already in an
MSA (723-729), U.S. Virgin Islands (730-731), Guam (732), American Samoa (733), and Northern Mariana Islands (734).CMA Services include Cellular Radiotelephone Service and Interactive Video and Data Service (IVDS)
Regional Economic Areas
The
C-Block (22 MHz) is being auctioned using the 12 Regional Economic
Areas (REAs) created by the FCC. The REAs are an aggregation of the 52
Major Economic Areas (MEAs) defined by the FCC.
REA Services include Wireless Communications Service (WCS)
All FCC areas, along with names, county lists, maps and map info data can be found on the Commission's website linked here.
Mike: How is the auction being conducted?
On their website, the Federal Communications Commission has a public notice titled Auction of 700 MHZ Band Licenses. This document describes the bidding procedure for the 214 companies that have qualified for the auction, which will be handled by the Wireless Telecommunications Bureau
(WTB). The WTB is one of seven FCC Bureaus and is responsible for all
FCC domestic wireless telecomm