Goto Section: 80.59 | 80.61 | Table of Contents
FCC 80.60
Revised as of October 1, 2010
Goto Year:2009 |
2011
§ 80.60 Partitioned licenses and disaggregated spectrum.
(a) Except as specified in § 20.15(c) of this chapter with respect to
commercial mobile radio service providers, charges must not be made for
service of:
(1) VHF Public Coast area licensees, see § 80.371(c)(1)(ii), may
partition their geographic service area or disaggregate their spectrum
pursuant to the procedures set forth in this section.
(2) AMTS geographic area licensees, see § 80.385(a)(3), may partition
their geographic service area or disaggregate their spectrum pursuant
to the procedures set forth in this section. Site-based AMTS public
coast station licensees may partition their license or disaggregate
their spectrum pursuant to the procedures set forth in this section,
provided that the partitionee or disaggregatee's predicted 38 dBu
signal level contour does not extend beyond the partitioner or
disaggregator's predicted 38 dBu signal level contour. The predicted 38
dBu signal level contours shall be calculated using the F(50, 50) field
strength chart for Channels 7-13 in § 73.699 (Fig. 10) of this chapter,
with a 9 dB correction for antenna height differential.
(3) Nationwide or multi-region LF, MF, and HF public coast station
licensees, see § § 80.357(b)(1), 80.361(a), 80.363(a)(2), 80.371(b),
and 80.374, may partition their spectrum pursuant to the procedures set
forth in this section, except that frequencies or frequency pairs
licensed to more than one licensee as of March 13, 2002 may be
partitioned only by the earliest licensee, and only on the condition
that the partitionee shall operate on a secondary, non-interference
basis to stations licensed as of March 13, 2002 other than the earliest
licensee. Coordination with government users is required for
partitioning of spectrum the licensing of which is subject to
coordination with government users.
(b) Technical standards --(1) Partitioning. In the case of
partitioning, all requests for authorization for partial assignment of
a license must include, as an attachment, a description of the
partitioned service area. The partitioned service area shall be defined
by coordinate points at every 3 degrees along the partitioned service
area unless an FCC-recognized service area is utilized (e.g.,
Metropolitan Service Area, Rural Service Area, or Economic Area) or
county lines are used. The geographic coordinates must be specified in
degrees, minutes, and seconds to the nearest second of latitude and
longitude, and must be based upon the 1983 North American Datum
(NAD83). In a case where an FCC-recognized service area or county lines
are utilized, applicants need only list the specific area(s) (through
use of FCC designations or county names) that constitute the
partitioned area.
(2) Disaggregation. VHF (156-162 MHz) spectrum may only be
disaggregated according to frequency pairs. AMTS spectrum may be
disaggregated in any amount.
(3) Combined partitioning and disaggregation. The Commission will
consider requests for partial assignment of licenses that propose
combinations of partitioning and disaggregation.
(c) License term. The license term for a partitioned license area and
for disaggregated spectrum shall be the remainder of the original
licensee's term as provided for in § 80.25 of this part.
(d) Construction Requirements --(1) Partitioning. Partial assignors and
assignees for license partitioning have two options to meet
construction requirements. Under the first option, the partitionor and
partitionee would each certify that they will independently satisfy the
substantial service requirement for their respective partitioned areas.
If either licensee failed to meet its substantial service showing
requirement, only the non-performing licensee's renewal application
would be subject to dismissal. Under the second option, the partitioner
certifies that it has met or will meet the substantial service
requirement for the entire market. If the partitioner fails to meet the
substantial service standard, however, only its renewal application
would be subject to forfeiture at renewal.
(2) Disaggregation. Partial assignors and assignees for license
disaggregation have two options to meet construction requirements.
Under the first option, the disaggregator and disaggregatee would
certify that they each will share responsibility for meeting the
substantial service requirement for the geographic service area. If
parties choose this option and either party fails to do so, both
licenses would be subject to forfeiture at renewal. The second option
would allow the parties to agree that either the disaggregator or the
disaggregatee would be responsible for meeting the substantial service
requirement for the geographic service area. If parties choose this
option, and the party responsible for meeting the construction
requirement fails to do so, only the license of the nonperforming party
would be subject to forfeiture at renewal.
(3) Site-based AMTS, and nationwide or multi-region LF, MF, and HF
public coast. Parties seeking to acquire a partitioned license or
disaggregated spectrum from a site-based AMTS, or nationwide or
multi-region LF, MF, and HF public coast licensee will be required to
construct and commence "service to subscribers" in all facilities
acquired through such transactions within the original construction
deadline for each facility as set forth in § 80.49. Failure to meet the
individual construction deadline will result in the automatic
termination of the facility's authorization.
[ 63 FR 40063 , July 27, 1998, as amended at 67 FR 48563 , July 25, 2002;
69 FR 64671 , Nov. 8, 2004]
Subpart C--Operating Requirements and Procedures
Station Requirements--General
Goto Section: 80.59 | 80.61
Goto Year: 2009 |
2011
CiteFind - See documents on FCC website that
cite this rule
Want to support this service?
Thanks!
Report errors in
this rule. Since these rules are converted to HTML by machine, it's possible errors have been made. Please
help us improve these rules by clicking the Report FCC Rule Errors link to report an error.
hallikainen.com
Helping make public information public