Goto Section: 27.13 | 27.15 | Table of Contents
FCC 27.14
Revised as of October 2, 2015
Goto Year:2014 |
2016
§ 27.14 Construction requirements; Criteria for renewal.
(a) AWS and WCS licensees, with the exception of WCS licensees holding
authorizations for the 600 MHz band, Block A in the 698-704 MHz and 728-734
MHz bands, Block B in the 704-710 MHz and 734-740 MHz bands, Block E in the
722-728 MHz band, Block C, C1 or C2 in the 746-757 MHz and 776-787 MHz
bands, Block A in the 2305-2310 MHz and 2350-2355 MHz bands, Block B in the
2310-2315 MHz and 2355-2360 MHz bands, Block C in the 2315-2320 MHz band,
and Block D in the 2345-2350 MHz band, and with the exception of licensees
holding AWS authorizations in the 1915-1920 MHz and 1995-2000 MHz bands, the
2000-2020 MHz and 2180-2200 MHz bands, or 1695-1710 MHz, 1755-1780 MHz and
2155-2180 MHz bands, must, as a performance requirement, make a showing of
“substantial service” in their license area within the prescribed license
term set forth in § 27.13. “Substantial service” is defined as service which
is sound, favorable and substantially above a level of mediocre service
which just might minimally warrant renewal. Failure by any licensee to meet
this requirement will result in forfeiture of the license and the licensee
will be ineligible to regain it.
(b) A renewal applicant involved in a comparative renewal proceeding shall
receive a preference, commonly referred to as a renewal expectancy, which is
the most important comparative factor to be considered in the proceeding, if
its past record for the relevant license period demonstrates that:
(1) The renewal applicant has provided “substantial” service during its past
license term; and
(2) The renewal applicant has substantially complied with applicable FCC
rules, policies and the Communications Act of 1934, as amended.
(c) In order to establish its right to a renewal expectancy, a WCS renewal
applicant involved in a comparative renewal proceeding must submit a showing
explaining why it should receive a renewal expectancy. At a minimum, this
showing must include:
(1) A description of its current service in terms of geographic coverage and
population served;
(2) An explanation of its record of expansion, including a timetable of new
construction to meet changes in demand for service;
(3) A description of its investments in its WCS system; and
(4) Copies of all FCC orders finding the licensee to have violated the
Communications Act or any FCC rule or policy; and a list of any pending
proceedings that relate to any matter described in this paragraph.
(d) In making its showing of entitlement to a renewal expectancy, a renewal
applicant may claim credit for any system modification applications that
were pending on the date it filed its renewal application. Such credit will
not be allowed if the modification application is dismissed or denied.
(e) Comparative renewal proceedings do not apply to WCS licensees holding
authorizations for Block A in the 698-704 MHz and 728-734 MHz bands, Block B
in the 704-710 MHz and 734-740 MHz bands, Block C in the 710-716 MHz and
740-746 MHz bands, Block D in the 716-722 MHz band, Block E in the 722-728
MHz band, or Block C, C1 or C2 in the 746-757 MHz and 776-787 MHz bands.
Each of these licensees must file a renewal application in accordance with
the provisions set forth in § 1.949, and must make a showing of substantial
service, independent of its performance requirements, as a condition for
renewal at the end of each license term.
(f) Comparative renewal proceedings do not apply to WCS licensees holding
authorizations for the 600 MHz band, 698-746 MHz, 747-762 MHz, and 777-792
MHz bands or licensees holding AWS authorizations for the 1915-1920 MHz and
1995-2000 MHz bands or the 2000-2020 MHz and 2180-2200 MHz bands, or the
1695-1710 MHz, or the 1755-1780 MHz and 2155-2180 MHz bands. These licensees
must file a renewal application in accordance with the provisions set forth
in § 1.949 of this chapter.
(g) WCS licensees holding EA authorizations for Block A in the 698-704 MHz
and 728-734 MHz bands, cellular market authorizations for Block B in the
704-710 MHz and 734-740 MHz bands, or EA authorizations for Block E in the
722-728 MHz band, if the results of the first auction in which licenses for
such authorizations are offered satisfy the reserve price for the applicable
block, shall provide signal coverage and offer service over at least 35
percent of the geographic area of each of their license authorizations no
later than June 13, 2013 (or within four years of initial license grant if
the initial authorization in a market is granted after June 13, 2009), and
shall provide such service over at least 70 percent of the geographic area
of each of these authorizations by the end of the license term. In applying
these geographic benchmarks, licensees are not required to include land
owned or administered by government as a part of the relevant service area.
Licensees may count covered government land for purposes of meeting their
geographic construction benchmark, but are required to add the covered
government land to the total geographic area used for measurement purposes.
Licensees are required to include those populated lands held by tribal
governments and those held by the Federal Government in trust or for the
benefit of a recognized tribe.
(1) If an EA or CMA licensee holding an authorization in these particular
blocks fails to provide signal coverage and offer service over at least 35
percent of the geographic area of its license authorization by no later than
June 13, 2013 (or within four years of initial license grant, if the initial
authorization in a market is granted after June 13, 2009), the term of that
license authorization will be reduced by two years and such licensee may be
subject to enforcement action, including forfeitures. In addition, an EA or
CMA licensee that provides signal coverage and offers service at a level
that is below this interim benchmark may lose authority to operate in part
of the remaining unserved areas of the license.
(2) If any such EA or CMA licensee fails to provide signal coverage and
offer service to at least 70 percent of the geographic area of its license
authorization by the end of the license term, that licensee's authorization
will terminate automatically without Commission action for those geographic
portions of its license in which the licensee is not providing service, and
those unserved areas will become available for reassignment by the
Commission. Such licensee may also be subject to enforcement action,
including forfeitures. In addition, an EA or CMA licensee that provides
signal coverage and offers service at a level that is below this end-of-term
benchmark may be subject to license termination. In the event that a
licensee's authority to operate in a license area terminates automatically
without Commission action, such areas will become available for reassignment
pursuant to the procedures in paragraph (j) of this section.
(3) For licenses under paragraph (g) of this section, the geographic service
area to be made available for reassignment must include a contiguous area of
at least 130 square kilometers (50 square miles), and areas smaller than a
contiguous area of at least 130 square kilometers (50 square miles) will not
be deemed unserved.
(h) WCS licensees holding REAG authorizations for Block C in the 746-757 MHz
and 776-787 MHz bands or REAG authorizations for Block C2 in the 752-757 MHz
and 782-787 MHz bands shall provide signal coverage and offer service over
at least 40 percent of the population in each EA comprising the REAG license
area no later than June 13, 2013 (or within four years of initial license
grant, if the initial authorization in a market is granted after June 13,
2009), and shall provide such service over at least 75 percent of the
population of each of these EAs by the end of the license term. For purposes
of compliance with this requirement, licensees should determine population
based on the most recently available U.S. Census Data.
(1) If a licensee holding a Block C authorization fails to provide signal
coverage and offer service over at least 40 percent of the population in
each EA comprising the REAG license area by no later than June 13, 2013 (or
within four years of initial license grant if the initial authorization in a
market is granted after June 13, 2009), the term of the license
authorization will be reduced by two years and such licensee may be subject
to enforcement action, including forfeitures. In addition, a licensee that
provides signal coverage and offers service at a level that is below this
interim benchmark may lose authority to operate in part of the remaining
unserved areas of the license.
(2) If a licensee holding a Block C authorization fails to provide signal
coverage and offer service over at least 75 percent of the population in any
EA comprising the REAG license area by the end of the license term, for each
such EA that licensee's authorization will terminate automatically without
Commission action for those geographic portions of its license in which the
licensee is not providing service. Such licensee may also be subject to
enforcement action, including forfeitures. In the event that a licensee's
authority to operate in a license area terminates automatically without
Commission action, such areas will become available for reassignment
pursuant to the procedures in paragraph (j) of this section. In addition, a
REAG licensee that provides signal coverage and offers service at a level
that is below this end-of-term benchmark within any EA may be subject to
license termination within that EA.
(3) For licenses under paragraph (h), the geographic service area to be made
available for reassignment must include a contiguous area of at least 130
square kilometers (50 square miles), and areas smaller than a contiguous
area of at least 130 square kilometers (50 square miles) will not be deemed
unserved.
(i) WCS licensees holding EA authorizations for Block A in the 698-704 MHz
and 728-734 MHz bands, cellular market authorizations for Block B in the
704-710 MHz and 734-740 MHz bands, or EA authorizations for Block E in the
722-728 MHz band, if the results of the first auction in which licenses for
such authorizations in Blocks A, B, and E are offered do not satisfy the
reserve price for the applicable block, as well as EA authorizations for
Block C1 in the 746-752 MHz and 776-782 MHz bands, are subject to the
following:
(1) If a licensee holding a cellular market area or EA authorization subject
to this paragraph (i) fails to provide signal coverage and offer service
over at least 40 percent of the population in its license area by no later
than June 13, 2013 (or within four years of initial license grant, if the
initial authorization in a market is granted after June 13, 2009), the term
of that license authorization will be reduced by two years and such licensee
may be subject to enforcement action, including forfeitures. In addition,
such licensee that provides signal coverage and offers service at a level
that is below this interim benchmark may lose authority to operate in part
of the remaining unserved areas of the license. For purposes of compliance
with this requirement, licensees should determine population based on the
most recently available U.S. Census Data.
(2) If a licensee holding a cellular market area or EA authorization subject
to this paragraph (i) fails to provide signal coverage and offer service
over at least 75 percent of the population in its license area by the end of
the license term, that licensee's authorization will terminate automatically
without Commission action for those geographic portions of its license in
which the licensee is not providing service, and those unserved areas will
become available for reassignment by the Commission. Such licensee may also
be subject to enforcement action, including forfeitures. In the event that a
licensee's authority to operate in a license area terminates automatically
without Commission action, such areas will become available for reassignment
pursuant to the procedures in paragraph (j) of this section. In addition,
such a licensee that provides signal coverage and offers service at a level
that is below this end-of-term benchmark may be subject to license
termination. For purposes of compliance with this requirement, licensees
should determine population based on the most recently available U.S. Census
Data.
(3) For licenses under paragraph (i), the geographic service area to be made
available for reassignment must include a contiguous area of at least 130
square kilometers (50 square miles), and areas smaller than a contiguous
area of at least 130 square kilometers (50 square miles) will not be deemed
unserved.
(j) In the event that a licensee's authority to operate in a license area
terminates automatically under paragraphs (g), (h), or (i) of this section,
such areas will become available for reassignment pursuant to the following
procedures:
(1) The Wireless Telecommunications Bureau is delegated authority to
announce by public notice that these license areas will be made available
and establish a 30-day window during which third parties may file license
applications to serve these areas. During this 30-day period, licensees that
had their authority to operate terminate automatically for unserved areas
may not file applications to provide service to these areas. Applications
filed by third parties that propose areas overlapping with other
applications will be deemed mutually exclusive, and will be resolved through
an auction. The Wireless Telecommunications Bureau, by public notice, may
specify a limited period before the filing of short-form applications (FCC
Form 175) during which applicants may enter into a settlement to resolve
their mutual exclusivity, subject to the provisions of § 1.935 of this
chapter.
(2) Following this 30-day period, the original licensee and third parties
can file license applications for remaining unserved areas where licenses
have not been issued or for which there are no pending applications. If the
original licensee or a third party files an application, that application
will be placed on public notice for 30 days. If no mutually exclusive
application is filed, the application will be granted, provided that a grant
is found to be in the public interest. If a mutually exclusive application
is filed, it will be resolved through an auction. The Wireless
Telecommunications Bureau, by public notice, may specify a limited period
before the filing of short-form applications (FCC Form 175) during which
applicants may enter into a settlement to resolve their mutual exclusivity,
subject to the provisions of § 1.935 of this chapter.
(3) The licensee will have one year from the date the new license is issued
to complete its construction and provide signal coverage and offer service
over 100 percent of the geographic area of the new license area. If the
licensee fails to meet this construction requirement, its license will
automatically terminate without Commission action and it will not be
eligible to apply to provide service to this area at any future date.
(k) Licensees holding WCS or AWS authorizations in the spectrum blocks
enumerated in paragraphs (g), (h), (i), (q), (r), (s), and (t) of this
section, including any licensee that obtained its license pursuant to the
procedures set forth in paragraph (j) of this section, shall demonstrate
compliance with performance requirements by filing a construction
notification with the Commission, within 15 days of the expiration of the
applicable benchmark, in accordance with the provisions set forth in
§ 1.946(d) of this chapter. The licensee must certify whether it has met the
applicable performance requirements. The licensee must file a description
and certification of the areas for which it is providing service. The
construction notifications must include electronic coverage maps, supporting
technical documentation and any other information as the Wireless
Telecommunications Bureau may prescribe by public notice.
(l) WCS licensees holding authorizations in the spectrum blocks enumerated
in paragraphs (g), (h), or (i) of this section, excluding any licensee that
obtained its license pursuant to the procedures set forth in subsection (j)
of this section, shall file reports with the Commission that provide the
Commission, at a minimum, with information concerning the status of their
efforts to meet the performance requirements applicable to their
authorizations in such spectrum blocks and the manner in which that spectrum
is being utilized. The information to be reported will include the date the
license term commenced, a description of the steps the licensee has taken
toward meeting its construction obligations in a timely manner, including
the technology or technologies and service(s) being provided, and the areas
within the license area in which those services are available. Each of these
licensees shall file its first report with the Commission no later than June
13, 2011 and no sooner than 30 days prior to this date. Each licensee that
meets its interim benchmarks shall file a second report with the Commission
no later than June 13, 2016 and no sooner than 30 days prior to this date.
Each licensee that does not meet its interim benchmark shall file this
second report no later than on June 13, 2015 and no sooner than 30 days
prior to this date.
(m)-(n) [Reserved]
(o) BRS and EBS licensees originally issued a BRS or EBS license prior to
November 6, 2009 must make a showing of substantial service no later than
May 1, 2011. With respect to initial BRS licenses issued on or after
November 6, 2009, the licensee must make a showing of substantial service
within four years from the date of issue of the license. Incumbent BRS
licensees that are required to demonstrate substantial service by May 1,
2011 must file their substantial service showings with their renewal
applications. “Substantial service” is defined as service which is sound,
favorable, and substantially above a level of mediocre service which just
might minimally warrant renewal. Substantial service for BRS and EBS
licensees is satisfied if a licensee meets the requirements of paragraph
(o)(1), (o)(2), or (o)(3) of this section. If a licensee has not met the
requirements of paragraph (o)(1), (o)(2), or (o)(3) of this section, then
demonstration of substantial service shall proceed on a case-by-case basis.
Except as provided in paragraphs (o)(4) and (o)(5) of this section, all
substantial service determinations will be made on a license-by-license
basis. Failure by any licensee to demonstrate substantial service will
result in forfeiture of the license and the licensee will be ineligible to
regain it.
(1) A BRS or EBS licensee has provided “substantial service” by:
(i) Constructing six permanent links per one million people for licensees
providing fixed point-to-point services;
(ii) Providing coverage of at least 30 percent of the population of the
licensed area for licensees providing mobile services or fixed
point-to-multipoint services;
(iii) Providing service to “rural areas” (a county (or equivalent) with a
population density of 100 persons per square mile or less, based upon the
most recently available Census data) and areas with limited access to
telecommunications services:
(A) For mobile service, where coverage is provided to at least 75% of the
geographic area of at least 30% of the rural areas within its service area;
or
(B) for fixed service, where the BRS or EBS licensee has constructed at
least one end of a permanent link in at least 30% of the rural areas within
its licensed area.
(iv) Providing specialized or technologically sophisticated service that
does not require a high level of coverage to benefit consumers; or
(v) Providing service to niche markets or areas outside the areas served by
other licensees.
(2) An EBS licensee has provided “substantial service” when:
(i) The EBS licensee is using its spectrum (or spectrum to which the EBS
licensee's educational services are shifted) to provide educational services
within the EBS licensee's GSA;
(ii) the EBS licensee's license is actually being used to serve the
educational mission of one or more accredited public or private schools,
colleges or universities providing formal educational and cultural
development to enrolled students; or
(iii) the level of service provided by the EBS licensee meets or exceeds the
minimum usage requirements specified in § 27.1214.
(3) An EBS or BRS licensee may be deemed to provide substantial service
through a leasing arrangement if the lessee is providing substantial service
under paragraph (o)(1) of this section. The EBS licensee must also be
otherwise in compliance with this Chapter (including the programming
requirements in § 27.1203 of this subpart).
(4) If the GSA of a licensee is less than 1924 square miles in size, and
there is an overlapping co-channel station licensed or leased by the
licensee or its affiliate, substantial service may be demonstrated by
meeting the requirements of paragraph (o)(1) or (o)(2) of this section with
respect to the combined GSAs of both stations.
(5) If the GSA of a BTA authorization holder, is less than one-half of the
area within the BTA for every BRS channel, substantial service may be
demonstrated for the licenses in question by meeting the requirements of
paragraph (o)(1) or (o)(2) of this section with respect to the combined GSAs
of the BTA authorization holder, together with any incumbent authorizations
licensed or leased by the licensee or its affiliates.
(p) This section enumerates performance requirements for licensees holding
authorizations for Block A in the 2305-2310 MHz and 2350-2355 MHz bands,
Block B in the 2310-2315 MHz and 2355-2360 MHz bands, Block C in the
2315-2320 MHz band, and Block D in the 2345-2350 MHz band.
(1) For mobile and point-to-multipoint systems in Blocks A and B, and
point-to-multipoint systems in Blocks C and D, a licensee must provide
reliable signal coverage and offer service to at least 40 percent of the
license area's population by March 13, 2017, and to at least 75 percent of
the license area's population by September 13, 2019. If, when filing the
construction notification required under § 1.946(d) of this chapter, a WCS
licensee demonstrates that 25 percent or more of the license area's
population for Block A, B or D is within a coordination zone as defined by
§ 27.73(a) of the rules, the foregoing population benchmarks are reduced to
25 and 50 percent, respectively. The percentage of a license area's
population within a coordination zone equals the sum of the Census Block
Centroid Populations within the area, divided by the license area's total
population.
(2) For point-to-point fixed systems, except those deployed in the Gulf of
Mexico license area, a licensee must construct and operate a minimum of 15
point-to-point links per million persons (one link per 67,000 persons) in a
license area by March 13, 2017, and 30 point-to-point links per million
persons (one link per 33,500 persons) in a licensed area by September 13,
2019. The exact link requirement is calculated by dividing a license area's
total population by 67,000 and 33,500 for the respective milestones, and
then rounding upwards to the next whole number. For a link to be counted
towards these benchmarks, both of its endpoints must be located in the
license area. If only one endpoint of a link is located in a license area,
it can be counted as a one- half link towards the benchmarks.
(3) For point-to-point fixed systems deployed on any spectrum block in the
Gulf of Mexico license area, a licensee must construct and operate a minimum
of 15 point-to-point links by March 13, 2017, and a minimum of 15
point-to-point links by September 13, 2019.
(4) Under paragraph (p)(2) and (p)(3) of this section, each fixed link must
provide a minimum bit rate, in bits per second, equal to or greater than the
bandwidth specified by the emission designator in Hertz (e.g., equipment
transmitting at a 5 Mb/s rate must not require a bandwidth of greater than 5
MHz).
(5) If an initial authorization for a license area is granted after March
13, 2013, then the applicable benchmarks in paragraphs (p)(1), (2) and (3)
of this section must be met within 48 and 78 months, respectively, of the
initial authorization grant date.
(6) Licensees must use the most recently available U.S. Census Data at the
time of measurement to meet these performance requirements.
(7) Licensees must certify compliance with the applicable performance
requirements by filing a construction notification with the Commission,
within 15 days of the expiration of the relevant performance milestone,
pursuant to § 1.946(d) of this chapter. Each construction notification must
include electronic coverage maps, supporting technical documentation, and
any other information as the Wireless Telecommunications Bureau may
prescribe by public notice. Electronic coverage maps must accurately depict
the boundaries of each license area (Regional Economic Area Grouping, REAG,
or Major Economic Area, MEA) in the licensee's service territory. Further,
REAG maps must depict MEA boundaries and MEA maps must depict Economic Area
boundaries. If a licensee does not provide reliable signal coverage to an
entire license area, its map must accurately depict the boundaries of the
area or areas within each license area not being served. Each licensee also
must file supporting documentation certifying the type of service it is
providing for each REAG or MEA within its service territory and the type of
technology used to provide such service. Supporting documentation must
include the assumptions used to create the coverage maps, including the
propagation model and the signal strength necessary to provide reliable
service with the licensee's technology.
(8) If a licensee fails to meet any applicable performance requirement, its
authorization will terminate automatically without further Commission action
as of the applicable performance milestone and the licensee will be
ineligible to regain it.
(q) The following provisions apply to any licensee holding an AWS
authorization in the 2000-2020 MHz and 2180-2200 MHz bands (an “AWS-4
licensee”):
(1) An AWS-4 licensee shall provide terrestrial signal coverage and offer
terrestrial service within four (4) years from the date of the license to at
least forty (40) percent of the total population in the aggregate service
areas that it has licensed in the 2000-2020 MHz and 2180-2200 MHz bands
(“AWS-4 Interim Buildout Requirement”). For purposes of this subpart, a
licensee's total population shall be calculated by summing the population of
each license area that a licensee holds in the 2000-2020 MHz and 2180-2200
MHz bands; and
(2) An AWS-4 licensee shall provide terrestrial signal coverage and offer
terrestrial service within seven (7) years from the date of the license to
at least seventy (70) percent of the population in each of its license areas
in the 2000-2020 MHz and 2180-2200 MHz bands (“AWS-4 Final Buildout
Requirement”).
(3) If any AWS-4 licensee fails to establish that it meets the AWS-4 Interim
Buildout Requirement, the AWS-4 Final Buildout requirement shall be
accelerated by one year from (seven to six years).
(4) If any AWS-4 licensee fails to establish that it meets the AWS-4 Final
Buildout Requirement in any of its license areas in the 2000-2020 MHz and
2180-2200 MHz bands, its authorization for each license area in which it
fails to meet the requirement shall terminate automatically without
Commission action. To the extent that the AWS-4 licensee also holds the 2
GHz MSS rights for the affected license area, failure to meet the AWS-4
Final Buildout Requirement in an EA shall also result in the MSS protection
rule in § 27.1136 no longer applying in that license area.
(5) To demonstrate compliance with these performance requirements, licensees
shall use the most recently available U.S. Census Data at the time of
measurement and shall base their measurements of population served on areas
no larger than the Census Tract level. The population within a specific
Census Tract (or other acceptable identifier) will only be deemed served by
the licensee if it provides signal coverage to and offers service within the
specific Census Tract (or other acceptable identifier). To the extent the
Census Tract (or other acceptable identifier) extends beyond the boundaries
of a license area, a licensee with authorizations for such areas may only
include the population within the Census Tract (or other acceptable
identifier) towards meeting the performance requirement of a single,
individual license.
(6) Failure by any AWS-4 licensee to meet the AWS-4 Final Buildout
Requirement in paragraph (q)(4) of this section will result in forfeiture of
the license and the licensee will be ineligible to regain it.
(7) Renewal showing. An applicant for renewal of a geographic-area
authorization in the 2000-2020 MHz and 2180-2200 MHz service bands must make
a renewal showing, independent of its performance requirements, as a
condition of renewal. The showing must include a detailed description of the
applicant's provision of service during the entire license period and
address:
(i) The level and quality of service provided by the applicant (including
the population served, the area served, the number of subscribers, the
services offered);
(ii) The date service commenced, whether service was ever interrupted, and
the duration of any interruption or outage;
(iii) The extent to which service is provided to rural areas;
(iv) The extent to which service is provided to qualifying tribal land as
defined in § 1.2110(f)(3)(i) of this chapter; and
(v) Any other factors associated with the level of service to the public.
(r) The following provisions apply to any licensee holding an AWS
authorization in the 1915-1920 MHz and 1995-2000 MHz bands:
(1) A licensee shall provide signal coverage and offer service within four
(4) years from the date of the initial license to at least forty (40)
percent of the population in each of its licensed areas (“Interim Buildout
Requirement”).
(2) A licensee shall provide signal coverage and offer service within ten
(10) years from the date of the initial license to at least seventy-five
(75) percent of the population in each of its licensed areas (“Final
Buildout Requirement”).
(3) If a licensee fails to establish that it meets the Interim Buildout
Requirement for a particular licensed area, then the Final Buildout
Requirement (in this paragraph (r)) and the license term (as set forth in
§ 27.13(j)) for each license area in which it fails to meet the Interim
Buildout Requirement shall be accelerated by two years (from ten to eight
years).
(4) If a licensee fails to establish that it meets the Final Buildout
Requirement for a particular licensed area, its authorization for each
license area in which it fails to meet the Final Buildout Requirement shall
terminate automatically without Commission action and the licensee will be
ineligible to regain it if the Commission makes the license available at a
later date.
(5) To demonstrate compliance with these performance requirements, licensees
shall use the most recently available U.S. Census Data at the time of
measurement and shall base their measurements of population served on areas
no larger than the Census Tract level. The population within a specific
Census Tract (or other acceptable identifier) will only be deemed served by
the licensee if it provides signal coverage to and offers service within the
specific Census Tract (or other acceptable identifier). To the extent the
Census Tract (or other acceptable identifier) extends beyond the boundaries
of a license area, a licensee with authorizations for such areas may only
include the population within the Census Tract (or other acceptable
identifier) towards meeting the performance requirement of a single,
individual license.
(6) An applicant for renewal of a license covered by this paragraph (r) must
make a renewal showing, independent of its performance requirements, as a
condition of renewal. The showing must include a detailed description of the
applicant's provision of service during the entire license period and
address:
(i) The level and quality of service provided by the applicant (including
the population served, the area served, the number of subscribers, the
services offered);
(ii) The date service commenced, whether service was ever interrupted, and
the duration of any interruption or outage;
(iii) The extent to which service is provided to rural areas;
(iv) The extent to which service is provided to qualifying tribal land as
defined in § 1.2110(f)(3)(i) of this chapter; and
(v) Any other factors associated with the level of service to the public.
(s) The following provisions apply to any licensee holding an AWS
authorization in the 1695-1710 MHz, 1755-1780 MHz, and 2155-2180 MHz bands:
(1) A licensee shall provide reliable signal coverage and offer service
within six (6) years from the date of the initial license to at least forty
(40) percent of the population in each of its licensed areas (“Interim
Buildout Requirement”).
(2) A licensee shall provide reliable signal coverage and offer service
within twelve (12) years from the date of the initial license to at least
seventy-five (75) percent of the population in each of its licensed areas
(“Final Buildout Requirement”).
(3) If a licensee fails to establish that it meets the Interim Buildout
Requirement for a particular licensed area, then the Final Buildout
Requirement (in this paragraph (s)) and the AWS license term (as set forth
in § 27.13(k)) for each license area in which it fails to meet the Interim
Buildout Requirement shall be accelerated by two (2) years (from twelve (12)
to ten (10) years).
(4) If a licensee fails to establish that it meets the Final Buildout
Requirement for a particular licensed area, its authorization for each
license area in which it fails to meet the Final Buildout Requirement shall
terminate automatically without Commission action and the licensee will be
ineligible to regain it if the Commission makes the license available at a
later date.
(5) To demonstrate compliance with these performance requirements, licensees
shall use the most recently available U.S. Census Data at the time of
measurement and shall base their measurements of population served on areas
no larger than the Census Tract level. The population within a specific
Census Tract (or other acceptable identifier) will be deemed served by the
licensee only if it provides signal coverage to and offers service within
the specific Census Tract (or other acceptable identifier). To the extent
the Census Tract (or other acceptable identifier) extends beyond the
boundaries of a license area, a licensee with authorizations for such areas
may include only the population within the Census Tract (or other acceptable
identifier) towards meeting the performance requirement of a single,
individual license. For the Gulf of Mexico license area, the licensee shall
demonstrate compliance with these performance requirements, using off-shore
platforms, including production, manifold, compression, pumping and valving
platforms as a proxy for population in the Gulf of Mexico.
(6) An applicant for renewal of a license covered by paragraph (s) of this
section must make a renewal showing, independent of its performance
requirements, as a condition of each renewal. The showing must include a
detailed description of the applicant's provision of service during the
entire license period and address:
(i) The level and quality of service provided by the applicant (including
the population served, the area served, the number of subscribers, the
services offered);
(ii) The date service commenced, whether service was ever interrupted, and
the duration of any interruption or outage;
(iii) The extent to which service is provided to rural areas;
(iv) The extent to which service is provided to qualifying tribal land as
defined in § 1.2110(f)(3)(i) of this chapter; and
(v) Any other factors associated with the level of service to the public.
(t) The following provisions apply to any licensee holding an authorization
in the 600 MHz band:
(1) A licensee shall provide reliable signal coverage and offer service
within six (6) years from the date of the initial license to at least forty
(40) percent of the population in each of its license areas (“Interim
Buildout Requirement”).
(2) A licensee shall provide reliable signal coverage and offer service
within twelve (12) years from the date of the initial license to at least
seventy-five (75) percent of the population in each of its license areas
(“Final Buildout Requirement”).
(3) If a licensee fails to establish that it meets the Interim Buildout
Requirement for a particular licensed area, then the Final Buildout
Requirement (in this paragraph (t)) and the license term (as set forth in
§ 27.13(l)) for each license area in which it fails to meet the Interim
Buildout Requirement shall be accelerated by two (2) years (from twelve (12)
to ten (10) years).
(4) If a licensee fails to establish that it meets the Final Buildout
Requirement for a particular license area, its authorization for each
license area in which it fails to meet the Final Buildout Requirement shall
terminate automatically without Commission action, and the licensee will be
ineligible to regain it if the Commission makes the license available at a
later date.
(5) To demonstrate compliance with these performance requirements, licensees
shall use the most recently available decennial U.S. Census Data at the time
of measurement and shall base their measurements of population served on
areas no larger than the Census Tract level. The population within a
specific Census Tract (or other acceptable identifier) will be deemed served
by the licensee only if it provides reliable signal coverage to and offers
service within the specific Census Tract (or other acceptable identifier).
To the extent the Census Tract (or other acceptable identifier) extends
beyond the boundaries of a license area, a licensee with authorizations for
such areas may include only the population within the Census Tract (or other
acceptable identifier) towards meeting the performance requirement of a
single, individual license. For the Gulf of Mexico license area, the
licensee shall demonstrate compliance with these performance requirements,
using off-shore platforms, including production, manifold, compression,
pumping and valving platforms as a proxy for population in the Gulf of
Mexico.
(6) An applicant for renewal of a license covered by this paragraph (t) must
make a renewal showing, independent of its performance requirements, as a
condition of each renewal. The showing must include a detailed description
of the applicant's provision of service during the entire license period and
address:
(i) The level and quality of service provided by the applicant (including
the population served, the area served, the number of subscribers, the
services offered);
(ii) The date service commenced, whether service was ever interrupted, and
the duration of any interruption or outage;
(iii) The extent to which service is provided to rural areas;
(iv) The extent to which service is provided to qualifying tribal land as
defined in § 1.2110(f)(3)(i) of this chapter; and
(v) Any other factors associated with the level of service to the public.
[ 62 FR 9658 , Mar. 3, 1997, as amended at 65 FR 3146 , Jan. 20, 2000; 69 FR 5715 , Feb. 6, 2004; 71 FR 35189 , June 19, 2006; 72 FR 27709 , May 16, 2007;
72 FR 48846 , Aug. 24, 2007; 72 FR 67578 , Nov. 29, 2007; 73 FR 26038 , May 8,
2008; 74 FR 8878 , Feb. 27, 2009; 75 FR 33731 , June 15, 2010; 75 FR 45069 ,
Aug. 2, 2010; 78 FR 8268 , Jan. 5, 2013; 78 FR 9620 , Feb. 11, 2013; 78 FR 50254 , Aug. 16, 2013; 79 FR 597 , Jan. 6, 2014; 79 FR 32411 , June 4, 2014; 79 FR 48536 , Aug. 15, 2014]
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Goto Section: 27.13 | 27.15
Goto Year: 2014 |
2016
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