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FCC 1.2105
Revised as of October 1, 2019
Goto Year:2018 |
2020
§ 1.2105 Bidding application and certification procedures; prohibition of
certain communications.
(a) Submission of Short-Form Application (FCC Form 175). In order to be
eligible to bid, an applicant must timely submit a short-form
application (FCC Form 175), together with any appropriate upfront
payment set forth by Public Notice. All short-form applications must be
filed electronically.
(1) All short-form applications will be due:
(i) On the date(s) specified by public notice; or
(ii) In the case of application filing dates which occur automatically
by operation of law, on a date specified by public notice after the
Commission has reviewed the applications that have been filed on those
dates and determined that mutual exclusivity exists.
(2) The short-form application must contain the following information,
and all information, statements, certifications and declarations
submitted in the application shall be made under penalty of perjury:
(i) Identification of each license, or category of licenses, on which
the applicant wishes to bid.
(ii)(A) The applicant's name, if the applicant is an individual. If the
applicant is a corporation, then the short-form application will
require the name and address of the corporate office and the name and
title of an officer or director. If the applicant is a partnership,
then the application will require the name, citizenship and address of
all general partners, and, if a partner is not a natural person, then
the name and title of a responsible person should be included as well.
If the applicant is a trust, then the name and address of the trustee
will be required. If the applicant is none of the above, then it must
identify and describe itself and its principals or other responsible
persons; and
(B) Applicant ownership and other information, as set forth in § 1.2112.
(iii) The identity of the person(s) authorized to make or withdraw a
bid. No person may serve as an authorized bidder for more than one
auction applicant;
(iv) If the applicant applies as a designated entity, a certification
that the applicant is qualified as a designated entity under § 1.2110.
(v) Certification that the applicant is legally, technically,
financially and otherwise qualified pursuant to section 308(b) of the
Communications Act of 1934, as amended;
(vi) Certification that the applicant is in compliance with the foreign
ownership provisions of section 310 of the Communications Act of 1934,
as amended. The Commission will accept applications certifying that a
request for waiver or other relief from the requirements of section 310
is pending;
(vii) Certification that the applicant is and will, during the pendency
of its application(s), remain in compliance with any service-specific
qualifications applicable to the licenses on which the applicant
intends to bid including, but not limited to, financial qualifications.
The Commission may require certification in certain services that the
applicant will, following grant of a license, come into compliance with
certain service-specific rules, including, but not limited to,
ownership eligibility limitations;
(viii) Certification that the applicant has provided in its application
a brief description of, and identified each party to, any partnerships,
joint ventures, consortia or other agreements, arrangements or
understandings of any kind relating to the licenses being auctioned,
including any agreements that address or communicate directly or
indirectly bids (including specific prices), bidding strategies
(including the specific licenses on which to bid or not to bid), or the
post-auction market structure, to which the applicant, or any party
that controls as defined in paragraph (a)(4) of this section or is
controlled by the applicant, is a party.
(ix) Certification that the applicant (or any party that controls as
defined in paragraph (a)(4) of this section or is controlled by the
applicant) has not entered and will not enter into any partnerships,
joint ventures, consortia or other agreements, arrangements, or
understandings of any kind relating to the licenses being auctioned
that address or communicate, directly or indirectly, bidding at auction
(including specific prices to be bid) or bidding strategies (including
the specific licenses on which to bid or not to bid), or post-auction
market structure with: any other applicant (or any party that controls
or is controlled by another applicant); with a nationwide provider that
is not an applicant (or any party that controls or is controlled by
such a nationwide provider); or, if the applicant is a nationwide
provider, with any non-nationwide provider that is not an applicant (or
with any party that controls or is controlled by such a non-nationwide
provider), other than:
(A) Agreements, arrangements, or understandings of any kind that are
solely operational as defined under paragraph (a)(4) of this section;
(B) Agreements, arrangements, or understandings of any kind to form
consortia or joint ventures as defined under paragraph (a)(4) of this
section;
(C) Agreements, arrangements or understandings of any kind with respect
to the transfer or assignment of licenses, provided that such
agreements, arrangements or understandings do not both relate to the
licenses at auction and address or communicate, directly or indirectly,
bidding at auction (including specific prices to be bid), or bidding
strategies (including the specific licenses on which to bid or not to
bid), or post-auction market structure.
(x) Certification that if applicant has an interest disclosed pursuant
to § 1.2112(a)(1) through (6) with respect to more than one short-form
application for an auction, it will implement internal controls that
preclude any individual acting on behalf of the applicant as defined in
paragraph (c)(5) of this section from possessing information about the
bids or bidding strategies (including post-auction market structure),
of more than one party submitting a short-form application or
communicating such information with respect to a party submitting a
short-form application to anyone possessing such information regarding
another party submitting a short-form application.
(xi) Certification that the applicant is not in default on any
Commission licenses and that it is not delinquent on any non-tax debt
owed to any Federal agency.
(xii) A certification indicating whether the applicant has ever been in
default on any Commission license or has ever been delinquent on any
non-tax debt owed to any Federal agency. For purposes of this
certification, an applicant may exclude from consideration as a former
default any default on a Commission license or delinquency on a non-tax
debt to any Federal agency that has been resolved and meets any of the
following criteria:
(A) The notice of the final payment deadline or delinquency was
received more than seven years before the short-form application
deadline;
(B) The default or delinquency amounted to less than $100,000;
(C) The default or delinquency was paid within two quarters (i.e., 6
months) after receiving the notice of the final payment deadline or
delinquency; or
(D) The default or delinquency was the subject of a legal or
arbitration proceeding that was cured upon resolution of the
proceeding.
(xiii) For auctions required to be conducted under Title VI of the
Middle Class Tax Relief and Job Creation Act of 2012 (Pub. L. 112-96)
or in which any spectrum usage rights for which licenses are being
assigned were made available under 47 U.S.C. 309(j)(8)(G)(i),
certification under penalty of perjury that the applicant and all of
the person(s) disclosed under paragraph (a)(2)(ii) of this section are
not person(s) who have been, for reasons of national security, barred
by any agency of the Federal Government from bidding on a contract,
participating in an auction, or receiving a grant. For the purposes of
this certification, the term “person” means an individual, partnership,
association, joint-stock company, trust, or corporation, and the term
“reasons of national security” means matters relating to the national
defense and foreign relations of the United States.
(3) Limit on filing applications. In any auction, no individual or
entity may file more than one short-form application or have a
controlling interest in more than one short-form application. In the
case of a consortium, each member of the consortium shall be considered
to have a controlling interest in the consortium. In the event that
applications for an auction are filed by applicants with overlapping
controlling interests, pursuant to paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this
section, both applications will be deemed incomplete and only one such
applicant may be deemed qualified to bid. This limit shall not apply to
any qualifying rural wireless partnership and individual members of
such partnerships. A qualifying rural wireless partnership for purposes
of this exception is one that was established as a result of the
cellular B block settlement process established by the Commission in CC
Docket No. 85-388 in which no nationwide provider is a managing partner
or a managing member of the management committee, and partnership
interests have not materially changed as of the effective date of the
Report and Order in WT Docket No. 14-170, FCC 15-80. A partnership
member for purposes of this exception is a partner or
successor-in-interest to a partner in a qualifying partnership that
does not have day-to-day management responsibilities in the partnership
and holds 25% or less ownership interest, and provides a certification
in its short-form application that it will implement internal controls
to insulate itself from the bidding process of the cellular partnership
and any other members of the partnership, except that it may, prior to
the deadline for resubmission of short-form applications, express to
the partnership the maximum it is willing to spend as a partner.
(4) Definitions. For purposes of the certifications required under
paragraph (a)(2) of this section:
(i) The term controlling interest includes individuals or entities with
positive or negative de jure or de facto control of the applicant. De
jure control includes holding 50 percent or more of the voting stock of
a corporation or holding a general partnership interest in a
partnership. Ownership interests that are held indirectly by any party
through one or more intervening corporations may be determined by
successive multiplication of the ownership percentages for each link in
the vertical ownership chain and application of the relevant
attribution benchmark to the resulting product, except that if the
ownership percentage for an interest in any link in the chain meets or
exceeds 50 percent or represents actual control, it may be treated as
if it were a 100 percent interest. De facto control is determined on a
case-by-case basis. Examples of de facto control include constituting
or appointing 50 percent or more of the board of directors or
management committee; having authority to appoint, promote, demote, and
fire senior executives that control the day-to-day activities of the
licensee; or playing an integral role in management decisions. In the
case of a consortium, each member of the consortium shall be considered
to have a controlling interest in the consortium.
(ii) The term consortium means an entity formed to apply as a single
applicant to bid at auction pursuant to an agreement by two or more
separate and distinct legal entities that individually are eligible to
claim the same designated entity benefits under § 1.2110, provided that
no member of the consortium may be a nationwide provider;
(iii) The term joint venture means a legally cognizable entity formed
to apply as a single applicant to bid at auction pursuant to an
agreement by two or more separate and distinct legal entities, provided
that no member of the joint venture may be a nationwide provider;
(iv) The term solely operational agreement means any agreement,
arrangement, or understanding of any kind that addresses operational
aspects of providing a mobile service, including but not limited to
agreements for roaming, device acquisition, and spectrum leasing and
other spectrum use arrangements, so long as the agreement does not both
relate to the licenses at auction and address or communicate, directly
or indirectly, bidding at auction (including specific prices to be bid)
or bidding strategies (including the specific licenses on which to bid
or not to bid), or post-auction market structure.
Note to paragraph (a): The Commission may also request applicants to
submit additional information for informational purposes to aid in its
preparation of required reports to Congress.
(b) Modification and Dismissal of Short-Form Application (FCC Form
175). (1) (i) Any short-form application (FCC Form 175) that does not
contain all of the certifications required pursuant to this section is
unacceptable for filing and cannot be corrected subsequent to the
applicable filing deadline. The application will be deemed incomplete,
the applicant will not be found qualified to bid, and the upfront
payment, if paid, will be returned.
(ii) If:
(A) An individual or entity submits multiple applications in a single
auction; or
(B) Entities commonly controlled by the same individual or same set of
individuals submit applications for any set of licenses in the same or
overlapping geographic areas in a single auction; then only one of such
applications may be deemed complete, and the other such application(s)
will be deemed incomplete, such applicants will not be found qualified
to bid, and the associated upfront payment(s), if paid, will be
returned.
(2) The Commission will provide bidders a limited opportunity to cure
defects specified herein (except for failure to sign the application
and to make certifications) and to resubmit a corrected application.
During the resubmission period for curing defects, a short-form
application may be amended or modified to cure defects identified by
the Commission or to make minor amendments or modifications. After the
resubmission period has ended, a short-form application may be amended
or modified to make minor changes or correct minor errors in the
application. Major amendments cannot be made to a short-form
application after the initial filing deadline. Major amendments include
changes in ownership of the applicant that would constitute an
assignment or transfer of control, changes in an applicant's size which
would affect eligibility for designated entity provisions, and changes
in the license service areas identified on the short-form application
on which the applicant intends to bid. Minor amendments include, but
are not limited to, the correction of typographical errors and other
minor defects not identified as major. An application will be
considered to be newly filed if it is amended by a major amendment and
may not be resubmitted after applicable filing deadlines.
(3) Applicants who fail to correct defects in their applications in a
timely manner as specified by public notice will have their
applications dismissed with no opportunity for resubmission.
(4) Applicants shall have a continuing obligation to make any
amendments or modifications that are necessary to maintain the accuracy
and completeness of information furnished in pending applications. Such
amendments or modifications shall be made as promptly as possible, and
in no case more than five business days after applicants become aware
of the need to make any amendment or modification, or five business
days after the reportable event occurs, whichever is later. An
applicant's obligation to make such amendments or modifications to a
pending application continues until they are made.
(c) Prohibition of certain communications. (1) After the short-form
application filing deadline, all applicants are prohibited from
cooperating or collaborating with respect to, communicating with or
disclosing, to each other or any nationwide provider that is not an
applicant, or, if the applicant is a nationwide provider, any
non-nationwide provider that is not an applicant, in any manner the
substance of their own, or each other's, or any other applicants' bids
or bidding strategies (including post-auction market structure), or
discussing or negotiating settlement agreements, until after the down
payment deadline, unless such communications are within the scope of an
agreement described in paragraphs (a)(2)(ix)(A) through (C) of this
section that is disclosed pursuant to paragraph (a)(2)(viii) of this
section.
(2) Any party submitting a short-form application that has an interest
disclosed pursuant to § 1.2112(a)(1) through (6) with respect to more
than one short-form application for an auction must implement internal
controls that preclude any individual acting on behalf of the applicant
as defined for purposes of this paragraph from possessing information
about the bids or bidding strategies of more than one party submitting
a short-form or communicating such information with respect to a party
submitting a short-form application to anyone possessing such
information regarding another party submitting a short-form
application. Implementation of such internal controls will not outweigh
specific evidence that a prohibited communication has occurred, nor
will it preclude the initiation of an investigation when warranted.
(3) An applicant must modify its short-form application to reflect any
changes in ownership or in membership of a consortium or a joint
venture or agreements or understandings related to the licenses being
auctioned.
(4) A party that makes or receives a communication prohibited under
paragraphs (c)(1) or (6) of this section shall report such
communication in writing immediately, and in any case no later than
five business days after the communication occurs. A party's obligation
to make such a report continues until the report has been made. Such
reports shall be filed as directed in public notices detailing
procedures for the bidding that was the subject of the reported
communication. If no public notice provides direction, the party making
the report shall do so in writing to the Chief of the Auctions and
Spectrum Access Division, Wireless Telecommunications Bureau, by the
most expeditious means available, including electronic transmission
such as email.
(5) For purposes of this paragraph:
(i) The term applicant shall include all controlling interests in the
entity submitting a short-form application to participate in an auction
(FCC Form 175), as well as all holders of partnership and other
ownership interests and any stock interest amounting to 10 percent or
more of the entity, or outstanding stock, or outstanding voting stock
of the entity submitting a short-form application, and all officers and
directors of that entity. In the case of a consortium, each member of
the consortium shall be considered to have a controlling interest in
the consortium; and
(ii) The term bids or bidding strategies shall include capital calls or
requests for additional funds in support of bids or bidding strategies.
Example: Company A is an applicant in area 1. Company B and Company C
each own 10 percent of Company A. Company D is an applicant in area 1,
area 2, and area 3. Company C is an applicant in area 3. Without
violating the Commission's Rules, Company B can enter into a consortium
arrangement with Company D or acquire an ownership interest in Company
D if Company B certifies either:
(1) That it has communicated with and will communicate neither with
Company A or anyone else concerning Company A's bids or bidding
strategy, nor with Company C or anyone else concerning Company C's bids
or bidding strategy, or
(2) that it has not communicated with and will not communicate with
Company D or anyone else concerning Company D's bids or bidding
strategy.
(6) Prohibition of certain communications for the broadcast television
spectrum incentive auction conducted under section 6403 of the Middle
Class Tax Relief and Job Creation Act of 2012 (Pub. L. 112-96).
(i) For the purposes of the prohibition described in paragraphs
(c)(6)(ii) and (iii) of this section, the term forward auction
applicant is defined the same as the term applicant is defined in
paragraph (c)(5) of this section, and the terms full power broadcast
television licensee and Class A broadcast television licensee are
defined the same as those terms are defined in § 1.2205(a)(1).
(ii) Except as provided in paragraph (c)(6)(iii) of this section, in
the broadcast television spectrum incentive auction conducted under
section 6403 of the Middle Class Tax Relief and Job Creation Act of
2012 (Pub. L. 112-96), beginning on the short-form application filing
deadline for the forward auction and until the results of the incentive
auction are announced by public notice, all forward auction applicants
are prohibited from communicating directly or indirectly any incentive
auction applicant's bids or bidding strategies to any full power or
Class A broadcast television licensee.
(iii) The prohibition described in paragraph (c)(6)(ii) of this section
does not apply to communications between a forward auction applicant
and a full power or Class A broadcast television licensee if a
controlling interest, director, officer, or holder of any 10 percent or
greater ownership interest in the forward auction applicant, as of the
deadline for submitting short-form applications to participate in the
forward auction, is also a controlling interest, director, officer, or
governing board member of the full power or Class A broadcast
television licensee, as of the deadline for submitting applications to
participate in the reverse auction.
Note 1 to paragraph (c): For the purposes of paragraph (c),
“controlling interests” include individuals or entities with positive
or negative de jure or de facto control of the licensee. De jure
control includes holding 50 percent or more of the voting stock of a
corporation or holding a general partnership interest in a partnership.
Ownership interests that are held indirectly by any party through one
or more intervening corporations may be determined by successive
multiplication of the ownership percentages for each link in the
vertical ownership chain and application of the relevant attribution
benchmark to the resulting product, except that if the ownership
percentage for an interest in any link in the chain meets or exceeds 50
percent or represents actual control, it may be treated as if it were a
100 percent interest. De facto control is determined on a case-by-case
basis. Examples of de facto control include constituting or appointing
50 percent or more of the board of directors or management committee;
having authority to appoint, promote, demote, and fire senior
executives that control the day-to-day activities of the licensee; or
playing an integral role in management decisions.
Note 2 to paragraph (c): The prohibition described in paragraph
(c)(6)(ii) of this section applies to controlling interests, directors,
officers, and holders of any 10 percent or greater ownership interest
in the forward auction applicant as of the deadline for submitting
short-form applications to participate in the forward auction, and any
additional such parties at any subsequent point prior to the
announcement by public notice of the results of the incentive auction.
Thus, if, for example, a forward auction applicant appoints a new
officer after the short-form application deadline, that new officer
would be subject to the prohibition in paragraph (c)(6)(ii) of this
section, but would not be included within the exception described in
paragraph (c)(6)(iii) of this section.
[ 80 FR 56809 , Sept. 18, 2015]
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