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The next big thing?

Northpoint would compete with cable and DBS. All it needs is a little help from the FCC.

By John M. Higgins -- Broadcasting & Cable, 8/7/2000

In some ways, it's hard to take Northpoint Technology seriously. The startup's vision of a sprawling wireless TV network combining the advantages of cable and direct broadcast satellite is a grand one. But Northpoint is controlled by neophytes in the television business, and their service, if rolled out nationally, would cost at least $1.5 billion. Moreover, it would be, at best, the fourth multichannel video competitor in every market it enters.

But dismissing Northpoint would be much easier if so many giant companies weren't trying to keep the fledgling company out of the business. DirecTV, EchoStar, Pegasus, Boeing and Alcatel are attacking Northpoint, all weighing in to keep regulators from approving even its first step toward developing a potentially powerful rival to cable and DBS.

More important, the company has been well-received among key legislators and regulators lured by Northpoint's pitch of creating another formidable competitor to cable.

Northpoint is looking to launch DBS without the "S": Instead of satellites, Northpoint would use transmitters on the ground. Half the capacity would be devoted to offering 96 channels of ESPN, MTV, HBO and the like for $20 a month. The other half would be used for high-speed Internet access. The system would use the same 12 GHz microwave band as DBS but in a way, Northpoint executives contend, that would not materially interfere with DBS services.

The DBS companies—DirecTV and EchoStar—harshly disagree, warning that the Northpoint system could leave their 15 million customers plagued by frequent outages. Boeing and Alcatel-backed Skybridge want the spectrum for themselves, primarily for high-speed data. Pegasus, a major rural reseller of DirecTV service, also wants a shot at it.

After six years of review, the FCC faces a Nov. 29 deadline to determine whether Northpoint should get the licenses for the spectrum. Both sides have tested the system; they disagree on what the tests show.

It's a multibillion-dollar showdown. Northpoint could get a slice of valuable spectrum and compete directly with DirecTV and EchoStar. A loss of even a million subscribers would cut $3 billion to $5 billion in value from cable or DBS companies.

FCC insiders say Northpoint—which is not related to DSL telephone provider Northpoint Communications—has a fair shot at approval.

If so, it would be a product of Northpoint's surprising political clout. Controlled by two women—a "socially responsible" money manager and an heir of a renowned, wealthy Texas ranch family—Northpoint and its operating affiliate Broadwave USA have had a warm reception in Congress and at the FCC.

That reception is fueled in part by Northpoint's ownership structure, which would essentially franchise markets to individual operators. So most of the first 66 proposed systems would be owned by 48 "affiliates," mostly local businesspeople and professionals, who generally are also politically connected and many of whom are minorities or women.

It is those affiliates—in a 51%-49% partnership with Northpoint's Broadwave—that are applying for the licenses. A few—such as Don Barden, former owner of Detroit's cable system—have experience in cable or broadcasting. What stands out more are those with obvious political credentials: an ex-aide from Bill Clinton's Arkansas days; the son and sister-in-law of a Democratic senator; and a sizable cadre of lawyers, lobbyists and other political consultants.

That's bolstered by the recent hiring of Toni Cook Bush as executive vice president. A communications lawyer, Bush was formerly senior counsel to the Senate Communications Subcommittee and is stepdaughter of Democratic political heavyweight Vernon Jordan.

Collier contends that Northpoint's political progress comes from the power of its argument for cheap, superior service that would be another competitive check against cable operators—and DBS. "We have gotten unrelenting opposition from the satellite industry," said Collier, who is chairman of both Northpoint and mutual-fund company Citizens Fund.

DBS executives counter that they're worried not about the competition but about the interference. "It's disingenuous for them to tout that this a viable business and get the FCC to look the other way," said DirecTV Chairman Eddy Hartenstein. He's worried that Northpoint's political prowess has the issue being "railroaded" through.

"This is basically a bunch of people who want to get spectrum for free, wrap it in a business plan, and sell it," Hartenstein said. He compared Northpoint's plan to that of wireless cable operators' microwave multipoint distribution systems in the early '90s, which made similar promises and ended in financial free-fall. "This is the son of MMDS. We all know how successful that was."

He and EchoStar Chairman Charlie Ergen are calling for independent testing.

Northpoint says the tests have been conducted to the FCC's satisfaction and point out that DirecTV parent Hughes Electronics also has two applications to secure the part of the spectrum—for free—for high-speed data.

There's some elegance in Northpoint's plan. Signals sent in the 12 GHz spectrum allocated to DBS are highly directional, more like a laser than a flashlight. DirecTV and EchoStar customers dishes must be precisely aligned to just the right spot in the southern sky to get the service. A dish misaligned by just a few inches won't catch a signal.

That allows the spectrum to be "reused." For decades, the FCC has intended that the 12 GHz slot be shared between DBS and ground-based systems, likely for narrowly targeted point-to-point microwave traffic. What a husband-and-wife of broadcast engineers realized in the early 1990s is that there is way to use the frequency for video. Carmen and Saleem Tawil determined that the frequencies could be used to essentially replicate the program slate offered by cable TV and DBS services without dramatically interfering with signals bouncing off DirecTV's and EchoStar's satellites hovering over the equator.

"They came up with the very simple but non-obvious realization that all satellite dishes point south, so the spectrum could be used by pointing north," Collier said. Hence: Northpoint, although it works from the east and west as well.

The Tawils approached Katherine "Chula" Reynolds, a member of the family behind King Ranch, the fabled South Texas ranching, oil and agriculture empire. It was she who roped in Collier, who as chairman of Citizens Funds invests only in "socially responsible" companies: no arms manufacturers or tobacco companies.

Collier and Reynolds teamed up to fund the project because they see two primary advantages. First, unlike DBS, Northpoint would be local and could carry all nearby broadcast stations and tailor program lineups to local tastes. Second, unlike cable, the service would be cheap to transmit and cheap to receive.

The low-powered Northpoint would require one small antenna mounted on a tall building or mast. Because buildings, trees and hills would keep many homes from having a direct line of sight to the antenna, Northpoint would need a series of small repeaters serving parts of a city, much like a cellular phone system.

Collier estimates that the gear to cover a relatively flat, 2 million-home market like Dallas, for example, would cost around $10 million. That excludes operating and marketing costs, but, even so, starting up would be far less than the $1.5 billion it would take to overbuild the Dallas market with a new cable system. Collier says it would take that for Northpoint to blanket the entire country.

Certainly, Northpoint won't achieve the 65% penetration that cable systems average, but, with costs that low, it won't have to. Collier says Northpoint can make money with less than 2% of a market.

The receivers would be relatively inexpensive, using largely the same components as those in DirecTV receivers already stocked on the shelves of Circuit City. Collier and Reynolds believe that consumers are conditioned to buy the receivers, though with heavy subsidies, rather than lease them as cable subscribers do. However, a national system will not be cheaper than DBS.

Analysts say the $1.5 billion Collier says it will take to build out nationwide is roughly triple what it would cost to launch two DBS satellites. In addition, Broadwave would likely face the same $500-per-subscriber marketing cost DirecTV and EchoStar face.

The big game here is getting the real estate. Northpoint and its affiliates must persuade the FCC to give them the spectrum—for free.

The idea of sharing the 12 GHz band dates back almost 20 years, when the FCC initially began licensing it out to abortive DBS services. Northpoint has been pitching the commission since 1994; the current proceeding started in 1998.

That's where affiliates help. The plan calls for affiliates to raise 75% of the money for their local operations. Broadwave would contribute 25%. The locals would own 51% of their system's equity. Broadwave gets an outsized stake for piecing the operation together, establishing a national customer service center, packaging cable networks, and advertising nationally

By structuring itself like a franchise operation, Northpoint presents itself not as single company but as a group of small businesses scattered around the country. That lets Northpoint bring to Congress groups of constituents—often active political donors—to push Northpoint's cause. "It gives them a bigger voice in the process than if it were just one little company," said one satellite executive.

All sides in the Northpoint debate have heavily lobbied the FCC. A central issue is whether Northpoint would be harmful to DBS services and a set of planned satellite data providers.

With broadcast TV, interference generates ghosts or snow. With DBS, too much interference of digital signals means TV screens go black; subscribers already suffer outages during heavy rain storms, about 15 hours a year on average.

No one charges that the Northpoint would have the kind of catastrophic effect as, say, two nearby FM radio stations transmitting on the same frequency. But DBS companies charge that it makes their customers' receivers more susceptible to rain fade.

Collier counters that, in live tests of the system around Washington, D.C., and Austin, Texas, DirecTV and EchoStar can't point to a single customer who lost service.

—Bill McConnell contributed to this article.

The local connection
Northpoint has recruited prominent individuals to use its technology and DBS spectrum to offer wireless broadband TV service in 66 markets. The so-called affiliates own 51% of the local companies. Northpoint's operating unit, BroadwaveUSA, the other 49%.
DMACityAffiliateBackground
1New YorkSophia CollierChair, Citizens Advisers; president, Northpoint Technology; Investor and venture capitalist; co-founder, American Natural Beverage Corp.; trustee, The New England Circle
2Los AngelesDavid Salzman, Sonia SalzmanDavid Salzman: president, David Salzman Enterprises; former partner, Quincy Jones-David Salzman Entertainment; Sonia Salzman: board, Congressional Hispanic Caucus Inst.Also the affiliate for Atlanta (10), New Orleans (41), Kansas City (31) and Louisville (48)
3ChicagoDon BardenChairman & CEO, Barden Companies; casino owner; former owner, Barden Cablevision. Also the affiliate for Detroit (9) and South Bend (87)
4PhiladelphiaSara Jones BidenAttorney, Barrack, Rodos & Bacine; sister-in-law of Sen. Joe Biden
5San Francisco Michael CalhounManagement consultant, CFC Healthcare; former vice chairman of the International Trade Commission
6BostonRonald HomerBanker/investment adviser, Access Capital; former president & CEO, The Boston Bank of Commerce
8WashingtonMitchell JohnsonPresident, MAJ Capital Management; former senior VP of corporate finance, Student Loan Market Association
9DetroitSee Chicago (3)
10AtlantaSee Los Angeles (2)
11HoustonSen. Rodney EllisState senator; attorney
13Tampa, FLLisa BrannockPresident, Penguin Communications Inc.; former CEO, Quarter Communications. Also the affiliate for Orlando (22)
13Mpls./St. PaulJim DemayPublic affairs consultant, Demay & Associates
15ClevelandPatrick ProutExecutive recruiter, Heidrick & Struggles; former president and CEO, Bank One of Cleveland
16Miami Betti LidskyFormer president and CEO, Hispanic Broadcasting Inc.
17PhoenixSamuel CoppersmithPartner, law firm Coppersmith Gordon Schermer Owens & Nelson PLC; secretary, Arizona Internet Access Association; Also the affiliate for Tucson (72)
18DenverMichael StrattonOwner, Stratton Companies; former owner and operator, Taurus Communication, a cable television system
19Sacramento, CANancy MooneyPublic affairs consultant
20PittsburghValerie OwenMedia consultant, Joe Slade White
22Orlando, FLSee Tampa (13)
24BaltimoreOliver Sockwell Jr.Executive-in-residence, Columbia University, Graduate School of Business; former CEO, Connie Lee
25San DiegoPhilip Nelson Lee Partner, Preston Gates & Ellis; chairman, Business Round-table of the NABCO. Also the affiliate for Santa Barbara (113)
27Hartford, CTJose PerezInvestor, developer, Community Solutions Inc.; former president, SINA. Also the affiliate for Springfield (105)
28Charlotte, NCSamuel FosterPresident, Tower Security Services LLC and Tower Real Estate Services; former president, S.R. Foster Const. Co. Also the affiliate for Florence (116)
29Raleigh,Durham, NCJames Bradley CronePresident, Campaign Connections; former daily newspaper publisher
30Nashville, TNMerritt Goetz Jr. President, Tennessee Association of Business
31Kansas City, MOSee Los Angeles (3)
35Greenville, SCCarolyn Sawyer President and CEO, Tom Sawyer Prod., former TV anchor. Also the affiliate for Columbia (86)
37San AntonioRoger PerezAttorney in private practice; representative, San Antonio City Council District One. Also the affiliate for El Paso (96)
38Grand Rapids, Rajkumari WienerPartner, Wiener & Associates MI
39Birmingham, ALH.E. Cauthen Jr.President and CEO, Cauthen & Associates
40Memphis, TNKaty VarneyPartner, McNeely, Pigott & Fox Public Relations. Also the affiliate for Chattanooga (84)
41New OrleansSee Los Angeles (2)
42Norfolk, VACurtis Cole Jr.CEO, Curtex Construction Corp.
43West Palm Jane FoxPresident, Jane Fox & Associates; consultant with non-profit Beach, FL organizations and trade associations
45Oklahoma CityTerry ChildersCEO, Childers Corp; chairman, First National Bank of Edmond, Okla.; former city manager, Oklahoma City
46Harrisburg, PANelson DiazPartner, law firm Blank Rome; board, Temple University
47Greensboro, NCAndrew DedmonOwner, Century 21 Dedmon Properites; works on projects with local developers; majority whip, N.C. House
48Louisville, KYSee Los Angeles (2)
50Providence, RIGeorge FinleyPresident, Finley Associates; partner Meridian Worldwide, an international public affairs organization
51Wilkes Barre-Scranton, PAHunter BidenAttorney; former bank official; son of Sen. Joe Biden Jr.
54Fresno, CABryn ForhanHospital administrator, Community Hospital; spent nine years as a Congressional staffer
55Albany, NYEarl AndrewsCommissioner, NY City Housing Authority
57 Little Rock, ARSheila BronfmanPublic affairs consultant, Southern Strategy Group
58Tulsa, OKJohn GhostbearAttorney
60RichmondNorwood Davis Jr.Former chairman and CEO, Trigon Healthcare Inc.
61Austin, TXAzie Taylor Director of marketing, GRW Capital Corp.; former Treasurer Morton of the United States, Carter Administration
62Mobile, ALStephen Dickson Partner, Corporate Relations Management Inc.; former executive director of the Mississippi Republican Party. Also the affiliate for Biloxi-Gulfport (158) and Jackson (89)
63 Knoxville, TNCarol ClarkAssociate professor, computer information systems, Middle Tennessee State University. Also the affiliate for Jackson, Tenn. (184) and Tri-Cities (92)
64Flint, MIRichard WienerPresident, Wiener & Associates; adjunct faculty member, Detroit School of Law
70Des Moines, IAJoe ShannahanDirector of public policy, Iowa Housing Corp.; former advertising agency representative
72Tucson, AZSee Phoenix (17)
84 Chattanooga, TNKaty VarneyPartner, McNeely, Pigott & Fox Public Relations. Also the affiliate for Memphis (40)
86 Columbia, SCSee Greenville (35)
87South Bend, INSee Chicago (3)
89Jackson, TNSee Mobile (62)
92Tri-Cities, TNSee Knoxville (63)
96El Paso, TXSee San Antonio (37)
97Baton Rouge, LAWilliam ArceneauxPresident, Louisiana Association of Independent Colleges and Universities; board, Louisianna Educational Television Authority
100Savannah, GALoren CarlsonInvestment banker, William R. Hough & Co. ; former New York City investment banker. Also the affiliate for Charleston (104)
104Charleston, SCSee Savannah (100)
105Springfield, MASee Hartford (27)
113Santa Barbara, CASee San Diego (25)
116Florence, SCSee Charlotte (28)
118Fort Smith, ARBetsey WrightChief of staff when Bill Clinton was Ark. governor
34Columbus, OHEric CarmichaelInvestment banker and partner, Pryor, McClendon, Counts & Co.
141Erie, PADebra SankoExecutive director, Lake Erie Consortium for Osteopathic Medical Training
158Biloxi-GulfportSee Also Mobile (62)
184Jackson, TNSee Knoxville (63)

 

Who they are

Executives of Northpoint, its local affiliates and representatives met in Washington on July 12 to plot regulatory and business strategy. The Northpoint executives: 1. Sophia Collier; 2. Katherine Reynolds; 3. Toni Cook Bush; 4. Linda Rickman. The affiliates (and the cities they intend to serve): 5. Azie Taylor Morton (Austin, Texas; New York City); 6. Lisa Brannock (Orlando and Tampa, Fla.); 7. Jane Fox (West Palm Beach and Orlando, Fla.; Washington); 8. Rajkumari Wiener (Grand Rapids, Mich.); 9. Loren Carlson (Charleston, S.C.; Savannah, Ga.,); 10. Samuel Foster Jr. (Charlotte, N.C.; Florence, S.C.); 11. Carolyn Sawyer (Columbia and Greenville, S.C.); 12. Carol Thompson Cole (Norfolk, Va.); 13. Kevin Ahern (Denver); 14. Richard Fox (Phoenix and Tucson, Ariz.); 15. Stephen Dickson (Jackson and Biloxi, Miss.; Mobile, Ala.); 16. David Preston (Providence, R.I.); 17. Oliver Sockwell (Baltimore); 18. Michelle Hagans (Baltimore); 19. Earl Andrews (Albany, N.Y.); 20. Nelson Diaz (Harrisburg, Pa.; San Diego); 21. Ronald Homer (Boston); 22. George Finley (Providence, R.I.); 23. Mitchell Johnson (Washington, D.C.; West Palm Beach, Fla.); 24. Francis McMahon (Providence, R.I.); 25. David Salzman (Los Angeles; Atlanta; New Orleans; Kansas City, Mo.; Louisville, Ky.); 26. Curtis Cole (Norfolk, Va.); 27. Jose Perez (Springfield, Mass.; Hartford, Conn.); 28. Richard Wiener (Flint, Mich.); 29. Samuel Coppersmith (Phoenix and Tucson, Ariz.). Brief identification of the affiliates appears on pages 28 and 30.

Northpointedly political

To win the licenses they need from the FCC, Northpoint Technology has to overcome fierce opposition from the rich and powerful satellite industry, led by General Motors' DirecTV and EchoStar.

But Northpoint comes to the battle well-armed.

And well-led. When CEO Sophia Collier decided to run Northpoint in 1998, she already was a substantial player in the Democratic party. She had struck it rich by selling her business, SoHo Natural Soda, to Seagram for $25 million and used the money to buy an investment company that became Citizens Funds, a socially responsible mutual fund that now manages more than $2 billion in assets.

While building Citizens Funds, Collier became active in New Hampshire's Democratic party, which has not historically been strong in the predominantly Republican state. By the mid '90s, Collier was a strong force in New Hampshire, helping to get a Democratic governor elected to two terms and to bring in a Democrat-controlled Senate for the first time in 80 years.

A personal party contributor to the tune of $60,000 in the past two years, Collier also has become a big enough player that she and fellow Northpoint principal Katherine "Chula" Reynolds were invited to a White House state dinner earlier this summer.

"She has the Midas touch in business and in politics," says Raymond Buckley, vice chair of the state party and New Hampshire's House minority whip.

Northpoint's connections only start at Collier.

Executive Vice President Toni Cook Bush was a partner at Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom, Northpoint's Washington law firm. She was a senior counsel with the Senate Commerce Committee, and is the stepdaughter of Clinton pal and Washington super lawyer Vernon Jordan. She was near to being named FCC chairman in 1993. Over the past four years, she has personally donated $41,500—mostly to Democratic lawmakers.

Northpoint also has a strong Republican link in founder Bonnie Newman, a close friend of Collier's. Newman was a key staffer to President George Bush and is just getting ready to take a top slot at Harvard University's Kennedy School. Newman, who was Sen. Judd Gregg's (R-N.H.) chief of staff when he was in the U.S. House of Representatives, introduced Collier and company to many Republicans on Capitol Hill.

The company also has been working its connections to House Telecommunications Subcommittee Chairman Billy Tauzin (R-La.), who may ascend to full committee chairmanship. The company's two PACs, set up in May, have given only to Tauzin and House Majority Whip Tom Delay (R-Texas). Tauzin was an early supporter of Northpoint.

But what gives Northpoint real political juice is its affiliate network, Broadwave USA: 48 individuals who have signed on to build systems in 66 cities and who have grass-roots clout. Mitchell A. Johnson has recruited many of them, of whom 65% are women or minorities and 30% are African-Americans.

The company is politically diverse as well, although its affiliates largely skew Democratic. Stephen Dickson is a former executive director of the Mississippi Republican Party. Terry Childers is a Republican and is close with House Republican Conference Chairman J.C. Watts (R-Okla.). And Norwood Davis is former chair of Virginia's Henrico County Republican Party.

The list also is heavy with former government officials, lawyers, lobbyists and political consultants.

Recruiter Johnson once worked for the government-mandated Student Loan Mortgage Association, and many of his recruits come from there. Johnson is on the board of Collier's Citizen's Funds, with about $1 million invested in Sallie Mae stock as of 1999. Edward Fox is Sallie Mae's chairman; William Arceneaux is a former Sallie Mae chairman; and Oliver Sockwell was executive vice president.

Most politically recognizable is Betsey Wright, Bill Clinton's chief of staff when he was governor of Arkansas. She could not be reached for this story.

Sara Jones Biden, sister-in-law of Sen. Joe Biden Jr. (D-Del.), and his son, Hunter Biden, are on board.

Ernest Green, an investment banker at Lehman Bros. in Washington, was one of the first nine black students to integrate a Little Rock high school in 1957. And Azie Taylor Morton was one of the first African-Americans to serve as U.S. Treasurer, during the Carter administration.

Interesting. Now, how does it work?

In the early 1990s, Texas consulting engineer Saleem Tawil was trying to figure out a way to make each-and-every TV station available to subscribers of DirecTV and EchoStar. And he came up with what he thought was a pretty elegant solution: broadcast the TV signals from local, terrestrial transmitters using the same 500 MHz of spectrum (12.2 GHz-12.7 GHz) as the DBS companies. The terrestrial signals wouldn't interfere with the satellite signals because the terrestrial ones would be beamed from the north and bounce harmlessly off the back and sides of the southwest-oriented satellite dishes. To receive the terrestrial signals, Northpoint subscribers would point their dishes north. In 1996, he and his wife Carmen, another RF engineer, founded Northpoint with investors Sophia Collier and Katherine Reynolds. Ever since, they have been working hard to turn his idea of DBS on the ground into the equal of DBS in the sky.

Northpoint takes advantage of the highly directional nature of the DBS frequencies and the ability of the familiar dish antennas to ignore signals that don't strike it more or less straight on. These attributes permit satellites to reuse the same spectrum even though they are parked in orbit only 9 degrees apart. In most cases, Northpoint says, its signals will hit DBS dishes at least 90 degrees off center.

Unlike DBS, which covers the entire nation from its orbiting transmitters, Northpoint would be a local service. To serve a city, Northpoint would set up a network of low-power (less than one-half watt) transmitters—a primary one that originates the programming and as many repeaters as necessary to insure coverage of most on the city's TV homes. With a range of 8-10 miles, the transmitters and repeaters would be mounted on towers or buildings and carefully located so their signals wouldn't interfere with DBS reception or with each other. In Washington, a transmitter and 23 repeaters would cost about $10 million and reach 1.3 million homes.

Initially, a Northpoint system would have just half the channel capacity of its DBS rivals. That's because the DBS companies effectively double their spectrum using dual polarization. To maximize coverage in the early going, Northpoint has decided not to forego dual polarization. But even at that, Northpoint would have plenty of capacity. With the help of digital compression, its 500 MHz would yield between 64 and 160 channels. Current plans are to broadcast about 90 TV channels, the best of cable and local broadcast stations, and use what's left for high-speed Internet access.

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