Pizza Shop Owner Backs LightSquared Bid to Use Different Spectrum Slice

LightSquared appears to have been beating the bushes for
backers of its latest FCC proposal, and while it wasn't Godfather's pizza that
one business owner was touting, that latest offer was one he suggested the FCC
shouldn't refuse.

The chief of police of the Sugar Creek, Mo., police
department, the owner of Guido's Pizza in Novi, Mich., and the minister of
Church of Christ at Chances Crossroads are just some of the folks who have
asked the FCC to accept LightSquared's new proposal to launch its 4G LTE
network.

The FCC has been soliciting comment on LightSquared's
proposal to vacate the 10 MHz of mobile satellite services (MSS) spectrum
closest to the GPS band and delay use of the lower portion of that MSS band. It
was out-of-band interference picked up by GPS receivers that caused the FCC to
rescind its permission to LightSquared to use the entirety of its MSS
allocation for terrestrial wireless.

Facing the loss of billions in investment, LightSquared
offered the counter proposal of delaying occupation of that 10 MHz while using
the remainder, then recently upped the ante by offering to relinquish the 10
MHz entirely as a guard band to allay GPS concerns, while delaying use of the
lower portion and launching with 30 MHz in a separate band and sharing 5 MHz of
that spectrum with the government.

It is that proposal that has been drawing comment at the
FCC, including Chief Herbert Soule, who wrote in a Dec. 17 letter pointing out
that LightSquared has satellite communications roots in the public safety
community -- providing voice service to FBI and FEMA -- and saying that the new
proposal is a "good deal for government."

Pizza parlor owner Daniel Lawless argued that the FCC should
approve the LightSquared proposal because cell service means more jobs, though
he did not try to draw a connection with those jobs and pizza.
"LightSquared should be commended and given the green light for this well-thought-out
plan," he said.

The Rev. Harold Tucker tells the FCC that approving the
revamped plan will have "a profound impact on religious efforts to reach
more and more people interested in learning about the Bible."

The GPS industry is not assuaged. In its filing on the new
proposal, it argues that high-powered signals in any part of the band adjacent
to GPS will cause interferences and calls "unexamined" the FCC's
claim that high-powered terrestrial networks are the highest and best use of
spectrum. The GPS commenters said they did not question the importance of
making more spectrum available for wireless, but said it did not follow that
"all underutilized spectrum, and mobile satellite services (MSS) spectrum
in particular, must be repurposed for mobile broadband now or in the
future."

FCC chairman Julius Genachowski was looking for LightSquared
to provide price and service competition to established nets like AT&T,
Verizon and Sprint, but the waiver was always conditioned on not interfering
with adjacent GPS service.

John Eggerton

Contributing editor John Eggerton has been an editor and/or writer on media regulation, legislation and policy for over four decades, including covering the FCC, FTC, Congress, the major media trade associations, and the federal courts. In addition to Multichannel News and Broadcasting + Cable, his work has appeared in Radio World, TV Technology, TV Fax, This Week in Consumer Electronics, Variety and the Encyclopedia Britannica.