President's Advisory Council Pushes Government Spectrum Sharing

As expected, the president's Council of Advisors on Science
and Technology's spectrum
report released Friday
concludes that "the traditional practice of
clearing and reallocating portions of the spectrum used by Federal agencies is
not a sustainable model for spectrum policy."

Council members include Google's Eric Schmidt and
Microsoft's Craig Mundie.

Instead it calls on the government to find a whopping 1,000
MHz of federal spectrum to make part of a shared spectrum
"superhighway." It also recommends creating a Federal Spectrum Access
System as a clearinghouse for "band-by-band registration and
conditions" for access to that spectrum by industry players, establishing spectrum
management methodologies that take into account both the transmitter and
receiver portions of the equation, and giving federal agencies incentives to
share their spectrum.

FCC Office of Engineering and Technology Bureau chief Julie
Knapp had signaled Thursday that was likely to be the case, and FCC chairman
Julius Genachowski at the same public meeting made it clear he believed sharing
and clearing would both have to be part of the equation.

The report clearly put its thumb on the scale for sharing.
"The best way to increase capacity is to leverage new technologies that
enable larger blocks of spectrum to be shared," said the White House in a
report summary.

On Thursday, FCC Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel said the
government should consider providing carrots for federal spectrum users in
terms of letting them share in the proceeds from their relinquished spectrum,
just as commercial broadcasters.

The council agrees, suggesting a "spectrum
currency" system of incentives to reward agencies that agree to share.

The report predicts it will take two or three decades to
transform the federal spectrum regime, but two or three years to start the
process, which it says will yield rapid results.

The report was greeted with plenty of comment from various quarters,
including the FCC, which will have to work with the National Telecommunications
& Information Administration to implement many of the proposals.

Commissioner Pai was concerned about the emphasis on
sharing. "I have serious concerns about the report's apparent dismissal of
clearing and reallocating federal spectrum for commercial use," he said in
a statement.

"To be sure, geographic spectrum sharing has its place
-- all reasonable means of making more spectrum available for commercial use
do. But I continue to believe that clearing federal spectrum bands and
reallocating them for exclusive commercial use is a critical component of any
sensible spectrum strategy."

The Wireless Innovation Alliance was more sanguine.
"WIA applauds today's PCAST report for its innovative and forward-thinking
approach to U.S. spectrum policy, including its unambiguous endorsement of
spectrum sharing," said the group. "WIA has been a longtime advocate
of the more efficient and shared use of underutilized spectrum, and today's
report demonstrates that the use of database coordination can greatly improve
the way we allocate the use of this scarce public resource. It is important for
the government to promote such dynamic band-sharing approaches at the same time
that it pursues more short-term and limited opportunities to clear and auction
certain federal bands."

"We are pleased that the PCAST report echoes so many of
the conclusions and recommendations urged by Public Knowledge over the last
three years," said Public Knowledge senior VP Harold Feld. "The path
to sustainable spectrum growth must take advantage of our power to innovate and
our leadership in open spectrum technologies such as Wi-Fi and Super Wi-Fi. For
too long, policymakers and industry lobbyists have quarreled over whether to
embrace more exclusive licensing or spectrum sharing as if a gain for one means
a loss for the other. We are happy the PCAST report rejects this false choice
that has deadlocked our spectrum policy for too long. By embracing sharing
while continuing to find clearable spectrum for auction, we can not only ensure
an endless supply of cat videos for our smart phones, but also provide enough
open spectrum for technological innovation, job creation, and lower connection
prices for consumers."

"The release of PCAST's report on government-held spectrum
is forward-thinking and provides policymakers with a framework that embraces
spectrum sharing, incentivizes Federal agency buy-in, builds on existing
technologies, and proposes a new hierarchy for how spectrum is used," said
Anna Eshoo (D-Calif.), ranking member of the House Communications Subcommittee.

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.