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Incumbent 39 GHZ Licensee Payment Instructions

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PUBLIC NOTICE
Federal Communications Commission
445 12th St., S.W.
Washington, D.C. 20554

News Media Information 202 / 418-0500
Internet: https://www.fcc.gov
TTY: 1-888-835-5322

DA 19-397
Released: May 14, 2019
NOTICE OF UPDATED 39 GHZ RECONFIGURATION PROCEDURES
PREPARATION FOR INCENTIVE AUCTION OF UPPER MICROWAVE FLEXIBLE
USE SERVICE LICENSES IN THE 37 GHZ, 39 GHZ, AND 47 GHZ BANDS
(AUCTION 103)
ORDER OF MODIFICATION
GN Docket No. 14-177
AU Docket No. 19-59
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Heading

Paragraph #

I.
II.
III.
IV.

INTRODUCTION ...................................................................................................................................1
BACKGROUND .....................................................................................................................................2
PREPARING THE 39 GHZ BAND FOR AUCTION 103.....................................................................6
QUANTIFYING EXISTING 39 GHZ LICENSES ................................................................................9
A. Updated Aggregated Holdings..........................................................................................................9
B. Methodology for Setting Relative Weights for Spectrum Holdings by PEA .................................11
V. RECONFIGURED HOLDINGS FOR MODIFIED LICENSES..........................................................17
A. Proposed and Alternative Reconfigurations ...................................................................................18
B. Reconfigured Holdings Equivalent to a Partial PEA. .....................................................................20
VI. INITIAL COMMITMENTS .................................................................................................................26
A. Incumbent 39 GHz Licensee Short-Form Application ...................................................................31
B. Initial Commitment Options ...........................................................................................................38
C. Transition for Existing 39 GHz Licenses........................................................................................47
D. Incentive Payments .........................................................................................................................52
VII. PROCEDURAL MATTERS................................................................................................................64
VIII. ORDERING CLAUSES .....................................................................................................................79
I.

INTRODUCTION

1.
In this Public Notice, the Wireless Telecommunications Bureau (Bureau), in cooperation
with the Office of Economics and Analytics (OEA), adopts procedures to reconfigure and modify existing
39 GHz licenses in preparation for Auction 103, an incentive auction that will offer new flexible use
licenses in the Upper 37 GHz (37.6–38.6 GHz), 39 GHz (38.6–40 GHz), and 47 GHz (47.2–48.2 GHz)

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bands.1 These reconfiguration procedures are a critical step toward offering new licenses in this incentive
auction, scheduled to begin on December 10, 2019, and will enhance opportunities for both incumbents
and new entrants to provide valuable 5G wireless, Internet of Things, and other advanced services.2
II.

BACKGROUND

2.
In the Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, the Commission provided that each 39 GHz
incumbent will choose among three options for its existing 39 GHz licenses. Specifically, each
incumbent may choose to: (1) have its licenses modified based on the Commission’s proposed
reconfiguration of its license holdings (Option 1); (2) have its licenses modified based on an acceptable
alternative reconfiguration that the incumbent proposes, provided that it satisfies certain specified
conditions (Option 2); or (3) commit to relinquish the holdings provided by all its existing licenses in
exchange for an incentive payment and the opportunity to bid for new licenses (Option 3). 3
3.
In the Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN, the Bureau/OEA set forth
reconfiguration procedures consistent with the framework established by the Commission. The Bureau
sought comment generally on those procedures and more specifically on four particular proposals
presented in the Public Notice.4
4.
Further, the Bureau implemented a temporary freeze on the acceptance and processing of
applications relating to any future transfers or assignments of 39 GHz licenses. There was an exception to
the freeze for transfers or assignments to or among commonly controlled entities, for which applications
were required to be filed on or before April 15, 2019.5 No applications seeking such transfers or
assignments of 39 GHz licenses have been filed since implementation of the temporary freeze.6
5.
The Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures Public Notice also served as an order of
modification for existing 39 GHz licenses. Specifically, the Bureau explained that, as proposed by the
Commission in the Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O,7 all existing 39 GHz licenses are subject to

1

See Use of Spectrum Bands Above 24 GHz For Mobile Radio Services, et al., GN Docket No. 14-177, Fourth
Report and Order, 33 FCC Rcd 12168, 12169-70, para. 4 (2018) (Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O). See also
Incentive Auction of Upper Microwave Flexible Use Service Licenses in the Upper 37 GHz, 39 GHz, and 47 GHz
Bands for Next-Generation Wireless Services; Comment Sought on Competitive Bidding Procedures for Auction
103, GN Docket No. 14-177, AU Docket No. 19-59, Public Notice, FCC 19-35 (rel. April 15, 2019)(Auction 103
Comment Public Notice or Auction 103 Comment PN); Notice of Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures;
Preparation for Incentive Auction of Upper Microwave Flexible Use Service Licenses in the 37 GHz, 39 GHz, and
47 GHz Bands (Auction 103); Order of Modification; 39 GHz License Transfer and Assignment Freeze, GN Docket
No. 14-177, AU Docket No. 19-59, Public Notice, DA 19-196 (WTB/OEA rel. Mar. 20, 2019)(Initial 39 GHz
Reconfiguration Procedures Public Notice or Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN).
2

See FCC Chairman Pai Announces Major Initiatives to Promote U.S. Leadership on 5G and Connect Rural
Americans to High-Speed Internet at White House Event, April 12, 2019, at
https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/DOC-356995A1.pdf.
3

Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, 33 FCC Rcd at 12174-80, paras. 15-36. See also Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration
Procedures PN at para. 2.
4

First, we sought comment on a proposed methodology for setting relative weights for spectrum holdings by PEA,
to be used to combine “partial PEA” holdings across PEAs. Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at
paras. 26-33 (including Appendix C). Second, we sought comment on whether to increase the threshold for postreconfiguration de minimis rounding from 5% to 10%. Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at paras. 4142. Third, we sought comment on the proposed process for calculating the geographic boundaries of a modified
license for a partial PEA. Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at paras. 45-47 (including Appendix A).
Fourth, we sought comment on how to direct the incentive payment for an incumbent that is made up of a group of
commonly controlled licensees. Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at para.72.

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modification, regardless of whether an incumbent elects to receive modified licenses or relinquish its
spectrum usage rights in exchange for an incentive payment, with the opportunity to bid on new licenses.8
III.

PREPARING THE 39 GHZ BAND FOR AUCTION 103

6.
Consistent with Commission decisions in the Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, we will
reconfigure existing 39 GHz licenses to match the new 39 GHz band plan and license areas. With the
Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN, we implemented the first steps toward quantifying the 39
GHz holdings of incumbents by aggregating existing licensees’ holdings in terms of MHz-pops by PEA
and consolidating the holdings of commonly controlled licensees based on then existing ULS.9 For
purposes of Auction 103, an “incumbent” includes both an existing 39 GHz licensee, individually or
together with other commonly controlled existing 39 GHz licensees.10 As described in these procedures,
an incumbent may represent one or more existing 39 GHz licensees with respect to reconfiguration of
existing licenses, the receipt of an incentive payment, and bidding on new licenses.
7.
This Public Notice and its Appendices update the initial data on aggregate incumbent
holdings and establish the final procedures that will be used for the remaining steps of the reconfiguration
process.11 We resolve all open issues raised in the Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN and
address the comments received.12
8.
From the perspective of 39 GHz incumbents, the major remaining steps of the 39 GHz
band reconfiguration process are as follows, with additional detail provided in subsequent sections of this
Public Notice:


Review Updated 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures Public Notice and Updated Aggregated
Holdings Data. In Appendix B, we provide each incumbent’s updated 39 GHz aggregated
(and consolidated, if applicable) holdings data in each Partial Economic Area (PEA)

(Continued from previous page)
5 Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at paras. 10-12. Incumbents were also instructed to make any
corrections to their license information in the Universal Licensing System (ULS) no later than April 15, 2019.
Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at paras. 18-19.
6

We note that pro forma corporate realignments that do not change the controlling interest holder or the licensee,
e.g., a change in an intermediate corporate holding company, are not precluded by this freeze. In many cases, such
realignments do not require application to the Commission for advance approval.
7

Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, 33 FCC Rcd at 12174-75, paras. 15-18, 62.

8

Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at paras. 14-16.

9

See Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN, Appendix B: Initial Aggregated Incumbent Holdings.

10

In the Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, the Commission decided that separate licenses held by entities that
control or are controlled by each other and/or have controlling ownership interests in common (“commonly
controlled entities”) will be treated as being held by a single entity in the reconfiguration of existing 39 GHz
licenses. Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, 33 FCC Rcd at 12176, para. 22.
11

The Appendices to this Public Notice are Appendix A: Updated Reconfiguration Technical Guide; Appendix B:
Updated Aggregated Incumbent Holdings; Appendix C: Index of PEA Weights for 39 GHz; and Appendix D:
Updated Initial Commitment Technical Guide. Appendices A and D substantively are similar to the counterpart
appendices to the Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN. The data in Appendix B has been updated since
the release of the initial data in Appendix B to the Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN, as described in
this Public Notice. Appendix C sets forth the result of the methodology for determining weights described in this
Public Notice. The Appendices are available on the Commission’s Auction 103 web page at
www.fcc.gov/auction/103.
12

Three parties filed comments in response to the Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN: AT&T, TMobile, and Verizon. Verizon was the only party to file a reply comment.

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(“Updated Aggregated Holdings Data”). The data has been updated to reflect additional
information obtained after the Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures Public Notice.


Review Reconfigured 39 GHz Incumbent Holdings Public Notice. The procedures and
methodologies we adopt in this Public Notice will be applied to reconfigure each incumbent’s
holdings to match the new band plan and service areas. The forthcoming Reconfigured 39
GHz Incumbent Holdings Public Notice will show the holdings in each PEA that will
determine the 100 megahertz license(s) that each incumbent would receive if it chose to
accept modified licenses based on the Commission’s proposed reconfiguration (Initial
Commitment Option 1). Any incumbent receiving more than one modified license in a PEA
will receive licenses for contiguous frequencies within the PEA. However, the final
frequencies of the licenses will be determined only after the assignment of frequencies for
new licenses won in the auction process. The Reconfigured 39 GHz Incumbent Holdings
Public Notice also will announce the timeline for incumbents to file FCC Form 175-A and
make Initial Commitments.



File FCC Form 175-A. To be able to access the Commission’s Initial Commitment System,
each incumbent must file an Incumbent 39 GHz Licensee Short-Form Application (FCC
Form 175-A). In the event that no FCC Form 175-A is submitted for an incumbent, that
incumbent will be considered to have submitted Option 1 (i.e., it committed to accepting
modified licenses based on the Commission’s proposed reconfiguration and to forgoing
any opportunity to relinquish any holdings for an incentive payment or to become
eligible to bid in Auction 103 for new licenses in Upper 37 GHz, 39 GHz, and 47 GHz).13



Make an Initial Commitment. Each incumbent may commit to one of the three options:
(Option 1) accepting modified licenses based on a reconfiguration of its holdings proposed by
the Commission in the Reconfigured 39 GHz Holdings Public Notice; (Option 2) accepting
modified licenses based on its acceptable alternative reconfiguration; or (Option 3)
relinquishing spectrum usage rights under all its 39 GHz licenses in exchange for an incentive
payment and being eligible to bid on new licenses. The deadline for submitting an option
choice in the Initial Commitment system will be no sooner than 60 days after the release of
the Reconfigured 39 GHz Incumbent Holdings Public Notice. An incumbent that for any
reason does not submit an Initial Commitment by the deadline will be considered to
have submitted Option 1 (i.e., it committed to accepting modified licenses based on the
Commission’s proposed reconfiguration and to forgoing any opportunity to relinquish
any holdings for an incentive payment or to become eligible to bid in Auction 103 for
new licenses in Upper 37 GHz, 39 GHz, and 47 GHz).14



Redistribute Holdings in Round Zero, if applicable. Each incumbent submitting Option 3
will have a limited opportunity during the Initial Commitment submission window to
redistribute partial PEA holdings in its updated aggregated holdings.15 Such an incumbent
may use weighted MHz-pops to make such redistributions as part of the Round Zero process

13

Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, 33 FCC Rcd at 12180, para. 38. See also, id. at 12178-79, paras. 32-33.
Consistent with the Commission decision, a party that controls or is controlled by an existing 39 GHz licensee that is
considered to have submitted Initial Commitment Option 1 or that has a controlling interest in common with an
existing 39 GHz licensee that is considered to have submitted Initial Commitment Option 1 also will not be eligible
to bid in Auction 103.
14

Id.

15

Spectrum usage rights equivalent to a 100 megahertz block that does not cover a full PEA constitute a “partial
PEA.”

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in the Initial Commitment System.16 An incentive payment to a 39 GHz incumbent
committing to Option 3 will be based on its holdings at the close of Round Zero, taking into
account any redistributions that the incumbent makes.

IV.



Bid for New Licenses, if applicable. As announced by the Commission in the Spectrum
Frontiers Fourth R&O, an existing licensee that submits either Option 1 or 2 in the Initial
Commitment System will not be eligible to bid for new licenses in Auction 103.17 An
existing licensee that submits Option 3 in the Initial Commitment System, however, may
apply to bid for new licenses by filing a short-form application to participate in the auction
(FCC Form 175), though it is not required to do so.18



Receive Modified 39 GHz Licenses, if applicable. Each licensee will retain its existing 39
GHz licenses until after the close of Auction 103. Modified licenses will not be issued until
after the close of Auction 103. Any licenses won by an incumbent in Auction 103 will be
issued pursuant to the Commission’s standard post-auction process of receiving payment for
winning bids, reviewing license applications, and then granting the new licenses. Incumbents
will be able to seek Special Temporary Authority as needed to transition from existing
licenses to modified licenses or to new licenses that will be issued subsequently.



Receive Incentive Payments, if applicable. The Commission will be ready to direct the
United States Treasury to disburse incentive payments owed following the grant of new
licenses based on winning bids in Auction 103. Each incentive payment will be determined
based on an incumbent’s holdings after Round Zero and the final clock phase price for related
spectrum blocks. An incentive payment may reduce the amount of Auction 103 winning
bids only if the same party using the same FCC Registration Number (FRN) is the
applicant on both FCC Form 175-A (for Initial Commitments) and FCC Form 175 (for
Auction 103). In all other cases, regardless of any relationship between a winning bidder and
existing licensees or the FCC Form 175-A applicant, the winning bidder will be obligated to
pay its winning bids without reduction by any incentive payment. The incumbent may direct
any incentive payment to more than one account, provided that the account owner is either
the FCC Form 175-A applicant or one of the existing 39 GHz licensees listed on the FCC
Form 175-A.

QUANTIFYING EXISTING 39 GHZ LICENSES
A.

Updated Aggregated Holdings

9.
Appendix B of this Public Notice lists Updated Aggregated Holdings Data and reflects
additional information obtained after the release of the Initial Aggregated Holdings Data with the Initial
39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures Public Notice. Appendix B provides the updated data, including the
extent of any changes. The additional information that resulted in changes includes a statement asserting
Video Multipoint Inc.’s de facto common control of licenses held by licensee Ronna L Sauro.19
Accordingly, the holdings of those licensees are consolidated in Appendix B. Review of the data also
16

Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, 33 FCC Rcd at 12180-81, paras. 39-41. See Appendix D: Updated Initial
Commitment Technical Guide.
17

Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, 33 FCC Rcd at 12180, para. 38. See also, id. at 12178-79, paras. 32-33.
Consistent with the Commission decision, a party with a controlling interest in an existing 39 GHz licensee that
submits Initial Commitment Options 1 or 2 or that is controlled by a party that also controls an existing 39 GHz
licensee that submits Initial Commitment Options 1 or 2 also will not be eligible to bid in Auction 103.
18

Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, 33 FCC Rcd at 12179, para. 34.

19

See ULS File No. 0008602224 at Attachment (filed April 15, 2019).

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identified a unique case where a single licensee, FiberTower Spectrum Holdings LLC, using two different
FRNs, held RSA licenses on the same frequencies that overlapped geographically. Due to the different
FRNs, the geographic overlap was not considered when determining the holdings with respect to each
FRN, which resulted in the population in the overlap being counted twice. We have corrected that error
and removed the double counted population. Finally, the updated data reflects minor corrections to the
population totals of some incumbents’ holdings. In a limited number of cases, the points of the
population cells fell precisely on the border between PEAs and/or licenses and the automated system did
not correctly assign the related population. These relatively small corrections result in some incumbents’
holdings decreasing by at most 0.7% or increasing by at most 0.3%.20
10.
We list 39 GHz MHz-pops holdings based on the information available in the public
ULS. The holdings have been determined by the population covered by a license within a PEA,
aggregated by licensee, and consolidated for commonly controlled entities, if applicable.21 These
Updated Aggregated Holdings will be used with respect to any option an incumbent submits as its Initial
Commitment.22 The holdings in Appendix B were calculated pursuant to the process described in the
Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN, using the formulas described in Appendix A.23
B.

Methodology for Setting Relative Weights for Spectrum Holdings by PEA

11.
We adopt a methodology for calculating the index of relative PEA weights for the
Auction 103 reconfiguration process using price data from Auctions 102 (24 GHz) and 1002 (600
MHz).24 Based on input from commenters, we revise the methodology proposed in the Initial 39 GHz
Reconfiguration Procedures PN by not including data from Auction 97 (AWS-3), and we assign relative
proportions between Auctions 102 and 1002 in the index 25
12.
Auctions 102 and 1002 offered PEA licenses, which makes their prices directly
comparable to those in Auction 103. Auction 97, in contrast, included licenses based on Economic Areas
(EAs) and Cellular Market Areas (CMAs). Due to these licensing area differences, Verizon Wireless
objects to using Auction 97 data and asserts that “there is no sound reason to set a PEA-based price index
using data from auctions of different license configurations that may reflect over- and under-inclusive
MHz-pops values.”26 AT&T also warns of challenges inherent in using price data from the different
geographic areas used in Auction 97 and notes that, if data are not distributed appropriately, “the impact
would be to raise the weighted value of less densely populated PEAs and decrease the weighted value of

20

See Appendix B: Updated Aggregated Incumbent Holdings.

21

See Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, 33 FCC Rcd at 12176, para. 22. In evaluating the existing ownership
structures reflected in existing 39 GHz licensees’ filings with the Commission, the following licensees are under
common control: Alascom, Inc., FiberTower Spectrum Holdings LLC, and Teleport Communications, LLC
(controlled by parent company AT&T Inc.); Cellco Partnership and Straight Path Spectrum, LLC (controlled by
parent company Verizon Communications, Inc.); and Sauro, Ronna L and Video Multipoint, Inc. (controlled by de
facto manager Video Multipoint, Inc.). We have listed all holdings for these entities under a name representing the
consolidated incumbent in Appendix B providing the updated aggregated holdings data.
22

Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, 33 FCC Rcd at 12178-79, paras. 29-32.

23

Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at paras. 21-24 (including Appendix A).

24

For Auction 102, we use data from bidding in the clock phase, which concluded on April 17, 2019. See Close of
Clock Phase Bidding; Information Concerning the Assignment Phase of Auction 102 (24 GHz), Including Schedule
for Mock Auction, AU Docket No. 18-85, Public Notice, DA 19-298 (WTB/OEA rel. April 17, 2019).
25

Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at paras. 26-33 (including Appendix C).

26

Verizon Comment at 3. See also Verizon Reply at 1.

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the higher population density PEAs.”27 In light of these concerns about the use of non-PEA data from
Auction 97, and the fact that Auction 102 clock phase data is now available, we conclude that we will
base the index only on Auctions 1002 and 102.28
13.
Commenters uniformly agree with our proposal not to include data from Auction 101 (28
GHz) in the index.29 The Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN addressed an alternative
proposal that would take into account prices from the partial set of county-level licenses available in
Auction 101 using a regression methodology, but no commenters support that approach.
14.
We also sought comment on our proposal to weight Auction 102 more heavily than
Auction 1002, and on the specific weights we should use if we do so.30 T-Mobile asserts that Auction 102
should be weighted more heavily because the millimeter wave spectrum in Auction 102 is more
comparable to the frequency bands available in Auction 103. Verizon Wireless disagrees and asks that
we weight Auctions 102 and 1002 equally, claiming that the “critical component of these valuations is
license area, not spectrum band.”31 Further, Verizon Wireless claims that weighting Auction 102 more
heavily “is particularly problematic here where the Bureau is valuing an incumbent’s existing spectrum
holdings that could be exchanged for either a voucher to participate in Auction 103 or an incentive
payment, potentially resulting in lost value to the existing licensee.”32 We are not persuaded that
weighting the results of Auction 102 more heavily is problematic. In addition to the frequency bands in
Auction 102 being more similar to those in Auction 103, the Auction 102 data reflect more recent market
conditions. Moreover, the auction procedures we adopt allow an existing licensee to retain all of its
existing blocks for full PEAs without making any additional payments, regardless of the weight assigned
to the PEA. In addition, the incumbent may redistribute its holdings of partial PEA blocks in Round Zero
if it feels the weight indices for those PEAs are inaccurate.33 Accordingly, consistent with T-Mobile’s

27

AT&T Comment at 3. We note however that AT&T also points out that using multiple data sets as inputs is
important to “. . . avoid over-reliance on a single auction and the bidding idiosyncrasies that may have occurred in
that auction.” Id. We agree with the general point that, other things equal, incorporating data from more auctions
would result in a smoother index than an index using fewer auctions. However, in this case, we do not find that any
additional data from Auction 97 would improve the index significantly. AT&T further recommends that we
incorporate a smoothing methodology “to account for pricing outliers that will naturally occur in any specific
auction.” Id. We decline to adopt a methodology to smooth the index further to reduce the effect of anomalous
price deviations, since such a methodology would also affect the relative values across other markets. Moreover, it
is not clear which price deviations should be regarded as anomalous rather than reflections of irregular market
conditions.
28

See also T-Mobile Comment at 2, 4. Though not directed to concerns about converting auction price data across
geographic licensing areas, T-Mobile’s comment also supports setting aside non-PEA data from Auction 97. TMobile urges us to rely primarily on prices from Auction 102 for the index because those prices reflect MHz-pops
values for more comparable high-band spectrum, unlike prices in Auctions 1002 and 97.
29

Verizon Comment at 1 (“. . . no reason to devise a complex, artificial approach for PEA-based MHz-pops values
that could produce perverse results.”) See also AT&T Comment at 4, T-Mobile Comment at 3.
30

See Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at para. 31.

31

Verizon Reply at 2. See also Letter from Catherine M. Hilke, Associate General Counsel, Verizon, to Marlene H.
Dortch, Secretary, FCC, GN Docket No. 14-177, AU Docket No. 19-59, at 2 (filed May 13, 2019) (Verizon Ex
Parte).
32

Verizon Reply at 2.

33

See Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, 33 FCC Rcd at 12172 and 80, paras. 10 and 39.

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suggestion, we will assign a weight of two-thirds to Auction 102 in the index and one-third to Auction
1002.34
15.
We do not adopt T-Mobile’s suggestion that, within Auction 102, we weight the Upper
Band blocks more heavily than the Lower Band blocks because of concerns expressed about the use of
the Lower Band.35 We note that the Lower Band blocks represent only two-sevenths of the inventory in
that auction, and consequently, prices for the Lower Band blocks will naturally have a lower weight than
the Upper Band blocks in the index.
16.
As a result of these decisions, the procedures used to construct the index of weights set
out in Appendix C did not require converting all data to a PEA basis. Otherwise those procedures are
consistent with those set forth in the Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN.36 Specifically, the
weights were determined by: (i) computing an average price for each PEA in Auctions 1002 and 102, (ii)
calculating a relative price index value for each PEA in each auction, and (iii) taking a weighted average
of index values, weighting Auction 102 data by two-thirds and Auction 1002 data by one-third to create
the index for weighting the MHz-pops in each PEA. The weighted MHz-pops for a block in a PEA then
can be calculated by multiplying the unweighted MHz-pops times the index value for the PEA.
V.

RECONFIGURED HOLDINGS FOR MODIFIED LICENSES

17.
The final procedures we adopt for reconfiguring the updated aggregated 39 GHz holdings
are the same as those described generally in the Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN.37 The
final procedures include procedures consistent with our tentative conclusion regarding de minimis
rounding and our proposal for determining the boundaries of modified licenses for partial PEAs, each of
which were supported by the only commenter that addressed the issues.38
A.

Proposed and Alternative Reconfigurations

18.
The Commission directed the Bureau to reconfigure 39 GHz holdings of existing
licensees. Subject to specified constraints, the Commission will implement the reconfiguration using a
mathematical optimization, as described further in the Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures Public
Notice and in the Updated Reconfiguration Technical Guide (Appendix A).39 In brief, the optimization
will consider all possible ways to reconfigure the incumbent’s holdings equivalent to a partial PEA
license such that the incumbent will have at most a single modified partial PEA license while keeping
constant the incumbent’s total weighted MHz-pops. Among the reconfigurations that meet these criteria,
the Commission will propose the reconfiguration that assigns the modified license for a partial PEA, if
any, in the available PEA that as a result will have the fewest remaining unassigned weighted
MHz-pops.40

34

T-Mobile Comment at 1, 4. Further, the weights we choose are consistent with T-Mobile’s specific
recommendation to weight Auction 102 between 50% and 75%. T-Mobile Comment at 4.
35

T-Mobile Comment at 2.

36

Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at para. 29.

37

See Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at paras. 36-39.

38

See Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at paras. 41-47.

39

See Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at paras. 21-24 (including Appendix A). The index of relative
weights for each PEA that will be used is set forth in Appendix C: Index of PEA Weights for 39 GHz that is
released with this Public Notice.
40

Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at para. 38; Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, 33 FCC Rcd at
12177, para. 25.

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19.
An incumbent also will have an opportunity to provide an acceptable alternative
reconfiguration in place of the Commission’s proposed reconfiguration. To be an acceptable alternative
reconfiguration, the incumbent’s plan must satisfy the following constraints: (i) the incumbent’s
combined total MHz-pops holdings are kept constant; (ii) for every PEA with partial PEA holdings but
one, the incumbent’s holdings in the PEA are reduced down to the greatest integer less than or equal to
the incumbent’s updated aggregate holdings in the PEA or increased up to the least integer greater than or
equal to its updated aggregate holdings in the PEA; and (iii) for at most a single PEA in which the
incumbent has final aggregate holdings equivalent to a partial PEA license, those holdings are increased
to less than the equivalent of a new license, or decreased to no less than zero, while maintaining the
incumbent’s combined holdings.41 Unlike the Commission’s reconfiguration proposal, an incumbent’s
alternative reconfiguration need not locate any modified license for a partial PEA in the PEA with the
fewest remaining unassigned weighted MHz-pops.42
B.

Reconfigured Holdings Equivalent to a Partial PEA.

20.
In the Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, the Commission determined that any modified
license would be for 100 megahertz, the complete bandwidth of a new license.43 Consequently, any
single modified license for a “partial PEA” would be “partial” in relation to the geography of a full PEA
covered by a new license.44 In the Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures Public Notice, we sought
comment on two issues relating to these partial PEA holdings: (1) the de minimis rounding threshold; and
(2) how the Commission will calculate the boundaries of any modified license for a partial PEA holding.45
21.
De Minimis Rounding and Option to Relinquish. The Commission concluded in the
Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O that an incumbent accepting modified licenses should be assigned a
modified license covering a full PEA if its reconfigured holdings equivalent to a partial PEA would leave
a de minimis portion of the population uncovered.46 The Commission found such rounding would serve
the public interest because it would ensure that an incumbent had the opportunity to serve the entire PEA,
rather than leaving a small percentage of the population most likely unserved.47 The Commission set this
de minimis threshold at 5% and directed the Bureau to determine whether it should be increased up to
10%.48 In the Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN, we tentatively concluded that we should
increase the de minimis threshold to 10%.49
22.
We adopt our tentative conclusion to increase the de minimis threshold to 10% for the
partial PEA holding. The only party addressing this issue in the record, T-Mobile, supports our
conclusion.50 T-Mobile agrees that this approach will maximize the remaining number of full PEA
41

Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at para. 39; Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, 33 FCC Rcd at
12178, para. 31. The constraints require that any pre-reconfiguration holdings equivalent to partial blocks be
reduced or increased to the nearest integer (full block equivalents) with at most one exception. In at most one PEA,
the holdings may remain between the nearest integers (full block equivalents) smaller and greater than the prereconfiguration PEA holdings, in order to keep the incumbent’s combined holdings constant.
42

Id.

43

Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, 33 FCC Rcd at 12177, para. 25.

44

See Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at para. 40.

45

Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at paras. 41-42; 45-47 (including Appendix A).

46

Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, 33 FCC Rcd at 12177, para. 26.

47

Id.

48

Id.

49

Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at paras. 41-42.

50

See T-Mobile Comment at 5.

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licenses available for auction. This approach also will eliminate the possibility of having to offer separate
licenses at auction that cover less than 10% of the PEA population, which would likely attract few
significant bids, if any, and likely leave those populations unserved. Further, T-Mobile agrees that de
minimis rounding should apply only where the incumbent commits to accept modified licenses, to avoid
an incumbent receiving an incentive payment windfall from such de minimis rounding.51 Accordingly, an
incumbent will receive a modified license for a full PEA if it has reconfigured holdings in the PEA that
would cover 90% or more of the PEA population.
23.
Geographic Boundaries of Modified Licenses for Partial PEAs. As determined in the
Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, the license for an incumbent’s one remaining partial PEA block after
reconfiguration will be determined by adjusting the incumbent’s currently licensed area in a PEA so that
it corresponds to the incumbent’s reconfigured holding in that PEA. The geographic boundaries of a
modified license for a partial PEA will be “as similar as possible to the incumbent’s original holdings in
that PEA, recognizing that the remaining partial PEA block may cover a larger or smaller percentage of
pops than the existing license.”52
24.
The Commission stated it would determine the geographic boundaries of this modified
license even when the incumbent submits an acceptable alternative reconfiguration.53 The same
methodology will be used to determine the geographic boundaries for any partial PEA, whether it results
from a Commission reconfiguration proposal or an acceptable alternative submitted by the incumbent.
The precise geographic boundaries of a modified license for a partial PEA will be determined only after
an incumbent makes its Initial Commitment. In the Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures Public
Notice and in the Reconfiguration Technical Guide (Appendix A),54 we outlined our process by which the
geographic boundaries of modified licenses for partial PEAs would be determined and we sought
comment on this process.
25.
We adopt our proposal for determining the geographic boundaries of modified licenses
for partial PEAs.55 Specifically, we conclude that the system will first determine an incumbent’s current
geographic coverage and then will add (or, in the case that the population in the coverage area exceeds the
reconfigured holdings, subtract) two-by-two kilometer grid cells adjacent to this coverage area within the
PEA. The system will do so until arriving at the population as close to the MHz-pops value of the
incumbent’s reconfigured holdings in the PEA as possible while not being less than the MHz-pops value
of the reconfigured holdings.56 If multiple combinations of grid cells could yield the same outcome, the
optimization will randomly choose one of the combinations. As noted by T-Mobile, the sole commenter
on this issue, this approach will promote a result whereby an incumbent’s post-reconfiguration boundaries

51

See T-Mobile Comment at 6. In other words, an incumbent with reconfigured holdings in a PEA that represent
.92 of a block (covering 92% of pops in the PEA) could elect to either receive a modified license in that PEA that
would cover the entire PEA (100% of pops), or it could choose to relinquish that partial holding for an incentive
payment of 92% of the final clock phase price in the auction.
52

Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, 33 FCC Rcd at 12177-78, para. 27.

53

See Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at paras. 45-47 (including Appendix A).

54

See Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at paras. 45-47 (including Appendix A).

55

In the Appendix A: Updated Reconfiguration Technical Guide released with this Public Notice, we provide one
clarification regarding which cells are added or subtracted through this process. In section 4 of Appendix A
(Determining the Geography of Retained Partial PEA Licenses), we clarify that grid cells that surround the boundary
of the incumbent’s current holdings in the partial PEA include all grid cells that share a side border or corner with
the grid cells in the partial holdings.
56

See Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at paras. 45-47 (including Appendix A).

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will reflect, as closely as possible, an incumbent’s pre-reconfiguration holdings, should it choose to
accept modified licenses.57
VI.

INITIAL COMMITMENTS

26.
With one exception, we adopt as final procedures for the initial commitment process
those described in the Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN. 58 In the Initial 39 GHz
Reconfiguration Procedures PN, we tentatively concluded that only one of the commonly controlled
entities that holds an existing 39 GHz license would receive the single incentive payment for an
incumbent’s combined holdings relinquished in the incentive auction. 59 In response to the record
regarding incentive payments, we revise this approach.60 We will permit a party lacking an existing 39
GHz license that controls an incumbent’s 39 GHz licensees or that is controlled by another party that
controls the incumbent’s 39 GHz licensees to receive an incentive payment. Using the procedures
described below, this approach will enable an incumbent using a party lacking 39 GHz licenses to bid on
new licenses in Auction 103 and to reduce its winning bids by the amount of the incentive payment for
the incumbent’s holdings. In response to additional comments, we also permit the incumbent to divide its
single incentive payment amount among accounts owned by the commonly controlled party that
represents existing 39 GHz licensee(s), or by one or more of its 39 GHz licensees. Below we review the
key aspects of the final procedures for the initial commitment process as also explained in the Initial 39
GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN and Appendix D: Updated Initial Commitment Technical Guide.
27.
The Reconfigured 39 GHz Incumbent Holdings Public Notice will announce the timeline
for Initial Commitments. The timeline will include a window for filing the Incumbent 39 GHz Licensee
Short-Form Application (FCC Form 175-A). Among other things, on the FCC Form 175-A, an
incumbent will identify the individuals who are authorized to act as the incumbent’s Initial Commitment
Representatives. The timeline will include a deadline for submitting a binding Initial Commitment
regarding the combined 39 GHz holdings of the applicable incumbent through the Initial Commitment
system. The window for filing FCC Form 175-A will open no sooner than 30 days after the timeline is
announced and the deadline for submitting Initial Commitments will be no sooner than 30 days after the
FCC Form 175-A filing window opens.
28.
An incumbent that for any reason does not submit an Initial Commitment by the deadline
will be considered to have committed to accepting modified licenses based on the Commission’s
proposed reconfiguration and to forgoing any opportunity to relinquish any partial PEA holdings for an
incentive payment or to become eligible to bid for licenses in Auction 103 (Initial Commitment Option
1). A party with a controlling interest in an existing 39 GHz licensee that is considered to have submitted
Initial Commitment Option 1, or that is controlled by a party that also controls an existing 39 GHz
licensee that is considered to have submitted Initial Commitment Option 1 also will not be eligible to bid
in Auction 103. If a 39 GHz incumbent has updated holdings for a group of commonly controlled entities
and is considered to have submitted Initial Commitment Option 1, committing to accepting modified
licenses, the modified licenses will be issued to the consolidated incumbent listed in Appendix B.
29.
Based on the Initial Commitments, we will announce the number of spectrum blocks in
the Upper 37 GHz and 39 GHz bands that will be available in Auction 103. A number of spectrum blocks
in the Upper 37 GHz and 39 GHz spectrum bands will be reserved in each PEA sufficient for any
modified licenses that incumbents commit to accept. The number of remaining spectrum blocks then will
be available to be assigned as new licenses in Auction 103. Other than information about the number of
57

See T-Mobile Comment at 6.

58

See Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at paras. 59-74.

59

See Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at para. 72.

60

See Section VI.D. below.

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blocks available in Auction 103, the Commission will not make public any information relating to
incumbents’ Initial Commitments until after Auction 103 closes.61
30.
The final changes to any existing licenses, whether modifications or cancellations based
on voluntary relinquishment, will occur after the close of Auction 103. The incumbent will be bound to
fulfill its Initial Commitment following the close of Auction 103.
A.

Incumbent 39 GHz Licensee Short-Form Application

31.
Each incumbent will use the Incumbent 39 GHz Licensee Short-Form Application (FCC
Form 175-A) to: (a) provide identifying information for the applicant; (b) provide information for a
contact person regarding the application; (c) list the FRNs of all existing 39 GHz licensees with licenses
being consolidated for purposes of Auction 103; (d) name up to three Initial Commitment
Representative(s); and (e) make required certifications. We will make available instructions and other
educational materials prior to the opening of the FCC Form 175-A filing window.
32.
FCC Form 175-A Applicant. In the Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, the Commission
decided that each incumbent’s 39 GHz license holdings would be treated on a combined basis, whether
aggregated by PEA for an individual licensee or aggregated and consolidated by PEA for commonly
controlled entities that are treated as a single incumbent.62 To implement our revised approach regarding
the party eligible to receive an incumbent’s incentive payment, the FCC Form 175-A applicant may be an
existing 39 GHz licensee or it may be a party subject to common control with the existing 39 GHz
licensee(s) listed in the FCC Form 175-A. The FCC Form 175-A applicant will represent the incumbent
for purposes of making an initial commitment to accept modified licenses or relinquish all existing
spectrum usage rights in exchange for an incentive payment and the opportunity to bid for new licenses in
Auction 103. An FCC Form 175-A applicant must certify that it represents itself and all licensee(s) listed
in the application with existing 39 GHz licenses being consolidated for purposes of Auction 103, all of
which must be commonly controlled.63 The applicant may name up to three individuals as Initial
Commitment Representatives, each of whom is authorized by the applicant to make an Initial
Commitment regarding the holdings of the existing 39 GHz licensees listed in the application.
33.
The Commission will issue any modified licenses to the FCC Form 175-A applicant that
submits Initial Commitment Option 1 or 2.64 If an entity wishes to assign modified licenses to multiple
commonly controlled entities, it may do so through the Commission’s standard transfer and assignment
process, including making pro forma transfers or assignments, after the modified licenses have been
issued to the FCC Form 175-A applicant.65 Similarly, the Commission will calculate a single incentive
payment for spectrum usage rights relinquished by an incumbent.66 As discussed in connection with
61

We note that, in its response to Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN, AT&T suggests that
confidentiality should be provided for what it refers to as “exchange proposals.” AT&T Comment at 2 n.2. In any
event, as AT&T acknowledges, “the exchange results will necessarily be public.” Id. Our information procedures
regarding Initial Commitments are consistent with this approach.
62

Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, 33 FCC Rcd at 12176, para. 22.

63

For purposes of reconfiguration, the spectrum usage rights of each 39 GHz licensee based on its licenses have
been aggregated to determine its holdings within each PEA. In the case of a group of commonly controlled entities
that each hold 39 GHz licenses, the holdings also have been consolidated.
64

See Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at para. 35.

65

See 47 CFR § 1.948.

66

See Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at para. 35. If the entity listed on FCC Form 175-A does not
have a current FCC Form 602 Ownership Form on file, prior to modified licenses being issued, it will provide the
necessary license ownership, basic eligibility, and qualification information required of FCC licensees. See para. 43,
infra. See also 47 U.S.C. § 308(b); 47 CFR §§ 1.919, 1.2112.

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incentive payments, the FCC Form 175-A applicant then may direct that incentive payment to more than
one account, provided the account owners are either the FCC Form 175-A applicant or one of the existing
39 GHz licensees listed on the FCC Form 175-A. In Auction 103, the bidding system automatically will
calculate obligations toward winning bids reduced by any incentive payment for relinquished holdings if
the FCC Form 175-A applicant also applies for and bids in Auction 103 using the same FRN. In all other
cases, regardless of any relationship between an Auction 103 bidder and the FCC Form 175-A applicant
or listed 39 GHz licensees, a winning bidder will be obligated to pay its winning bids at the close of the
auction regardless of any incentive payment it may receive later.
34.
An incumbent bidding on new licenses and claiming a designated entity bidding credit,
e.g., a small business bidding credit, in Auction 103 may receive a bidding credit only with respect to
winning bid amounts that exceed any incentive payment to that incumbent.67 This remains the case even
when an incumbent uses different parties as the applicant on the FCC Form 175-A for Initial
Commitments and on the FCC Form 175 for bidding on new licenses.68
35.
Rule Prohibiting Certain Communications. As of the deadline for filing FCC Form 175A, any incumbent 39 GHz licensee listed in an FCC Form 175-A will be considered to be an applicant in
Auction 103 for purposes of Section 1.2105(c), the Commission’s rule that prohibits certain auctionrelated communications from the short-form application deadline until the post-auction deadline for down
payments on new licenses.69 Subject to specified exceptions, the rule provides that, after the 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 [of communications services]
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….”70
36.
The rule will apply to a covered incumbent from the deadline for filing FCC Form 175-A
regardless of whether the incumbent ultimately relinquishes spectrum usage rights. In this respect, the
applicant on FCC Form 175-A and any listed licensees are the “covered incumbent,” as all have an
interest in the holdings and any resulting incentive payment. Any existing 39 GHz licensee that is listed
67

Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, 33 FCC Rcd at 12181-82, para. 43.

68

In such a case, i.e., when the FRN of the applicant on the FCC Form 175-A for Initial Commitments is not the
same as the FRN on the FCC Form 175 for bidding on new licenses, the Bidding System will reflect the FCC Form
175 applicant’s claimed bidding credit without taking into account the incumbent’s incentive payment, payable at
the direction of the FCC Form 175-A applicant. As a result, the bidding credit reflected in the bidding system may
not be correct. The Commission will make the correct calculation during the post-auction licensing process and
adjust the bidding credit discount accordingly.
69

See 47 CFR §§ 1.2105(c), 1.2115 (providing for adapting rules for incentive auctions). The Commission will
detail further the operation of the prohibition in future public notices setting forth the detailed procedures for
Auction 103. Interested parties seeking additional guidance prior to the release of those future public notices may
consult the analogous Auctions 101 and 102 Procedures Public Notice, past public notices providing guidance with
respect to the rule, and the authorities listed on the Commission’s web page. See Auctions of Upper Microwave
Flexible Use Licenses for Next-Generation Wireless Services; Notice and Filing Requirements, Minimum Opening
Bids, Upfront Payments, and Other Procedures for Auctions 101 (28 GHz) and 102 (24 GHz); Bidding in Auction
101 Scheduled to Begin November 14, 2018, Public Notice, 33 FCC Rcd 7575, 7598-7605, paras. 57-82 (2018)
(Auctions 101 and 102 Procedures Public Notice); Guidance Regarding the Prohibition of Certain Communications
During the Incentive Auction, Auction 1000, Public Notice, 30 FCC Rcd 10794 (WTB 2015) (Prohibited
Communications Guidance Public Notice). A summary listing of documents addressing application of Section
1.2105(c) is available on the Commission’s auction web page at https://www.fcc.gov/economics-analytics/auctionsdivision/auctions/summary-listing-documents-addressing-application-rule#block-menu-block-4.
70

Id.

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on an FCC Form 175-A could relinquish existing spectrum usage rights in exchange for an incentive
payment, even if ultimately it does not do so.71 Information on all covered incumbents will be available
to the public since applicants and listed licensees on FCC Form 175-A and/or applicants filing FCC Form
175 will be identified by public notice subsequent to the respective filing deadlines for the forms. The
rule prohibiting certain communications prohibits those communications between applicants and
nationwide providers, regardless of whether those nationwide providers are applicants in the auction.72
Consistent with the procedures adopted for Auctions 101 and 102 with respect to millimeter wave bands,
we identify AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, and Verizon Wireless as “nationwide providers” for the purpose of
implementing our competitive bidding rules in Auction 103, including Section 1.2105(c).73
37.
A party covered by Section 1.2105(c) must implement procedures to ensure that a party
with a disclosable ownership interest in the covered party and in another applicant (also a covered party)
does not have access to the bids and bidding strategies of more than one of the covered parties. Section
1.2105(c)(2) provides that a covered party “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.”74
B.

Initial Commitment Options

38.
In the Initial Commitment System,75 the Initial Commitment Representative will commit
the represented 39 GHz licensees to one of three Initial Commitment options: (1) accept modified
licenses based on the Commission’s proposed reconfiguration of the holdings of the 39 GHz incumbent;
(2) accept modified licenses based on an acceptable alternative reconfiguration submitted by the
incumbent; or (3) relinquish all spectrum usage rights pursuant to the licensees’ existing 39 GHz licenses
in exchange for an incentive payment by having the licenses cancelled. To be able to bid for new licenses
in Auction 103, a 39 GHz incumbent must submit Initial Commitment Option 3 and commit to having its
existing 39 GHz licenses cancelled. An incumbent that submits either Initial Commitment Option 1 or
Option 2 cannot bid for new licenses in Auction 103.
39.
Additional description of Initial Commitment System details is provided in Appendix D:
Updated Initial Commitment Technical Guide. We will provide additional information and educational
materials regarding the Initial Commitment System in advance of the opening of the Initial Commitment
submission window.
40.
Reconfiguration by the Commission and Acceptable Alternatives (Options 1 and 2,
respectively). An Initial Commitment Representative may commit the incumbent to accepting modified
licenses based on the reconfiguration proposed by the Commission (Option 1). Alternatively, a
representative may use the Initial Commitment system to submit an acceptable alternative reconfiguration
71

In contrast, an incumbent that wants only to commit to accept the modification proposed by the Commission may
do so without filing an FCC Form 175-A. In that case, it will be deemed to have committed to accepting modified
licenses based on the Commission’s proposed reconfiguration and to keeping any modified partial PEA license.
72

Updating Part 1 Competitive Bidding Rules et al., Report and Order, Order on Reconsideration of the First Report
and Order, Third Order on Reconsideration of the Second Report and Order, Third Report and Order, 30 FCC Rcd
7493, 7577, para. 199 (2015) (2015 Part 1 Report and Order), modified by Erratum, 30 FCC Rcd 8518
(OMD/WTB 2015).
73

See Auctions 101 and 102 Procedures Public Notice, 33 FCC Rcd at 7593-94, 7598, paras. 44 and 57, n.132.

74

47 CFR § 1.2105(c)(2).

75

An Initial Commitment Representative may access the Initial Commitment System after activating his or her own
SecurID® token.

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(Option 2). The Initial Commitment System will enable a representative to consider various potential
reconfigurations, if feasible, and to determine whether an alternative reconfiguration meets the necessary
requirements.
41.
It may be possible for there to be more than one reconfiguration consistent with the
Commission’s requirements if an incumbent has weighted MHz-pops quantities equivalent to a partial
PEA in multiple PEAs. In this case, the incumbent will be able to consider the available options using the
Initial Commitment System (Option 2). More specifically, in accordance with the Commission’s
requirements for an acceptable reconfiguration, the Initial Commitment System will allow the
representative to round holdings equivalent to a partial PEA either down to the greatest integer less than
or equal to the incumbent’s updated holdings or up to the least integer greater than or equal to the
incumbent’s updated holdings, for those PEAs, with at most one exception.76 The system will notify the
representative if choices made are not consistent with having at most one PEA with the equivalent of a
partial PEA license.
42.
For example, if the representative has indicated that it wishes to round down holdings
equivalent to partial PEA licenses in all but one PEA, and the remaining weighted MHz-pops would
increase those holdings in the remaining PEA to more than a full PEA license, the system will require the
representative to readjust its holdings. Once the representative has provided input that leads to an
acceptable alternative reconfiguration, it may “submit” the reconfiguration and commit the represented 39
GHz licensees to accept modified licenses based on the submitted acceptable alternative reconfiguration.
43.
The Commission will issue modified licenses to the FCC Form 175-A applicant. If the
FCC Form 175-A applicant does not have a current FCC Form 602 on file, prior to modified licenses
being issued, it will file an FCC Form 602 Ownership Form along with basic eligibility, and qualification
information required of FCC licensees.77 Specific filing instructions will be provided, if necessary, in the
Auction 103 Closing Public Notice announcing winning bidders. As detailed below in connection with
incentive payments, in the event that the incumbent chooses to relinquish its partial PEA holdings, a
single incentive payment will be made to the FCC Form 175-A applicant representing the incumbent after
the conclusion of Auction 103.
44.
In the Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, the Commission decided that 39 GHz licensees
that accept modified licenses, based on Initial Commitment Option 1 or 2 will not be eligible to bid in
Auction 103. Consequently, a party with control over such 39 GHz licensees or that is controlled by a
party capable of controlling such 39 GHz licensees will not be eligible to bid in Auction 103.
45.
If an incumbent submits Initial Commitment Option 1 or 2 to receive modified licenses,
and the modified licenses will include a license for a partial PEA, the incumbent’s Initial Commitment
Representative will choose either to keep the modified license for a partial PEA or to relinquish the
spectrum usage rights for the partial PEA license in exchange for an incentive payment. If the
representative elects to keep the modified partial PEA license, the de minimis rounding rules will apply,
potentially rounding the partial PEA block up to a modified license for a full PEA block. In the case of a
relinquishment, the incentive payment will be based on the actual MHz-pops of the relinquished holdings.
46.
Round Zero Reallocations for an Incumbent Submitting Initial Commitment Option 3.
As part of submitting Initial Commitment Option 3, an incumbent will have an opportunity to reallocate,
within constraints, any updated aggregated partial PEA holdings in Round Zero.78 The Initial
Commitment Representative may reallocate the incumbent’s updated aggregated partial PEA holdings
among the PEAs in which it has such holdings. The reallocation will be done by transferring weighted
76

See Appendix D: Updated Initial Commitment Technical Guide.

77

See 47 U.S.C. § 308(b); 47 CFR §§ 1.919, 1.2112.

78

Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, 33 FCC Rd at 12181, para. 40.

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MHz-pops among eligible PEAs. The Initial Commitment System will notify the representative if a
reallocation does not use all of the weighted MHz-pops available. The representative will be permitted to
submit a proposed reallocation that does not use all of the weighted MHz-pops available. If a
representative does so, the system automatically will apportion any unused weighted MHz-pops to the
partial PEAs in the incumbent’s updated aggregated holdings by PEA, starting with the lowest numbered
PEA.
C.

Transition for Existing 39 GHz Licenses

47.
Each 39 GHz licensee will hold its existing licenses until after the announcement of
winning bidders for new licenses in Auction 103. The incumbent’s binding Initial Commitment then will
be implemented as part of the post-auction transition.
48.
For an incumbent with an Initial Commitment to accept modified licenses (Options 1 or
2), the modified licenses will be issued after winning bidders are announced in Auction 103. The
incumbent will know the number of all the modified licenses in each PEA based on its submitted Initial
Commitment. The specific frequency blocks for which modified licenses will be issued will be assigned
in the assignment phase of the auction and will be announced after the close of bidding along with the
geographic boundaries of any modified license for a partial PEA.79
49.
Incumbents that will be issued modified licenses already have existing licenses in the
PEA and may be able to transition any existing operations to new frequencies (or geographic areas in the
case of licenses that either covered or now cover only part of a PEA) before any new licenses are granted,
as new licenses won pursuant to Auction 103 will not be issued until after post-auction payments are
made and license applications are accepted and reviewed. We will support this transition by designating
the time period after the close of the auction and before new licenses are granted as the transition period
for incumbents receiving modified licenses to make the transition. Specifically, we will issue modified
licenses after the close of the auction but not cancel these incumbents’ authorizations on their original
frequencies to allow for a limited transition period. We will cancel their original authorizations only after
the transition has been made to the new frequencies or when the original frequencies are needed for new
licenses, whichever is sooner.80
50.
For an incumbent that commits to relinquish all existing 39 GHz spectrum usage rights in
exchange for an incentive payment (Option 3), we will cancel the existing licenses after the winning
bidders are announced in Auction 103. This will make associated spectrum available for authorization for
licenses under the new band plan, i.e., modified licenses and new licenses won at auction. We recognize
that, if these incumbents have existing operations at the time of the close of the auction, they will need a
transition period to continue to operate after their existing licenses are canceled and before their new
licenses are issued (or until they can transition existing operations to other spectrum bands in which they
hold licenses). This transition period will be accommodated through Special Temporary Authorizations
(STAs).
51.
STA Process. Incumbents that have existing operations and need continuing authority to
operate as they transition to new frequencies can apply for an STA, if needed, to ensure continuity of
service. An incumbent will need to explain in its STA request the nature of its existing operations and
identify how much time it needs for transition and/or why it was unable to complete the transition in the
79

See id. at 12185, para. 58.

80

If an incumbent choosing to have its licenses modified is moving to frequencies where another incumbent with
modified licenses holds its original licenses, we will need to ensure only one authorization is active. In this case, the
Commission would develop a plan to accommodate the transition of both incumbents, which may include granting
Special Temporary Authorizations (STAs) to effectuate the transition. The Commission may also consider granting
STAs if an incumbent’s transition to its new modified frequencies has not been completed before the Commission is
ready to grant new licenses in the same frequencies.

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initial time allotted (if applicable). Any STAs granted will authorize the incumbent to operate only on a
secondary, non-interfering basis, and only up to 180 days.81 These STAs will not be renewed absent
extraordinary circumstances.82 We will provide the filing deadline for these types of STA requests in the
Auction 103 Closing Public Notice announcing winning bidders.
D.

Incentive Payments

52.
For incumbents that submit Initial Commitment Option 3, the incentive payment will be
determined based on the incumbent’s MHz-pops holdings in a PEA after Round Zero and the final clock
phase price for a spectrum block in the same PEA at the close of the clock phase of the auction and
summed across all PEAs in which the incumbent had such holdings.83 For an incumbent that accepts
modified licenses for whole blocks based on reconfigured holdings and elects to relinquish reconfigured
holdings that are equivalent to a partial PEA, these holdings will be the reconfigured holdings in the PEA
with MHz-pops equivalent to less than a full block. As previously noted, holdings equivalent to less than
a full block that are relinquished will not include any post-reconfiguration rounding.
53.
Based on the authority referred to in the Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN,
and so long as such treatment of the incentive payment is consistent with Federal financial management
principles and guidance, the Commission will collect from any winning bidder that also is the applicant
on an FCC Form 175-A, amounts net of any incentive payment for the holdings based on the relevant
FCC Form 175-A.84 As already noted, for Auction 103, the Commission bidding system automatically
will calculate obligations toward winning bids net of any incentive payment for relinquished holdings
when the same party with the same FRN is the applicant for an FCC Form 175-A and for an FCC Form
175.
54.
In general, winning bidders must pay their winning bids in full within approximately one
month after release of the public notice announcing the close of an auction.85 However, those winning bid
payments are recognized as auction proceeds available to be shared as incentive payments only after the
Commission grants licenses associated with winning bid payments. Until then, the Commission holds
winning bid payments while it processes the license application(s) of winning bidders and does not
disburse them. Accordingly, cash incentive payments will be made only after the Commission grants new
licenses that result in the recognition of sufficient auction proceeds needed to make the incentive
payments.
55.
The auction process will determine a single incentive payment amount with respect to
any holdings relinquished by an incumbent. As we noted in the Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration
Procedures PN: “Once the combined holdings [of an incumbent] are redistributed by weighted MHzpops across PEAs, incumbent holdings in a particular PEA may no longer be clearly derived from any
particular existing license or, in the case of consolidated licensees, from any particular existing

81

Although these STAs will be secondary, incumbents should have sole use of the frequencies authorized for a
period of time because the Commission will not be able to grant its first set of new licenses immediately after the
auction closes, due to the additional time required for application submission, payments, and the petition to deny
period, among other things.
82

These STAs will be issued on a secondary, non-interfering basis, and therefore new licensees in these frequencies
have primary operating authority. Incumbents that need additional time to transition also have the option to
negotiate leases or other arrangements with the new licensee(s) authorized to operate in those frequencies.
83

For such an incumbent, the holdings in a PEA after Round Zero will be the incumbent’s Updated Aggregated
Holdings as modified by the incumbent during Round Zero.
84

See Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at para. 74.

85

47 CFR § 1.2107.

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licensee.”86 In the Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN, we tentatively concluded that such a
single payment may be directed to only one of the commonly controlled existing licensees and we sought
comment on whether there is a need to permit the designation of a commonly controlled entity that does
not already hold a 39 GHz license.87
56.
Commission auction rules permit only one entity from a group of commonly controlled
entities to be an applicant in a Commission auction of new spectrum licenses.88 The Commission
mandated that a defining characteristic of Auction 103 should be that “incumbents will have the
opportunity to replace at no additional cost all existing spectrum usage rights equivalent to a full 100
megahertz blocks with new licenses that are offered in the auction and provide equivalent rights.”89 This
mandate is achieved in part by handling incentive payments for incumbent holdings on a combined basis
in order to net them against the winning bids of a single applicant. Accordingly, the Commission’s
bidding system automatically will calculate obligations toward winning bids net of any incentive payment
for relinquished holdings when the same party with the same FRN is the applicant on an FCC Form 175A and an FCC Form 175. The alternative proposal in the Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN
recognized that an incumbent might have reasons to use an entity to bid for new licenses that differed
from the existing licensee.
57.
As reflected in the FCC Form 175-A procedures already described, we adopt our
alternative proposal to address the interests raised in the record. Our decision will enable an incumbent to
have its incentive payments reduce the winning bids of its FCC Form 175-A applicant even though that
applicant does not hold the 39 GHz licenses being relinquished. T-Mobile supports the alternative
proposal and no commenter opposes it.90 This approach would allow an incumbent to select a new party
that controls, is controlled by, or is subject to common control with existing licensees, to be its vehicle for
bidding on new licenses. That party’s winning bids, if any, then may be reduced by the incumbent’s
incentive payment, even though the party does not itself hold existing 39 GHz licensees. All this may be
done consistent with the treatment of holdings on a combined basis.
58.
While not objecting to this approach, Verizon would go farther. In response to the Initial
39 GHz Procedures PN, Verizon contends that handling incentive payments, or the issuance of licenses,
could have potentially adverse tax consequences.91 To remedy its concern, Verizon proposes that
participating parties be permitted to designate multiple specific commonly controlled entities to receive
licenses and/or incentive payments upon completion of the auction. Verizon acknowledges that the Initial
39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN deemed holdings combined for purposes of reconfiguration and
Auction 103 pursuant to an express Commission decision in the Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O.92
Nevertheless, Verizon asserts that its proposal to unwind that consolidation is not inconsistent with the
Commission’s decision.93
59.
As an initial matter, we note that in the Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, the
Commission indicated that all existing licenses are subject to change, regardless of the licensee’s
86

Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at para. 35.

87

Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at para. 72.

88

47 CFR § 1.2105(a)(3).

89

Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, 33 FCC Rcd at 12172, para. 10.

90

T-Mobile Comments at 6-7.

91

Verizon Comment at 5. See also Verizon Ex Parte at 1.

92

Id. (citing Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures PN at para. 35 and Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, 33
FCC Rcd at 12176, para. 22).
93

Id.

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participation in the incentive auction, in order to implement the Commission’s transition to a new band
plan and service rules for the 39 GHz band. The Commission also indicated that, although affected by an
incumbent’s decision whether to bid in the incentive auction for new licenses, the exact form each license
will take by the end of the auction will be determined by the overall process we are implementing. The
Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O noted that ultimately the Internal Revenue Service can determine the tax
consequences resulting from this process.94
60.
Further, Verizon’s proposal is in tension with the procedures needed to implement the
Commission’s reconfiguration framework. For the reasons described, Auction 103 will determine a
single incentive payment amount for an incumbent’s holdings and, moreover, will net that amount against
the winning bid obligations of an incumbent that also bids for new licenses. Given this treatment, it is not
feasible for the Commission’s systems to unwind the process so that each existing licensee may receive
new licenses and/or an incentive payment that correlates precisely with the licenses that it held prior to
the process, separate and apart from those held by other commonly controlled licensees. Accordingly, we
cannot afford incumbents all the flexibility suggested by Verizon’s proposal.
61.
With respect to Verizon’s suggestion regarding the distribution of licenses won by the
bidder, we note that the Commission’s rules require the winning bidder as identified on FCC Form 175 to
be the same entity that applies for the licenses on the FCC Form 601 subject to certain exceptions.95
However, if an entity wishes to assign licenses won in Auction 103 to multiple commonly controlled
entities, it may do so through the Commission’s standard transfer and assignment process, including
making pro forma transfers or assignments, after the licenses have been issued to the winning bidder.96
For Auction 103 only, we will permit a winning bidder that represents an incumbent group of commonly
controlled entities to notify the Commission in its FCC Form 601 of its intent to make pro forma transfers
or assignments of licenses won in Auction 103 immediately upon grant of such licenses, if applicable,
which will allow the incumbent to ensure that its modified licenses are assigned to the existing licensees
that relinquished the 39 GHz licenses originally.97
62.
In addition, an incumbent’s Initial Commitment Representative will be able to direct any
incentive payment to more than one account, provided the account owners are either the FCC Form 175A applicant or one of the existing 39 GHz licensees listed on the FCC Form 175-A.98
63.
We will provide instructions in a later public notice regarding how an Initial
Commitment Representative will provide information near the conclusion of Auction 103 regarding the
account(s) to which any incentive payment should be made.
VII.

PROCEDURAL MATTERS

64.
Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis. This Public Notice adopts procedures that include
information collection requirements that are subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA),
Public Law 104-13. As described in the Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration PN, the Commission previously
commenced the PRA approval process for the new information collection requirements associated with

94

Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, 33 FCC Rcd 12175, para. 18 & n.44.

95

See 47 CFR § 1.2107(c), (g). Section 1.2107(g) provides a limited exception for a winning bidder claiming a
bidding credit as a consortium. See 47 CFR § 1.2110(b)(4)(i).
96

See 47 CFR § 1.948.

97

We emphasize that a licensee cannot assign or transfer licenses won in Auction 103 until after the FCC Form 601
application associated with those licenses has been granted.
98

See Verizon Ex Parte at 1 (noting that limiting payments to existing licensees would “fully realize” the purpose of
Verizon’s proposal with respect to payments).

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the Incumbent 39 GHz Licensee Short Form Application (FCC Form 175-A).99 As part of that process,
the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), the general public, and other Federal agencies have been
invited to comment on the new information collection requirements contained in this Public Notice.100
More recently, the Commission has submitted the FCC Form 175-A to OMB for review.101 Pursuant to
the Small Business Paperwork Relief Act of 2002,102 we also sought specific comment in the Initial 39
GHz Reconfiguration PN on how we might further reduce the information collection burden for small
business concerns with fewer than 25 employees.103 No comments were received in response to these
issues.
65.
Supplemental Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis. As required by the Regulatory
Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended (RFA),104 a Supplemental Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
(Supplemental IRFA) was incorporated in the Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures Public Notice
released in March 2019. The Commission sought written public comments on the proposals in the Initial
39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures Public Notice, including comments on the Supplemental IFRA. No
comments were received in response to the Supplemental IRFA. In conjunction with the Initial 39 GHz
Reconfiguration Procedures Public Notice, this Public Notice develops and details the procedures
necessary to implement the pre-auction process for Auction 103. These Public Notices and the
supplemental Regulatory Flexibility analyses contained therein supplement the Initial and Final
Regulatory Flexibility Analyses completed in the Spectrum Frontiers Fourth R&O, Spectrum Frontiers
Orders, and other Commission orders pursuant to which Auction 103 will be conducted. This present
Supplemental Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (Supplemental FRFA) conforms to the RFA.105
66.
Need for, and Objectives of, the Rules. This Public Notice explains the updated
procedures the Bureau/OEA will use to implement the steps described in the Spectrum Frontiers Fourth
R&O to reconfigure incumbents’ 39 GHz licenses to better match the new 39 GHz band plan and service
rules adopted by the Commission and allow incumbents to make binding Initial Commitments through
the Commission’s Initial Commitment System. It also describes the process by which an incumbent 39
GHz licensee will have an opportunity to make a binding Initial Commitment through the Commission’s
Initial Commitment System to (1) have its licenses modified based on the Commission’s proposed
reconfiguration of its license holdings (and forgo bidding for new licenses in Auction 103); (2) have its
licenses modified based on an acceptable alternative reconfiguration that the incumbent proposes,
provided that it satisfies certain specified conditions (and forgo bidding for new licenses in Auction 103);
or (3) commit to relinquish its licenses in exchange for an incentive payment and have its licenses
cancelled, with the ability to bid for new licenses if it so chooses. The procedures in this Public Notice
constitute the more specific implementation of the decisions contemplated by the underlying rulemaking
orders, including the Spectrum Frontiers Orders and relevant competitive bidding orders, and are fully
consistent therewith.106
99

Information Collection Being Reviewed by the Federal Communications Commission, 84 Fed. Reg. 4066 (Feb.
14, 2019).
100

See Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures Public Notice at para. 75.

101

Information Collection Being Submitted for Review and Approval to the Office of Management and Budget, 84
Fed. Reg. 16260 (April 18, 2019).
102

See 44 U.S.C. § 3506(c)(4).

103

See Initial 39 GHz Reconfiguration Procedures Public Notice at para. 75.

104

5 U.S.C. § 603. The RFA, see 5 U.S.C. §§ 601-612, has been amended by the Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, Pub. L. No. 104-121, Title II, 110 Stat. 857 (1996).
105

See 5 U.S.C. § 604.

106

See generally Competitive Bidding Second Report and Order, 9 FCC Rcd at 2360-75, paras. 68-159.

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67.
Summary of Significant Issues Raised by Public Comments in Response to the
Supplemental IRFA. No comments were filed that specifically addressed the proposed rules and policies
presented in the Supplemental IRFA.
68.
Response to Comments by the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration. Pursuant to the Small Business Jobs Act of 2010, which amended the RFA, the
Commission is required to respond to any comments filed by the Chief Counsel of the Small Business
Administration (SBA), and to provide a detailed statement of any change made to the proposed rule(s) as
a result of those comments.107 The Chief Counsel did not file any comments in response to the proposals
in this proceeding.
69.
Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities to Which the Rules Would
Apply. The RFA directs agencies to provide a description of, and, where feasible, an estimate of the
number of small entities that may be affected by the rules and policies, adopted herein.108 The RFA
generally defines the term “small entity” as having the same meaning as the terms “small business,”
“small organization,” and “small governmental jurisdiction.”109 In addition, the term “small business” has
the same meaning as the term “small business concern” under the Small Business Act.110 A “small
business concern” is one which: (1) is independently owned and operated; (2) is not dominant in its field
of operation; and (3) satisfies any additional criteria established by the SBA.111
70.
Regulatory Flexibility Analyses were incorporated into the Spectrum Frontiers Orders
and in those analyses, the Commission described in detail the small entities that might be significantly
affected. Accordingly, in this Public Notice, we hereby incorporate by reference the descriptions and
estimates of the number of small entities from the previous Regulatory Flexibility Analyses in the
Spectrum Frontiers Orders.112
71.
Based on the information available in the Commission’s public Universal Licensing
System (ULS), the Commission estimates there are currently 16 incumbent 39 GHz licensees.113 Of these
incumbent 39 GHz licensees, the Commission estimates that up to 8 could be considered a “small entity”
under the RFA.
72.
Description of Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance
Requirements for Small Entities. The Commission designed the reconfiguration and Initial Commitment
107

5 U.S.C. § 604(a)(3).

108 5
109

U.S.C. § 603(b)(3).

Id. § 601(6).

Id. § 601(3) (incorporating by reference the definition of “small business concern” in the Small Business Act, 15
U.S.C. § 632). Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. § 601(3), the statutory definition of a small business applies “unless an agency,
after consultation with the Office of Advocacy of the Small Business Administration and after opportunity for public
comment, establishes one or more definitions of such term which are appropriate to the activities of the agency and
publishes such definition(s) in the Federal Register.”
110

111

15 U.S.C. § 632.

112

2016 Spectrum Frontiers Order, 31 FCC Rcd at 8234-42, Appx. E; 2017 Spectrum Frontiers Order, 32 FCC Rcd
at 11087-96, Appendices C, D.
113

In Auction 30, the Commission offered 2,450 licenses in the 39 GHz band. Auction 30 closed on May 8, 2000
with 29 winning bidders winning a total of 2,173 licenses. See 39 GHz Band Auction Closes, Public Notice, 15 FCC
Rcd 13,648 (2000). 18 of these winning bidders (winning a total of 849 licenses) claimed eligibility for a small
business bidding credit. Id. We note that, as a general matter, the number of winning bidders that are eligible for a
small business bidding credit at the close of an auction does not necessarily represent the number of small
businesses currently in a service. Also, the Commission does not generally track subsequent business size unless, in
the context of assignments or transfers, unjust enrichment issues are implicated.

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processes to minimize reporting and compliance requirements for participating incumbent licensees,
including those that are small entities. For example, incumbent 39 GHz licensees desiring to make an
Initial Commitment will need to file an Incumbent 39 GHz Licensee Short-Form Application (FCC Form
175-A), which the Commission will use to provide an incumbent 39 GHz licensee (or, if applicable, a
group of commonly controlled entities that hold 39 GHz licenses) with access to the Initial Commitment
System in order to make an Initial Commitment regarding existing 39 GHz spectrum holdings. The
information that must be provided on FCC Form 175-A is limited to that which is necessary to enable the
Commission to provide incumbent 39 GHz licensees with access Initial Commitment System for purposes
of making their Initial Commitments.114
73.
We do not expect that the reconfiguration and Initial Commitment processes and
procedures will require small entities to hire attorneys, engineers, consultants, or other professionals
because the information necessary to comply with these processes and procedures should be available and
maintained as part of the customary and usual business or private practice of all incumbent 39 GHz
licensees. In addition, to comply with some of the requirements small entities will be able to rely on the
Commission's systems rather than having to perform calculations which might have required the use of
professionals. For example, for an incumbent submitting Initial Commitment Option 3, if a Round Zero
reallocation does not use all of the weighted MHz-pops available, the small entity's Initial Commitment
representative will be permitted to submit a proposed reallocation that does not use all of the weighted
MHz-pops available. If the representative does so, the system will automatically apportion any unused
weighted MHz-pops to the partial PEAs in the incumbent’s updated aggregated holdings by PEA, starting
with the lowest numbered PEA. Further, with regard to incentive payments, for Auction 103, the
Commission’s bidding system will automatically calculate obligations toward winning bids net of any
incentive payment for relinquished holdings when the same party with the same FRN is the applicant for
an FCC Form 175-A and for an FCC Form 175.
74.
Steps Taken to Minimize the Significant Economic Impact on Small Entities, and
Significant Alternatives Considered. The RFA requires an agency to describe any significant, specifically
small business, alternatives that it has considered in reaching its approach, which may include the
following four alternatives (among others): “(1) the establishment of differing compliance or reporting
requirements or timetables that take into account the resources available to small entities; (2) the
clarification, consolidation, or simplification of compliance and reporting requirements under the rule for
such small entities; (3) the use of performance rather than design standards; and (4) an exemption from
coverage of the rule, or any part thereof, for such small entities.”115
75.
The Commission has taken steps that should minimize any economic impact that the
proposed reconfiguration and Initial Commitment processes and procedures may have on small
businesses. As an initial matter, the procedures only apply to incumbent 39 GHz licensees. Moreover,
the Commission has made an effort to minimize the burden on all participating incumbent 39 GHz
licensees, regardless of size, by limiting the information collected on FCC Form 175-A to that which is
necessary to enable the Commission to provide an incumbent 39 GHz licensee (or, if applicable a group
of commonly controlled entities that hold 39 GHz licenses) with access to the Initial Commitment System
in order to make an Initial Commitment regarding existing 39 GHz spectrum holdings. Detailed
instructions and guidance to incumbent 39 GHz licensees about filing FCC Form 175-A, including the
filing deadline, will be provided in advance of the start of the FCC Form 175-A filing window, and the
Bureau/OEA staff will conduct outreach to all incumbents to ensure that they are informed of their

114

The information required on Form 175-A includes contact information, the FCC Registration Numbers (FRNs)
of all individual licensees represented through the application, Initial Commitment Representatives, and various
certifications.
115

5 U.S.C. § 603(c)(1)-(4).

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options, thereby further minimizing any burdens on incumbent 39 GHz licensees that desire to make an
Initial Commitment, including those that are small entities.
76.
As described in this Public Notice, small entities will be able to rely on Commission
systems rather than having to use their own resources to comply with some of the processes and
procedures adopted in this Public Notice, which will minimize some economic impact. Where a small
entity is an existing 39 GHz licensee with existing operations that commits to relinquish all existing 39
GHz spectrum usage rights in exchange for an incentive payment and needs continuing authority to
operate as it transitions to new frequencies, that entity will be afforded a transition period where it can
continue to operate after its existing licenses are canceled and before its new licenses are issued. This
transition period will be accommodated through Special Temporary Authorizations (STAs) granted by the
Commission authorizing it to operate on a secondary, non-interfering basis, for up to 180 days. This
process will ensure that an existing 39 GHz licensee can maintain continuity of service and minimize the
economic impact for small entities that could occur if there was a gap or lapse in service.
77.
Report to Congress. The Commission will send a copy of the Public Notice, including
the Supplemental FRFA, in a report to Congress pursuant to the Congressional Review Act.116 In
addition, the Commission will send a copy of the Public Notice, including the Supplemental FRFA, to the
Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the SBA. A copy of the Public Notice, and the Supplemental FRFA (or
summaries thereof) will also be published in the Federal Register.117
78.
Contact Information. For further information concerning this proceeding, contact the
offices listed below:
Broadband Division, Wireless Telecommunications Bureau
Upper Microwave Flexible Use Service (UMFUS) questions:

Simon Banyai at (202) 418-2487

Auctions Division, Office of Economics and Analytics
Auction legal questions:

Erik Salovaara at (202) 418-0660

Office of Communications Business Opportunities
For questions concerning small business inquiries:

116

See 5 U.S.C. § 801(a)(1)(A).

117

See 5 U.S.C. § 604(b).

(202) 418-0990

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ORDERING CLAUSES

79.
IT IS ORDERED that, pursuant to Sections 309 and 316 of the Communications Act of
1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. §§ 309, 316, and the authority delegated in the Spectrum Frontiers Fourth
Report and Order, FCC 18-180, and 47 CFR §§ 0.271, 0.331, the licenses of all 39 GHz band licensees
are hereby modified as specified in the Spectrum Frontiers Fourth Report and Order and further
explained in this Public Notice. This Public Notice shall be sent by certified mail, return receipt
requested, to each current 39 GHz licensee at the mailing address on file in ULS.
80.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, that the Commission’s Consumer and Governmental
Affairs Bureau, Reference Information Center, SHALL SEND a copy of this Public Notice, including the
Supplemental Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration.
- FCC -

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