My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
COM 0522.012 2002-2004
ClerkCouncil
>
Council Records
>
Communications
>
2002-2004
>
COM 0522.012 2002-2004
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
6/22/2017 8:14:07 AM
Creation date
5/10/2008 12:50:55 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Communications
Communications - Type
COM
Communications - Council Term
2002-2004
Communication
0522
Point
012
Author
Gary Safarik, Councilmember
Communications - Referred To
N/A
Document Relationships
COM 0522.000 2002-2004
(Related)
Path:
\Council Records\Communications\2002-2004
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
31
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
800 MHz decision is expected soon Page 1 of 2 <br /> ~r~ ~ n m ~ ~ • o... ar r, =G a-:=~+~s . st .>:,x=^ v . ua F r, r=, r+u c <br /> ~INi~ ~ <br /> MM4,4YMYdY ttt9f£Plbk)fEbH1`ADGI <br /> 800 MHz decision is expected soon <br /> BY DONNY JACKSON <br /> Mobile Radio Technology, )an 1, 2004 <br /> Public-safety organizations, critical-infrastructure entities and wireless carriers using 800 MHz <br /> spectrum soon may be preparing to shift to different frequencies, as the Federal Communications <br /> Commission is expected to address the well-chronicled interference problems in the band this month or <br /> next. <br /> Two primary proposals have been submitted to the FCC to resolve the interference issues, most of <br /> which involve conflicts with expanding wireless carrier Nextel Communications. One calls for <br /> rebanding the spectrum, while the other proposes technical solutions to mitigate the problem. <br /> Known as the Consensus Plan, the rebanding strategy is supported by most public-safety organizations <br /> and Nextel, which submitted a white paper two years ago that outlined the plan. It calls for Nextel to <br /> move from its interleaved 800 MHz spectrum to a continuous block within the band, and to exchange <br /> 700 MHz and 900 MHz frequencies for a block of 1.9 GHz spectrum. Nextel also has pledged to pay <br /> $850 million to absorb the costs of relocating and re-tuning other 800 MHz users to a contiguous block <br /> elsewhere in the band. <br /> Opponents of this plan argue that the three-and-a-half years needed to implement such a spectrum <br /> shuffle means the interference problems would not be addressed quickly enough. They're also <br /> concerned Nextel would receive a spectrum windfall if the rebanding plan were to be adopted as <br /> proposed. Instead, wireless carriers competing with Nextel and other 800 MHz users that would be <br /> forced to move under the rebanding plan are supporting a plan that calls for the creation of engineering <br /> best practices that would be used within the 800 MHz band to mitigate interference. <br /> Motorola, Nextel's primary vendor and one of the largest manufacturers of equipment for other 800 <br /> MHz users, submitted comments to the FCC in May 2003 indicating it had developed receivers that <br /> could address interference problems without rebanding. <br /> Such technical solutions could be implemented immediately without inconveniencing public-safety <br /> groups or critical-infrastructure entities such as power companies, according to Jill Lyon, vice president <br /> and general counsel for the United Telecom Council, an association of utility companies. She called <br /> rebanding a "pie in the sky" proposal that is fraught with logistical problems, not the least of which <br /> involves assurances that funding will be available to pay for the proposed changes. There are <br /> indications that the costs of rebanding could exceed Nextel's $850 million estimate by a significant <br /> margin, she said. <br /> Perhaps the most disconcerting aspect of the rebanding proposal is a stipulation that would limit <br /> technological development for 800 MHz users other than Nextel, Lyon said. Users of the spectrum <br /> block below the 861 MHz demarcation point would have to use high-tower, high-power technologies, <br /> while Nextel would be able to use shorter towers and lower-power systems that are characteristic of <br /> ATT. E <br /> <br /> http://iwce-mrt.corn/microsites/magazinearticle.asp?mode=print&magazinearticleid=190317... 6/23/04 <br /> <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.