Mar 22 2018 FCC Transcript for WT 17-79

Transcript re: WT Docket No. 17-79 — Accelerating Wireless Broadband Deployment by Removing Barriers to Infrastructure Investment

CHAIRMAN PAI: WELCOME TO THE MARCH 22, 2018 FEDERAL COMMISSIONS COMMISSION WHICH IS KNOWN AS MR. CLYBURN’S 29TH BIRTHDAY. HAPPY BIRTHDAY, COMMISSIONER CLYBURN. CERTAINLY HOPE THIS ITERATION IS AS FUN AS THE PREVIOUS ONES.

COMMISSIONER CLYBURN: ALREADY IS.

CHAIRMAN PAI: PLEASE WOULD YOU ANNOUNCE OUR AGENDA FOR THE DAY.

MADAM SECRETARY: COMMISSIONERS, FOR TODAY’S MEETING YOU WILL HEAR SIX ITEMS FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION. FIRST YOU WILL CONSIDER A REPORT AND ORDER THAT WOULD CLARIFY AND MODIFY THE PROCEDURES FOR NACA AND NEPA REVIEW OF REQUIRE BEZZ INFRASTRUCTURE DEPLOYMENT, SECOND YOU WILL CONSIDER A SECOND FURTHER NOTICE OF PROPOSAL TO ADDRESS THE PROBLEM OF UNWANTED CALLS TO REASSIGN NUMBERS. THIRD, YOU WILL CONSIDER A NOTICE OF INQUIRY EXAMINING LOCATION BASED ROUTING OF WIRELESS 911 CALLS FOR TO ENSURE THAT CALLS ARE ROUTED TO THE PROPER 911 CALL CENTER. FOURTH, YOU WI LL CONSIDER A SIXTH FURTHER NOTICE OF PROPOSED RULE MAKING TO STIMULATE USE OF AN INVESTMENT IN THE 4.9 GIGAHERTZ BAND. FIFTH, YOU WILL CONSIDER A NOTICE OF PROPOSED RULE MAKING THAT PROPOSES TO STREAMLINE THE RE-AUTHORIZATION PROCESS FOR TELEVISION SATELLITE STATIONS THAT ARE ASSIGNED OR TRANSFERRED IN COMBINATION WITH A PREVIOUSLY APPROVED PARENT STATION. SIXTH, YOU WILL CONSIDER A SECOND REPORT AND ORDER THAT WILL REMOVE THE PERSONAL USE RESTRICTION FOR PROVIDER SPECIFIC CONSUMER SINGLE BOOSTERS AND A SECOND FURTHER NOTICE OF PROPOSED RULE MAKING THAT SEEKS COMMENT ON WAYS TO FURTHER EXPAND ACCESS TO CONSUMER SIGNAL BOOSTERS. THIS IS YOUR AGENDA TODAY. THE FIRST ITEM ACCELERATING BROADBAND DEPLOYMENT BY REMOVING BARRIERS TO INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT WILL BE PRESENTED BY THE WIRELESS TELECOMMUNICATIONS BUREAU AND JOHN STOCKDALE, CHIEF OF THE BUREAU WILL GIVE THE INTRODUCTION.

CHAIRMAN PAI: THANK YOU, CHIEF STOCKDALE, THE FLOOR IS YOURS. CHIEF

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EH Trust Release re: Ramazzini RF Microwave Radiation Study

Original press release here.

World’s Largest Animal Study on Cell Tower Radiation Confirms Cancer Link

Scientists call on the World Health Organization International Agency for Research on Cancer to re-evaluate the carcinogenicity of cell phone radiation after the Ramazzini Institute and US government studies report finding the same unusual cancers

This press release was orginally distributed by SBWire; Teton Village, WY 3/22/2018:

Researchers with the renowned Ramazzini Institute (RI) in Italy announce that a large-scale lifetime study of lab animals exposed to environmental levels of cell tower radiation developed cancer. A $25 million study of much higher levels of cell phone radiofrequency (RF) radiation, from the US National Toxicology Program (NTP), has also reported finding the same unusual cancer called Schwannoma of the heart in male rats treated at the highest dose. In addition, the RI study of cell tower radiation also found increases in malignant brain (glial) tumors in female rats and precancerous conditions including Schwann cells hyperplasia in both male and female rats.

The Ramazzini study exposed 2,448 Sprague-Dawley rats from prenatal life until their natural death to "environmental" cell tower radiation for 19 hours per day (1.8 GHz GSM radiofrequency radiation (RFR) of 5, 25 and 50 V/m). RI exposures mimicked base station emissions like those from cell tower antennas, and exposure levels were far less than those used in the NTP studies of cell phone radiation.

Fiorella Belpoggi PhD, study author and RI Director of Research:

"Our findings of cancerous tumors in rats exposed to environmental levels of RF are consistent with and reinforce the results of the US NTP studies on cell phone radiation, as both reported increases in the same types of tumors of the brain and heart in Sprague-Dawley rats. Together, these studies provide sufficient evidence to call for the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) to re-evaluate and re-classify their conclusions regarding the carcinogenic potential of RFR in humans."

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Italian RF Microwave Radiation Animal Study Results

March 22, 2018; Original Microwave News article here.

Ramazzini Institute Findings are “Consistent with” and “Reinforces” U.S. NTP Cancer Finding

Ramazzini’s Belpoggi Calls for IARC To Reassess RF–Cancer Risk

Partial results of the Ramazzini Institute’s RF–animal study, which show a statistically significant increase in tumors in the hearts of male rats exposed to GSM radiation, were officially released today. They appear in Environmental Research, a peer-reviewed journal.

As we reported last month, the Ramazzini Institute (‘RI’) finding of Schwann cell tumors —called schwannomas— in the rat hearts is consistent with a similar finding by the U.S. National Toxicology Program (NTP) in a $25 million RF project, the largest of its kind.

In an interview with Microwave News, Fiorella Belpoggi, the senior author of the new paper and the director of the Ramazzini Institute’s Research Center in Bologna, Italy, offered her views on the new results, the parallels with those of the NTP and the implications for IARC’s designation of the cancer risk of RF radiation. The Ramazzini experiment took ten years to complete.

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House OKs 1.3 Trillion Dollar Spending Bill

. . . bolstering defense and domestic programs; Senate must act by Friday to avert government shutdown.

Mar 22, 2018 by John Eggerton; Original article here.

S4WT Note: Not a single mention of HR.4986 and it’s 4G/5G Densification plan to Install Close Proximity Microwave Radiation Antennas (CPMRA) in residential neighborhoods.

AP’s latest story:

WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House says President Donald Trump will sign a $1.3 trillion budget bill that boosts military spending, but does not include all the funding he sought for his promised border wall.

White House officials say the plan includes key administration priorities, particularly defense spending. They argue they could not get everything they want because Democratic votes are needed in the closely divided Senate.

Budget Director Mick Mulvaney said the bill was not perfect, but "that’s how the process works." He noted the deal includes at least some money for new construction along the border. Trump sounded less than enthused by the bill Wednesday night. He tweeted: "Had to waste money on Dem giveaways in order to take care of military pay increase and new equipment."

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Who is Afraid of Huawei?

3/20/18 Wall Street Journal article By Dan Strumpf at daniel.strumpf@wsj.com, Rob Taylor at rob.taylor@wsj.com and Paul Vieira at paul.vieira@wsj.com; see original article here.

Security Worries Spread Beyond the U.S.

Concerns about Chinese telecom giant, world No. 1 in wireless equipment, sprout in Canada, Australia and South Korea.

National-security concerns surrounding China’s Huawei Technologies Co. are spreading beyond the U.S. to key allies. The telecommunications equipment maker was a subject of debate in Canada’s Parliament this week, and the chief executive of South Korea’s largest telecom, considering vendors for next-generation wireless technology, reportedly called Huawei a “concern.”

Australia, where U.S. officials have been pushing a case that the Chinese company is a national security risk, recently pressured the Solomon Islands to drop Huawei as the contractor on an undersea cable connecting the South Pacific nation with Australia. It offered instead to fund a separate cable itself. Australia is now consulting other nations about their security concerns around Huawei’s involvement in next-generation 5G wireless equipment, officials said.

The U.S. has taken a series of actions aimed at Huawei, the world’s biggest supplier of wireless equipment and No. 3 vendor of smartphones. The Shenzhen-based company has been effectively shut out of the U.S. telecom market since a 2012 congressional report said its equipment could be used for spying.

At issue is Huawei’s growing strength in the telecommunications market. Western policy makers are concerned China could gain a leading edge in developing 5G, set to underpin self-driving cars and other internet-connected devices.

Privately held and owned by its employees, Huawei has long said it operates independently of Beijing, and that concerns the company would use its technology—which is employed in mobile networks world-wide—to spy for the Chinese government are unfounded.

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Verizon Accounting Scandal

March 19, 2018 By Bruce Kushnick, New Networks Institute, Executive Director; Original article here

Verizon’s Proposed Settlement in New York Covers Up One of the Largest, Nationwide, Accounting Scandals in American History.

The following financial information is taken directly from Verizon New York’s 2016 Annual Report, published in June 2017.

A. Key Findings

We address the settlement in Section D, below.

Using the Verizon-New York 2016 Annual Report and other financial reports, we found:

  • Low Income Families are Defacto Investors, without the Benefits: Low income families, seniors, rural customers and everyone else got hit with multiple rate increases  — 84% on basic service and 50%-250% on ancillary services — in New York State since 2006–2016. Verizon and the State claimed the increases were for “massive deployment of fiber optics” and losses. The losses were artificially created and the massive fiber deployment was mostly shifted to Wireless services.
  • Customer Overcharging: We estimate that in NY State customers paid an additional $1,000–1,500 per line, from 2006 to 2016, for basic service (and an ancillary service) as built into rates are these construction perks and compensation for losses, and the dumping of billions of dollars annually of expenses created by the Verizon’s subsidiaries.
  • $2.8+ Billion in Wireless Cross-Subsidies: In 2010–2013 Verizon New York paid the construction expenditures for 5,515 cell sites to be built at a cost estimated to be $2.8 billion — and according to Verizon’s own press statements, this came out of the wireline construction budgets. This is instead of building out FTTP: Fiber to the Premises. (Note: these expenses were just for these four years. It has continued, but it would require an audit of the most current financials.)
  • Wireless Underpayments for Network Use: In 2016 in New York, we estimate that Verizon Wireless generated $6.5-$7.5 billion in revenue, which is not part of Verizon-New York, the State Public Telecom Utility. Verizon-New York’s 2016 Annual Report shows that “Cellco Partners”, (Verizon Wireless is a DBA) only paid $69 million to Verizon New York for use of its Public Utility Wireline networks and any construction. Based on interrogatories of the investigation, there appears to be an entire cesspool of fractional payments by Verizon.

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Facebook Employs Former Employee of Cambridge Analytica

March 18, 2018 The Guardian article by Paul Lewis and Julia Carrie Wong; Original article here.
Part of The Guardian series: The Cambridge Analytica Files

The co-director of a company that harvested data from tens of millions of Facebook users before selling it to the controversial data analytics firms Cambridge Analytica is currently working for the tech giant as an in-house psychologist.

Joseph Chancellor was one of two founding directors of Global Science Research (GSR), the company that harvested Facebook data using a personality app under the guise of academic research and later shared the data with Cambridge Analytica. He was hired to work at Facebook as a quantitative social psychologist around November 2015, roughly two months after leaving GSR, which had by then acquired data on millions of Facebook users.

Chancellor is still working as a researcher at Facebook’s Menlo Park headquarters in California, where psychologists frequently conduct research and experiments using the company’s vast trove of data on more than 2 billion users.

It is not known how much Chancellor knew of the operation to harvest the data of more than 50 million Facebook users and pass their information on to the company that went on to run data analytics for Donald Trump’s presidential campaign. Chancellor was a director of GSR along with Aleksandr Kogan, a more senior Cambridge University psychologist who is said to have devised the scheme to harvest Facebook data from people who used a personality app that was ostensibly acquiring data for academic research.

On Friday, 3/16/18, Facebook announced it had suspended both Kogan and Cambridge Analytica from using the platform, pending an investigation. Facebook said in a statement Kogan “gained access to this information in a legitimate way and through the proper channels” but “did not subsequently abide by our rules” because he passed the information on to third parties. Kogan maintains that he did nothing illegal and had a “close working relationship” with Facebook.

Facebook appears to have taken no action against Chancellor – Kogan’s business partner at the time their company acquired the data, using an app called thisisyourdigitallife.

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No CPMRAs In Monterey Vista Neighborhood

No Close Proximity Microwave Radiation Antennas in the Monterey Vista Neighborhood

There are less intrusive means for Verizon to close any alleged "coverage gaps" in the Montery Vista neighborhood, detailed below.

The 1996 Telecommunications Act requires the Wireless Carrier applicant, not the City, to prove that less instrusive alternatives do not exist. Such alternatives may include collocation with existing macro cell sites or new macro cell sites in one of the City’s preferred locations. These alternatives would be outside of — not embedded in — residential zones. The City of Monterey has the authority to enforce its local municipal code to preserve the residential character of residential neighborhoods.

Background

Verizon deploys four main frequencies/wavelengths options to bring Wireless voice and data services to residential zones:

  • A. 700 MHZ that has a wavelength of 16.9 inches for primarily data and some VoLTE
  • B. 850 MHz that has a wavelength of 13.9 inches for primarily voice/text
  • C. 1900 MHz that has a wavelength of 6.2 inches for primarily data and some VoLTE
  • D. 2100 MHz that has a wavelength of 5.6 inches for primarily data and some VoLTE

Verizon antennas that send/receive these frequency/wavelength options can be deployed in various configurations, including the following:

  1. Macro cell tower sites using stand-alone structures (providing coverage 10-20 miles away)
  2. Roof and building-mounted cell sites (providing coverage 5-10 miles away)
  3. Utility/Light pole-mounted cell sites (providing coverage 2.5 to 5 miles away)

That’s right. These Utility/Light pole-mounted cell sites do not just transmit down the block; they can they transmit pulsed, data-modulated, RadioFrequency Microwave Radiation through the houses that are nearby on the way to the houses several miles away.

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NDIA Redlining by AT&T Report is One Year Old

by Bill Callahan | Mar 10, 2018 | Original NDAI article here


It’s been a busy year. See Digital Inclusion News and Measuring Inclusion.

One year ago today, NDIA and Connect Your Community released AT&T’s Digital Redlining of Cleveland, our first research report on that company’s discrimination against lower-income urban neighborhoods in the deployment of its standard fiber-enhanced broadband service between 2008 and 2014.

Based on a mapping analysis of FCC Form 477 block data and city permit records, AT&T’s Digital Redlining of Cleveland showed that AT&T had quietly ignored the service areas of four inner-city wire centers when it installed its high-speed “fiber to the node” VDSL network throughout most Cleveland suburbs and better-off city neighborhoods. The now-standard VDSL infrastructure, which combines optical fiber running to neighborhood locations with upgraded copper lines the rest of the way to customer homes, provides most AT&T households with Internet access at download speeds above 24 mpbs, as well as the option of IP video “cable” subscription service.

But residents of neighborhoods served by the four inner-city wire centers — Hough, Glenville, Central, Fairfax, South Collinwood, St. Clair-Superior, Detroit-Shoreway, Stockyards and other high-poverty areas — are still relegated to AT&T’s old, much slower copper-only ADSL network.

The result, according to AT&T’s own 2016 data reported to the FCC: 55% of of Census blocks in the city of Cleveland had maximum AT&T download speeds of 6 mbps or less, and 22% had download speeds of 3 mbps, 1.5 mbps or 768 kbps.

NDIA and CYC pointed out that AT&T was free to discriminate against these neighborhoods, and keep the practice secret, because of its success in lobbying Ohio legislators to eliminate municipal cable franchising and oversight in 2007. To quote the report:

In 2007, AT&T succeeded in lobbying the Ohio General Assembly to eliminate municipal franchising of cable television providers by dangling the promise of a new era of “cable competition” in communities throughout its service territory . . .

AT&T’s “cable franchise reform” legislation explicitly permitted providersunder the new state-run video service authorization system to serve less than 100% of their designated service territories – a provision that led critics like the City of Cleveland to warn of the exclusion of poorer neighborhood . . .

AT&T dismissed the idea that providers would redline or cherrypick communities, and legislator sapparently believed them; the legislation passed both houses with virtually unanimous support, including “Yes” votes from every Cleveland representative.

AT&T’s Digital Redlining of Cleveland got noticed. In the weeks following its release, the report was widely covered and linked on news and tech industry sites including The Hill, Buzzfeed, Grio, Ars Technica, Engadget, Gizmodo, Fierce Telecomand MultiChannel News among others. Cleveland alternative newspaper Scene made it the subject of two long, detailed articles, and the city’s local ABC news outlet, WEWS, covered it as well.

An NDIA affiiate in Dayton, Advocates for Basic Legal Equality, requested a similar map of AT&T’s deployment pattern in the Dayton area and released it publicly on March 22, with the headline “AT&T Fails To Invest in Low-Income Montgomery County Neighborhoods”.

On March 15, new FCC Chairman Ajit Pai told an audience in Pittsburgh:

“Just last week, a study of broadband deployment in Cleveland suggested that fiber was much less likely to be deployed in the low-income neighborhoods. This highlights the need to establish Gigabit Opportunity Zones…”

In August, an attorney representing three Cleveland AT&T customers submitted a formal complaint to the FCC citing the report and alleging that “AT&T’s offerings of high speed broadband service violates the Communications Act’s prohibition against unjust and unreasonable discrimination.”

In early September, NDIA released new maps showing very similar patterns of broadband deployment discrimination by AT&T against high-poverty neighborhoods in Detroit and Toledo. Two AT&T customers in Detroit soon joined the attorney’s FCC complaint. (The customer complaints are currently the subject of a confidential mediation process between the attorney, Daryl Parks, and AT&T.)

In late October, the FCC released its Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on the Lifeline program, including a section on “Digital Redlining”.

“Recent reports argue that some service providers engage in “digital redlining” in low-income areas – a practice that results in certain low-income areas experiencing less facilities deployment when compared to other areas, and that low-income consumers in those areas may experience increased difficulty obtaining affordable, robust communications services… We seek comment on how the Commission can address this issue with the Lifeline program.”

(Here are NDIA’s comments on this section, among others.)

Through all this, AT&T’s Digital Redlining of Cleveland has continued to be discussed and linked by the media, most recently in this Fast Company article the day before yesterday.

And through all this, AT&T spokespeople have continued to respond with non-denial denials like this and this:

AT&T regulatory and stateexternal affairs executive VP Joan Marsh said:

“We do not redline. Our commitment to diversity and inclusion is unparalleled. Our investment decisions are based on the cost of deployment and demand for our services and are of course fully compliant with the requirements of the Communications Act.”

There’s nothing wrong with the report’s data or how NDIA and CYC mapped it, but after a year AT&T has made no attempt to rebut the data and maps. And after a year, there’s still no alternative explanation of how considerations of “cost of deployment and demand for our services” led AT&T to leave those neighborhoods in Cleveland — and similar high-poverty neighborhoods in Detroit, Toledo and Dayton — out of its neighborhood fiber deployment plans.

And unfortunately, after a year, we’ve heard of no plan from AT&T to demonstrate its “commitment to diversity and inclusion” by going back and building fiber into those neighborhoods it missed the first time, so the residents can finally get the speeds and quality of service that nearby suburbs have enjoyed for years.

Well… maybe next year.

PD-2018-0306 Verizon Leverages Santa Rosa Churches

by KEVIN MCCALLUM, THE PRESS DEMOCRAT | March 6, 2018, 9:33PM | Original article here.

Direct all Calls/Emails/Praises/Complaints to City Planner Andrew Trippel, 707-543-3223 | atrippel@srcity.org

First public meeting is on Wed, Mar 7 at 6 p.m
at 637 First St., Santa Rosa — across the street from City Hall


Proposed 62-Foot Verizon Steeple/Macro Cell Tower at 1620 Sonoma Ave.

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