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FCC preps for shutdown; auction resumes

Shutdown expected to begin at the FCC on Thursday; Senate confirms Geoffrey Starks to FCC seat and Brendan Carr to full term

The partial government shutdown is expected to hit the Federal Communications Commission as of midday, but the bidding in the FCC’s millimeter wave auction is resuming as scheduled.

Meanwhile, the FCC once more has a fully seated commission. Commissioner Brendan Carr has received Senate confirmation for a full-term, and the Senate also confirmed Geoffrey Starks to the Democratic FCC seat previously held by Commissioner Mignon Clyburn (who resigned in April).

In a statement on the confirmations, FCC Chairman Ajit Pai said that Starks “brings a wealth of experience and expertise, including having served most recently as assistant chief in the Enforcement Bureau. During his confirmation hearing, I was excited to hear him highlight the need to expand rural broadband and the power of telemedicine.”

Pai added that in terms of Carr’s work at the FCC thus far, he “has done tremendous work on a number of issues, including his leadership on wireless infrastructure modernization. He has also been a staunch advocate for rural broadband deployment, particularly for precision agriculture and advancements in telemedicine.”

As the shutdown looms, the mmWave auction’s four daily rounds will pick up again starting this morning.  The FCC itself is expecting to shut down at midday, with employees allowed four hours for an orderly exit. The auction can continue because it is funded out of auction proceeds, rather than congressional appropriations. Auction 101 has raised nearly $690 million thus far, but bidding appeared to be winding down before the break for the holidays.

According to the FCC, during the shutdown “work required for the protection of life and property will continue, as will any work related to spectrum auctions, which is funded by auction proceeds. In addition, the Office of the Inspector General will continue operations until further notice.”

In the meantime, according to the FCC’s shutdown plan, “suspended activities include, among many others: Consumer complaint and inquiry phone lines cannot be answered; consumer protection and local competition enforcement must cease; licensing services, including broadcast, wireless, and wireline, must cease; management of radio spectrum and the creation of new opportunities for competitive technologies and services for the American public must be suspended; and equipment authorizations, including those bringing new electronic devices to American consumers, cannot be provided.”

The shutdown plan noted that although more than 1,400 FCC employees will be furloughed until further notice, about 17% of its workforce will be retained, either to work without pay or because their salaries are paid out of sources other than lapsed appropriations. The auction will continue, and the FCC’s plan calls for up to 200 employees to continue working because their salary and expenses are not funded out of lapsed appropriations and they are supporting spectrum auction-related activities. The FCC commissioners’ pay is also not financed through annual appropriations and they will be retained, the agency noted.

The FCC’s plan calls for up to 45 other employees to work without pay in order to provide a skeleton crew for protection of life and property, spectrum interference issues, emergency IT and Universal Service Fund disbursements, among other functions; the rest of the agency’s workforce will be furloughed and sent home. Some contractors will also be retained either on a full-time or as-needed basis, either to protect the agency’s property (including IT) or to support auction-related activities. The full FCC shutdown plan is available here.

Editor’s note: This story has been updated with information about the FCC confirmations. 

ABOUT AUTHOR

Kelly Hill
Kelly Hill
Kelly reports on network test and measurement, as well as the use of big data and analytics. She first covered the wireless industry for RCR Wireless News in 2005, focusing on carriers and mobile virtual network operators, then took a few years’ hiatus and returned to RCR Wireless News to write about heterogeneous networks and network infrastructure. Kelly is an Ohio native with a masters degree in journalism from the University of California, Berkeley, where she focused on science writing and multimedia. She has written for the San Francisco Chronicle, The Oregonian and The Canton Repository. Follow her on Twitter: @khillrcr