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800 MHz Rebanding: An Overview

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Title: 800 MHz Rebanding: An Overview


1
800 MHz RebandingAn Overview
David Furth Associate Bureau Chief Public Safety
and Homeland Security Bureau March 21, 2007
2
Outline
  • How Did We Get Here?
  • The Interference Problem
  • The Rulemaking
  • The Transition
  • Whats Next?

3
History of the 800 MHz Band
  • Established in the 1970s for land mobile use
    (reallocated from UHF-TV)
  • Intended to relieve crowding of lower band land
    mobile frequencies
  • Channels allocated for mixture of services
  • Public Safety
  • Business Radio
  • Industrial/Land Transportation (e.g., utilities)
  • Specialized Mobile Radio (commercial service)

4
800 MHz -- Old Band Plan
806
824
762
764
849
851
746
747
B
A
D
C
B
A
B
A
700 MHz Public Safety (24 MHz)
Cellular (50 MHz)
800 MHz Band
Upper 700 MHz Commercial (30 MHz)
ATG
776
777
894
896
792
794
700 MHz Guard Band
806
809.75
821
816
824
Channels 1-120 SMR/General Category
NPSPAC (Public Safety)
SMR, B/ILT, Public Safety Interleaved
ESMR
854.75
866
861
869
851
Interleaved Spectrum -12.5 MHz 250 Channels 80
SMR Channels (Licensed by EA, Some Incumbent
Operators Remain) 70 Public Safety Channels 50
Business Channels 50 Industrial/Land
Transportation Channels
SMR/General Category -7.5 MHz 150
Channels Licensed by EA Blocks of 25 channels
(SMR) Some Incumbent Operators Remain (includes
Business, I/LT, and Public Safety)
NPSPAC - 6 MHz 225 Channels _at_ 12.5 kHz spacing 5
Channels _at_ 25 kHz spacing 5 Mutual Aid Channels
ESMR/Upper 200 10 MHz 200 Channels Licensed by
EA A few non-EA incumbents remain most were
relocated or acquired in late 1990s.
5
Outline
  • How Did We Get Here?
  • The Interference Problem
  • The Rulemaking
  • The Transition
  • Whats Next?

6
Interference Problem
  • Mid-1990s Nextel starts to deploy
    cellular-architecture ESMR in the 800 MHz band
  • Public safety also expands into 800 MHz as lower
    bands grow congested
  • Late 1990s -- 800 MHz public safety systems
    encounter increasing interference and dead
    zones
  • Problem traced to Nextel as well as cellular
    carriers operating in adjacent spectrum

7
Interference Problem
  • Caused by incompatible system architecture on
    adjacent channels
  • Public safety systems use high-site
    architecture -- small number of base stations
    with high antennas to maximize signal propagation
  • Commercial systems use low-site cellular
    architecture -- numerous cells with low antennas
    to allow frequency reuse
  • Interference occurs when a mobile user on a
    high-site system moves far from its own base
    station but near a low-site commercial base
    station
  • Interleaved band plan exacerbates problem

8
Near/Far Problem
Near/far problem First responder is near the
CMRS cell site and far from its own base station
Public Safety BaseStation
CMRSCellSite
Strong signal from cell site
10 MILES
Weak signal from public safety base station
2500 FEET
Result Signal from cell site overloads public
safety handset
9
Public Safety Dead Spots
PUBLICSAFETYSTATION

Dead spots near CMRS cell sites first
responders cannot hear public safety
communications


10
Outline
  • How Did We Get Here?
  • The Interference Problem
  • The Rulemaking
  • The Transition
  • Whats Next?

11
Early Proposals
  • Best Practices Guide (2000) -- voluntary
    measures to reduce interference
  • Nextel White Paper (2001) proposes rebanding as
    a solution
  • 800 MHz NPRM (2002) seeks comment on rebanding
    and non-rebanding alternatives
  • Consensus Proposal (2002) Revised rebanding
    plan proposed by coalition of 800 MHz
    stakeholders, including Nextel and several public
    safety organizations

12
800 MHz Report and Order
  • Adopted in July 2004
  • Commission adopts a two-pronged solution to the
    interference problem
  • New rules for protection of public safety systems
    from interference by commercial systems
  • Rebanding to separate public safety and other
    high-site systems from cellular systems.
  • Commissions rebanding plan incorporates some
    elements of the Consensus Proposal but also has
    new and additional elements

13
800 MHz -- Old Band Plan
806
824
762
764
849
851
746
747
B
A
D
C
B
A
B
A
700 MHz Public Safety (24 MHz)
Cellular (50 MHz)
800 MHz Band
Upper 700 MHz Commercial (30 MHz)
ATG
776
777
894
896
792
794
700 MHz Guard Band
806
809.75
821
816
824
Channels 1-120 SMR/General Category
NPSPAC (Public Safety)
SMR, B/ILT, Public Safety Interleaved
ESMR
854.75
866
861
869
851
Interleaved Spectrum -12.5 MHz 250 Channels 80
SMR Channels (Licensed by EA, Some Incumbent
Operators Remain) 70 Public Safety Channels 50
Business Channels 50 Industrial/Land
Transportation Channels
SMR/General Category -7.5 MHz 150
Channels Licensed by EA Blocks of 25 channels
(SMR) Some Incumbent Operators Remain (includes
Business, I/LT, and Public Safety)
NPSPAC - 6 MHz 225 Channels _at_ 12.5 kHz spacing 5
Channels _at_ 25 kHz spacing 5 Mutual Aid Channels
ESMR/Upper 200 10 MHz 200 Channels Licensed by
EA A few non-EA incumbents remain most were
relocated or acquired in late 1990s.
14
800 MHz New Band Plan
806
824
849
851
762
764
746
747
B
A
B
D
C
B
A
A

800 MHz Band
700 MHz Public Safety
Upper 700 MHz Commercial
ATG
Cellular
776
777
894
896
792
794
700 MHz Guard Band
824
806
809
817
815
816
866
NPSPAC (Public Safety)
866
869
Public Safety B/ILT Non-Cellular SMR
854
Expansion Band
ESMR
Guard Band
862
851
862
854
861
860
869
  • Nextel and other ESMRs occupy upper band segment,
    adjacent to Cellular band
  • Public safety and other high-site systems occupy
    lower band segment, adjacent to 700 MHz public
    safety
  • Guard Band and Expansion Band serve as buffers

15
Post-Rebanding More Public Safety Spectrum
NPSPAC (Public Safety)
SMR, B/ILT, Public Safety Interleaved
ESMR
Expansion Band
Guard Band
  • Interleaved spectrum vacated by Nextel is
    available exclusively to public safety for 3
    years
  • After 3 years, vacated spectrum is also opened to
    Critical Infrastructure for an additional 2 years
  • Other interleaved spectrum available on pool
    channel basis

16
800 MHz Report and Order
  • Awards 10 MHz of spectrum in the 1.9 GHz band to
    Nextel
  • Spectrum is compensation for Nextel paying
    relocation costs and relinquishing a portion of
    its 800 MHz spectrum to benefit public safety.
  • Nextel must clear Broadcast Auxiliary Service
    (BAS) licensees from the 1.9 GHz band
  • Requires Nextel to make a windfall payment to
    the U.S. Treasury if value of the 1.9 GHz
    spectrum (calculated at 4.8 billion) is greater
    than
  • Relocation costs paid by Nextel, plus
  • Value of Nextels relinquished 800 MHz spectrum

17
800 MHz Report and Order
  • Requires Nextel to pay all relocation costs
    incurred by public safety and other 800 MHz
    incumbents
  • Costs must be reasonable, but no ceiling on total
    amount
  • Relocating licensees must receive comparable
    facilities
  • Provides for a 36-month transition to the new
    band plan
  • Provides for creation of the 800 MHz Transition
    Administrator (TA) to administer the transition
    and audit expenditures

18
Subsequent Orders
  • 800 MHz Supplemental Order (adopted December
    2004)
  • Modified the 18-month benchmark requiring Nextel
    to relocate Channel 1-120 licensees
  • Increased the credit to Nextel for relinquishing
    800 MHz spectrum
  • 800 MHz Reconsideration Order (adopted October
    2005)
  • Modified eligibility rules for relocating to the
    ESMR band
  • Affirmed Commissions authority to award the 1.9
    GHz spectrum to Nextel

19
Preparation for Transition
  • Sept-Oct 2004 -- Transition Administrator
    selected
  • January 2005 -- TA develops region-by-region
    rebanding schedule
  • February 2005 -- Nextel accepts 800 MHz RO
    conditions (Sprint affirms post-merger)
  • March 2005 WTB approves schedule
  • June 2005 Transition begins

20
Outline
  • How Did We Get Here?
  • The Interference Problem
  • The Rulemaking
  • The Transition
  • Whats Next?

21
Transition Process
  • The 800 MHz RO established a 36-month transition
    process
  • The 36-month clock started on June 27, 2005, and
    ends on June 26, 2008
  • Transition is divided into two stages
  • Stage 1 Relocation of Channels 1-120
  • Stage 2 Relocation of NPSPAC
  • Transition is divided into four geographic waves

22
Rebanding Stage 1
NPSPAC (Public Safety)
Channels 1-120 -- SMR/General Category
SMR, B/ILT, Public Safety Interleaved
ESMR
Expansion Band
Guard Band
  • Channel 1-120 Non-ESMR systems move to the
    Interleaved Band (Nextel vacates interleaved
    channels)
  • Channel 1-120 ESMR Systems (non-Nextel) move to
    the ESMR Band
  • Expansion and Guard Bands cleared
  • Nextel can remain in the Non-ESMR spectrum until
    Phase II

23
Rebanding Stage 2
Channels 1-120 SMR/General Category
NPSPAC (Public Safety)
SMR, B/ILT, Public Safety Interleaved
ESMR
Expansion Band
Guard Band
  • Nextel vacates Channels 1-120
  • NPSPAC licensees move down 15 megahertz to new
    NPSPAC Band
  • Nextel moves into old NPSPAC Band
  • Nextel vacates remaining channels in Interleaved
    Band

24
Transition Waves 1-4
25
Negotiations and Mediation
  • Nextel and each licensee must negotiate a
    Frequency Relocation Agreement (FRA)
  • Time period for negotiations
  • 3-month voluntary negotiation period
  • 3-month mandatory negotiation period
  • Mediation
  • If negotiations fail, Nextel and the licensee
    enter into a 30 working-day mediation period with
    a TA-designated mediator
  • Mediation can be extended under some
    circumstances
  • Referral to PSHSB
  • If the parties fail to reach a mediated
    agreement, the TA refers the case to PSHSB, which
    has delegated authority under the 800 MHz RO to
    rule on disputed issues de novo

26
Negotiation Periods
Waves (in chronological order) No. of Licensees Negotiation Period Begins Mediation Begins
Wave 1 (1-120) 383 6/27/05 12/27/05
Wave 2 (1-120) 234 10/3/05 4/3/06
Wave 3 (1-120) 301 1/3/06 7/3/06
Wave 1 (NPSPAC) 401 2/1/06 11/1/06
Wave 4 (1-120) 160 7/3/06 4/3/07 (Postponed)
Wave 2 (NPSPAC) 289 8/1/06 2/1/07
Wave 3 (NPSPAC) 237 11/1/06 5/1/07
Wave 4 (NPSPAC) 196 2/1/07 8/1/07
27
Stage 1 (Channels 1-120) Relocation Progress
  • Substantial progress has been made in Waves 1-3
    negotiations and mediations
  • Physical relocation of Channel 1-120 incumbents
    is now under way
  • Small number of cases remain open
  • Some licensees with both Channel 1-120 and NPSPAC
    systems want to relocate all in Stage 2

28
Stage 2 (NPSPAC) Relocation Progress
  • More complex and time-consuming than Stage 1
  • NPSPAC has more large, complex public safety
    systems, more interoperability relationships
    among licensees
  • Significant time needed for relocation planning
    by NPSPAC licensees
  • Large number of cases in extended mediation

29
Wave 4 Border Issues
30
Wave 4 Border Issues
  • Rebanding in Wave 4 border regions must conform
    to cross-border spectrum agreements with Canada
    and Mexico
  • Existing bilateral agreements limit U.S. access
    to the 800 MHz band in border areas
  • Modifications to agreements are needed for Wave 4
    band plan to be consistent with rest of U.S.
  • Commission staff is discussing possible changes
    to existing agreements with Canadian and Mexican
    regulators
  • Working in coordination with State Department
  • Bureau has extended Wave 4 timeline to allow time
    for international issues to be resolved

31
PSHSB Role in Rebanding
  • Rebanding implementation is a major priority for
    PSHSB
  • Bureau has delegated authority to rule on
    disputed issues de novo
  • Has issued five orders in individual cases to
    date
  • Has issued orders and PNs on issues affecting
    multiple cases (e.g., ability of public safety
    licensees to exchange information regarding
    negotiations with Nextel)
  • Bureau works closely with all major stakeholders
    to track progress and resolve issues informally

32
Outline
  • How Did We Get Here?
  • The Interference Problem
  • The Rulemaking
  • The Transition
  • Whats Next?

33
Whats Next
  • Pending Reconsideration Petitions
  • Stage 2 Scheduling Issues
  • Additional Mediation Cases
  • Negotiations with Canada and Mexico
  • Nextel Network Cost Issues
  • Post-Rebanding Licensing Issues
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