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November 10, 2005

George Bush has nominated Tennessee regulator Deborah Taylor Tate to fill a vacant Republican seat on the FCC and nominated Democrat Michael Copps to serve another term at the agency.

Tate would fill the vacancy left by Michael Powell, who stepped down in March as FCC chairman. The five-member FCC, headed by Kevin Martin (statements) has been evenly split between two Republicans and two Democrats since Powell (a Republican) left.

Last month, for example, Martin was forced to make some concessions to Michael J. Copps (statements) and Democratic Commissioner Jonathan Adelstein (statements) to get approval for SBC Communications' takeover of AT&T and Verizon Communications' purchase of MCI. Those provisions (pdf) included "naked DSL", where consumers can buy DSL without being forced to also purchase voice service and "net neutrality", where the RBOC doesn't block users from running their own applications on the bandwidth.

RBOCs seem to approve of the Tate monination

“This is a critical time for the telecom industry with technologies and the marketplace rapidly evolving, and we applaud President Bush for nominating Deborah Tate, a strong, experienced candidate, to the FCC,” said Walter B. McCormick, president and CEO of USTelecom, in a prepared statement. “With the President’s goal of achieving universal broadband deployment by 2007, Congress preparing to update the nation’s communications laws and technology forging ahead, the FCC is at the center of today’s communications debate. We urge the Senate to quickly confirm Deborah Tate to help Chairman Martin move the President’s agenda forward.”

The full FCC board will be a temporary phenomenon. Bush will have to nominate a third FCC member when Kathleen Abernathy is required to step down when this session of Congress ends in December.

Tate’s term would run through 2007 and Copps’ through 2010.

Business Week has an interview with Kevin Martin, who has been a big supporter of the incumbants including, The buyout and elimination of 2.3 GHz broadband wireless by XM radio, the domination of licensed 2.5 GHz by Sprint/Nextel, the power limitation of 5.4GHz, limiting the 3.5GHz band, the elimination of telco DSL competition, silence on attempts to ban virtually all municipal networks, the elimination of unlicensed 700 Mhz, a screwed up DTV system, and the general lack of affordable broadband and competition in the United States.


Originally posted by samc from Daily Wireless, remediated by yatta on Nov 10, 2005 at 06:03 PM