FCC Web Documents citing 97.1
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- Conference (WRC-97), Geneva, 1997, and Final Acts of the World Radiocommunication Conference (WRC-2000), Istanbul, 2000, (Radio Regulations); Chadwick Request. In the amateur service, ``operating privileges'' generally refer to the frequency bands available to the control operator of an amateur station and to the emission types an amateur station may transmit. See 47 C.F.R. §§ 2.1(c), 97.3(a)(4). See 47 C.F.R. § 97.1. The purpose of the amateur service includes recognition and enhancement of the value of the amateur service to the public as a voluntary noncommercial communications service, continuation of the amateur's proven ability to contribute to the advancement of the radio art; expansion of the existing reservoir of trained operators, technicians, and electronic experts; and continuation of the amateur's unique ability
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- to the advancement of the radio art; encouragement and improvement of the service through rules which provide for advancing skills in both the communication and technical phases of the radio art; expansion of the existing reservoir of trained operators, technicians, and electronic experts; and continuation and extension of the amateur's unique ability to enhance international goodwill. See 47 C.F.R. § 97.1(a)-(e). See 47 C.F.R. § 97.3(a)(1). See 47 U.S.C. § 153(2); 47 C.F.R. § 97.3(a)(4). See 47 C.F.R. § 97.111(a)(1). See 47 C.F.R. § 97.401(a). See WRC-03 Final Acts, Article 25.6. See Final Acts of the World Radiocommunication Conference (WRC-97), Geneva, Switzerland, 1997, and Final Acts of the World Radiocommunication Conference, (WRC-00), Istanbul, 2000, Radio Regulation S25.5. This Radio Regulation stated,
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- 47 C.F.R. § 90.353(a). 47 C.F.R. § 97.301. The amateur radio service under Part 97 of the Commission's rules provides spectrum for amateur radio service licensees to participate in a voluntary noncommercial communication service, which allows experimentation with various radio techniques and technologies to further the understanding of radio use and the development of new technologies. See 47 C.F.R. § 97.1. Users of Part 15 devices do not have any allocation status in the Commission's rules. Instead, the Commission makes spectrum available for Part 15 devices on an unprotected and non-interference basis. Under Part 15, unlicensed devices may not cause harmful interference to LMS licensees, amateur operations, or other licensed systems in the 902-928 MHz band. See 47 C.F.R. § 90.361.
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- Bureau staff recently issued a Public Notice providing guidance for requesting waiver relief to facilitate government-sponsored emergency preparedness and disaster drills. See Amateur Service Communications During Government Disaster Drills, Public Notice, 24 FCC Rcd 12872 (WTB, PSHSB, EB 2009) (Disaster Drills Public Notice). The waiver process outlined in this Public Notice remained available throughout this rulemaking proceeding. 47 C.F.R. § 97.1(a). 47 C.F.R. § 97.403. See Recommendations of the Independent Panel Reviewing the Impact of Hurricane Katrina on Communications Networks, Order, EB Docket No. 06-119; WC Docket No. 06-63, 22 FCC Rcd 10541, 10576 ¶ 111 (2007) (noting that the amateur radio community played an important role in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina and other disasters). See Letter from Kenneth Hughes,
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- staff recently issued a Public Notice providing guidance for requesting waiver relief to facilitate government-sponsored emergency preparedness and disaster drills. See Amateur Service Communications During Government Disaster Drills, Public Notice, DA 09-2259 (WTB, PSHSB, EB rel. Oct. 20, 2009) (Disaster Drills Public Notice). The waiver process outlined in this Public Notice remains available throughout this rulemaking proceeding. 47 C.F.R. § 97.1(a). 47 C.F.R. § 97.403. See Recommendations of the Independent Panel Reviewing the Impact of Hurricane Katrina on Communications Networks, Order, EB Docket No. 06-119; WC Docket No. 06-63, 22 FCC Rcd 10541, 10576 ¶ 111 (2007) (noting that the amateur radio community played an important role in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina and other disasters). See Letter from Kenneth Hughes,
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- dogging her vagina every single night with your dad's flashlight! FV: Hang up the phone! MV: God [beep]! God [beep]! You're going to hell! You're a sinner! I can't believe you're pregnant, you bitch! You're a whore! FV: Hang up the phone! Boy: What kind of [unintelligible] is this? MV: [Laughter] Announcer: Extreme night-time radio with Kramer and Twitch on 97.1, the Eagle. (2) August 3, 2000 (7:45 p.m. to 9:15 p.m.) MV: Male Voice(s) (Hosts) MV2: Adult-film actor (Carlos) FV: Adult-film actress (Gina) MV3: Hosts' assistant (Frat) MV: Carlos is on the way and porno chicks. ... MV: We also have Gina Rider. She's a porn star. She's going to be performing at the Clubhouse. 9:30 your first show, right?
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- The U.S. is located in ITU Region 2. The amateur radio service under Part 97 of the Commission's Rules provides spectrum for amateur radio service licensees to participate in a voluntary noncommercial communication service which allows experimentation with various radio techniques and technologies to further the understanding of radio use and the development of new technologies. See 47 C.F.R. § 97.1. See Pub. L. 105-261, 112 Stat. 1920, §113(c)(1)(C)(iii) and 113(c)(3)(C). See Pub. L. 105-261, 112 Stat. 1920, (codified at 47 U.S.C. §923(c)(3)(B)), Section 6001(a). See NTIA Special Publication 95-32, Spectrum Reallocation Final Report, Response to Title VI-Omnibus Reconciliation Act of 1993, February 1995, Section 4. See NTIA Special Publication 95-32, Spectrum Reallocation Final Report, Response to Title VI-Omnibus Reconciliation Act
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- time. Commonly referred to as a ``single sideband'' by amateur radio operators. See id. and associated text. Commonly referred to as ``AM phone'' or the type of signal that an AM broadcast station transmits. Petition at 4. See 47 C.F.R. §§ 2.1(c), 97.3(a) (4). Herein, ``amateur radio service'', ``Amateur Service'' and ``Amateur Radio Service'' are synonymous. See 47 C.F.R. § 97.1. See 47 C.F.R. § 97.101. See 47 C.F.R. § 97.101(b). Id. See 47 C.F.R. § 97.101(a). See id. See Petition at 4. See Petition at 2. Id. Id. See Petition at 2. Id. See Petition at 4. See Petition at 5. See Public Notice, Petition for Rulemaking Filed, Consumer & Governmental Affairs Bureau, Report No. 2612, (rel. June 26, 2003).
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- Amateur Radio Service Station W6WBJ. He filed the above-captioned application for renewal of license for Station W6WBJ on February 28, 2007. On August 21, 2000, the Commission's Enforcement Bureau informed Crowell that monitoring information indicated that he had engaged in deliberate interference to radio communications in progress on the 75-meter band over the preceding several months in violation of Section 97.1 of the Commission's Rules. Pursuant to Section 308(b) of the Commission's Act of 1934, as amended (the Act), Crowell was directed to respond to the letter and specify what actions he had taken to avoid causing similar interference in the future. On August 31, 2000, Crowell responded. The Enforcement Bureau found Crowell's response to be irrelevant and frivolous and issued
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- its disposal to provide essential communication needs in connection with the immediate safety of human life and the immediate protection of property when normal communication systems are not available. In those circumstances, rule waiver is not necessary. . By the Chief, Wireless Telecommunications Bureau; Chief, Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau; and Chief, Enforcement Bureau. -FCC- See 47 C.F.R. § 97.1(a). See also Recommendations of the Independent Panel Reviewing the Impact of Hurricane Katrina on Communications Networks, Order, EB Docket No. 06-119; WC Docket No. 06-63, 22 FCC Rcd 10541, 10576 ¶ 111 (2007) (noting that the amateur radio community played an important role in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina and other disasters). See 47 C.F.R. § 97.3(a)(4). See 47 C.F.R.
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-09-2259A1_Rcd.pdf
- pending. The waiver must be requested prior to the drill, and employees may not transmit amateur communications on their employer's behalf unless the waiver request has been granted. In an actual emergency, the Commission's Rules provide that an amateur station may use any means of radiocommunication at its disposal to provide essential communication needs in connection 1See 47 C.F.R. § 97.1(a). See alsoRecommendations of the Independent Panel Reviewing the Impact of Hurricane Katrina on Communications Networks, Order, EB Docket No. 06-119; WC Docket No. 06-63, 22 FCC Rcd 10541, 10576 ¶ 111 (2007) (noting that the amateur radio community played an important role in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina and other disasters). 2See 47 C.F.R. § 97.3(a)(4). 3See 47 C.F.R. §
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- ž ž DA 09-895 April 22, 2009 William M. Wiltshire Harris, Wiltshire & Grannis LLP 1200 18th Street, N.W. Washington DC 20036 Re: DIRECTV Enterprises, LLC, IBFS File No. SAT-LOA-20090309-00033, Call Sign: S2788 Dear Mr. Wiltshire: On March 9, 2009, DIRECTV Enterprises, LLC (``DIRECTV'') filed an application for authority to construct, launch, and operate a geostationary Ka-band satellite at the 97.1° W.L. orbital location operating on the following frequencies: 18300-18800 MHz, 19700-20200 MHz, 28350-28600 MHz, 29250-29500 MHz, and 29500-3000 MHz. The Commission has not announced that the orbital location and frequency bands are available for assignment. Consequently, the application is premature and is dismissed without prejudice to refiling. Accordingly, pursuant to Section 0.261 of the Commission's rules on delegations of authority,
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- Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit £ ² ² ² ² ² ² ² DA 10-1044 Gordon Schlesinger 5364 Saxon Street San Diego, CA 92115-1145 Re: Petition for Rule Making to revise and update #97.1 of the Commission's Rules and Regulations, filed September 22, 2009 Dear Mr. Schlesinger: This is in response to the above-referenced petition for rulemaking that you filed on September 22, 2009 (Petition). You request that Section 97.1 of the Commission's Rules be amended to account for changes in technology and amateur practice since the rule was adopted. For the reasons set
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- 36.1 58.6 Deciles (Blocks of Zip Codes Grouped by Median Household Income) Median Household Income (in Each Decile of Zip Codes) December 1999 December 2000 December 1999 December 2000 90-100 $53,494 to $291,938 90.8% 96.1% 98.4% 99.8% 80-90 $43,617 to $53,478 77.4 90.4 95.9 99.1 70-80 $38,396 to $43,614 67.0 82.4 94.3 98.1 60-70 $34,744 to $38,395 59.6 78.7 91.7 97.1 50-60 $32,122 to $34,743 53.7 74.6 89.4 96.3 40-50 $29,893 to $32,121 51.8 69.8 88.2 94.8 30-40 $27,542 to $29,892 49.1 69.4 85.9 94.0 20-30 $24,855 to $27,541 48.8 67.1 85.1 93.2 10-20 $21,645 to $24,855 45.3 62.6 82.5 91.2 0-10 $0 to $21,644 41.7 56.0 84.1 91.7 Table 11 December 2000 Percent of Zip Codes in Decile with at
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- 1 75.0 191 79.1 New York 824 16 98.1 95 16 85.6 951 96.6 North Carolina 493 12 97.6 67 15 81.7 587 95.4 North Dakota 270 20 93.1 12 3 80.0 305 92.5 Ohio 814 39 95.4 80 9 89.9 942 94.9 Oklahoma 502 23 95.6 20 2 90.9 547 95.4 Oregon 282 5 98.3 22 4 84.6 313 97.1 Pennsylvania 806 32 96.2 99 13 88.4 950 95.3 Puerto Rico 86 0 100.0 1 0 100.0 87 100.0 Rhode Island 30 0 100.0 5 1 83.3 36 97.2 South Carolina 276 2 99.3 17 5 77.3 300 97.7 South Dakota 245 9 96.5 5 2 71.4 261 95.8 Tennessee 355 9 97.5 38 4 90.5 406 96.8 Texas 1,483
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- BNPL-20010611AEQ NEW PAYSON, AZ PAYSON COUNCIL FOR THE MUSICAL ARTS REQ: 96.3 MHz Channel 242 BNPL-20010611AFO NEW PAYSON, AZ PAYSON COUNCIL MUSIC ASSOCIATION REQ: 98.5 MHz Channel 253 BNPL-20010612AEZ NEW TONOPAH, AZ CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP MINISTRIES REQ: 105.7 MHz Channel 289 BNPL-20010613AAU NEW COTTONWOOD, AZ COTTONWOOD EDUCATIONAL ASSOCIATION REQ: 92.1 Channel 221 BNPL-20010614ABH NEW KINGMAN, AZ CALVARY CHAPEL OF KINGMAN REQ: 97.1 Channel 246 BNPL-20010614ACD NEW KINGMAN, AZ KINGMAN MISSIONARY ALLIANCE CHURCH REQ: 98.7 MHz Channel 254 BNPL-20010614ADE NEW CROWN KING, AZ BRADSHAW MOUNTAIN BROADCASTING REQ: 100.3 MHz Channel 262 BNPL-20010614AFR NEW BACAVI, AZ THE PATH REQ: 101.5 Channel 268 BNPL-20010614AHL NEW WICKENBURG, AZ RANCHO DE LOS CABALLEROS BROADCASTING REQ: 99.1 MHz Channel 256 BNPL-20010615AGX NEW TUCSON, AZ PASCUA YAQUI TRIBE REQ:
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- Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit È È È È ¤ ¤ Report No. 2543 April 16, 2002 CONSUMER INFORMATION BUREAU REFERENCE INFORMATION CENTER ------------------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------ RM NO. RULES SEC. PETITIONER DATE RECEIVED NATURE OF PETITION ------------------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------ 10412 Part 97.1 Nickolaus E. Leggett 02/11/02 Request Amendment of the Commission's Rules regarding Field Repair Requirements (Filed By Nickolaus E. Leggett, for Commercially -built Transmitter and 1432 Northgate Square Transceiver Equipment for the Amateur Apt. 2A Radio Service Reston, VA 20190-3748) 10413 Part 97 ARRL, the National 03/22/02 Request Amendment of the Commission's Association for Amateur Radio Amateur Service Rules Governing Operating
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- 97.2 96.2 97.4 95.1 96.4 95.7 96.5 KANSAS 94.9 96.7 94.3 95.8 94.4 96.4 94.6 96.1 KENTUCKY 86.9 90.9 88.1 91.0 87.4 91.1 86.2 90.6 LOUISIANA 88.9 93.3 89.7 92.7 90.3 93.6 88.7 91.9 MAINE 90.7 93.1 93.4 95.3 94.0 95.6 93.4 95.4 MARYLAND 96.3 96.7 95.7 96.5 95.5 96.7 95.7 96.7 MASSACHUSETTS 94.3 95.9 95.9 96.9 95.2 96.3 96.4 97.1 MICHIGAN 93.8 94.9 92.8 94.5 92.9 94.2 93.4 94.5 MINNESOTA 96.4 97.5 95.8 97.1 96.4 97.4 96.2 97.2 MISSISSIPPI 82.4 89.1 82.4 87.5 80.9 87.6 80.1 87.3 MISSOURI 92.1 94.1 91.5 93.7 92.5 94.8 93.4 94.9 MONTANA 92.8 94.5 91.0 94.0 91.4 93.9 90.9 93.7 NEBRASKA 94.0 95.3 95.7 96.8 95.3 96.6 95.6 96.8 NEVADA 89.4 91.9 90.4 92.8 91.8
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- 95.2 HI 96.8 95.2 92.5 94.8 ID 90.4 89.7 90.1 89.1 IL 91.3 91.8 92.4 91.4 IN 95.2 95.0 96.1 96.3 IA 94.0 95.2 95.1 93.5 KS 90.8 91.9 91.5 90.1 KY 90.5 90.7 91.6 89.8 LA 96.6 96.9 96.3 95.4 ME 94.3 92.2 93.7 93.5 MD Massachusetts 96.8 96.3 96.1 93.9 MA 94.2 93.8 93.2 91.5 MI 97.7 96.6 97.1 95.6 MN 91.6 89.2 87.9 86.7 MS 93.9 92.0 95.1 92.1 MO 93.6 92.8 94.0 93.3 MT 94.8 96.5 95.7 94.5 NE 93.8 90.9 91.9 90.0 NV 95.0 97.5 96.8 94.4 NH 96.1 94.3 94.8 93.9 NJ 91.6 91.5 91.1 92.2 NM 95.0 94.3 94.2 91.3 NY 93.6 93.5 92.9 91.4 NC 94.5 94.4 96.0 95.2 ND 94.0 96.1 94.7
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- 86.2 91.2 5.0 * Hawaii 93.5 95.4 1.8 * Idaho 90.7 94.8 4.1 * Illinois 94.2 90.1 -4.1 # Indiana 91.6 91.8 0.3 Iowa 96.2 95.4 -0.8 Kansas 94.3 94.8 0.4 Kentucky 88.1 91.4 3.3 * Louisiana 89.7 90.9 1.3 Maine 93.4 96.6 3.2 * Maryland 95.7 93.4 -2.3 # Massachusetts 95.9 96.4 0.5 Michigan 92.8 93.7 0.9 Minnesota 95.8 97.1 1.3 Mississippi 82.4 89.6 7.2 * Missouri 91.5 93.7 2.2 * Montana 91.0 93.5 2.5 * Nebraska 95.7 95.7 0.0 Nevada 90.4 92.2 1.8 New Hampshire 94.3 96.4 2.1 * New Jersey 94.8 95.1 0.3 New Mexico 82.0 91.4 9.4 * New York 91.8 94.5 2.7 * North Carolina 88.3 93.3 5.0 * North Dakota 94.6 95.0 0.3 Ohio 92.4
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- 86.2 91.2 5.0 * Hawaii 93.5 95.4 1.8 * Idaho 90.7 94.8 4.1 * Illinois 94.2 90.1 -4.1 # Indiana 91.6 91.8 0.3 Iowa 96.2 95.4 -0.8 Kansas 94.3 94.8 0.4 Kentucky 88.1 91.4 3.3 * Louisiana 89.7 90.9 1.3 Maine 93.4 96.6 3.2 * Maryland 95.7 93.4 -2.3 # Massachusetts 95.9 96.4 0.5 Michigan 92.8 93.7 0.9 Minnesota 95.8 97.1 1.3 Mississippi 82.4 89.6 7.2 * Missouri 91.5 93.7 2.2 * Montana 91.0 93.5 2.5 * Nebraska 95.7 95.7 0.0 Nevada 90.4 92.2 1.8 New Hampshire 94.3 96.4 2.1 * New Jersey 94.8 95.1 0.3 New Mexico 82.0 91.4 9.4 * New York 91.8 94.5 2.7 * North Carolina 88.3 93.3 5.0 * North Dakota 94.6 95.0 0.3 Ohio 92.4
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- 1999January 101.9 100.7 102.2 99.9 99.3 101.3 90.9 February 102.0 100.4 102.0 99.5 99.1 100.7 89.7 March 102.3 100.2 102.3 98.9 98.4 100.3 89.0 April 103.0 100.0 100.9 99.8 99.5 100.7 87.8 May 103.0 99.6 102.7 97.5 96.4 100.2 85.8 June 103.0 99.7 103.2 97.4 96.3 100.2 84.0 July 103.3 99.5 103.7 96.7 95.3 100.0 82.9 August 103.6 99.8 103.8 97.1 95.9 99.8 82.3 September 104.1 99.6 103.7 96.8 95.9 99.2 82.6 October 104.3 99.8 103.5 97.4 96.9 98.8 82.0 November 104.3 100.6 103.9 98.7 99.1 99.2 81.2 December 104.3 100.7 104.2 98.6 98.5 99.9 81.1 2000January 104.6 100.9 104.8 98.5 98.3 100.1 80.6 February 105.3 99.4 104.9 95.5 94.0 99.2 79.7 March 106.1 98.9 105.1 94.4 93.1 98.5 79.2 April
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- 10.5 15.6 36.7 $150,700 1.7 0.0 0.0 0.0 98.3 $5 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0100.0 9,827,052 31.4 2.1 16.6 11.7 38.2 American Samoa $2,749,415 53.3 1.4 20.0 13.3 12.0 $855,889 34.7 0.0 52.1 12.4 0.7 $124 0.0 0.0 99.2 0.0 0.8 15,012,915 27.6 0.8 35.8 12.1 23.8 Baker Island $0 $0 $0 0 Guam $6,535,200 81.6 0.0 2.3 8.4 7.7 $875,256 97.1 0.0 1.9 0.0 1.0 $0 156,460,848 84.9 0.0 2.9 0.5 11.6 Hawaii $301,656 0.0 0.0 0.2 0.0 99.8 $2,898 0.0 0.0100.0 0.0 0.0 $0 2,025,740 0.0 0.0 1.6 0.0 98.4 Howland Island $0 $0 $0 0 Jarvis Island $0 $0 $0 0 Johnston Atoll $0 $0 $0 0 Kingman Reef $0 $0 $0 0 Midway Atoll $0 $0 $0 0
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- of Zip Codes with High-Speed Lines in Service as of June 30, 2005 (Over 200 kbps in at least one direction) Table 17 More Number of Providers Ten or Four Five Six Seven Eight Nine Zero One Two Three Rev. 4/4/06 Jun 2003 More Than 3,147 97.3% 98.1% 98.7% 98.9% 98.9% 99.3% 99.7% 99.9% 99.8% 100.0% 99.9% 100.0% 947-3,147 95.8 97.1 98.2 98.2 98.5 99.0 99.4 99.8 99.9 99.9 99.9 99.9 268-947 93.4 95.6 97.5 98.4 98.5 99.2 98.4 99.5 99.9 99.9 99.9 100.0 118-268 86.7 92.3 95.2 96.9 97.7 98.8 95.9 98.8 99.5 99.7 99.8 99.9 67-118 77.9 87.5 93.0 96.4 97.6 98.6 90.2 96.8 98.5 99.4 99.6 99.8 41-67 65.4 80.9 88.0 93.8 96.4 98.2 81.2 93.0 96.3 98.5
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- 97.2 96.2 97.4 95.1 96.4 95.7 96.5 KANSAS 94.9 96.7 94.3 95.8 94.4 96.4 94.6 96.1 KENTUCKY 86.9 90.9 88.1 91.0 87.4 91.1 86.2 90.6 LOUISIANA 88.9 93.3 89.7 92.7 90.3 93.6 88.7 91.9 MAINE 90.7 93.1 93.4 95.3 94.0 95.6 93.4 95.4 MARYLAND 96.3 96.7 95.7 96.5 95.5 96.7 95.7 96.7 MASSACHUSETTS 94.3 95.9 95.9 96.9 95.2 96.3 96.4 97.1 MICHIGAN 93.8 94.9 92.8 94.5 92.9 94.2 93.4 94.5 MINNESOTA 96.4 97.5 95.8 97.1 96.4 97.4 96.2 97.2 MISSISSIPPI 82.4 89.1 82.4 87.5 80.9 87.6 80.1 87.3 MISSOURI 92.1 94.1 91.5 93.7 92.5 94.8 93.4 94.9 MONTANA 92.8 94.5 91.0 94.0 91.4 93.9 90.9 93.7 NEBRASKA 94.0 95.3 95.7 96.8 95.3 96.6 95.6 96.8 NEVADA 89.4 91.9 90.4 92.8 91.8
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-265358A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-265358A1.txt
- 69.6 72.3 75.6 77.4 75.7 80.2 81.7 $10,000 - $19,999 85.7 88.9 81.6 85.0 81.8 80.4 91.4 87.3 88.0 86.0 89.7 $20,000 - $29,999 95.1 91.5 94.9 98.6 94.3 92.0 91.9 93.0 91.4 94.1 95.5 $30,000 - $39,999 96.5 91.7 97.2 95.5 99.0 100.0 98.3 100.0 97.9 97.6 97.0 $40,000 or more 98.4 100.0 96.8 97.6 93.7 98.9 96.5 97.6 97.1 98.8 98.1 All Households 87.2 85.7 85.9 87.1 83.8 84.3 88.3 88.1 87.2 88.7 90.1 California $9,999 or less 82.9 80.3 82.3 84.5 86.9 85.9 84.3 87.5 85.9 87.7 89.0 $10,000 - $19,999 90.5 90.6 92.3 91.1 93.6 94.7 93.9 92.9 94.3 94.1 93.0 $20,000 - $29,999 95.5 95.4 93.6 95.8 95.4 94.8 96.7 96.3 96.6 96.1 95.6 $30,000 -
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-266596A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-266596A1.txt
- 17 Percentage of Zip Codes with High-Speed Lines in Service as of December 31, 2005 (Over 200 kbps in at least one direction) Number of Providers Ten or Four Five Six Seven Eight Nine More Zero One Two Three Dec 2003 More Than 3,147 98.2% 98.1% 98.7% 98.9% 99.1% 99.2 % 99.9% 99.8% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0 % 99.9 % 947-3,147 97.1 97.3 98.2 98.5 98.7 99.3 99.8 99.7 100.0 99.9 99.9 99.9 268-947 95.7 95.8 97.9 98.8 99.1 99.3 99.3 99.5 99.9 100.0 100.0 100.0 118-268 91.5 93.3 96.7 97.9 98.2 99.2 98.1 99.1 99.7 99.8 99.8 99.8 67-118 85.9 89.3 95.0 97.5 98.0 98.8 95.0 97.1 99.1 99.7 99.7 99.8 41-67 76.1 83.3 91.5 96.0 97.5 98.8 87.9 94.4 97.8
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-266857A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-266857A1.txt
- 86.9 67.7 March 114.2 99.7 121.7 81.5 79.8 85.1 67.6 April 113.9 98.7 121.9 79.2 77.4 83.1 67.5 May 113.7 98.1 122.0 77.9 76.0 81.8 67.5 June 113.8 97.5 122.2 76.7 74.6 80.8 66.3 July 114.0 98.1 123.1 77.2 75.6 80.8 66.2 August 114.4 97.8 123.7 76.0 74.0 79.7 66.1 September 114.8 97.4 123.8 75.2 73.3 78.9 66.1 October 114.6 97.1 124.0 74.3 72.1 78.7 66.1 November 114.3 97.2 124.2 74.1 71.8 78.3 66.7 December 114.2 97.2 124.1 74.3 72.0 78.6 66.5 2004January 114.8 97.0 124.4 73.9 71.6 78.0 66.3 February 115.4 97.1 124.2 73.9 71.6 77.8 66.6 March 116.2 96.7 124.2 73.1 70.6 77.2 66.5 April 116.6 96.5 123.9 72.8 70.1 77.2 66.4 May 117.2 95.9 124.2 71.3 68.8 75.5
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-268003A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-268003A1.txt
- 97.2 96.2 97.4 95.1 96.4 95.7 96.5 KANSAS 94.9 96.7 94.3 95.8 94.4 96.4 94.6 96.1 KENTUCKY 86.9 90.9 88.1 91.0 87.4 91.1 86.2 90.6 LOUISIANA 88.9 93.3 89.7 92.7 90.3 93.6 88.7 91.9 MAINE 90.7 93.1 93.4 95.3 94.0 95.6 93.4 95.4 MARYLAND 96.3 96.7 95.7 96.5 95.5 96.7 95.7 96.7 MASSACHUSETTS 94.3 95.9 95.9 96.9 95.2 96.3 96.4 97.1 MICHIGAN 93.8 94.9 92.8 94.5 92.9 94.2 93.4 94.5 MINNESOTA 96.4 97.5 95.8 97.1 96.4 97.4 96.2 97.2 MISSISSIPPI 82.4 89.1 82.4 87.5 80.9 87.6 80.1 87.3 MISSOURI 92.1 94.1 91.5 93.7 92.5 94.8 93.4 94.9 MONTANA 92.8 94.5 91.0 94.0 91.4 93.9 90.9 93.7 NEBRASKA 94.0 95.3 95.7 96.8 95.3 96.6 95.6 96.8 NEVADA 89.4 91.9 90.4 92.8 91.8
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-268891A1.doc http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-268891A1.pdf
- Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit ' (c) FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION ENFORCEMENT BUREAU South Central region San Juan Office US Federal Building Room 762 San Juan, PR 00918-1731 December 8, 2006 Mr. Jose Berrios Patillas, PR NOTICE OF UNLICENSED OPERATION Case Number: EB-06-SJ-044 Document Number: W20073268001 The San Juan Office received information that an unlicensed broadcast radio station on 97.1MHz was allegedly operating in Patillas. On November 29, 2006, agents from this office confirmed by direction finding techniques that radio signals on frequency 97.1MHz were emanating from Mr. Jose Berrios' radio station identifying as ``Radio Justicia'' located at a 2nd floor local in a commercial building on Route 3 at the intersection with Route 757 in Patillas, PR. The Commission's
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-269251A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-269251A1.txt
- 1980 to 2000 from the decennial censuses. Percentage data for 2001 to 2004 from the Census Bureau's American Community Survey. Table 6.2 Historical Telephone Penetration Estimates 6 - 12 Characteristic Housing Unit Tenure Owner Occupied 98.8% 98.7% 98.5% 98.3% Renter Occupied 93.4 92.6 91.6 90.4 Age of Householder 15 - 34 94.5 93.6 92.0 90.2 35 - 64 97.3 97.2 97.1 96.7 65 + 98.7 98.6 98.7 98.7 Race of Householder White 97.6 97.3 96.9 96.3 Black or African American 93.6 93.0 93.0 92.3 American Indian or Alaska Native 89.1 89.5 87.8 89.6 Asian 98.4 98.0 97.5 96.9 Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islande 95.9 95.5 91.4 92.2 Other 94.6 95.1 93.9 93.3 Two or More Races 95.1 92.7 95.6 92.8 Ethnicity
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-269251A8.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-269251A8.txt
- 1980 to 2000 from the decennial censuses. Percentage data for 2001 to 2004 from the Census Bureau's American Community Survey. Table 6.2 Historical Telephone Penetration Estimates 6 - 12 Characteristic Housing Unit Tenure Owner Occupied 98.8% 98.7% 98.5% 98.3% Renter Occupied 93.4 92.6 91.6 90.4 Age of Householder 15 - 34 94.5 93.6 92.0 90.2 35 - 64 97.3 97.2 97.1 96.7 65 + 98.7 98.6 98.7 98.7 Race of Householder White 97.6 97.3 96.9 96.3 Black or African American 93.6 93.0 93.0 92.3 American Indian or Alaska Native 89.1 89.5 87.8 89.6 Asian 98.4 98.0 97.5 96.9 Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islande 95.9 95.5 91.4 92.2 Other 94.6 95.1 93.9 93.3 Two or More Races 95.1 92.7 95.6 92.8 Ethnicity
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-269251A9.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-269251A9.txt
- 1999January 101.9 100.7 102.2 99.9 99.3 101.3 90.9 February 102.0 100.4 102.0 99.5 99.1 100.7 89.7 March 102.3 100.2 102.3 98.9 98.4 100.3 89.0 April 103.0 100.0 100.9 99.8 99.5 100.7 87.8 May 103.0 99.6 102.7 97.5 96.4 100.2 85.8 June 103.0 99.7 103.2 97.4 96.3 100.2 84.0 July 103.3 99.5 103.7 96.7 95.3 100.0 82.9 August 103.6 99.8 103.8 97.1 95.9 99.8 82.3 September 104.1 99.6 103.7 96.8 95.9 99.2 82.6 October 104.3 99.8 103.5 97.4 96.9 98.8 82.0 November 104.3 100.6 103.9 98.7 99.1 99.2 81.2 December 104.3 100.7 104.2 98.6 98.5 99.9 81.1 2000January 104.6 100.9 104.8 98.5 98.3 100.1 80.6 February 105.3 99.4 104.9 95.5 94.0 99.2 79.7 March 106.1 98.9 105.1 94.4 93.1 98.5 79.2 April
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-269512A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-269512A1.txt
- 97.2 96.2 97.4 95.1 96.4 95.7 96.5 KANSAS 94.9 96.7 94.3 95.8 94.4 96.4 94.6 96.1 KENTUCKY 86.9 90.9 88.1 91.0 87.4 91.1 86.2 90.6 LOUISIANA 88.9 93.3 89.7 92.7 90.3 93.6 88.7 91.9 MAINE 90.7 93.1 93.4 95.3 94.0 95.6 93.4 95.4 MARYLAND 96.3 96.7 95.7 96.5 95.5 96.7 95.7 96.7 MASSACHUSETTS 94.3 95.9 95.9 96.9 95.2 96.3 96.4 97.1 MICHIGAN 93.8 94.9 92.8 94.5 92.9 94.2 93.4 94.5 MINNESOTA 96.4 97.5 95.8 97.1 96.4 97.4 96.2 97.2 MISSISSIPPI 82.4 89.1 82.4 87.5 80.9 87.6 80.1 87.3 MISSOURI 92.1 94.1 91.5 93.7 92.5 94.8 93.4 94.9 MONTANA 92.8 94.5 91.0 94.0 91.4 93.9 90.9 93.7 NEBRASKA 94.0 95.3 95.7 96.8 95.3 96.6 95.6 96.8 NEVADA 89.4 91.9 90.4 92.8 91.8
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-270407A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-270407A1.txt
- Average Percentage of Households with Telephone Service) Change State Alabama 95.2% 95.3% 95.1% 94.5% 93.3% Alaska 96.6 97.9 96.7 97.6 96.6 Arizona 95.8 95.6 95.0 95.2 93.1 Arkansas 94.7 94.3 92.5 91.0 90.9 California 98.0 98.3 98.3 97.9 97.0 Colorado 98.5 97.4 97.0 96.5 95.1 Connecticut 98.8 98.7 98.2 98.3 97.3 Delaware 98.2 98.2 97.7 97.9 97.5 District of Columbia 97.1 97.5 96.9 96.1 95.2 Florida 97.0 96.6 96.3 95.5 94.0 Georgia 95.6 95.5 95.0 94.1 92.9 Hawaii 97.9 97.0 96.3 95.2 95.6 Idaho 96.2 97.4 96.3 95.7 96.2 Illinois 95.9 95.7 95.4 94.7 94.4 Indiana 95.4 94.7 93.7 93.4 94.4 Iowa 97.6 97.4 96.6 95.6 96.0 Kansas 96.9 96.3 95.8 95.7 93.6 Kentucky 96.0 94.8 95.0 93.3 92.0 Louisiana 95.3
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-272545A2.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-272545A2.txt
- 6.0 0.013.222.3 58.6 Philippines $311,746,391 2.5 0.036.414.6 46.5 $6,044,495 0.0 0.012.313.8 73.8 $1,518,554 96.4 0.0 0.0 0.1 3.5 2,371,653,318 2.3 0.031.316.7 49.6 Singapore $33,872,371 0.7 0.123.1 9.4 66.7 $4,486,692 0.5 0.014.240.9 44.4 $2,187,939 99.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.7 240,201,806 3.4 1.313.331.9 50.1 Sri Lanka $22,458,146 1.5 0.042.9 9.6 45.9 $1,318,542 0.0 0.0 7.1 2.5 90.4 $1,816 0.0 0.0 0.0 2.9 97.1 187,605,266 1.5 0.043.610.9 43.9 Taiwan $37,036,155 1.7 0.017.025.8 55.5 $14,754,723 0.6 0.0 5.036.2 58.2 $244,835 99.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 1.0 573,881,336 4.0 0.013.735.3 47.0 Thailand $20,710,904 0.7 0.123.426.0 49.8 $5,595,445 0.0 0.0 5.031.5 63.5 $10,971 64.7 0.0 0.0 7.0 28.2 285,767,595 1.3 0.313.317.3 67.8 Vietnam $43,598,847 2.7 0.049.211.3 36.9 $2,871,264 0.0 0.0 0.0 1.0 98.9 $4,130 0.0 0.0 0.0 8.4
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-272904A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-272904A1.txt
- 97.2 96.2 97.4 95.1 96.4 95.7 96.5 KANSAS 94.9 96.7 94.3 95.8 94.4 96.4 94.6 96.1 KENTUCKY 86.9 90.9 88.1 91.0 87.4 91.1 86.2 90.6 LOUISIANA 88.9 93.3 89.7 92.7 90.3 93.6 88.7 91.9 MAINE 90.7 93.1 93.4 95.3 94.0 95.6 93.4 95.4 MARYLAND 96.3 96.7 95.7 96.5 95.5 96.7 95.7 96.7 MASSACHUSETTS 94.3 95.9 95.9 96.9 95.2 96.3 96.4 97.1 MICHIGAN 93.8 94.9 92.8 94.5 92.9 94.2 93.4 94.5 MINNESOTA 96.4 97.5 95.8 97.1 96.4 97.4 96.2 97.2 MISSISSIPPI 82.4 89.1 82.4 87.5 80.9 87.6 80.1 87.3 MISSOURI 92.1 94.1 91.5 93.7 92.5 94.8 93.4 94.9 MONTANA 92.8 94.5 91.0 94.0 91.4 93.9 90.9 93.7 NEBRASKA 94.0 95.3 95.7 96.8 95.3 96.6 95.6 96.8 NEVADA 89.4 91.9 90.4 92.8 91.8
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-272906A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-272906A1.txt
- 75.7 80.2 81.7 80.8 $10,000 - $19,999 85.7 88.9 81.6 85.0 81.8 80.4 91.4 87.3 88.0 86.0 89.7 88.5 $20,000 - $29,999 95.1 91.5 94.9 98.6 94.3 92.0 91.9 93.0 91.4 94.1 95.5 94.0 $30,000 - $39,999 96.5 91.7 97.2 95.5 99.0 100.0 98.3 100.0 97.9 97.6 97.0 96.3 $40,000 or more 98.4 100.0 96.8 97.6 93.7 98.9 96.5 97.6 97.1 98.8 98.1 97.1 All Households 87.2 85.7 85.9 87.1 83.8 84.3 88.3 88.1 87.2 88.7 90.1 89.3 $9,999 or less 82.9 80.3 82.3 84.5 86.9 85.9 84.3 87.5 85.9 87.7 89.0 87.7 $10,000 - $19,999 90.5 90.6 92.3 91.1 93.6 94.7 93.9 92.9 94.3 94.1 93.0 95.0 $20,000 - $29,999 95.5 95.4 93.6 95.8 95.4 94.8 96.7 96.3 96.6 96.1
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-274714A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-274714A1.txt
- 95.5 95.4 -0.1 Delaware 95.0 93.7 -1.4 District of Columbia 94.7 92.5 -2.2 Florida 85.5 93.2 7.6 * Georgia 88.9 92.7 3.8 * Hawaii 94.6 96.0 1.5 Idaho 89.5 96.5 7.0 * Illinois 95.0 93.4 -1.6 Indiana 90.3 91.6 1.2 Iowa 95.4 96.5 1.1 Kansas 94.9 95.0 0.1 Kentucky 86.9 94.4 7.5 * Louisiana 88.9 94.6 5.7 * Maine 90.7 97.1 6.4 * Maryland 96.3 95.5 -0.8 Massachusetts 94.3 96.1 1.8 Michigan 93.8 94.1 0.3 Minnesota 96.4 98.1 1.7 Mississippi 82.4 91.0 8.6 * Missouri 92.1 95.7 3.6 * Montana 92.8 96.0 3.2 * Nebraska 94.0 94.0 0.0 Nevada 89.4 93.8 4.4 * New Hampshire 95.0 96.5 1.6 New Jersey 94.1 95.8 1.7 New Mexico 85.3 92.5 7.2 * New York
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-276876A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-276876A1.txt
- 86.9 67.7 March 114.2 99.7 121.7 81.5 79.8 85.1 67.6 April 113.9 98.7 121.9 79.2 77.4 83.1 67.5 May 113.7 98.1 122.0 77.9 76.0 81.8 67.5 June 113.8 97.5 122.2 76.7 74.6 80.8 66.3 July 114.0 98.1 123.1 77.2 75.6 80.8 66.2 August 114.4 97.8 123.7 76.0 74.0 79.7 66.1 September 114.8 97.4 123.8 75.2 73.3 78.9 66.1 October 114.6 97.1 124.0 74.3 72.1 78.7 66.1 November 114.3 97.2 124.2 74.1 71.8 78.3 66.7 December 114.2 97.2 124.1 74.3 72.0 78.6 66.5 2004 January 114.8 97.0 124.4 73.9 71.6 78.0 66.3 February 115.4 97.1 124.2 73.9 71.6 77.8 66.6 March 116.2 96.7 124.2 73.1 70.6 77.2 66.5 April 116.6 96.5 123.9 72.8 70.1 77.2 66.4 May 117.2 95.9 124.2 71.3 68.8
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-277784A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-277784A1.txt
- Service as of December 31, 2006 (Over 200 kbps in at least one direction) Number of Providers Ten or Four Five Six Seven Eight Nine More Zero One Two Three Dec 2003 More Than 3,147 98.2 % 98.1 % 98.7 % 98.9 % 99.1 % 99.2 % 99.5 % 99.9% 99.8% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0 % 99.9 % 99.9 % 947-3,147 97.1 97.3 98.2 98.5 98.7 99.3 99.7 99.8 99.7 100.0 99.9 99.9 99.9 99.9 268-947 95.7 95.8 97.9 98.8 99.1 99.3 99.5 99.3 99.5 99.9 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 118-268 91.5 93.3 96.7 97.9 98.2 99.2 99.3 98.1 99.1 99.7 99.8 99.8 99.8 99.8 67-118 85.9 89.3 95.0 97.5 98.0 98.8 99.0 95.0 97.1 99.1 99.7 99.7 99.8 99.8 41-67 76.1
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-279226A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-279226A1.txt
- from the decennial censuses. Percentage data for 2001 to 2005 from the Census Bureau's American Community Survey. Table 6.2 Historical Telephone Penetration Estimates 6 - 13 Characteristic Housing Unit Tenure Owner Occupied 98.8% 98.7% 98.5% 98.3% 97.7% Renter Occupied 93.4 92.6 91.6 90.4 89.0 Age of Householder 15 - 34 94.5 93.6 92.0 90.2 88.0 35 - 64 97.3 97.2 97.1 96.7 96.1 65 + 98.7 98.6 98.7 98.7 98.6 Race of Householder White 97.6 97.3 96.9 96.3 95.6 Black or African American 93.6 93.0 93.0 92.3 91.9 American Indian or Alaska Native 89.1 89.5 87.8 89.6 86.8 Asian 98.4 98.0 97.5 96.9 95.5 Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander 95.9 95.5 91.4 92.2 93.1 Other 94.6 95.1 93.9 93.3 91.0 Two
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-279226A11.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-279226A11.txt
- -- SPECIAL ACCESS Percent Installation Commitments Met 91.2 97.6 86.9 16.3 93.0 86.9 93.5 86.7 Average Installation Interval (days) 14.0 17.2 14.4 42.3 10.8 1.6 7.5 10.2 Average Repair Interval (hours) 44.1 4.1 12.5 94.9 3.6 22.9 3.6 5.9 LOCAL SERVICES PROVIDED TO RESIDENTIAL AND BUSINESS CUSTOMERS Percent Installation Commitments Met 96.7 99.5 93.7 99.2 96.7 97.2 95.9 95.7 Residence 97.1 99.6 93.7 99.2 97.0 97.4 96.3 95.8 Business 95.3 98.8 94.1 98.9 94.5 95.9 91.5 94.8 Average Installation Interval (days) 1.0 2.4 4.9 4.8 1.9 1.4 2.6 2.8 Residence 0.9 2.0 4.2 4.1 1.8 1.4 2.5 2.8 Business 1.5 4.9 6.7 7.8 2.5 1.4 3.1 3.5 Average Out of Service Repair Interval (hours) 9.6 22.0 17.4 16.8 18.5 12.1 14.0
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-279226A8.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-279226A8.txt
- from the decennial censuses. Percentage data for 2001 to 2005 from the Census Bureau's American Community Survey. Table 6.2 Historical Telephone Penetration Estimates 6 - 13 Characteristic Housing Unit Tenure Owner Occupied 98.8% 98.7% 98.5% 98.3% 97.7% Renter Occupied 93.4 92.6 91.6 90.4 89.0 Age of Householder 15 - 34 94.5 93.6 92.0 90.2 88.0 35 - 64 97.3 97.2 97.1 96.7 96.1 65 + 98.7 98.6 98.7 98.7 98.6 Race of Householder White 97.6 97.3 96.9 96.3 95.6 Black or African American 93.6 93.0 93.0 92.3 91.9 American Indian or Alaska Native 89.1 89.5 87.8 89.6 86.8 Asian 98.4 98.0 97.5 96.9 95.5 Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander 95.9 95.5 91.4 92.2 93.1 Other 94.6 95.1 93.9 93.3 91.0 Two
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-279226A9.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-279226A9.txt
- 86.9 67.7 March 114.2 99.7 121.7 81.5 79.8 85.1 67.6 April 113.9 98.7 121.9 79.2 77.4 83.1 67.5 May 113.7 98.1 122.0 77.9 76.0 81.8 67.5 June 113.8 97.5 122.2 76.7 74.6 80.8 66.3 July 114.0 98.1 123.1 77.2 75.6 80.8 66.2 August 114.4 97.8 123.7 76.0 74.0 79.7 66.1 September 114.8 97.4 123.8 75.2 73.3 78.9 66.1 October 114.6 97.1 124.0 74.3 72.1 78.7 66.1 November 114.3 97.2 124.2 74.1 71.8 78.3 66.7 December 114.2 97.2 124.1 74.3 72.0 78.6 66.5 Table 7.4 Consumer Price Indices (December 1997 = 100) BLS Series ID 7 - 9 All Goods and Services Telephone Services Land-line telephone services, local charges Land-line telephone services, long distance charges Land-line interstate toll calls Land-line intrastate toll
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-279931A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-279931A1.txt
- -- Special Access Percent Installation Commitments Met 91.2 97.6 86.9 16.3 93.0 86.9 93.5 86.7 Average Installation Interval (days) 14.0 17.2 14.4 42.3 10.8 1.6 7.5 10.2 Average Repair Interval (hours) 44.1 4.1 12.5 94.9 3.6 22.9 3.6 5.9 Local Services Provided to Res. and Business Customers Percent Installation Commitments Met 96.7 99.5 93.7 99.2 96.7 97.2 95.9 95.7 Residence 97.1 99.6 93.7 99.2 97.0 97.4 96.3 95.8 Business 95.3 98.8 94.1 98.9 94.5 95.9 91.5 94.8 Average Installation Interval (days) 1.0 2.4 4.9 4.8 1.9 1.4 2.6 2.8 Residence 0.9 2.0 4.2 4.1 1.8 1.4 2.5 2.8 Business 1.5 4.9 6.7 7.8 2.5 1.4 3.1 3.5 Avg. Out of Svc. Repair Interval (hours) 9.6 22.0 17.4 16.7 18.5 12.1 14.0
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-279997A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-279997A1.txt
- 97.2 96.2 97.4 95.1 96.4 95.7 96.5 KANSAS 94.9 96.7 94.3 95.8 94.4 96.4 94.6 96.1 KENTUCKY 86.9 90.9 88.1 91.0 87.4 91.1 86.2 90.6 LOUISIANA 88.9 93.3 89.7 92.7 90.3 93.6 88.7 91.9 MAINE 90.7 93.1 93.4 95.3 94.0 95.6 93.4 95.4 MARYLAND 96.3 96.7 95.7 96.5 95.5 96.7 95.7 96.7 MASSACHUSETTS 94.3 95.9 95.9 96.9 95.2 96.3 96.4 97.1 MICHIGAN 93.8 94.9 92.8 94.5 92.9 94.2 93.4 94.5 MINNESOTA 96.4 97.5 95.8 97.1 96.4 97.4 96.2 97.2 MISSISSIPPI 82.4 89.1 82.4 87.5 80.9 87.6 80.1 87.3 MISSOURI 92.1 94.1 91.5 93.7 92.5 94.8 93.4 94.9 MONTANA 92.8 94.5 91.0 94.0 91.4 93.9 90.9 93.7 NEBRASKA 94.0 95.3 95.7 96.8 95.3 96.6 95.6 96.8 NEVADA 89.4 91.9 90.4 92.8 91.8
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-280980A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-280980A1.txt
- 97.2 96.2 97.4 95.1 96.4 95.7 96.5 KANSAS 94.9 96.7 94.3 95.8 94.4 96.4 94.6 96.1 KENTUCKY 86.9 90.9 88.1 91.0 87.4 91.1 86.2 90.6 LOUISIANA 88.9 93.3 89.7 92.7 90.3 93.6 88.7 91.9 MAINE 90.7 93.1 93.4 95.3 94.0 95.6 93.4 95.4 MARYLAND 96.3 96.7 95.7 96.5 95.5 96.7 95.7 96.7 MASSACHUSETTS 94.3 95.9 95.9 96.9 95.2 96.3 96.4 97.1 MICHIGAN 93.8 94.9 92.8 94.5 92.9 94.2 93.4 94.5 MINNESOTA 96.4 97.5 95.8 97.1 96.4 97.4 96.2 97.2 MISSISSIPPI 82.4 89.1 82.4 87.5 80.9 87.6 80.1 87.3 MISSOURI 92.1 94.1 91.5 93.7 92.5 94.8 93.4 94.9 MONTANA 92.8 94.5 91.0 94.0 91.4 93.9 90.9 93.7 NEBRASKA 94.0 95.3 95.7 96.8 95.3 96.6 95.6 96.8 NEVADA 89.4 91.9 90.4 92.8 91.8
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-280982A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-280982A1.txt
- 75.7 80.2 81.7 80.8 $10,000 - $19,999 85.7 88.9 81.6 85.0 81.8 80.4 91.4 87.3 88.0 86.0 89.7 88.5 $20,000 - $29,999 95.1 91.5 94.9 98.6 94.3 92.0 91.9 93.0 91.4 94.1 95.5 94.0 $30,000 - $39,999 96.5 91.7 97.2 95.5 99.0 100.0 98.3 100.0 97.9 97.6 97.0 96.3 $40,000 or more 98.4 100.0 96.8 97.6 93.7 98.9 96.5 97.6 97.1 98.8 98.1 97.1 All Households 87.2 85.7 85.9 87.1 83.8 84.3 88.3 88.1 87.2 88.7 90.1 89.3 $9,999 or less 82.9 80.3 82.3 84.5 86.9 85.9 84.3 87.5 85.9 87.7 89.0 87.7 $10,000 - $19,999 90.5 90.6 92.3 91.1 93.6 94.7 93.9 92.9 94.3 94.1 93.0 95.0 $20,000 - $29,999 95.5 95.4 93.6 95.8 95.4 94.8 96.7 96.3 96.6 96.1
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-282813A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-282813A1.txt
- 0 0.0 142,497 46.3 307,807 53.7 SD Tennessee 25 2,159,372 76.4 230,906 8.2 437,673 15.5 2,827,951 84.5 TN Texas 58 9,139,311 88.7 322,280 3.1 847,251 8.2 10,308,842 91.8 TX Utah 14 884,440 90.4 0 0.0 93,439 9.6 977,879 90.4 UT Vermont 10 322,138 83.6 0 0.0 62,985 16.4 385,123 83.6 VT Virginia 21 3,379,034 87.5 369,633 9.6 112,875 2.9 3,861,542 97.1 VA Washington 25 2,673,506 89.4 234,028 7.8 82,276 2.8 2,989,810 97.2 WA West Virginia 10 737,998 81.6 0 0.0 165,933 18.4 903,931 81.6 WV Wisconsin 90 1,896,253 70.8 0 0.0 783,949 29.2 2,680,202 70.8 WI Wyoming 10 203,026 80.1 0 0.0 50,573 19.9 253,599 80.1 WY United States 1,433123,171,144 84.6%10,671,339 7.3%11,775,833 8.1%145,618,316 91.9% US American Samoa 1 0 0.0 0
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-284321A2.pdf
- 0.022.8 76.3 $12,753 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0100.0 33,578,978 0.016.2 1.327.5 54.9 Moldova $3,291,183 0.034.6 2.416.5 46.5 $50,477 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0100.0 $1,513 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0100.0 20,923,875 0.029.9 3.820.8 45.5 Poland $28,627,708 0.016.8 2.021.0 60.1 $265,401 0.021.4 0.027.3 51.3 $12,772 0.0 0.0 0.0 5.0 95.0 629,521,883 0.0 5.0 5.720.3 69.0 Romania $23,463,078 0.049.8 4.710.3 35.3 $2,269,704 0.0 2.1 0.0 0.8 97.1 $60,160 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0100.0 184,493,706 0.027.6 7.210.4 54.9 Russia $28,813,824 0.034.8 1.116.7 47.4 $1,209,497 0.052.7 0.0 3.2 44.0 $5,208,849 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0100.0 406,710,016 0.114.9 2.623.8 58.6 Serbia $19,442,925 0.0 5.219.526.4 48.9 $413,044 0.0 0.0 0.021.3 78.7 $3,837 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0100.0 176,806,074 0.0 2.527.532.1 38.0 Slovakia $5,026,908 0.116.2 3.228.6 51.9 $131,101 0.0 0.0 0.047.2 52.8 $8,874 0.0 0.0
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-284923A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-284923A1.txt
- Arizona 88.8 93.7 4.9 Arkansas 88.2 92.5 4.4 California 91.7 96.6 4.9 * Colorado 94.4 98.4 4.0 Connecticut 95.5 97.4 1.9 Delaware 95.0 95.2 0.2 District of Columbia 94.7 93.9 -0.8 Florida 85.5 93.8 8.3 * Georgia 88.9 95.0 6.1 * Hawaii 94.6 96.1 1.5 Idaho 89.5 98.1 8.6 * Illinois 95.0 94.1 -0.9 Indiana 90.3 92.2 1.9 Iowa 95.4 97.1 1.7 Kansas 94.9 96.5 1.6 Kentucky 86.9 92.4 5.5 * Louisiana 88.9 96.7 7.7 Maine 90.7 97.8 7.1 * Maryland 96.3 94.7 -1.6 Massachusetts 94.3 96.4 2.1 Michigan 93.8 96.1 2.3 Minnesota 96.4 98.0 1.7 Mississippi 82.4 92.7 10.3 * Missouri 92.1 96.5 4.4 * Montana 92.8 95.1 2.3 Nebraska 94.0 95.3 1.2 Nevada 89.4 93.8 4.3 New Hampshire 95.0
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-284932A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-284932A1.txt
- State Alabama 95.2% 95.3% 95.1% 94.5% 93.3% 92.6% Alaska 96.6 97.9 96.7 97.6 96.6 96.3 Arizona 95.8 95.6 95.0 95.2 93.1 93.6 Arkansas 94.7 94.3 92.5 91.0 90.9 90.3 California 98.0 98.3 98.3 97.9 97.0 96.6 Colorado 98.5 97.4 97.0 96.5 95.1 94.6 Connecticut 98.8 98.7 98.2 98.3 97.3 96.5 Delaware 98.2 98.2 97.7 97.9 97.5 97.0 District of Columbia 97.1 97.5 96.9 96.1 95.2 94.5 Florida 97.0 96.6 96.3 95.5 94.0 92.4 Georgia 95.6 95.5 95.0 94.1 92.9 90.9 Hawaii 97.9 97.0 96.3 95.2 95.6 95.7 Idaho 96.2 97.4 96.3 95.7 96.2 94.2 Illinois 95.9 95.7 95.4 94.7 94.4 93.7 Indiana 95.4 94.7 93.7 93.4 94.4 93.4 Iowa 97.6 97.4 96.6 95.6 96.0 94.9 Kansas 96.9 96.3 95.8 95.7 93.6
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-284934A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-284934A1.txt
- 86.9 67.7 March 114.2 99.7 121.7 81.5 79.8 85.1 67.6 April 113.9 98.7 121.9 79.2 77.4 83.1 67.5 May 113.7 98.1 122.0 77.9 76.0 81.8 67.5 June 113.8 97.5 122.2 76.7 74.6 80.8 66.3 July 114.0 98.1 123.1 77.2 75.6 80.8 66.2 August 114.4 97.8 123.7 76.0 74.0 79.7 66.1 September 114.8 97.4 123.8 75.2 73.3 78.9 66.1 October 114.6 97.1 124.0 74.3 72.1 78.7 66.1 November 114.3 97.2 124.2 74.1 71.8 78.3 66.7 December 114.2 97.2 124.1 74.3 72.0 78.6 66.5 2004 January 114.8 97.0 124.4 73.9 71.6 78.0 66.3 February 115.4 97.1 124.2 73.9 71.6 77.8 66.6 March 116.2 96.7 124.2 73.1 70.6 77.2 66.5 April 116.6 96.5 123.9 72.8 70.1 77.2 66.4 May 117.2 95.9 124.2 71.3 68.8
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-287688A1.pdf
- N. Mariana Islands 20,926 0.0 NA Ohio 5,433,993 94.6 1.06 Oklahoma 1,535,987 79.9 1.25 Oregon 1,732,954 90.7 1.10 Pennsylvania 6,602,383 95.4 1.05 Puerto Rico 1,068,168 100.0 1.00 Rhode Island 380,875 100.0 1.00 South Carolina 1,966,021 70.3 1.42 South Dakota 307,807 55.3 1.81 Tennessee 2,827,951 84.8 1.18 Texas 10,308,842 91.9 1.09 Utah 977,879 90.7 1.10 Vermont 385,123 83.8 1.19 Virginia 3,869,542 97.1 1.03 Virgin Islands 68,130 0.0 NA Washington 2,989,810 97.3 1.03 West Virginia 903,931 81.9 1.22 Wisconsin 2,680,202 71.0 1.41 Wyoming 253,599 80.8 1.24 Total 146,856,926 92.4% 1.08 NA - Not Applicable. 1/ USF loops, a measure of access lines, are defined in subcategory 1.3 of 47 C.F.R. 36.154(a). 2/ Average percent reporting to ARMIS (Report 43-01) is based on USF
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-287688A3.pdf
- N. Mariana Islands 20,926 0.0 NA Ohio 5,433,993 94.6 1.06 Oklahoma 1,535,987 79.9 1.25 Oregon 1,732,954 90.7 1.10 Pennsylvania 6,602,383 95.4 1.05 Puerto Rico 1,068,168 100.0 1.00 Rhode Island 380,875 100.0 1.00 South Carolina 1,966,021 70.3 1.42 South Dakota 307,807 55.3 1.81 Tennessee 2,827,951 84.8 1.18 Texas 10,308,842 91.9 1.09 Utah 977,879 90.7 1.10 Vermont 385,123 83.8 1.19 Virginia 3,869,542 97.1 1.03 Virgin Islands 68,130 0.0 NA Washington 2,989,810 97.3 1.03 West Virginia 903,931 81.9 1.22 Wisconsin 2,680,202 71.0 1.41 Wyoming 253,599 80.8 1.24 Total 146,856,926 92.4% 1.08 NA - Not Applicable. 1/ USF loops, a measure of access lines, are defined in subcategory 1.3 of 47 C.F.R. 36.154(a). 2/ Average percent reporting to ARMIS (Report 43-01) is based on USF
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-287688A8.pdf
- 6.2 Historical Telephone Penetration Estimates 54.7 97.6 1.8 34.5 94.8 12.7 21.7 9.6 57.5 73.4 59.9 65.6 6 - 13 Characteristic Housing Unit Tenure Owner Occupied 98.8% 98.7% 98.5% 98.3% 97.7% 97.1% 97.1% Renter Occupied 93.4 92.6 91.6 90.4 89.0 87.9 89.5 Age of Householder 15 - 34 94.5 93.6 92.0 90.2 88.0 86.3 87.8 35 - 64 97.3 97.2 97.1 96.7 96.1 95.4 95.6 65 + 98.7 98.6 98.7 98.7 98.6 98.5 98.5 Race of Householder White 97.6 97.3 96.9 96.3 95.6 NA NA Black or African American 93.6 93.0 93.0 92.3 91.9 NA NA American Indian or Alaska Native 89.1 89.5 87.8 89.6 86.8 NA NA Asian 98.4 98.0 97.5 96.9 95.5 NA NA Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-287688A9.pdf
- 86.9 67.7 March 114.2 99.7 121.7 81.5 79.8 85.1 67.6 April 113.9 98.7 121.9 79.2 77.4 83.1 67.5 May 113.7 98.1 122.0 77.9 76.0 81.8 67.5 June 113.8 97.5 122.2 76.7 74.6 80.8 66.3 July 114.0 98.1 123.1 77.2 75.6 80.8 66.2 August 114.4 97.8 123.7 76.0 74.0 79.7 66.1 September 114.8 97.4 123.8 75.2 73.3 78.9 66.1 October 114.6 97.1 124.0 74.3 72.1 78.7 66.1 November 114.3 97.2 124.2 74.1 71.8 78.3 66.7 December 114.2 97.2 124.1 74.3 72.0 78.6 66.5 2004 January 114.8 97.0 124.4 73.9 71.6 78.0 66.3 February 115.4 97.1 124.2 73.9 71.6 77.8 66.6 March 116.2 96.7 124.2 73.1 70.6 77.2 66.5 April 116.6 96.5 123.9 72.8 70.1 77.2 66.4 May 117.2 95.9 124.2 71.3 68.8
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-287962A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-287962A1.txt
- % 99.9 % 99.9 % 99.9 % 947-3,147 97.3 98.2 98.5 98.7 99.3 99.7 99.7 99.7 100.0 99.9 99.9 99.9 99.9 99.9 268-947 95.8 97.9 98.8 99.1 99.3 99.5 99.6 99.5 99.9 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 118-268 93.3 96.7 97.9 98.2 99.2 99.3 99.2 99.1 99.7 99.8 99.8 99.8 99.8 99.9 67-118 89.3 95.0 97.5 98.0 98.8 99.0 98.9 97.1 99.1 99.7 99.7 99.8 99.8 99.7 41-67 83.3 91.5 96.0 97.5 98.8 99.1 99.3 94.4 97.8 99.0 99.3 99.5 99.5 99.6 25-41 73.1 87.6 92.6 95.5 98.1 98.6 98.7 87.6 95.6 97.7 98.5 99.3 99.5 99.4 15-25 61.2 77.8 88.0 91.4 96.6 97.8 97.8 80.4 90.8 95.7 96.8 98.9 99.1 99.2 6-15 52.1 69.4 82.7 86.2 95.8 97.2 97.5 76.2
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-289169A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-289169A1.txt
- State (Percentage of Households with Telephone Service) State Alabama 87.9% 95.4% 7.5% * Alaska 83.8 96.1 12.3 * Arizona 88.8 94.6 5.9 Arkansas 88.2 93.6 5.5 California 91.7 96.4 4.7 * Colorado 94.4 98.0 3.6 Connecticut 95.5 96.9 1.4 Delaware 95.0 92.3 -2.7 District of Columbia 94.7 91.8 -2.9 Florida 85.5 93.1 7.6 * Georgia 88.9 92.9 4.1 Hawaii 94.6 97.1 2.5 Idaho 89.5 95.2 5.8 * Illinois 95.0 94.2 -0.8 Indiana 90.3 92.6 2.2 Iowa 95.4 98.1 2.7 Kansas 94.9 96.7 1.8 Kentucky 86.9 94.7 7.8 * Louisiana 88.9 95.9 6.9 Maine 90.7 97.6 6.9 * Maryland 96.3 93.3 -2.9 Massachusetts 94.3 96.7 2.4 Michigan 93.8 96.0 2.2 Minnesota 96.4 98.3 2.0 Mississippi 82.4 93.0 10.7 * Missouri 92.1 97.0
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-291222A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-291222A1.txt
- M07 J07 N07 M08 J08 N08 Month (March, July, November) Per cent with T elephone In Unit Available Table 2 Telephone Penetration by State (Percentage of Households with Telephone Service) State Alabama 87.9% 94.9% 7.0% * Alaska 83.8 97.2 13.4 * Arizona 88.8 95.4 6.7 Arkansas 88.2 92.4 4.2 California 91.7 96.3 4.6 * Colorado 94.4 97.6 3.2 Connecticut 95.5 97.1 1.6 Delaware 95.0 96.7 1.6 District of Columbia 94.7 90.3 -4.4 Florida 85.5 92.1 6.6 * Georgia 88.9 90.8 2.0 Hawaii 94.6 96.2 1.6 Idaho 89.5 94.8 5.3 * Illinois 95.0 93.9 -1.1 Indiana 90.3 91.5 1.1 Iowa 95.4 97.1 1.7 Kansas 94.9 95.9 1.0 Kentucky 86.9 95.1 8.1 * Louisiana 88.9 94.5 5.5 Maine 90.7 98.1 7.4 * Maryland
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-291391A2.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-291391A2.txt
- Maritime - Pacific $871,447 0.0 43.7 0.0 11.2 45.1 $0 $0 559,743 0.0 12.9 0.0 19.4 67.7 Other Regions $5,469,994 0.0 32.8 0.0 37.2 30.0 $7,934 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0100.0 $5,678 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0100.0 3,260,939 0.0 19.2 0.0 40.1 40.7 American Samoa $537,364 0.0 0.0 0.0 10.9 89.1 $569,876 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0100.0 $0 21,388,756 0.0 0.0 0.0 2.9 97.1 Baker Island $0 $0 $0 0 Howland Island $0 $0 $0 0 Jarvis Island $0 $0 $0 0 Johnston Atoll $0 $0 $0 0 Kingman Reef $0 $0 $0 0 Midway Atoll $0 $0 $0 0 Navassa Island $0 $0 $0 0 Northern Mariana Islands $5,789,927 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0100.0 $222,176 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0100.0 $0 33,642,760 0.0 0.0 0.0
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-292593A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-292593A1.txt
- 72.4 $10,000 - $19,999 85.7 88.9 81.6 85.0 81.8 80.4 91.4 87.3 88.0 86.0 89.7 88.5 86.9 $20,000 - $29,999 95.1 91.5 94.9 98.6 94.3 92.0 91.9 93.0 91.4 94.1 95.5 94.0 90.7 $30,000 - $39,999 96.5 91.7 97.2 95.5 99.0 100.0 98.3 100.0 97.9 97.6 97.0 96.3 96.7 $40,000 or more 98.4 100.0 96.8 97.6 93.7 98.9 96.5 97.6 97.1 98.8 98.1 97.1 97.8 All Households 87.2 85.7 85.9 87.1 83.8 84.3 88.3 88.1 87.2 88.7 90.1 89.3 86.1 California $9,999 or less 82.9 80.3 82.3 84.5 86.9 85.9 84.3 87.5 85.9 87.7 89.0 87.7 87.0 $10,000 - $19,999 90.5 90.6 92.3 91.1 93.6 94.7 93.9 92.9 94.3 94.1 93.0 95.0 94.1 $20,000 - $29,999 95.5 95.4 93.6 95.8 95.4
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-292759A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-292759A1.txt
- -0.6 Florida 85.5 92.6 7.1 * Georgia 88.9 95.0 6.1 * Hawaii 94.6 97.2 2.6 Idaho 89.5 96.8 7.3 * Illinois 95.0 94.6 -0.4 Indiana 90.3 93.3 2.9 Iowa 95.4 98.4 3.0 Kansas 94.9 96.5 1.6 Kentucky 86.9 93.4 6.5 * Louisiana 88.9 95.5 6.6 Maine 90.7 97.9 7.2 * Maryland 96.3 95.5 -0.8 Massachusetts 94.3 97.9 3.6 Michigan 93.8 97.1 3.3 Minnesota 96.4 98.4 2.1 Mississippi 82.4 93.5 11.1 * Missouri 92.1 97.2 5.1 * Montana 92.8 95.7 2.9 Nebraska 94.0 95.9 1.9 Nevada 89.4 94.1 4.7 New Hampshire 95.0 98.5 3.6 New Jersey 94.1 94.8 0.6 New Mexico 85.3 92.3 7.0 New York 90.8 94.7 3.8 * North Carolina 89.3 95.3 6.0 * North Dakota 95.1 98.5 3.4 Ohio
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-295212A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-295212A1.txt
- 4.7 Arkansas 88.2 92.8 4.7 California 91.7 96.6 4.9 * Colorado 94.4 97.0 2.6 Connecticut 95.5 98.5 3.0 Delaware 95.0 96.5 1.5 District of Columbia 94.7 91.3 -3.4 Florida 85.5 92.9 7.4 * Georgia 88.9 93.8 4.9 Hawaii 94.6 98.7 4.1 Idaho 89.5 96.3 6.8 * Illinois 95.0 95.9 0.9 Indiana 90.3 92.3 2.0 Iowa 95.4 98.3 2.9 Kansas 94.9 97.1 2.2 Kentucky 86.9 94.8 7.9 * Louisiana 88.9 94.9 6.0 Maine 90.7 97.1 6.3 * Maryland 96.3 95.0 -1.3 Massachusetts 94.3 98.2 3.9 Michigan 93.8 97.1 3.3 Minnesota 96.4 98.1 1.7 Mississippi 82.4 94.1 11.8 * Missouri 92.1 95.1 3.1 Montana 92.8 92.3 -0.5 Nebraska 94.0 95.9 1.9 Nevada 89.4 94.4 5.0 * New Hampshire 95.0 98.0 3.1 New Jersey
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- 94.1 95.7 94.8 67.4 65.7 78.3 90.5 92.9 67.9 50.9 86.4 94.6 54.2 80.8 6 - 13 Characteristic Housing Unit Tenure Owner Occupied 98.8% 98.7% 98.5% 98.3% 97.7% 97.1% 97.1% 99.3% Renter Occupied 93.4 92.6 91.6 90.4 89.0 87.9 89.5 96.2 Age of Householder 15 - 34 94.5 93.6 92.0 90.2 88.0 86.3 87.8 93.4 35 - 64 97.3 97.2 97.1 96.7 96.1 95.4 95.6 98.4 65 + 98.7 98.6 98.7 98.7 98.6 98.5 98.5 99.2 Race of Householder White 97.6 97.3 96.9 96.3 95.6 NA NA NA Black or African American 93.6 93.0 93.0 92.3 91.9 NA NA NA American Indian or Alaska Native 89.1 89.5 87.8 89.6 86.8 NA NA NA Asian 98.4 98.0 97.5 96.9 95.5 NA NA
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- 94.1 95.7 94.8 67.4 65.7 78.3 90.5 92.9 67.9 50.9 86.4 94.6 54.2 80.8 6 - 13 Characteristic Housing Unit Tenure Owner Occupied 98.8% 98.7% 98.5% 98.3% 97.7% 97.1% 97.1% 99.3% Renter Occupied 93.4 92.6 91.6 90.4 89.0 87.9 89.5 96.2 Age of Householder 15 - 34 94.5 93.6 92.0 90.2 88.0 86.3 87.8 93.4 35 - 64 97.3 97.2 97.1 96.7 96.1 95.4 95.6 98.4 65 + 98.7 98.6 98.7 98.7 98.6 98.5 98.5 99.2 Race of Householder White 97.6 97.3 96.9 96.3 95.6 NA NA NA Black or African American 93.6 93.0 93.0 92.3 91.9 NA NA NA American Indian or Alaska Native 89.1 89.5 87.8 89.6 86.8 NA NA NA Asian 98.4 98.0 97.5 96.9 95.5 NA NA
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- 86.9 67.7 March 114.2 99.7 121.7 81.5 79.8 85.1 67.6 April 113.9 98.7 121.9 79.2 77.4 83.1 67.5 May 113.8 98.1 122.0 77.9 76.0 81.8 67.5 June 113.9 97.5 122.2 76.7 74.6 80.8 66.3 July 114.0 98.1 123.1 77.2 75.6 80.8 66.2 August 114.4 97.8 123.7 76.0 74.0 79.7 66.1 September 114.8 97.4 123.8 75.2 73.3 78.9 66.1 October 114.7 97.1 124.0 74.3 72.1 78.7 66.1 November 114.4 97.2 124.2 74.1 71.8 78.3 66.7 December 114.3 97.2 124.1 74.3 72.0 78.6 66.5 2004 January 114.8 97.0 124.4 73.9 71.6 78.0 66.3 February 115.4 97.1 124.2 73.9 71.6 77.8 66.6 March 116.2 96.7 124.2 73.1 70.6 77.2 66.5 April 116.6 96.5 123.9 72.8 70.1 77.2 66.4 May 117.2 95.9 124.2 71.3 68.8
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- Minnesota 96.4 97.0 0.6 Mississippi 82.4 94.3 11.9 * Missouri 92.1 96.7 4.6 * Montana 92.8 92.0 -0.8 Nebraska 94.0 95.3 1.3 Nevada 89.4 94.3 4.9 * New Hampshire 95.0 98.4 3.4 New Jersey 94.1 97.0 2.9 New Mexico 85.3 90.9 5.6 New York 90.8 95.0 4.1 * North Carolina 89.3 93.9 4.6 North Dakota 95.1 97.6 2.5 Ohio 92.2 97.1 4.9 * Oklahoma 91.5 96.5 5.0 Oregon 91.2 99.0 7.8 * Pennsylvania 95.1 98.6 3.5 * Rhode Island 93.3 96.3 2.9 South Carolina 81.8 92.1 10.3 * South Dakota 92.7 96.8 4.1 Tennessee 87.6 93.8 6.2 Texas 89.0 94.8 5.8 * Utah 90.3 96.7 6.4 * Vermont 92.7 98.9 6.2 * Virginia 93.1 96.3 3.2 Washington 92.5 98.4 5.9 *
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- $359,115,353 0.0 0.1 5.0 25.1 69.9 $6,331,434 0.0 0.0 0.0 4.3 95.7 $5,439,801 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0100.0 3,152,249,207 0.0 0.1 5.2 26.2 68.5 Singapore $26,035,513 0.0 0.1 0.3 11.8 87.9 $1,755,416 0.0 0.0 0.0 29.6 70.4 $10,465,884 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0100.0 467,864,057 0.0 0.3 2.0 33.9 63.9 Sri Lanka $31,334,247 0.0 0.2 0.3 6.0 93.5 $446,616 0.0 0.0 0.0 2.9 97.1 $1,778,357 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0100.0 399,470,749 0.0 0.2 0.2 5.3 94.2 Taiwan $46,724,080 0.0 0.0 0.1 7.0 92.9 $5,498,474 0.0 0.0 0.0 45.5 54.5 $1,620,182 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0100.0 842,825,021 0.0 0.0 0.2 23.5 76.3 Thailand $12,296,825 0.0 0.1 0.7 18.4 80.8 $2,977,742 0.0 0.0 0.0 20.9 79.1 $13,767 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0100.0 541,701,689 0.0 0.0 1.6 31.0 67.3 Vietnam
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- 72.4 $10,000 - $19,999 85.7 88.9 81.6 85.0 81.8 80.4 91.4 87.3 88.0 86.0 89.7 88.5 86.9 $20,000 - $29,999 95.1 91.5 94.9 98.6 94.3 92.0 91.9 93.0 91.4 94.1 95.5 94.0 90.7 $30,000 - $39,999 96.5 91.7 97.2 95.5 99.0 100.0 98.3 100.0 97.9 97.6 97.0 96.3 96.7 $40,000 or more 98.4 100.0 96.8 97.6 93.7 98.9 96.5 97.6 97.1 98.8 98.1 97.1 97.8 All Households 87.2 85.7 85.9 87.1 83.8 84.3 88.3 88.1 87.2 88.7 90.1 89.3 86.1 California $9,999 or less 82.9 80.3 82.3 84.5 86.9 85.9 84.3 87.5 85.9 87.7 89.0 87.7 87.0 $10,000 - $19,999 90.5 90.6 92.3 91.1 93.6 94.7 93.9 92.9 94.3 94.1 93.0 95.0 94.1 $20,000 - $29,999 95.5 95.4 93.6 95.8 95.4
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- service, most notably, the transmission of local broadcast signals into unserved and underserved markets. PROVISION OF LOCAL SIGNALS This section provides an analysis of the extent to which local signals are being provided by DTH satellite television providers and by other multichannel video program distributors. A. Cable Television Service Out of 100.8 million TV households nationwide, as of June 2000, 97.1 million households (96.6%) have franchise cable available (``homes passed'') and 67.7 million households (67.2%) subscribe to franchised cable. Under the Commission's cable ``must carry'' rules implementing the provisions for carriage of local television signals in Sections 614 and 615 of the Communications Act, cable television systems are required to carry the signals of local commercial and non-commercial broadcast television stations,
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- licensee's class of operator license. Report and Order, 15 FCC Rcd at 326 ¶ 20. Id. Qualls Petition at 1; ARRL Petition at 3-5; WAD II Petition at 19-20. Qualls Petition at 1; WAD II Petition at 20. ARRL Petition at 3-5. Id. at 3. Report and Order, 15 FCC Rcd at 329 ¶ 25 Id. See 47 C.F.R. § 97.1. Report and Order, 15 FCC Rcd at 329 ¶ 25 Qualls Petition at 1. Id. at 2. Qualls Petition at 1-2. Morse Code Watch. Australia, Denmark, Israel, Sweden, United Kingdom, South Africa and Gibraltar, among other countries, have adopted 5 wpm as their telegraphy examination element. Other countries, including New Zealand, Singapore, India, Malaysia, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, Kenya, and
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- telecommunications competition and encourage the commercial deployment of new telecommunications technologies. In contrast, none of these objectives applies to the Amateur Radio Service, which is a voluntary noncommercial service. Furthermore, ARRL has not demonstrated that private covenants have a substantial impact on the ability of amateurs to fulfill the fundamental purposes of the Amateur Radio Service set forth in Section 97.1 of the Commission's Rules. Thus, we conclude that, in the instant case, while preemption is appropriate with respect to state and local regulations, it is not similarly appropriate with respect to CC&Rs. ARRL also objects to the Bureau's reliance upon the fact that some amateur antennas can be much larger than OTARDs. ARRL characterizes the examples of different types of
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- at the end of 2000, and by the end of June 2001 was estimated to be 104 million. The most widely used industry measurement of cable availability, however, is the number of homes passed expressed as a percentage of TV households. Based on data from Paul Kagan Associates, homes passed as a percentage of TV households was estimated to be 97.1 percent as of June 2001. In its comments, NRTC once again proposes that this figure is flawed. This statistic, it notes, varies depending on the estimate of homes passed and whether the comparison is based on TV households, all households, all occupied housing units, or all housing units in the United States, as some have suggested. NRTC suggests again this
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- transmitted signal shall not exceed 100 hertz. 9. Section 97.313 (i) is amended as follows. § 97.313 Transmitter Power Standards. b. Section 97.313 (i) is added: (i)No station may transmit with a transmitter power exceeding 100 W PEP in the 135.7-137.8 kHz segment, and the total Effective Isotropic Radiated Power (EIRP) shall not exceed 1 Watt. See 47 C.F.R. § 97.1. A secondary service shall not cause harmful interference to stations of primary or permitted services to which frequencies are already assigned or to which frequencies may be assigned at a later date; cannot claim protection from harmful interference from stations of a primary or permitted service to which frequencies are already assigned or may be assigned at a latter date;
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- 2002). BIA Financial Network Inc., MEDIA Access Pro data base (Mar. 2002). Annual Assessment of the Status of Competition in the Market for the Delivery of Video Programming, 17 FCC Rcd 1244, 1254-55 (2002) ¶ 17 (``Eighth Annual MVPD Competition Report'') (``Based on data from Paul Kagan Associates, homes passed as a percentage of TV households was estimated to be 97.1 percent as of June 2001. ... [The National Rural Telecommunications Cooperative] suggests that the number of homes passed as a percentage of TV households could be as low as 81 percent.''), 1330 App. B, Table B-1 (Kagan data showing that as of June 2001, cable television was subscribed to by 64% of homes that had at least one television). Eighth
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- or as of June 30, 2001 Percentage of Zip Codes with High-Speed Lines in Service (Over 200 kbps in at Least One Direction) Table 10 Deciles (Blocks of Zip Codes Grouped by Density) Persons per Square Mile (In Each Decile of Zip Codes) Dec 1999 Dec 2000 90-100 More Than 3,147 96.1% 98.2% 98.1% 98.9% 99.9% 99.9% 80-90 947-3,147 93.2 97.1 97.1 98.5 99.8 99.8 70-80 268-947 87.5 95.7 95.6 96.2 99.3 99.5 60-70 118-268 77.7 91.5 92.3 91.4 98.1 98.8 50-60 67-118 66.9 85.9 87.5 83.3 95.0 96.8 40-50 41-67 53.7 76.1 80.9 72.3 87.9 93.0 30-40 25-41 40.9 65.0 72.8 60.0 80.0 87.3 20-30 15-25 29.8 50.1 58.9 50.9 69.4 78.4 10-20 6-15 26.7 38.5 51.1 50.2 61.9 74.6
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- must maintain in their station records either manufacturer data on the antenna gain or calculations of the antenna gain. No amateur station shall cause harmful interference to stations authorized in the mobile and fixed services; nor is any amateur station protected from interference due to the operation of any such station. * * * * * See 47 C.F.R. § 97.1. See Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, ET Docket 02-98, 17 FCC Rcd 8954 (2002). The LF, or low frequency, portion of the spectrum is the frequency region between 30 kHz and 3000 kHz. See Petition for Rule Making, RM-9404, Public Notice Report No. 230, (rel. November 23, 1998). See Petition for Rule Making, RM-10209, Public Notice Report No. 2501 (rel. Aug.
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- out-of-band interference to Inmarsat's MES from its base stations. MSV states that its ATC equipment manufacturer, Ericsson, has committed to meeting this value. In the analysis of potential interference to airborne Inmarsat terminals, Inmarsat used a reduction from peak power to out-of-band power of 68 dB (to -101.9 dBW/Hz, per carrier) and for a three carrier sector a total of -97.1 dBW/Hz for the base station. This provides over 20 dB more conservative attenuation between what MSV equipment manufacturer states that MSV's equipment will be capable of meeting and the value that Inmarsat used in its analysis. We will use the lower value. Path Loss in the Vicinity of the ATC Base Station Inmarsat uses a free-space loss equation to determine
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- C.F.R. § 2.106 n.US270. See NPRM, 17 FCC Rcd at 12,191 ¶ 20. The BSS and broadcasting service are regulated solely by the Commission and thus, these allocations will be added only to the non-Federal Government Table. The Amateur service is a generally a radiocommunication service carried out by authorized individuals for personal aim without pecuniary interest. 47 C.F.R. § 97.1(a)(4). The Amateur-satellite service is a radiocommunication service using stations on Earth satellites for the same purpose as those of the amateur service. 47 C.F.R. § 97.1(a)(3). See supra, n. 25. See NPRM, 17 FCC Rcd at 12,191 ¶ 20. The amateur and amateur-satellite services allocations are regulated solely by the Commission. Our proposed allocation changes are to be made only
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- equipment is exempt from a certification requirement, except for external power amplifiers operating below 144 MHz. Such amplifiers must have no gain in the 26-28 MHz band to ensure that they can not be used to amplify the output of transmitters operating in the Citizen's Band (CB) Radio Service. See 47 C.F.R. §§ 97.315 and 97.317. See 47 C.F.R. § 97.1. The common personal computer sound card uses a low speed DAC, typically about 40,000 samples/second, to produce audio output. See 47 C.F.R. § 2.932(e). Id. Id. See Report and Order in ET Docket No. 00-47, 16 FCC Rcd 17373, 13383 (2001). See Vanu Inc. Comment, August 1, 2003. Vanu proposes the following language to clarify compliance with 47 C.F.R. §
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- 10.173.78 8.91 3.62 9.16 3.63 5.02 2.32 4.47 2.21 BI-1 - Timeliness of Daily Usage Feed BI-1-02-2030% DUF in 4 Business Days 99.89 99.79 99.87 99.84 99.78 BI-2 - Timeliness of Carrier Bill BI-2-01-2030Timeliness of Carrier Bill 100 100 100 100 100 BI-3 - Billing Accuracy & Claims Processing BI-3-04-2030% CLEC Billing Claims Acknowledged Within Two Business Days 100 77.14 97.1 100 100 BI-3-05-2030% CLEC Billing Claims Resolved Within 28 Calendar Days After Acknowledgement 68.24 87.23 100 98.18 96.88 RESALE Ordering POTS & Pre-qualified Complex - Electronically Submitted OR-1 - Order Confirmation Timeliness OR-1-02-2320% On Time LSRC Flow Through 99.87 100 100 100 99.85 OR-1-04-2100% On Time LSRC/ASRC - No Facility Check 97.17 94.69 96.73 96.16 96.66 OR-1-06-2320% On Time
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- with it. If you got a hooker somewhere... MV3: She'll probably kick your ass. MV1: She'll have her driver kill you. So tell us if you were ever dumb enough to try one of these on a girl and even if not just what sort of strange sex techniques have you heard of. 248-559-9797. MV3: Billy from Southfield you're on 97.1 FM talk. MC1: How're you guys doin' today? MV3: Okay Billy. MC1: Yeah, the ``David Copperfield.'' MV1: I heard of this but I can't remember how it goes. MC1: Um, I think it's when you're having sex with a girl from behind... MV1: Oh yeah. MC1: and then you spit on her back. MV1: Oh yeah, okay you pretend by
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- Order No. 13,347, 69 Fed. Reg. 44,573 (2004). 47 C.F.R. § 11.44(a). See 47 C.F.R. § 11.55(a); see also 2002 Report and Order, 17 FCC Rcd at 4057; First Report and Order, 10 FCC Rcd at 1809. Amateur radio operators play an important role in providing emergency communications, but are not subject to mandatory EAS obligations. See 47 C.F.R. § 97.1(a). . Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act (Stafford Act), as amended, 42 U.S.C. § 5121, et. seq. As a result of the Stafford Act, twenty-seven Federal departments and agencies signed an agreement concerning Federal response and assistance to State and local governments when a major disaster or emergency overwhelms their ability to respond. >. NWS broadcasts NWS
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- (hereinafter Petition). The amateur radio service, governed by Part 97 of the Commission's Rules, provides spectrum for amateur radio service licensees (``amateurs'') to participate in a voluntary noncommercial communication service which provides emergency communications and allows experimentation with various radio techniques and technologies to further the understanding of radio use and the development of new technologies. See 47 C.F.R. § 97.1 See generally 47 C.F.R. Parts 5 and 15. The non-Federal Government fixed service in this band is regulated under Part 23 of the Commission's Rules. See 47 C.F.R. §§ 15.113, 15.209 and 15.217; see also 47 C.F.R. §2.106 footnote US294. In addition, section 15.209 permits operation of authorized unlicensed systems with field strengths of up to 4.9 microvolts/meter in the
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- Conference (WRC-97), Geneva, 1997, and Final Acts of the World Radiocommunication Conference (WRC-2000), Istanbul, 2000, (Radio Regulations); Chadwick Request. In the amateur service, ``operating privileges'' generally refer to the frequency bands available to the control operator of an amateur station and to the emission types an amateur station may transmit. See 47 C.F.R. §§ 2.1(c), 97.3(a)(4). See 47 C.F.R. § 97.1. The purpose of the amateur service includes recognition and enhancement of the value of the amateur service to the public as a voluntary noncommercial communications service, continuation of the amateur's proven ability to contribute to the advancement of the radio art; expansion of the existing reservoir of trained operators, technicians, and electronic experts; and continuation of the amateur's unique ability
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- to the advancement of the radio art; encouragement and improvement of the service through rules which provide for advancing skills in both the communication and technical phases of the radio art; expansion of the existing reservoir of trained operators, technicians, and electronic experts; and continuation and extension of the amateur's unique ability to enhance international goodwill. See 47 C.F.R. § 97.1(a)-(e). See 47 C.F.R. § 97.3(a)(1). See 47 U.S.C. § 153(2); 47 C.F.R. § 97.3(a)(4). See 47 C.F.R. § 97.111(a)(1). See 47 C.F.R. § 97.401(a). See WRC-03 Final Acts, Article 25.6. See Final Acts of the World Radiocommunication Conference (WRC-97), Geneva, Switzerland, 1997, and Final Acts of the World Radiocommunication Conference, (WRC-00), Istanbul, 2000, Radio Regulation S25.5. This Radio Regulation stated,
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- RACES is a domestic radio service using amateur stations for civil defense communications during periods of local, regional or national civil emergencies. See World Radiocommunication Conference Final Acts (Geneva, 2003), Article 25, 47 C.F.R. § 97.3(a)(37). Hereafter, the term "amateur service" is used to include all of the amateur radio services. See 47 C.F.R. § 97.3(a)(4). See 47 C.F.R. § 97.1. See 47 C.F.R. § 97.111(a)(1). See 47 C.F.R. § 97.401. See 1998 Biennial Regulatory Review -- Amendment of Part 97 of the Commission's Amateur Service Rules, Report and Order, WT Docket No. 98-143, 15 FCC Rcd 315 (1999) (License Restructure Report and Order) and Errata, April 19, 2000; Memorandum Opinion and Order, 16 FCC Rcd 8076 (2001). The rule changes
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- RACES is a domestic radio service using amateur stations for civil defense communications during periods of local, regional or national civil emergencies. See World Radiocommunication Conference Final Acts (Geneva, 2003), Article 25, 47 C.F.R. § 97.3(a)(37). Hereafter, the term "amateur service" is used to include all of the amateur radio services. See 47 C.F.R. § 97.3(a)(4). See 47 C.F.R. § 97.1. See 47 C.F.R. § 97.111(a)(1). See 47 C.F.R. § 97.401. See 1998 Biennial Regulatory Review -- Amendment of Part 97 of the Commission's Amateur Service Rules, Report and Order, WT Docket No. 98-143, 15 FCC Rcd 315 (1999) (License Restructure Report and Order) and Errata, April 19, 2000; Memorandum Opinion and Order, 16 FCC Rcd 8076 (2001). The rule changes
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- is a domestic radio service using amateur radio stations for civil defense communications during periods of local, regional or national civil emergencies. See World Radiocommunication Conference Final Acts (Geneva, 2003), Article 25; 47 C.F.R. § 97.3(a)(37). Hereafter, the term "amateur service" is used to include all of the amateur radio services. See 47 C.F.R. § 97.3(a)(4). See 47 C.F.R. § 97.1. See 47 C.F.R. § 97.111(a)(1). See 47 C.F.R. § 97.1(a). See World Radiocommunication Conference Final Acts (Geneva, 2003) (WRC-03 Final Acts), Article 25.6. The WRC-03 Final Acts applicable to the amateur service became effective on July 5, 2003. An administration is any governmental department responsible for discharging obligations under the Radio Regulations. See 47 C.F.R. § 2.1. See Final Acts
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-06-24A1.doc http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-06-24A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-06-24A1.txt
- 47 C.F.R. § 90.353(a). 47 C.F.R. § 97.301. The amateur radio service under Part 97 of the Commission's rules provides spectrum for amateur radio service licensees to participate in a voluntary noncommercial communication service, which allows experimentation with various radio techniques and technologies to further the understanding of radio use and the development of new technologies. See 47 C.F.R. § 97.1. Users of Part 15 devices do not have any allocation status in the Commission's rules. Instead, the Commission makes spectrum available for Part 15 devices on an unprotected and non-interference basis. Under Part 15, unlicensed devices may not cause harmful interference to LMS licensees, amateur operations, or other licensed systems in the 902-928 MHz band. See 47 C.F.R. § 90.361.
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-06-75A1.doc http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-06-75A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-06-75A1.txt
- IS ORDERED that Robert J. Robbins's application for review is DENIED. Robbins may seek judicial review of this action pursuant to 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(b). The officials responsible for this action are the following Commissioners: Chairman Martin, Commissioners Copps, Adelstein, and Tate. FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION Marlene H. Dortch Secretary Letter from Robert J. Robbins, President and General Manager, The Call 97.1 (WMKL) to FOIA Officer (Feb. 2, 2005) (FOIA Request); Letter from Robert J. Robbins, President, Call Communications Group, Inc. to Deputy Associate General Counsel Joel Kaufman (Feb. 28, 2005) (Application for Review). Robbins has subsequently narrowed his FOIA request to information related to unlicensed broadcasts on 91.7 and 91.9 MHz in the Miami Dade/Broward County Florida areas. For station 91.7,
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-07-117A1.doc http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-07-117A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-07-117A1.txt
- C.F.R. § 90.353(a). See 47 C.F.R. § 97.301. The amateur radio service under Part 97 of the Commission's Rules provides spectrum for amateur radio service licensees to participate in a voluntary noncommercial communication service which allows experimentation with various radio techniques and technologies to further the understanding of radio use and the development of new technologies. See 47 C.F.R. § 97.1. Users of Part 15 devices do not have any allocation status in our rules; rather, we make spectrum available for Part 15 devices on an unprotected and non-interference basis. Under Part 15, unlicensed devices may not cause harmful interference to LMS licensees, amateur operations, or other licensed systems in the 902-928 MHz band and are not protected from interference from
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-08-59A1.doc http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-08-59A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-08-59A1.txt
- 97 of the Commission's Rules to Implement WRC-03 Regulations Applicable to Requirements for Operator Licenses in the Amateur Radio Service, Notice of Proposed Rule Making and Order, WT Docket No. 05-235, 20 FCC Rcd 13247, 13256 ¶¶ 17-18 (2005). See Report and Order, 21 FCC Rcd at 14803-06 ¶¶ 13-18. See id. at 14804 ¶ 15 (citing 47 C.F.R. § 97.1(b)). See id. (citing 1998 Biennial Regulatory Review - Amendment of Part 97 of the Commission's Amateur Service Rules, Report and Order, WT Docket No. 98-143, 15 FCC Rcd 315 (1999) (License Restructure Report and Order)). See id. at 14804 ¶ 16 (citing 47 C.F.R. § 97.1(a)). See id. at 14804-05 ¶ 16 (citing License Restructure Report and Order, 15 FCC
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-09-97A1.doc http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-09-97A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-09-97A1.txt
- covers 71.6 percent of the population and 37 percent of the area in this CMA. By comparison, the other providers with coverage are: Sprint Nextel with coverage of 94 percent of the population and 37.9 percent of the area; T-Mobile with coverage of 64.3 percent of the population and 13.5 percent of the area; and Verizon Wireless with coverage of 97.1 percent of the population and 41.8 percent of the area. Louisiana 7 - West Feliciana (CMA460). We find that in this market, there is a high likelihood of competitive harm due to the merged entity's high combined market share along with insufficient network coverage by other service providers in this market that would effectively counter any anticompetitive behavior by the
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-09-97A1_Rcd.pdf
- covers 71.6 percent of the population and 37 percent of the area in this CMA. By comparison, the other providers with coverage are: Sprint Nextel with coverage of 94 percent of the population and 37.9 percent of the area; T-Mobile with coverage of 64.3 percent of the population and 13.5 percent of the area; and Verizon Wireless with coverage of 97.1 percent of the population and 41.8 percent of the area. 83. Louisiana 7 West Feliciana (CMA460). We find that in this market, there is a high likelihood of competitive harm due to the merged entity's high combined market share along with insufficient network coverage by other service providers in this market that would effectively counter any anticompetitive behavior by the
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-10-124A1.doc http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-10-124A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-10-124A1.txt
- Bureau staff recently issued a Public Notice providing guidance for requesting waiver relief to facilitate government-sponsored emergency preparedness and disaster drills. See Amateur Service Communications During Government Disaster Drills, Public Notice, 24 FCC Rcd 12872 (WTB, PSHSB, EB 2009) (Disaster Drills Public Notice). The waiver process outlined in this Public Notice remained available throughout this rulemaking proceeding. 47 C.F.R. § 97.1(a). 47 C.F.R. § 97.403. See Recommendations of the Independent Panel Reviewing the Impact of Hurricane Katrina on Communications Networks, Order, EB Docket No. 06-119; WC Docket No. 06-63, 22 FCC Rcd 10541, 10576 ¶ 111 (2007) (noting that the amateur radio community played an important role in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina and other disasters). See Letter from Kenneth Hughes,
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-10-38A1.doc http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-10-38A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-10-38A1.txt
- to such a level could adversely affect experimentation in the amateur service. See id. at 1486 ¶ 14. See Petition at 1. Over fifty comments were filed in response to the ARRL petition. Commenters were divided as to whether the APC requirement should be eliminated. Id. at 5. Id. at 6 (citing 47 C.F.R. §§ 97.311(b), 97.313(a)). 47 C.F.R. § 97.1(b). See 47 C.F.R. § 97.313(a). The Commission's rules have always imposed additional limitations on amateur station SS transmissions because, as some comments note, the nature of SS makes it virtually impossible to determine the source of interference. See Comments of Charles Young at 1; Comments of Alexander Krist at 4; Comments of Walter B. Fair at 1; Comments of George
- http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-10-45A1.doc http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-10-45A1.pdf http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-10-45A1.txt
- staff recently issued a Public Notice providing guidance for requesting waiver relief to facilitate government-sponsored emergency preparedness and disaster drills. See Amateur Service Communications During Government Disaster Drills, Public Notice, DA 09-2259 (WTB, PSHSB, EB rel. Oct. 20, 2009) (Disaster Drills Public Notice). The waiver process outlined in this Public Notice remains available throughout this rulemaking proceeding. 47 C.F.R. § 97.1(a). 47 C.F.R. § 97.403. See Recommendations of the Independent Panel Reviewing the Impact of Hurricane Katrina on Communications Networks, Order, EB Docket No. 06-119; WC Docket No. 06-63, 22 FCC Rcd 10541, 10576 ¶ 111 (2007) (noting that the amateur radio community played an important role in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina and other disasters). See Letter from Kenneth Hughes,
- http://wireless.fcc.gov/auctions/62/comments/SummitMediaBroadcasting.pdf
- Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Summit Media Broadcasting, LLC 180 Main Street Sutton, WV 26601 Phone 1-304-765-7373 WDBS 97.1 FM WSGB 1490 AM Fax 1-304-765-7836 Email: info@theboss97fm.com RE: DA 05-1076 Auction No. 62 Comments 4-26-05 Federal Communications Commission Commission's Secretary Attn.: WTB/ASAD Office Of The Secretary Summit Media Broadcasting, LLC a small West Virginia company is the licensee of radio stations WDBS and WSGB located in Braxton County, West Virginia. We would like to participate in the upcoming FM
- http://wireless.fcc.gov/outreach/2004broadbandforum/comments/NewAmericaPublicKnowledge.pdf
- Using this model, one radio signal can be associated with a carrier wave of a particular fre- quency, and additional radios on different frequencies can operate in the same area. In effect, Marconi figured out how to use frequency to multiplex radio signals. Each station got its own unique frequency: hence the familiar radio call numbers like 102.7, 88.5, or 97.1. Because frequency division was the only viable means of operating multiple simultaneous transmitters when radio developed as a commercial service, it became the basis for government radio policy. Regulating radio meant regulating frequencies, by parceling out the usable spectrum to licensees and service categories. And so it remains today. We don't use the same numbers to identify TV channels or
- http://wireless.fcc.gov/services/index.htm?job=about_1&id=amateur
- Top Arrow Return To Top Operations in Emergencies Q: Is it correct that my station must not transmit analog voice emissions on the HF band digital emission segments even during an emergency? Yes. The [91]Rules, including the analog/digital emission exclusive segments, are carefully designed to provide an amateur radio service in the United States that has certain fundamental purposes. [92]Section 97.1 declares that the foremost purpose is expressed in the principle of recognition and enhancement of the value of the amateur service to the public as a voluntary, noncommercial communication service, particularly with respect to providing emergency communications. It would be illogical to abandon these [93]Rules -- which are carefully developed through the rule making process with the input of amateur
- http://wireless.fcc.gov/services/index.htm?job=prb-1&id=amateur&page=4
- telecommunications competition and encourage the commercial deployment of new telecommunications technologies.^[74]21 In contrast, none of these objectives applies to the Amateur Radio Service, which is a voluntary noncommercial service.^[75]22 Furthermore, ARRL has not demonstrated that private covenants have a substantial impact on the ability of amateurs to fulfill the fundamental purposes of the Amateur Radio Service set forth in Section 97.1 of the Commissions Rules.^[76]24 Thus, we conclude that, in the instant case, while preemption is appropriate with respect to state and local regulations, it is not similarly appropriate with respect to CC&Rs. 8. ARRL also objects to the Bureaus reliance upon the fact that some amateur antennas can be much larger than OTARDs.24 ARRL characterizes the examples of different types
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Cable/Reports/fcc01001.doc http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Cable/Reports/fcc01001.pdf http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Cable/Reports/fcc01001.txt
- During the 1999-2000 television season the number of U.S. TV Households was reported as 100.8 million, and increase of 1.4 percent over the prior year. The number of homes passed by cable was approximately 95.6 million at the end of 1998 and 96.6 million at the end of 1999, and by the end of June 2000 was estimated to be 97.1 million, according to one source. The most widely used industry measurement of cable availability is the number of homes passed expressed as a percentage of TV households. In June 2000, this statistic, homes passed as a percentage of TV households, was 96.6 percent, unchanged from the previous year. Some parties have proposed to use different measures of cable availability. The
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Orders/2000/fcc00238.doc http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Orders/2000/fcc00238.pdf http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Orders/2000/fcc00238.txt
- the measurement methodologies, statistical approaches, definitions, and exclusions may vary in significant ways. In this instance, however, we determine that the comparison is a meaningful one. For the months of December 1999 to April 2000, SWBT satisfied the five-hour standard for 77.7, 92.9, 95.0, 95.0 and 94.1 percent of loop with ported number orders submitted via LEX, and 93.2, 98.2, 97.1, 96.4 and 96.1 percent for EDI orders. See SWBT Aggregated Performance Data, Measurement No. 94 (``Percent FOCs Received Within `X' Hours) (Residence and Simple Business With Loop 1-19) at 271-No. 94a and 94c. In the Texas I Proceeding, SWBT explained that its sub-standard performance at the end of 1999, for loops with a ported number, was attributable to inadequate training
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Reports/FCC-State_Link/IAD/hspd0604.pdf
- 8% 6% 4% 3% 3% 11% Six Ten or Seven Two Three Eight Nine Percentage of Zip Codes with High-Speed Lines in Service as of December 31, 2003 (Over 200 kbps in at Least One Direction) Table 13 More Number of Providers Zero One Four Five Dec 2003 More Than 3,147 98.2% 98.1% 98.7% 98.9% 99.9% 99.8% 100.0% 100.0% 947-3,147 97.1 97.3 98.2 98.5 99.8 99.7 100.0 99.9 268-947 95.7 95.8 97.9 98.8 99.3 99.5 99.9 100.0 118-268 91.5 93.3 96.7 97.9 98.1 99.1 99.7 99.8 67-118 85.9 89.3 95.0 97.5 95.0 97.1 99.1 99.7 41-67 76.1 83.3 91.5 96.0 87.9 94.4 97.8 99.0 25-41 65.0 73.1 87.6 92.6 80.0 87.6 95.6 97.7 15-25 50.1 61.2 77.8 88.0 69.4 80.4 90.8
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Reports/FCC-State_Link/IAD/hspd0705.pdf
- 3% 13% Six Ten or Seven Two Three Eight Nine Percentage of Zip Codes with High-Speed Lines in Service as of December 31, 2004 (Over 200 kbps in at Least One Direction) Table 13 More Number of Providers Zero One Four Five Dec 2003 Dec 2004 More Than 3,147 98.2% 98.1% 98.7% 98.9% 99.1% 99.9% 99.8% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 947-3,147 97.1 97.3 98.2 98.5 98.7 99.8 99.7 100.0 99.9 99.9 268-947 95.7 95.8 97.9 98.8 99.1 99.3 99.5 99.9 100.0 100.0 118-268 91.5 93.3 96.7 97.9 98.2 98.1 99.1 99.7 99.8 99.8 67-118 85.9 89.3 95.0 97.5 98.0 95.0 97.1 99.1 99.7 99.7 41-67 76.1 83.3 91.5 96.0 97.5 87.9 94.4 97.8 99.0 99.3 25-41 65.0 73.1 87.6 92.6 95.5 80.0
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Reports/FCC-State_Link/IAD/hspd1204.pdf
- 12% Percentage of Zip Codes with High-Speed Lines in Service as of June 30, 2004 (Over 200 kbps in at Least One Direction) Table 13 More Number of Providers Zero One Four Five Six Ten or Seven Two Three Eight Nine Jun 2003 Jun 2004 More Than 3,147 97.3% 98.1% 98.7% 98.9% 98.9% 99.7% 99.9% 99.8% 100.0% 99.9% 947-3,147 95.8 97.1 98.2 98.2 98.5 99.4 99.8 99.9 99.9 99.9 268-947 93.4 95.6 97.5 98.4 98.5 98.4 99.5 99.9 99.9 99.9 118-268 86.7 92.3 95.2 96.9 97.7 95.9 98.8 99.5 99.7 99.8 67-118 77.9 87.5 93.0 96.4 97.6 90.2 96.8 98.5 99.4 99.6 41-67 65.4 80.9 88.0 93.8 96.4 81.2 93.0 96.3 98.5 99.1 25-41 54.5 72.8 81.0 90.4 94.3 71.4 87.3
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Reports/FCC-State_Link/IAD/subs1197.pdf
- ** Indiana 91.6 93.8 2.2 * Iowa 96.2 96.7 0.5 Kansas 94.3 94.0 -0.4 Kentucky 88.1 93.2 5.0 * Louisiana 89.7 91.0 1.4 Maine 93.4 96.1 2.7 * Maryland 95.7 95.7 0.0 Massachusetts 95.9 95.4 -0.5 Michigan 92.8 94.3 1.4 Minnesota 95.8 96.9 1.1 Mississippi 82.4 89.2 6.8 * Missouri 91.5 95.0 3.6 * Montana 91.0 93.7 2.7 Nebraska 95.7 97.1 1.4 Nevada 90.4 94.1 3.8 * New Hampshire 94.3 96.5 2.2 New Jersey 94.8 94.9 0.1 New Mexico 82.0 88.1 6.1 * New York 91.8 94.2 2.4 * North Carolina 88.3 93.1 4.8 * North Dakota 94.6 95.8 1.2 Ohio 92.4 94.6 2.1 * Oklahoma 90.3 91.4 1.2 Oregon 90.6 95.6 5.0 * Pennsylvania 94.9 97.1 2.3 * Rhode Island
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Reports/FCC-State_Link/SOCC/96socc.pdf
- 97.4 ME MARYLAND 96.5 97.3 95.3 95.5 MD MASSACHUSETTS 95.2 96.4 95.9 95.7 MA MICHIGAN 95.5 95.4 94.9 93.3 MI MINNESOTA 97.2 96.6 97.4 96.4 MN MISSISSIPPI 87.9 87.9 89.3 89.8 MS MISSOURI 94.8 95.0 97.5 93.7 MO MONTANA 94.6 94.1 94.1 94.4 MT NEBRASKA 95.8 96.2 96.9 97.9 NE NEVADA 92.7 93.8 94.1 94.6 NV NEW HAMPSHIRE 94.5 96.3 97.1 95.5 NH NEW JERSEY 92.8 95.2 95.9 95.6 NJ NEW MEXICO 86.1 87.7 86.4 90.7 NM NEW YORK 93.2 94.0 94.3 93.7 NY NORTH CAROLINA 95.3 93.0 93.5 93.2 NC NORTH DAKOTA 96.9 95.8 96.1 94.6 ND OHIO 94.5 94.1 94.9 94.3 OH OKLAHOMA 92.4 90.9 91.6 89.9 OK OREGON 96.3 95.3 95.6 95.2 OR PENNSYLVANIA 96.9 96.7 97.3 96.4
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Reports/FCC-State_Link/SOCC/99socc.pdf
- 69.1 1,789.1 1,371.8 417.3 237.3 69.6 104.4 411.3 6.0 HI Idaho 1,428.5 42.1 1,386.4 945.1 441.3 235.3 101.7 102.0 439.1 2.2 ID Illinois 12,601.8 551.4 12,050.4 9,167.2 2,883.2 1,504.1 876.0 420.5 2,800.6 42.0 IL Indiana 6,348.3 359.6 5,988.8 4,500.0 1,488.8 878.5 289.4 299.8 1,467.6 21.2 IN Iowa 2,696.0 99.5 2,596.5 1,830.0 766.5 364.1 164.7 232.6 761.5 5.0 IA Kansas 2,572.9 97.1 2,475.9 1,739.0 736.9 390.0 113.4 223.5 726.8 10.0KS Kentucky 4,419.7 129.3 4,290.4 3,207.4 1,083.0 713.9 164.3 192.5 1,070.7 12.3KY Louisiana 4,907.1 163.7 4,743.4 3,603.2 1,140.2 786.6 153.4 183.3 1,123.3 16.9 LA Maine 1,577.0 67.1 1,509.9 1,099.1 410.9 214.2 96.3 97.6 408.1 2.8ME Maryland 6,545.0 327.4 6,217.6 4,347.9 1,869.8 838.4 313.9 708.9 1,861.2 8.5MD Massachusetts 9,350.6 393.9 8,956.7 6,201.8 2,754.8 1,083.9
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Compliance/Orders/1997/fcc97218.doc http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Compliance/Orders/1997/fcc97218.pdf http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Compliance/Orders/1997/fcc97218.txt
- Communications Act - Competitive Bidding, 61 FCC Rcd 49103 ( FCC 96-330, adopted: August 6,1996, released: October 10, 1996). Second Order on Reconsideration and Seventh Report and Order, 11 FCC Rcd 2639 (1995). Fourth Report and Order In the Matter of Implementation of Section 309(j) of the Communications Act- Competitive Bidding, 9 FCC Rcd 2330 (1994). See 47 C.F.R. ( 97.1 et seq. 47 C.F.R. ( 97.5 (b)(1),(2), (3),(4). See 13 C.F.R. ( 121.201, SIC Major Group Code 44 -- Water Transportation (4491, 4492, 4493, 4499) and 45 -- Transportation by Air (4522, 4581). 47 C.F.R. ( 101 et seq (formerly part 21 of the Commission's rules). Persons eligible under Parts 80 and 90 of the Commission's rules can use private
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Engineering_Technology/Documents/bulletins/oet65/oet65a.pdf http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Engineering_Technology/Documents/bulletins/oet65/oet65a.wp
- 33.3 13.1 33.1 11.3 32.7 14.9* 32.4 18.3* 32.1 21.7* 25 51.9 25.4 51.5 19.6 51.1 16.6 50.6 15.1 50.0 18.3* 49.6 21.7* 50 72.6 35.1 71.9 26.8 71.4 22.7 70.7 20.6 69.9 19.1 69.3 17.6 75 88.4 42.6 87.7 32.5 87.0 27.3 86.1 24.8 85.1 22.9 84.4 21.2 100 101.8 48.8 100.9 37.1 100.1 31.2 99.1 28.3 98.0 26.2 97.1 24.1 125 113.6 54.6 112.6 41.2 111.7 34.6 110.5 31.4 109.3 29.0 108.4 26.7 150 124.2 59.6 123.1 45.0 122.2 37.9 120.9 34.2 119.6 31.6 118.5 29.1 175 133.4 64.0 132.8 48.3 131.8 40.6 130.4 36.7 129.0 33.9 127.9 31.2 200 143.1 68.0 141.8 51.7 140.8 43.3 139.3 39.1 137.7 36.1 136.5 33.2 Table6.MinimumheightforsingleFMantennacompliancewithgeneral population/uncontrolledexposurelimits.TheabovenumbersapplytosingleFMantennasfor whichthebaseofthesupportingtowerisatapproximatelythesamelevelorhigherthanthe surroundingterrain.Foreachentry,thehighernumberrepresentsa"worstcase"assuminga dipole-typeelementintheantennaarray.Thelowernumberforeachentryrepresentsa typical"bestcase"achievableusingmodern,commercially-availableantennas.For intermediatecombinationsofpowerornumberofelementsinterpolationisacceptable,as
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Engineering_Technology/Orders/1997/fc97115a.pdf http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Engineering_Technology/Orders/1997/fc97115a.wp
- 98.3 MIDETROIT 7 41 1000.0 305.0 27072 5522 24481 5147 3.0 0.6 99.3 MIDETROIT 20 21 50.0 293.0 16588 4704 16512 4692 5.2 2.6 99.8 MIDETROIT 50 14 50.0 293.0 16894 4721 15265 4505 0.6 0.3 99.9 MIDETROIT 56 43 50.0 293.0 14854 4517 16254 4720 10.6 4.1 91.3 MIDETROIT 62 44 50.0 296.0 13246 4403 13572 4435 0.0 0.0 97.1 MIEASTLANSING 23 55 54.4 296.0 16624 1384 16287 1333 0.9 0.4 100.0 MIESCANABA 3 48 1000.0 363.0 36170 175 35639 173 0.0 0.0 99.9 MIFLINT 12 36 1000.0 287.0 27238 1966 24490 1807 0.9 0.8 99.5 MIFLINT 28 52 115.7 265.0 14607 2617 14356 2578 0.0 0.0 99.6 MIFLINT 66 16 58.1 287.0 18404 1552 18533 1571 0.1 0.0 99.2
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Engineering_Technology/Orders/1998/fc98024a.pdf http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Engineering_Technology/Orders/1998/fc98024a.txt http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Engineering_Technology/Orders/1998/fc98024a.wp
- 194.3 213.0 13878 5588 14310 5777 10.0 2.3 93.5 DC WASHINGTON 50 51 65.0 247.0 14147 5160 14207 5376 0.1 0.0 97.7 DE SEAFORD 64 44 50.0 195.0 4202 154 4202 154 3.2 2.9 100.0 DE WILMINGTON 12 55 1000.0 294.0 23176 7443 20136 6742 0.0 0.0 99.8 DE WILMINGTON 61 31 50.0 292.0 16054 5337 15401 5324 5.3 6.5 97.1 FL BOCA RATON 63 44 61.7 310.0 13892 3705 13892 3705 0.0 0.0 100.0 FL BRADENTON 66 42 50.0 465.0 18294 2380 18282 2379 0.0 0.0 100.0 FL CAPE CORAL 36 35 216.1 450.0 24093 879 23907 870 0.0 0.0 100.0 FL CLEARWATER 22 21 232.4 433.0 21082 2536 21082 2536 9.1 5.2 100.0 FL CLERMONT 18 17 240.6 458.0
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Engineering_Technology/Reports/fcc00454.doc http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Engineering_Technology/Reports/fcc00454.pdf http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Engineering_Technology/Reports/fcc00454.txt
- service, most notably, the transmission of local broadcast signals into unserved and underserved markets. PROVISION OF LOCAL SIGNALS This section provides an analysis of the extent to which local signals are being provided by DTH satellite television providers and by other multichannel video program distributors. A. Cable Television Service Out of 100.8 million TV households nationwide, as of June 2000, 97.1 million households (96.6%) have franchise cable available (``homes passed'') and 67.7 million households (67.2%) subscribe to franchised cable. Under the Commission's cable ``must carry'' rules implementing the provisions for carriage of local television signals in Sections 614 and 615 of the Communications Act, cable television systems are required to carry the signals of local commercial and non-commercial broadcast television stations,
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Mass_Media/Notices/1998/fcc98037.pdf http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Mass_Media/Notices/1998/fcc98037.txt http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Mass_Media/Notices/1998/fcc98037.wp
- the years.33 This is due in part to improved television receiver designs, as well as the fact that many households receive broadcast channels via cable rather than by over-the-air transmission. When the UHF discount was adopted in 1985, cable passed approximately 60 percent of all television households34 and had approximately 32 million subscribers.35 Today, the pass rate has risen to 97.1 percent with approximately 64.2 million subscribers.36 Moreover, the Supreme Court has recently upheld the constitutionality of the "must-carry" rules which require cable systems to carry local television broadcast stations.37 Parties have nonetheless urged us to continue the UHF discount policy given the significant number of television households that do not subscribe to cable.38 27. We request comment in this proceeding
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Mass_Media/Orders/1998/fcc98315.pdf http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Mass_Media/Orders/1998/fcc98315.txt http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Mass_Media/Orders/1998/fcc98315.wp
- (thous) (% NL Area) (% NL Pop) (%) B-9 DC WASHINGTON 50 51 65.0 247.0 14147 5160 14207 5376 0.1 0.0 97.7 DE SEAFORD 64 44 50.0 195.0 4202 154 4202 154 3.2 2.9 100.0 DE WILMINGTON 12 55 1000.0 294.0 23176 7443 20136 6742 0.0 0.0 99.8 DE WILMINGTON 61 31 50.0 292.0 16054 5337 15401 5324 5.3 6.5 97.1 FL BOCA RATON 63 44 61.7 310.0 13892 3705 13892 3705 0.0 0.0 100.0 FL BRADENTON 66 42 50.0 465.0 18294 2380 18282 2379 0.0 0.0 100.0 FL CAPE CORAL 36 35 216.1 450.0 24093 879 23907 870 0.0 0.0 100.0 FL CLEARWATER 22 21 232.4 433.0 21082 2536 21082 2536 9.1 5.2 100.0 FL CLERMONT 18 17 240.6 458.0
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Miscellaneous/Filings/fl990122.html http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Miscellaneous/Filings/fl990122.wp
- Freedom of Information Action - GTE Service Corporation. In the Matter of 1998 Biennial Regulatory Review -- Streamlining of Mass Media Applications, Rules and Processes (MM Docket No. 98-43). Petition for Leave of File Petition for Partial Reconsideration - Michael Robert Birdsill, Claire Benezra/Farm Belt Radio, Inc., Maquoketa Broadcasting Company. In the Matter of 1998 Biennial Regulatory Review -- Part 97.1 Amateur Radio Service (WT Docket No. 98-143). Comments - Courtney B. Duncan/N5BF, Jan A. Tarsala/WB6VRN, Michael J. Sparling; Reply Comments - The American Radio Relay League, Inc. In the Matter of Prescribing the Authorized Unitary Rate of Return for Interstate Services of Local Exchange Carriers (CC Docket No. 98-166). Designation of Service Notice - US West Communications, Inc. In the
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Wireless/Orders/1999/da992654.doc http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Wireless/Orders/1999/da992654.txt
- organizations. ARRL Petition at 12. ARRL Petition at 13. Id. at 2. Id. at 4. Id. See 47 C.F.R. § 97.407(c). Public Notice, Petitions for Rulemaking Filed, Report No. 2206, June 19, 1997. Mr. Marshall King Comments at 1 (filed December 9, 1997). Id. at 3. Mr. Billy Geer Comments at 1 (filed July 25, 1997). See 47 C.F.R. § 97.1(a). See RACES R&O, 36 Rad. Reg. 2d (P&F) at 318. See 47 C.F.R. § 97.105(b). ARRL Petition at 11. See also RACES R&O, 36 Rad. Reg. 2d (P&F) at 322-323, where the Commission observed that there is nothing to prevent amateur stations registered in RACES from taking part in other organized and unorganized amateur activities and communicating with non-RACES amateur
- http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Wireline_Competition/Orders/2002/fcc02118.pdf
- LSRs) 27.72 23.24 19.9 18.25 18.74 OR-4 Timeliness of Completion Notification OR-4-02- 3000 Completion Notice (BCN) % On Time 99.2 98.65 OR-4-05- 3000 Work Completion Notice (PCN) % On Time 99.99 100 OR-5 - Percent Flow-Through OR-5-01- 3000 % Flow Through - Total (ASRs + LSRs) 59.19 73.51 72.89 72.64 74.04 OR-5-03- 3000 % Flow Through Achieved 97.1 96.87 97.52 96.73 96.94 Special Services - Electronically Submitted OR-1 Order Confirmation Timeliness (ASRs + LSRs) OR-1-04- 3210 % On Time LSRC/ASRC No Facility Check DS0 NA NA NA NA NA Federal Communications Commission FCC 02-118 C-23 Metric Metric September October November December January Notes Number Full Name VZ CLE C VZ CLE C VZ CLE C VZ CLE
- http://www.fcc.gov/eb/FieldNotices/2003/DOC-268891A1.html
- download the Microsoft Word or Adobe Acrobat version. ***************************************************************** FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION ENFORCEMENT BUREAU South Central region San Juan Office US Federal Building Room 762 San Juan, PR 00918-1731 December 8, 2006 Mr. Jose Berrios Patillas, PR NOTICE OF UNLICENSED OPERATION Case Number: EB-06-SJ-044 Document Number: W20073268001 The San Juan Office received information that an unlicensed broadcast radio station on 97.1MHz was allegedly operating in Patillas. On November 29, 2006, agents from this office confirmed by direction finding techniques that radio signals on frequency 97.1MHz were emanating from Mr. Jose Berrios' radio station identifying as "Radio Justicia" located at a 2^nd floor local in a commercial building on Route 3 at the intersection with Route 757 in Patillas, PR. The Commission's
- http://www.fcc.gov/eb/Orders/2001/da01812.doc http://www.fcc.gov/eb/Orders/2001/da01812.html
- dogging her vagina every single night with your dad's flashlight! FV: Hang up the phone! MV: God [beep]! God [beep]! You're going to hell! You're a sinner! I can't believe you're pregnant, you bitch! You're a whore! FV: Hang up the phone! Boy: What kind of [unintelligible] is this? MV: [Laughter] Announcer: Extreme night-time radio with Kramer and Twitch on 97.1, the Eagle. (2) August 3, 2000 (7:45 p.m. to 9:15 p.m.) MV: Male Voice(s) (Hosts) MV2: Adult-film actor (Carlos) FV: Adult-film actress (Gina) MV3: Hosts' assistant (Frat) MV: Carlos is on the way and porno chicks. ... MV: We also have Gina Rider. She's a porn star. She's going to be performing at the Clubhouse. 9:30 your first show, right?
- http://www.fcc.gov/eb/Orders/2003/FCC-03-71A1.html
- it. If you got a hooker somewhere... MV3: She'll probably kick your ass. MV1: She'll have her driver kill you. So tell us if you were ever dumb enough to try one of these on a girl and even if not just what sort of strange sex techniques have you heard of. 248- 559-9797. MV3: Billy from Southfield you're on 97.1 FM talk. MC1: How're you guys doin' today? MV3: Okay Billy. MC1: Yeah, the ``David Copperfield.'' MV1: I heard of this but I can't remember how it goes. MC1: Um, I think it's when you're having sex with a girl from behind... MV1: Oh yeah. MC1: and then you spit on her back. MV1: Oh yeah, okay you pretend by
- http://www.fcc.gov/eb/Orders/2004/FCC-04-189A1.html
- Order No. 13,347, 69 Fed. Reg. 44,573 (2004). 19 47 C.F.R. 11.44(a). 20 See 47 C.F.R. 11.55(a); see also 2002 Report and Order, 17 FCC Rcd at 4057; First Report and Order, 10 FCC Rcd at 1809. 21 Amateur radio operators play an important role in providing emergency communications, but are not subject to mandatory EAS obligations. See 47 C.F.R. 97.1(a). 22 These services are among the evolving digital technologies that bring advanced services to consumers and make more efficient use of the available spectrum. DBS service, including the Direct-to-Home Fixed-Satellite Service (DTH-FSS), provides multi- channel video programming services to millions of households. DTV is a type of broadcasting technology that allows broadcasters to offer television with movie-quality picture and CD-quality
- http://www.fcc.gov/fcc-bin/audio/DOC-220690A1.doc http://www.fcc.gov/fcc-bin/audio/DOC-220690A1.pdf http://www.fcc.gov/fcc-bin/audio/DOC-220690A1.txt
- BNPL-20010611AEQ NEW PAYSON, AZ PAYSON COUNCIL FOR THE MUSICAL ARTS REQ: 96.3 MHz Channel 242 BNPL-20010611AFO NEW PAYSON, AZ PAYSON COUNCIL MUSIC ASSOCIATION REQ: 98.5 MHz Channel 253 BNPL-20010612AEZ NEW TONOPAH, AZ CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP MINISTRIES REQ: 105.7 MHz Channel 289 BNPL-20010613AAU NEW COTTONWOOD, AZ COTTONWOOD EDUCATIONAL ASSOCIATION REQ: 92.1 Channel 221 BNPL-20010614ABH NEW KINGMAN, AZ CALVARY CHAPEL OF KINGMAN REQ: 97.1 Channel 246 BNPL-20010614ACD NEW KINGMAN, AZ KINGMAN MISSIONARY ALLIANCE CHURCH REQ: 98.7 MHz Channel 254 BNPL-20010614ADE NEW CROWN KING, AZ BRADSHAW MOUNTAIN BROADCASTING REQ: 100.3 MHz Channel 262 BNPL-20010614AFR NEW BACAVI, AZ THE PATH REQ: 101.5 Channel 268 BNPL-20010614AHL NEW WICKENBURG, AZ RANCHO DE LOS CABALLEROS BROADCASTING REQ: 99.1 MHz Channel 256 BNPL-20010615AGX NEW TUCSON, AZ PASCUA YAQUI TRIBE REQ:
- http://www.fcc.gov/fcc-bin/audio/FCC-02-249A1.doc http://www.fcc.gov/fcc-bin/audio/FCC-02-249A1.pdf http://www.fcc.gov/fcc-bin/audio/FCC-02-249A1.txt
- 2002). BIA Financial Network Inc., MEDIA Access Pro data base (Mar. 2002). Annual Assessment of the Status of Competition in the Market for the Delivery of Video Programming, 17 FCC Rcd 1244, 1254-55 (2002) ¶ 17 (``Eighth Annual MVPD Competition Report'') (``Based on data from Paul Kagan Associates, homes passed as a percentage of TV households was estimated to be 97.1 percent as of June 2001. ... [The National Rural Telecommunications Cooperative] suggests that the number of homes passed as a percentage of TV households could be as low as 81 percent.''), 1330 App. B, Table B-1 (Kagan data showing that as of June 2001, cable television was subscribed to by 64% of homes that had at least one television). Eighth
- http://www.fcc.gov/ftp/Bureaus/Mass_Media/Databases/documents_collection/da97-2568.html
- No 10.000 203. 27.500 245C 96.9 KKGL NAMPA ID LIC BLH7318 43-45-19.0 116-05-52.0 No 44.000 768. 55.000 245C 96.9 KROG GRANTS PASS OR LIC BLH860403KB 42-22-56.0 123-16-29.0 No 25.000 679. 75.000 245A B1 96.9 WMKB RIDGEBURY PA LIC BLH890728KC 41-55-43.0 76-46-58.0 Can No 1.550 131. 3.600 245C1 96.9 KMTN JACKSON WY LIC BLH850617KC 43-27-42.0 110-45-10.0 No 50.000 323. 84.000 246C2 97.1 KAMDFM CAMDEN AR LIC BLH4437 33-35-13.0 92-49-42.0 No 39.000 56. 50.000 246C2 97.1 KNWB HILO HI LIC BLH850814KV 19-45-33.0 155-08-33.0 No 40.000 -38. 50.000 246C2 97.1 KNWB HILO HI CP BPH961113IE 19-47- 2.0 155-05-25.0 No 38.000 -251. 50.000 246B B 97.1 WWBX BANGOR ME LIC BMLH850105KX 44-42-13.0 69-04-47.0 Can No 5.000 375. 7.500 246C2 97.1 KKBR BILLINGS MT LIC BLH941101KA
- http://www.fcc.gov/ownership/materials/already-released/review090001.pdf
- 43.967.895.8 Monterey-Salinas-Santa Cruz Mar-96 78 32 20 13 16.8n/a 59.9 Nov-97 78 32 18 13 40.6n/a 74.6 Nov-98 79 32 18 14 28.7 n/a 71.0 Mar-00 74 33 14 11 39.756.983.0 Mar-01 77 33 12 11 35.957.490.5 Syracuse NY Mar-96 68 28 15 13 48.1n/a 91.1 Nov-97 70 30 12 14 50.0n/a 96.8 Nov-98 72 30 12 13 43.3 n/a 97.1 Mar-00 75 30 11 13 48.074.895.9 Mar-01 78 31 10 13 51.576.396.8 Harrisburg-Lebanon-Carlisle PA Mar-96 73 23 15 13 28.6n/a 77.7 Nov-97 73 23 13 12 35.5n/a 89.8 Nov-98 74 24 13 12 35.9 n/a 95.8 Mar-00 77 24 11 12 41.477.696.7 Mar-01 79 24 11 12 40.074.695.6 Sarasota - Bradenton FL Mar-96 79 13 10 8 56.1 n/a120.7 Nov-97