FCC to Investigate D-Block Auction 54
eweekhickins writes "Feds and public interest groups are taking seriously accusations that someone tampered with the wireless spectrum auction process. The block of spectrum that was supposed to go to emergency responders failed to get close to the reserve price, raising suspicions that someone was trying to make money off the Sept. 11 national tragedy. But that would never happen, right?" This is a follow up to last week's allegations.
Same old fraud (Score:1)
Re:Same old fraud (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
That said, it's a pretty scary requirem
QoS priority? (Score:2)
Re:Same old fraud (Score:5, Interesting)
I've worked in companies working around the edges of various issues that have become "national emergencies". There's always people doing yeoman work in those areas who could work miracles with a marginal increase in funding. But they never get a marginal increase in funding.
What happens is that once the politicians decide there is an emergency, there is a deluge of cash. Often, the people who've been doing the work all along never see this as people closer to the budgeting process divert the money into crash programs run by people who have no knowledge or interest in what as actually bee done. Other times, they end up with vast quantities of cash that they have to spend right away; the emergency becomes spending all the money before anybody accuses you of dragging your feet. I've seen cases where agencies have literally paid millions of dollars to have a web site with a email backed fill in form that could have been done (by several competent and independent evaluations) for around $50K. The reason was that they never had anything like two million dollars in the kitty before, and had no idea of how to spend it. If they had had a $100K windfall, they could have spent it very well indeed, but they didn't even know where to begin to spend the money they'd been given; certainly not fast enough.
So they turned to a company that specialized in absorbing lots of cash on federal contracts quickly.
I'll let you in on a dirty little secret about government contracting. All those rules that supposedly keep Uncle Sam from being fleeced actually make it easier for somebody with political connections to take him to the cleaner. The reason is that the only way to absorb the money generated by the federal government in a "national emergency", and comply with all the accounting rules, is to have a company or a subsidiary that specializes in absorbing federal money and filling out all the paperwork. The government doesn't buy what it needs in an emergency on the open market, but by outfits starting with Halliburton and all the way down to small time operations that eat up a few millions here and there.
I was amazed and appalled the degree to which you could hire a lobbyist and make a quick buck on a shoeshine and a shell product, provided you were dealing with something "important".
So basically.... (Score:5, Insightful)
The FCC had put in some pretty strong wording about building in first responder capability. It was more than what was typically done in the past, but it didn't seem totally outrageous. I think the problem is that a lot of the wireless carriers are moving towards commodization, and thus low margins. 90% of the population in the US can get good cell service from multiple providers. With low margins, why would you take on a huge risk that could be a brick around your neck? Better to spend the little bit extra and get a chunk of spectrum whose only restrictions were pretty much that you had to use it? I think it's that that piece of the spectrum just isn't worth the hassle if you have to build in tons of first responder equipment also.
It's just worth only 50% of what they thought it was. Oops, they messed up. But since they messed up big, they have to start an investigation.
Re:So basically.... (Score:5, Insightful)
The requirements on existing networks to support the government(s) during emergency are nearly enough to put you out of business if you have low margins. Imagine how many lights you'd put in your house if you had to supply each with 8 hour battery backup and one outlet in every room with 24 hour battery backup plus data recorders for who used the lights and when.
Yep, you'd be asking yourself why you want to spend 1.3 Billion Dollars for the privilege of building a network that is 3-10 times more expensive than regular networks. It probably also has to be tied into the latest NSA data dragnet system as well.
Notoriously, emergency services teams/groups don't really have the funds to pay you extra money for that huge network you built. They like to get things cheaply too, saving your taxpayer dollars and such.
That's not quite it. Regulatory uncertainty. (Score:5, Insightful)
You're confusing some things here. The backup power requirement applies to ANY telecom site. Wireless or wireline, any block, any sort of CMRS. They're all subject to the same backup power requirement (at least until the D.C. Circuit rules on the appeal of that requirement). And the D-block requirements have nothing to do with CALEA. CALEA will apply exactly the same to the D-block as to the other blocks in the 700 MHz auction. What made the D-block different is that whichever commercial carrier won the spectrum rights was to work out some arrangement where, in addition to building a commercial network on that spectrum, they would also build capacity for use by public safety agencies.
What killed the D-block was uncertainty. The FCC put out vague, put potentially onerous, obligations on the D-block. The auction winner's ability to exploit the spectrum was to be dependent on their ability to negotiate out some deal with a big mess of first responder organizations. At the time the FCC didn't seem terribly worried about this because they set everything up along the lines of a plan proposed by Frontline Wireless (a plan that first responders seemed favorably disposed towards), with Frontline's assurances that they would bid past the reserve price and ensure the block was sold. Then Frontline failed to secure the necessary capital to bid for the D-block and had to drop out. Everyone else just looked at the requirement of having to cut some sort of deal with the first responder organizations (who would all be fighting each other for bigger slices of the pie) before exploiting the spectrum and thought, you've got to be kidding me. No fucking way.
Re:So basically.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Those "new" rules will make cell phones almost as reliable as POTS, give or take a few nines.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
I believe the expectation was that bidders would be putting together a package where the extra hardware was paid for by government grants, arranged separately. Most US communications infrastructure was paid for that way (the "investment" of the private companies
Re:So basically.... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
It also ignores how U.S. government works. We like our public officials to be technical nitwits who need a contractor to screw in a light bulb. This makes it easier for us to build companies that overcharge the Feds for shoddy work. Have yo
Re:So basically.... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:So basically.... (Score:4, Insightful)
That's not the point. The allegation is that this company tried to tack on 50 million that would go to them, and that by doing so they rocked the boat enough that people pulled out rather than bid on the block. That's fraud. It doesn't matter whether the potential bids would have been high enough - that just means it was stupid fraud, which is just as illegal.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Now, accusations have been levied that a consulting firm hired to help the government hand over the spectrum may have acted improperly and discouraged potential bidders by suggesting that any winning bid would have to pay $50 million in annual fees, in addition to the auction price.
It is question of ethical practices whether it is related to 9/11 or not. And the question is if these charges are true, whether we could trust this consulting firm for any business.
Begin long Conspiracy theory thread in 3,2,1 (Score:1, Informative)
pen & teller
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kcrF346sS_I [youtube.com]
Debunking the 9/11 Myths
http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/military_law/1227842.html?page=1 [popularmechanics.com]
http://www.debunk911myths.org/ [debunk911myths.org]
http://www.debunking911.com/ [debunking911.com]
That should to keep the paranoids and nutters silent for a least a min or two.
http://rds.yahoo.com/_ylt=A0oGkl7up.dHWO8ADoFXNyoA;_ylu=X3oDMTEzNmRvbGhpBHNlYwNzcgRwb3MDMTEEY29sbwNzazEEdnRpZANGODIzXzg3/SIG=11gi164v7/EXP=1206450542/**http%3A//www.d [yahoo.com]
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
In 2001, 42,196 people were killed in motor vehicle accidents in the US [wikipedia.org]. That works out to an average of ~115 per day or ~14 9/11's. Or, in short, more people die in a month *regularly* than were killed on 9/11.
Now, perhaps them all dying on one day does make it a tragedy. But, then, so was the Boston Masacre a tragedy. But, if one is going to obsess about such things, perhaps it'd be better to look at the root cause instead of focusing on the symptoms. I mean, after the Boston Masacre, did Boston hi
Re: (Score:1)
What part of the TAS, or its asinine policies, is about "[hitting] terrorists first"? What part of labelling all terrorists al Quaeda to stir up fear is "an entirely new way of thinking about the problem"? The only thing "new" is the rate at which overly broad and unprepared plans are enacted because they're focused on "[hitting terrorists] hard" without any consideration for either collateral
Re: (Score:1)
Pen & Teller are Bullshit [in non-magic] (Score:1, Offtopic)
Okay, really, it's not that they're sacred cows. It's that both are confirmed and tested under the same system, th
What's with the Summary? (Score:5, Insightful)
The only connection the D-block auction has to 9/11 is the fact that it is meant, not just for a commercial communications network, but also for emergency responders to have access to it as well. The different agencies responding on 9/11 (and in the days that followed) were hampered by the fact that they use different radio systems and had difficulty communicating with one another.
Re: (Score:2)
However, those problems were caused by management (government) bungling, not by technical issues. They could have had radio syst
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
I agree with the earlier poster - there is no conn
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
You whippersnappers are obviously too young to remember the tidal wave of 1570.
You take your lives for granted.
Re: (Score:1)
- RG>
Government is not good business (Score:1)
Any chance they used Sequoia voting machines? (Score:2)
First Responders not happy about this auction (Score:5, Insightful)
Emergency Agencies can apply for and receive an assigned frequency for free. The capital costs can be expensive. But the frequency is free to use once we get past that. If our neighbor is using a frequency and we work with them, they can give us permission to use their frequency too. System works pretty well. It could be better, but it works.
Now, the government is going to sell the emergency services spectrum in the 700Mhz range? If emergency agencies want to use 700Mhz, we will be expected to pay a monthly service fee so some private company will make a profit off of emergency services.
I don't care if it will be a nationwide service. My fire department is in Idaho. They don't need to talk to a police department in Georgia ever.
If you want to see an interoperable radio system that works, go talk to the National Interagency Fire Center and look at the comms packages they send out with Type I and II Incident Command Teams. They bring all the radios, repeaters, frequencies with them. Everyone of the incident gets issued a pre-programmed radio and a frequency assignment list so that they know how to get hold of each other.
This 700Mhz plan is worthless. You want to make effective use of the frequency range and not waste local taxes, let us use the frequency for free like the other public service blocks.
FCC should pay, not other way around (Score:1)
Who gets the money? (Score:1)
Seems to me everyone owns the spectrum, and the money should go to everyone.
Get rid of the Auction system (Score:3, Insightful)
Allow cheap powerful walkie talkies for the public. The free market will help build public owned towers and we will then have an alternative to government/big business colluding ripoff.
Re: (Score:2)
Umm, we already have them... Citizens Band. Family Radio Service. Multi-Use Radio Service. General Mobile Radio Service. Ham. etc.
Not to mention the 900MHz, 2.4GHz, 5GHz (et al.) unlicensed spectrum everyone is using for cordless phones and WiFi, but not for voice service.
What's so specially about 700MHz that voice service will magically take off, where the rest have failed to?