FCC Urged to Reject Standalone 5G Broadcast for LPTV
The Advanced Television Broadcasting Alliance (ATBA) urges the FCC to reject a petition for standalone 5G Broadcast on LPTV spectrum, warning it risks spectrum reallocation to wireless carriers. ATBA argues that 5G Broadcast should be integrated within the ATSC 3.0 standard rather than authorized as a separate cellular-based transmission option for LPTV stations. This dispute highlights a broader conflict over broadcast spectrum control and the future direction of ATSC 3.0 adoption in the US.
Key Takeaways
- ATBA warns that authorizing 3GPP 5G Broadcast as a standalone standard could expose LPTV spectrum to reallocation by wireless carriers.
- ATBA supports 5G Broadcast integration within ATSC 3.0, citing technical work by ATSC's TG3/S32 group and demonstrations of 5G Broadcast within ATSC 3.0 transmissions.
- The LPTV Broadcasters Association (LPTVBA) petition, which ATBA opposes, seeks to fast-track recognition of 3GPP 5G Broadcast (Releases 16-19) as a transmission option under Part 74 FCC rules.
- ATBA is asking the FCC to eliminate ATSC 1.0 simulcasting requirements, establish ATSC 3.0 test markets, and enforce the All-Channel Receiver Act for ATSC 3.0 tuners.
Why It Matters
This dispute over LPTV transmission standards reflects a larger battle for broadcast spectrum control and the future of ATSC 3.0. Authorizing a standalone cellular-based standard on LPTV channels could provide the wireless industry with a new argument for spectrum reallocation, a precedent set by the 2017 broadcast incentive auction where LPTV stations were significantly impacted. For the broadcast industry, a parallel regulatory path threatens existing investments in ATSC 3.0 and could question its endgame as the dominant standard. The FCC's decision will signal whether it views this primarily as a technical integration issue within ATSC 3.0 or a broader spectrum policy shift that could redefine broadcasting's footprint.
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