SBA Communications Corporation (NASDAQ: SBAC) announced this week that Jeff Stoops will retire from his positions as President and Chief Executive Officer on December 31, 2023. SBA’s Board of Directors has appointed Brendan Cavanagh, SBA’s Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, to succeed Stoops as President and CEO, at which time Cavanagh shall also be appointed to the company’s Board of Directors. Stoops shall remain on the company’s Board of Directors, and upon his retirement shall assume the position of non-executive Chairman of the Board. Steven Bernstein, SBA’s founder and current Chairman of the Board of Directors, will continue to serve on the Board, and Jack Langer will continue in his role as lead independent director. SBA said it intends to appoint its next Chief Financial Officer later this year. Continue Reading |
Thursday, February 23, 2023
Stoops to Step Down as SBA CEO in ‘23 Succeeded by Brendan Cavanagh
Wednesday, February 22, 2023
Commerce Department Report Critical of FirstNet Reinvestments
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Tuesday, February 21, 2023
Rosenworcel Assures Senators Next Version of Broadband Maps Will Improve
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Monday, February 20, 2023
UScellular Towers a Bright Spot Amid Flat Wireless Performance
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Friday, February 17, 2023
FCC Helps Domestic Abuse Survivors Gain Safe, Affordable Connectivity
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Thursday, February 16, 2023
Rip & Replace Funding Shortfall Gets Notice in Senate and House
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Wednesday, February 15, 2023
Data Center Growth Outlook is Cloudy
Demand for data center space continues to reach new heights as digital services pervade daily consumer and business activities. Data center leasing surged in 2022 to 2,250 megawatts (MW) of power in North America, following a previous high point of 950 MW in 2021, according to datacenterHawk. Now, the data center sector may face headwinds in trying to keep pace with demand for power and land in 2023, amid longer delivery timelines and shortages in key markets, Data Center Frontier posted in a recent blog.
Throughout 2022, hyperscale operators aggressively locked down capacity for long-term cloud services growth even as data center capacity construction is slowed by supply chain disruptions. Nonetheless, demand remains strong with hyperscale single leases averaging over 70 MW, and more data center lease transactions across a broader base of customers from enterprise to financial, gaming, and tech companies. Continue Reading
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