A
big bird, like a raptor, can knock out a tower climber. Threats to
climbers from nesting birds vary by body size and demeanor, according to
Dr. Marco Restani, Senior Raptor Specialist with Cell Tower Osprey
Management. “It’s unnerving to have a big bird attacking you on a
tower,” said Restani. He shared safety tips and suggestions for what to
do when a raptor has built a big nest on a tower that needs work during a
NATE webinar Thursday titled “Climbing in The Bird-Tower Environment.”
“Birds want to build nests someplace that’s safe, near food and
protected from the elements. Basically,” they see towers as “tall
trees,” said Restani. Migratory birds are protected by federal law. The
Migratory Bird Treaty Act carries a fine of up to $15,000 per count and
six months in prison for killing or capturing these birds, including
hawks, ospreys, eagles and owls. The Bald and Golden Eagle Protection
Act is even more stringent, carrying penalties up to $200,000 and up to
two years in prison for disturbing the birds, their eggs or nests. Continue Reading
Friday, March 29, 2019
Thursday, March 28, 2019
Verizon Appeals Complaints About Its ‘First to 5G’ Ads
The
drama over the advertising industry’s first 5G case continues over an
issue that has repercussions in how the industry presents
next-generation services to consumers. The National Advertising Division
(NAD), an investigative unit managed by the Council of Better Business
Bureaus, asked Verizon to stop claiming it has the country’s first 5G
network. Verizon is appealing the decision and claims its commercials
are not misleading, reports arstechnica.
The NAD announced its recommendation to the carrier last week, Inside Towers reported. AT&T lodged a complaint, prompting the investigation. AT&T claimed Verizon was misleading customers by renaming parts of its 4G network as “5GE.”
The NAD recommended Verizon change or stop the ads to avoid conveying the message it has a 5G mobile network now. Verizon plans to launch in April in certain markets. Continue Reading
The NAD announced its recommendation to the carrier last week, Inside Towers reported. AT&T lodged a complaint, prompting the investigation. AT&T claimed Verizon was misleading customers by renaming parts of its 4G network as “5GE.”
The NAD recommended Verizon change or stop the ads to avoid conveying the message it has a 5G mobile network now. Verizon plans to launch in April in certain markets. Continue Reading
Wednesday, March 27, 2019
“NIMSYs”: Parents Say “Not In My School Yard” to T-Mobile
UPDATE Citing
recent activity by parents in Ripon, CA who got a tower removed from
school property due to cancer concerns, parents at the Montessori del
Mundo charter school in Aurora, CO are requesting radiation tests from
T-Mobile, according to the Aurora Sentinel.
Like their California counterparts, they’re concerned that cell phone
antennas on the school’s roof could cause cancer or pose other health
risks to their children and other students despite reassurances of
safety.
Alondra Flores, whose son is a kindergartner said, “I don’t know if that is going to mess with brain cells. I didn’t know enough about it to know if there even is a risk.” Continue Reading
Alondra Flores, whose son is a kindergartner said, “I don’t know if that is going to mess with brain cells. I didn’t know enough about it to know if there even is a risk.” Continue Reading
Friday, March 22, 2019
USTelecom, Others Unveil Broadband Map Improvement Project
Left to right: USTelecom President/CEO Jonathan Spalter and FCC Chairman Ajit Pai
The FCC’s broadband coverage maps have long been maligned by the agency’s own Commissioners, Congress, and others for being inaccurate, and not a reliable indicator of where broadband has been deployed and where connectivity is non-existent. But carriers and the government need to rely on the maps to direct federal broadband funding.
That’s why USTelecom, The Broadband Association, ITTA, The Voice of America’s Broadband Providers, the Wireless Internet Service Providers Association, and several broadband companies and associations unveiled on Thursday, the creation of a new initiative to better map broadband deployment nationwide and help close the digital divide.
USTelecom President/CEO Jonathan Spalter called the project at yesterday’s announcement in Washington, D.C., “simple, common sense. If our aim is to leave no American behind, we must be capable of pinpointing” where broadband is available and where it is not. Continue Reading
Wednesday, March 20, 2019
Tennessee Governor Proffers $14.8 Million in Broadband Grants
Tennessee
Governor Bill Lee Tuesday revealed $14.8 million in broadband
accessibility grants that will expand broadband service to more than
8,300 households and businesses in 17 counties.
“I am pleased to announce that we are getting our rural areas up to speed and expanding broadband in the areas that need it most,” said Lee. “I am committed to ensuring connectivity in every corner of our state as broadband impacts our goals for health care, education, economic development and beyond.”
According to the FCC’s 2018 Broadband Deployment Report, nearly one in four rural Tennesseans lack access to broadband. In addition to the $20 million included in Gov. Lee’s recommended budget for fiscal year 2020, these grants will continue to close the access gap, ensuring rural residents have the tools needed for growth and prosperity. Continue Reading
“I am pleased to announce that we are getting our rural areas up to speed and expanding broadband in the areas that need it most,” said Lee. “I am committed to ensuring connectivity in every corner of our state as broadband impacts our goals for health care, education, economic development and beyond.”
According to the FCC’s 2018 Broadband Deployment Report, nearly one in four rural Tennesseans lack access to broadband. In addition to the $20 million included in Gov. Lee’s recommended budget for fiscal year 2020, these grants will continue to close the access gap, ensuring rural residents have the tools needed for growth and prosperity. Continue Reading
Tuesday, March 19, 2019
Winter Racks Up Repack Delays
Experts say the TV channel repack is
getting more complicated as winter drags on and delays are inevitable,
coming into spring and summer.
Phase 1 ended in late November with 143 stations moving without much delay, Inside Towers reported. However winter weather has caused headaches for tower crews and delays in Phase 2, with about 114 station moves due to be completed by April 12, reports TVNewsCheck.
In addition, many of the stations in the middle phases have interference dependencies, meaning if a station in Phase 3 moves late, that delays a move for another station in Phase 4. By contrast, there were no interference dependencies in Phase 1. Stations facing delays were simply moved to a later phase, said Dennis Wallace, Managing Partner of RF consulting firm Meintel, Sgrignoli & Wallace, LLC.
“You had a year and a half to move 150 stations,” says Wallace. “Now you’re going to move 150 every 30 to 60 days, which I think is pretty unrealistic. I think the wheels come off the wagon here in Phases 3 and 4,” he tells TVNewsCheck.
Some delays may be solved by the FCC granting certain stations STAs to operate at lower power, according to Wallace, “But at some point, they reach a scenario where a station can’t transition, and operating with an interim facility is not an option.”
Vendors prepared for the spike in equipment demand, but winter weather and the tower crew shortage, limits how much work gets accomplished. Jampro Antenna President Alex Perchevitch said, “People are looking around for crews, and when they’ve found them, the weather has not been very accommodating.” Continue Reading
Phase 1 ended in late November with 143 stations moving without much delay, Inside Towers reported. However winter weather has caused headaches for tower crews and delays in Phase 2, with about 114 station moves due to be completed by April 12, reports TVNewsCheck.
In addition, many of the stations in the middle phases have interference dependencies, meaning if a station in Phase 3 moves late, that delays a move for another station in Phase 4. By contrast, there were no interference dependencies in Phase 1. Stations facing delays were simply moved to a later phase, said Dennis Wallace, Managing Partner of RF consulting firm Meintel, Sgrignoli & Wallace, LLC.
“You had a year and a half to move 150 stations,” says Wallace. “Now you’re going to move 150 every 30 to 60 days, which I think is pretty unrealistic. I think the wheels come off the wagon here in Phases 3 and 4,” he tells TVNewsCheck.
Some delays may be solved by the FCC granting certain stations STAs to operate at lower power, according to Wallace, “But at some point, they reach a scenario where a station can’t transition, and operating with an interim facility is not an option.”
Vendors prepared for the spike in equipment demand, but winter weather and the tower crew shortage, limits how much work gets accomplished. Jampro Antenna President Alex Perchevitch said, “People are looking around for crews, and when they’ve found them, the weather has not been very accommodating.” Continue Reading
Monday, March 18, 2019
FCC Gets ‘Vertical’ With 911 Location Data
More than 80 percent of 911 calls
today are made from wireless phones. The FCC has been modernizing its
911 location accuracy rules, and Friday proposed updating them to make
it easier to locate callers in multi-story buildings. The proposal would
help 911 call centers identify the floor level where the call
originated.
The debate grew spirited at times, and vote split along party lines.
A landline automatically sends data containing the caller’s address to 911. Callers expect the same kind of accuracy when they use a cell phone to call 911. The FCC’s Enhanced 911 location accuracy rules, require wireless providers to meet an increasingly stringent series of location accuracy benchmarks, including providing the caller’s “dispatchable” location (such as the street address and apartment number), or a vertical location on a phased-in basis, beginning in April 2121.
On Friday, the Commission proposed a vertical (or “z-axis”) location accuracy metric of plus or minus three meters above or below the phone for 80 percent of indoor wireless 911 calls. Continue Reading
The debate grew spirited at times, and vote split along party lines.
A landline automatically sends data containing the caller’s address to 911. Callers expect the same kind of accuracy when they use a cell phone to call 911. The FCC’s Enhanced 911 location accuracy rules, require wireless providers to meet an increasingly stringent series of location accuracy benchmarks, including providing the caller’s “dispatchable” location (such as the street address and apartment number), or a vertical location on a phased-in basis, beginning in April 2121.
On Friday, the Commission proposed a vertical (or “z-axis”) location accuracy metric of plus or minus three meters above or below the phone for 80 percent of indoor wireless 911 calls. Continue Reading
Friday, March 15, 2019
Inside Towers’ Podcast: “Tower Talks” is Underway
Inside Towers will be entering the world of podcasting, with an ongoing series of talks and “Fryerside Chats,” featuring guests from across the industry. Inside Towers Managing Editor, Jim Fryer, hosts the program slated to run, initially, twice per month. Tower Talks’ first guest is Todd Schlekeway, Executive Director of NATE. Schlekeway discusses the recent NATE conference and the upcoming ‘D.C. Fly-In’ held for NATE members, looking to connect with their political representatives.
Fryer also shares the ethernet with Inside Towers Washington Bureau Chief, Leslie Stimson, who provides insights on what is happening “inside the Beltway” with both the FCC and Congress.
Continue Reading
Thursday, March 14, 2019
Parents Want Tower Removed Citing Cancer in Students and Teachers
The Ripon Unified School District
(RUSD) is working with Sprint to move a tower near Weston Elementary
after four students and three teachers were diagnosed with cancer and
parents voiced their concerns, reported the Modesto Bee. Some
parents pulled their children from the school, and approximately 200
parents attended a recent Ripon school board meeting to demand action.
In a prepared statement, board president Kit Oase said tests done on the tower found it was operating normally within safety standards. Additionally, Oase noted that RUSD receives a negligible amount of revenue from providing campus space for the tower.
Richard Rex, whose family lives across the street from Weston School, said a bump appeared on his 11-year-old son’s abdomen a month ago and was found to wrap around his liver. He said his son’s classroom is near the tower.
According to Oase, the school district sympathized with the families, but the district has no out clause in the 25-year lease agreement with Sprint. The district and Sprint will have to mutually agree to a relocation of the tower, reported the Bee. Continue Reading
In a prepared statement, board president Kit Oase said tests done on the tower found it was operating normally within safety standards. Additionally, Oase noted that RUSD receives a negligible amount of revenue from providing campus space for the tower.
Richard Rex, whose family lives across the street from Weston School, said a bump appeared on his 11-year-old son’s abdomen a month ago and was found to wrap around his liver. He said his son’s classroom is near the tower.
According to Oase, the school district sympathized with the families, but the district has no out clause in the 25-year lease agreement with Sprint. The district and Sprint will have to mutually agree to a relocation of the tower, reported the Bee. Continue Reading
Wednesday, March 13, 2019
Lawmakers Hear Sharply Different Views of Merger Outcome
In a nearly two and a half-hour
hearing Tuesday that turned contentious several times, lawmakers on a
House Judiciary Committee subcommittee tried to parse whether the
proposed merger of T-Mobile and Sprint is in the public interest.
Rep. David Cicilline (D-RI), Chairman of the Subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial and Administrative Law, said from the outset he’s, “deeply skeptical” that consolidation fosters more competition. Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner (R-WI), said he hasn’t made up his mind, but doesn’t think “antitrust questions should be partisan.”
Full Judiciary Committee Chair, Jerry Nadler (D-NY), said, “We must determine if a combined company would have less incentive to innovate and compete with competitors” in an already “highly concentrated” market.
The resulting three large carriers would each have a third of the market, he added.
T-Mobile CEO John Legere, who would lead the “New T-Mobile” post-merger, said the result would be more jobs, and “the new company would ensure America would win” the race to 5G, everywhere, including rural areas. He also said the new entity would offer in-home broadband, “freeing millions from the stranglehold of big cable.” Continue Reading
Rep. David Cicilline (D-RI), Chairman of the Subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial and Administrative Law, said from the outset he’s, “deeply skeptical” that consolidation fosters more competition. Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner (R-WI), said he hasn’t made up his mind, but doesn’t think “antitrust questions should be partisan.”
Full Judiciary Committee Chair, Jerry Nadler (D-NY), said, “We must determine if a combined company would have less incentive to innovate and compete with competitors” in an already “highly concentrated” market.
The resulting three large carriers would each have a third of the market, he added.
T-Mobile CEO John Legere, who would lead the “New T-Mobile” post-merger, said the result would be more jobs, and “the new company would ensure America would win” the race to 5G, everywhere, including rural areas. He also said the new entity would offer in-home broadband, “freeing millions from the stranglehold of big cable.” Continue Reading
Thursday, March 7, 2019
$4.1 Million Fiber Network Sits In the Dark
In February 2015, Arlington officials
spent $4.1 million to build a 10-mile fiber optic “ConnectArlington”
network, aimed at giving local businesses cheaper access to higher-speed
internet by offering an alternative to the large ISPs; however, since
then, the fiber has gone almost totally unused, reported ARLnow.
Though the county is barred by state law from offering internet service itself, officials envisioned smaller ISPs working with local tech firms to “light” the fiber, providing county businesses with a new option to access the internet at fast speeds. According to a committee of broadband experts, the program design scared off businesses interested in leasing the fiber.
Eight months ago, the committee presented a report recommending an extensive overhaul of the program’s design. County officials say they’re already working to heed some of the committee’s recommendations, but it remains an open question as to how the county will work to address the problems with ConnectArlington. The network costs hundreds of thousands of dollars per year to maintain, reported ARLnow.
“They have this huge amount of fiber in the ground, and not a single strand of it has been leased,” said Chris Rozycki, a member of the Broadband Advisory Committee that studied ConnectArlington. “It’s like they’ve built an interstate, with no on-ramps or off-ramps.” Continue Reading
Though the county is barred by state law from offering internet service itself, officials envisioned smaller ISPs working with local tech firms to “light” the fiber, providing county businesses with a new option to access the internet at fast speeds. According to a committee of broadband experts, the program design scared off businesses interested in leasing the fiber.
Eight months ago, the committee presented a report recommending an extensive overhaul of the program’s design. County officials say they’re already working to heed some of the committee’s recommendations, but it remains an open question as to how the county will work to address the problems with ConnectArlington. The network costs hundreds of thousands of dollars per year to maintain, reported ARLnow.
“They have this huge amount of fiber in the ground, and not a single strand of it has been leased,” said Chris Rozycki, a member of the Broadband Advisory Committee that studied ConnectArlington. “It’s like they’ve built an interstate, with no on-ramps or off-ramps.” Continue Reading
Wednesday, March 6, 2019
WV Hopes Facebook Project Establishes the State as a Fiber Backbone Route
Facebook plans to build a fiber optic
network from Ashburn, VA to Columbus, Ohio to connect two major
internet exchanges. The work is expected to begin this year, and last
between 18 to 24 months.
U.S. Senator Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV) and West Virginia Governor Jim Justice said about 275 miles of the route will be in West Virginia, providing the state with enhanced fiber optic connectivity.
As a result of the project, broadband providers will be able to expand middle-mile networks into communities along the route, and it will establish West Virginia as a preferred route for fiber backbone construction, they say in the announcement. Continue reading
U.S. Senator Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV) and West Virginia Governor Jim Justice said about 275 miles of the route will be in West Virginia, providing the state with enhanced fiber optic connectivity.
As a result of the project, broadband providers will be able to expand middle-mile networks into communities along the route, and it will establish West Virginia as a preferred route for fiber backbone construction, they say in the announcement. Continue reading
Tuesday, March 5, 2019
Tornado Tears Through Alabama
It was no contest for a 250-foot tower in Smith Station, AL
Sunday night, when a tornado ripped through Lee County, taking down the
latticed structure located along Highway 280. The National Weather
Service said the twister was at least EF-3 in strength with winds of
136-to-165 mph and was a half-mile wide or more.
According to Tower Genius, the site is owned by American Tower Corporation and had three or four carriers. Continue reading
According to Tower Genius, the site is owned by American Tower Corporation and had three or four carriers. Continue reading
Monday, March 4, 2019
Are Security Fears About Huawei Overdone?
Some security experts believe U.S.
claims about the potential danger Chinese telecom Huawei poses to 5G
networks are overblown. Huawei, meanwhile, has gone on the offensive to
repair its image. The security issue relates to the U.S. extradition
case against Huawei’s CFO. Canada is allowing the case to proceed.
Huawei took out a full-page ad in Thursday’s Wall Street Journal that read: “Don’t believe everything you hear. Come and see us.” The ad, an “open letter” from Catherine Chen, a senior vice president and director of Huawei’s board, asks U.S. journalists to visit the company’s campuses, noting the U.S. government has accused the company of espionage, fraud and theft in the past year, and “has developed some misunderstandings about us,” reported CNBC.
Some U.S. security officials have long said Huawei has built “backdoors” into network technology it sells to other countries, to enable it to spy for the Chinese government. Huawei refutes this claim. Continue Reading
Huawei took out a full-page ad in Thursday’s Wall Street Journal that read: “Don’t believe everything you hear. Come and see us.” The ad, an “open letter” from Catherine Chen, a senior vice president and director of Huawei’s board, asks U.S. journalists to visit the company’s campuses, noting the U.S. government has accused the company of espionage, fraud and theft in the past year, and “has developed some misunderstandings about us,” reported CNBC.
Some U.S. security officials have long said Huawei has built “backdoors” into network technology it sells to other countries, to enable it to spy for the Chinese government. Huawei refutes this claim. Continue Reading
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