News Update - September 2022
Federal & State Agencies May Now Apply For Read-Only Access To Reports Filed In The FCC’s Network Outage Reporting System & Disaster Information Reporting System
September 30, 2022 – The FCC’s Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau has announced that Federal, state, Tribal nation, territorial, and District of Columbia agencies may begin applying for read-only access to the reports filed in the FCC’s Network Outage Reporting System (NORS) and Disaster Information Reporting System (DIRS). Access to NORS and DIRS outage and network status information is expected to improve Federal and state agencies’ ability to respond to outages and save lives. To apply for access, an agency must email NORS_DIRS_Information_Sharing@fcc.gov with the following: (1) a signed statement from an agency official, on the agency’s official letterhead, including the official’s full contact information and formally requesting access to NORS and DIRS filings; (2) a description of why the agency has a need to access NORS and DIRS filings and how it intends to use the information in practice; (3) if applicable, a request to exceed the proposed presumptive limits on the number of individuals (i.e., user accounts) permitted to access NORS and DIRS filings with an explanation of why this is necessary; (4) a completed copy of a Participating Agency Certification Form; and (5) a demonstration of the agency’s “need to know” by citing to statutes or other regulatory authority that establishes it has official duties making it directly responsible for emergency management and first responder support functions. Additional information, forms related to the information sharing framework, user guides, FAQs, and links to the Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau’s previously-recorded stakeholder workshop are available on the Outage Information Sharing webpage.
NTIA Requests Public Comment On Waiver Of Buy America Provisions For Middle Mile Grant Program
September 30, 2022 – The National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) is seeking public comment on a proposed limited applicability nonavailability waiver that would provide recipients of grants under NTIA’s Middle Mile Grant Program a limited exemption from application of the Infrastructure Act’s “Buy America” provisions as applied to limited classes of manufactured products and construction materials. Comments on NTIA’s proposed waiver are due on or before October 3, 2022, at 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time.
The Build America, Buy America Act, which is part of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, requires Federal agencies to ensure that “none of the funds made available for a Federal financial assistance program for infrastructure, including each deficient program, may be obligated for a project unless all of the iron, steel, manufactured products, and construction materials used in the project are produced in the United States.” The Infrastructure Act provides for exceptions to or waiver of Buy American provisions under certain conditions.
In the notice for public comment, NTIA explains that the proposed waiver will: (1) promote broad participation in the Middle Mile Grant Program, (2) ensure that non-Federal entities and for-profit entities are able to compete for program funding on equal footing (especially in light of the very short application timeframe for the program), (3) ensure that program awardees will have access to the manufactured products and construction materials necessary to fulfill their obligations under the Middle Mile Grant Program, (4) allow funding recipients to continue to provide economic opportunity through innovation and timely deployment of broadband infrastructure, which is recognized to expand job opportunities, and (5) support the timely development of critical domestic public infrastructure.
If NTIA ultimately grants the proposed waiver, it will be effective for all Middle Mile Grant Program awards awarded from March 1, 2023, until March 1, 2024. Grant recipients to whom the proposed waiver would apply would be required to report on their purchases of items from foreign sources. NTIA also would review the waiver within six months of the date on which it is issued to assess whether it remains necessary to the fulfillment of the Commerce Department’s missions and goals and consistent with applicable legal authorities, such as the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, Executive Order 14005, and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Memorandum M-22-11.
FCC Add Companies To List Of Communications Equipment And Services That Pose National Security Risk: Pacific Networks Corp., ComNet (USA) LLC, & China Unicom (Americas) Operations Limited
September 20, 2022 – The FCC’s Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau has announced it has added two companies to the list of communications equipment and services (Covered List) that have been determined to pose an unacceptable risk to the national security of the United States or the security and safety of U.S. persons. The two companies both provide international telecommunications services:
Pacific Networks Corp. and its wholly-owned subsidiary ComNet (USA) LLC
China Unicom (Americas) Operations Limited.
Under the Secure and Trusted Communications Networks Act, the FCC must publish and maintain a list of covered communications equipment and services. Each entity identified on the list should be read to include their subsidiaries and affiliates. The initial list containing five companies was released in March 2021, and three more companies were added in March 2022. The addition of Pacific Networks Corp. and its wholly-owned subsidiary ComNet (USA) LLC, and China Unicom (Americas) Operations Limited brings the total to ten. The updated Covered List is included as an Appendix to the Public Notice, and is available on the Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau’s supply chain website.
NTIA Updates Federal Broadband Funding Resource Website
September 19, 2022 – The U.S. Department of Commerce’s National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) has released an update to its Federal Funding website, which serves as a comprehensive resource for applicants seeking federal funding for the deployment of broadband infrastructure. The Federal Funding site includes information on more than 80 federal broadband funding programs across 14 federal agencies, including the three broadband funding programs authorized by the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021: Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) Program ($42.5 billion); Enabling Middle Mile Broadband Infrastructure Program ($1 billion); and, State Digital Equity Act programs ($1.5 billion). Visitors to the Federal Funding site can access information using several resources including a PDF guide, an Interactive Guide, and a spreadsheet database.
FCC Releases Broadband Data Collection Specifications For Bulk Fixed Availability Challenge And Crowdsource Data
September 15, 2022 – The FCC’s Broadband Data Task Force has released the Data Specifications for Bulk Fixed Availability Challenge and Crowdsource Data, which provides guidance as to the requirements for filing bulk challenges, as well as bulk crowdsource information, to the fixed broadband availability data that will be published on the FCC’s new Broadband Data Collection (BDC) broadband availability maps. After the FCC’s BDC broadband maps are published, individuals and entities, including consumers, state, local, and Tribal governmental entities, and service providers, will be able to submit individual and bulk challenges (challenges to the fixed broadband availability data with respect to multiple locations) to the BDC fixed availability data. Entities such as state, local and Tribal governments may also submit bulk crowdsource data in the BDC system. Bulk challenges and bulk crowdsource data filings must be consistent with the specifications set forth in the Data Specifications for Bulk Fixed Availability Challenge and Crowdsource Data. Crowdsource data differs from challenge data in several ways, and there are different filing specifications for each.
FCC Releases Further Information On Broadband Data Collection Mobile Speed Challenges & Crowdsource Data Submissions
September 15, 2022 – The FCC’s Broadband Data Task Force has released a Public Notice which “establishes procedures for mobile wireless broadband service providers, governmental entities, and other third parties that use their own hardware and software to submit on-the-ground speed test data as part of the mobile challenge and verification processes as part of the Broadband Data Collection (BDC).” In addition to detailing the availability of fixed internet service, the FCC’s BDC will produce a map showing the availability of mobile broadband in the U.S. Information on mobile broadband availability submitted by providers will be subject to a challenge process and crowdsource data. Entities submitting mobile challenges may use (1) an FCC-approved speed test application to collect speed test data or (2) their own hardware and software to collect speed test data so long as it includes a defined set of metrics. Likewise, to respond to challenges, mobile wireless broadband providers may use (1) an FCC-approved speed test application, or (2) their own hardware and software to collect on-the-ground test data. Procedures for the preparation and formatting of mobile speed test data for submission into the BDC system are set forth in the Data Specifications for Mobile Speed Test Data guide. The Broadband Data Task Force’s Public Notice provides, among other things, the following key details on the use of hardware and software in the challenge and crowdsource processes:
In describing their data collection methodology, entities submitting mobile challenges and mobile providers responding to challenges must provide a narrative overview of the overall testing solution, including a description of the test procedures and whether the testing was app based, software-based, or hardware-based; the type of software and hardware used for the testing; and, if available, a URL link to the software and hardware products used.
Such parties must also indicate whether the testing software affects the natural behavior of a tested device, such as by locking the device to a particular radio access technology or spectrum band. In addition, parties must include information about the devices used in the testing, including supported radio access technologies, data service plan, and whether the devices have internal or external antennas (and the height of the external antennas and antenna gain, if applicable). Parties must also include information about the duration of speed tests and speed test servers, including server type (e.g., iperf, ookla) and main configurations between server and client (e.g., SCTP/UDP/TCP), the geographic location(s) of the server(s), the estimated number of servers, and provisioned bandwidth capacity of test servers. Parties must submit the description of their data collection methodology into the BDC system when they submit their on-the-ground speed test data.
Governmental and other third-party challengers choosing to use their own hardware and software must also submit a complete description of the methodology used to collect their data and substantiate it through the certification of a qualified engineer or official.
If a mobile broadband provider uses its own hardware and software, it must incorporate the test methodology and collect the metrics that OET-approved apps must gather for consumer challenges and that governmental and third-party challenger speed test data must contain.
Mobile broadband providers who choose to use their own hardware and software to respond to challenges must submit a complete description of the methodologies used to collect their data and substantiate their data through the certification of a qualified engineer or official.
Los Angeles Unified School District Asks FCC To Add Cybersecurity Costs To E-Rate Program
September 14, 2022 – The Los Angeles Unified School District has asked the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to “immediately authorize the ongoing, permanent use of existing E-Rate Program funds to bolster and maintain IT security infrastructure.” The L.A. Unified School District experienced a ransomware attack in September 2022. The organization notes in its letter that it “previously joined the Council of Great City Schools and other national organizations in urging the FCC to update the E-Rate program by including cybersecurity costs under the E-Rate Eligible Services List (ESL) to help school districts prepare for the increase in cyberattacks and enable school districts to strengthen their security needs.” The L.A. Unified School District claims that it and other school districts nationwide are using “funding meant to be used for meeting the instructional and socio-emotional needs of our students” to defend against cyberattacks, and argues that “supporting cybersecurity tools through the E-Rate program is…appropriate under the FCC’s existing goals for Universal Service.”
Fourth Quarter 2022 USF Contribution Factor: 28.9 Percent
September 13, 2022 – The Federal Communications Commission’s Office of Managing Director has announced that the proposed universal service fund (USF) contribution factor for the fourth quarter of 2022 will be will be 28.9 percent. This is an increase of 4.1 from the 33 percent contribution factor that was used for the third quarter of 2022.
For the fourth quarter of 2022, the Universal Service Administrative Company (USAC) projects $8.624083 billion in total interstate and international end-user telecommunications revenues will be collected. (The 3Q 2022 total was $8.285056 billion; the 2Q 2022 total was $8.751403 billion, and the 1Q 2022 total was $9.235846 billion.)
USAC estimates that $1.914030 billion is needed to cover the total demand and expenses for all Federal universal service support mechanisms (revenue requirement) in the fourth quarter of 2022. (The 3Q 2022 demand was $2.036310 billion; the 2Q 2022 demand was $1.664020 billion; and the 1Q 2022 demand was $1.84091 billion.)
Total fourth quarter 2022 demand includes projected program support, administrative expenses, and true-ups and adjustments, which breaks out among the USF support mechanisms as follows:
E-Rate Schools & Libraries: $609.07 million
Rural Health Care: $0.11 million
High-Cost: $1.08506 billion
Lifeline: $211.43 million
Connected Care: $8.36 million
If the FCC takes no action on the proposed USF contribution factor within 14 days, it will be declared approved. Historical information on quarterly universal service fund contribution factors is available online from the FCC.
Rural Digital Opportunity Fund: FCC Authorizes RDOF Support For 49 Winning Bids (13th RDOF Authorization)
September 13, 2022 – The FCC’s Wireline Competition Bureau has authorized Rural Digital Opportunity Fund (RDOF) Phase I auction support for 49 winning bids. This is the thirteenth Public Notice authorizing RDOF support. Attachment A to the Bureau’s Public Notice contains a list of the authorized winning bids, which belong to two entities: Cyber Broadband Inc (Alabama) and E Fiber San Juan, LLC (Utah).
The authorizations were granted after the Bureau reviewed long-form application information for each authorized winning bidder, including letters of credit and Bankruptcy Code opinion letters, and concluded the submissions were acceptable. Consequently, the Bureau has directed and authorized the Universal Service Administrative Company to obligate and disburse Universal Service Fund support to each winning bidder. Support will be disbursed in 120 monthly payments, beginning at the end of September 2022. The first service obligation that must be met by the RDOF support recipients authorized by the Public Notice is the deployment of broadband service to 40% of locations in a state by December 31, 2025. The broadband service must meet the standards for which support was received (i.e., speed levels and latency). After that, these RDOF support recipients must achieve the following broadband service deployment obligations: 60% of locations in a state by December 31, 2026; 80% of locations in a state by December 31, 2027; and 100% of locations in a state by December 31, 2028.
Starlink Files Application For Review Of FCC Decision Denying Long-Form Application For RDOF Support
September 9, 2022 – Starlink Services, LLC has filed an Application for Review of the Wireline Competition Bureau’s decision denying SpaceX’s long-form application to obtain support for its winning bids in the Rural Digital Opportunity Fund (RDOF) Phase I auction. Starlink, through its parent SpaceX, initially won $885,509,638.40 in 10-year RDOF support to serve 642,925 locations in 35 states. Following extensive review of Starlink’s long-form application, the Wireline Competition Bureau, in an August 10, 2022 Public Notice, concluded Starlink failed to demonstrate that it is reasonably capable of complying with the FCC’s requirements.
In its Application for Review, Starlink argues the Wireline Competition Bureau decision “is flawed as a matter of both law and policy.” First, Starlink claims the decision “fails legally because it contradicts the record—including SpaceX’s and Starlink’s proven capabilities—it contradicts the Commission’s stated rules for the program, and it rests on unsupported conjecture and outside-the-record information apparently cherry-picked from somewhere on the Internet.” Second, Starlink claims the decision “fails the RDOF’s very purpose: closing the digital divide.” Ultimately, Starlink requests that the Federal Communications Commission: (1) reverse the Wireline Competition Bureau decision by finding that SpaceX is reasonably capable of meeting its performance obligations in its winning bid areas; (2) order the Wireline Competition Bureau to grant SpaceX’s Long Form for those states where it has submitted proof of ETC status; and (3) direct the Wireline Competition Bureau to grant SpaceX’s request for waiver of the deadline to submit evidence of ETC designations in those states where it has yet to receive such designations.
USAC & FCC Remind High-Cost USF Recipients Of Challenge Processes
September 9, 2022 – The Universal Service Administrative Company and the FCC have issued information to remind high-cost universal service fund (USF) support recipients “of the importance of engaging with challenge processes associated with federal funding programs and of timely reporting deployments in USAC’s High Cost Universal Broadband (HUBB) portal.” USAC and the FCC explain that “participation in challenge processes associated with new broadband deployment programs can promote the efficient use of federal funding.” They recommend that high-cost USF recipients submit information on their broadband service deployments “no later than 30 days after service is initially offered to locations in satisfaction of deployment obligations.”
FCC Releases Tentative Agenda For September 29th Open Meeting
September 8, 2022 – Federal Communications Commission Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel has announced the following tentative agenda for the FCC’s next open meeting scheduled for Thursday, September 29, 2022:
Space Innovation: Mitigation of Orbital Debris in the New Space Age – The Commission will consider a Second Report and Order that would adopt rules requiring low-Earth orbit space station operators planning disposal through uncontrolled atmospheric re-entry to complete disposal as soon as practicable, and no more than five years following the end of their mission. The Report and Order would also adopt a grandfathering period of two years and address the potential for waivers for certain types of research and scientific missions. (IB Docket No. 22-271, 18-313)
Calling Services for Incarcerated People – The Commission will consider a Report and Order and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking to improve access to communications for incarcerated people with disabilities and reduce the financial burdens created by certain calling service charges and practices. (WC Docket No. 12-375)
Improving Accessibility and Clarity of Emergency Alerts – The Commission will consider a Report and Order to improve the clarity and accessibility of Emergency Alert System (EAS) visual messages to the public, including persons who are deaf or hard of hearing as well as others who are unable to access the audio message. (PS Docket No. 15-94)
Removing Obsolete Analog TV Rules – The Commission will consider a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking that would amend Part 73 of its rules for television and Class A television broadcast stations to remove obsolete rules for analog TV operations. (MB Docket No. 22-227)
USDA Now Accepting Applications For ReConnect Program Funding
September 6, 2022 – The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has announced it is now accepting applications for ReConnect Program loans and grants to expand access to high-speed internet in rural America. The application window for the ReConnect Program second funding round in fiscal year 2022 runs from September 6, 2022, through 11:59 a.m. EST on November 2, 2022. Applications can be submitted through the RUS online application portal. Applicants can apply for ReConnect Program funding from the following award categories:
100 Percent Loan. Up to $150 million is available for loans. The maximum amount that can be requested in an application is $50 million, and the interest rate is set at a fixed 2%. Awardees must meet a 100 Mbps symmetrical minimum service requirement in all proposed funded service areas.
100 Percent Grant. Applicants must provide a matching contribution equal to at least 25 percent of the cost of the overall project. Up to $150 million is available for grants. The maximum amount of grant funds that can be requested in an application is $25 million. Awardees must meet a 100 Mbps symmetrical minimum service requirement in all proposed funded service areas.
50 Percent Loan and 50 Percent Grant Combination. Up to $150 million is available for loans and up to $150 million is available for grants. The maximum amount that can be requested in an application is $25 million for the loan and $25 million for the grant. Loan and grant amounts will always be equal. Awardees must meet a 100 Mbps symmetrical minimum service requirement in all proposed funded service areas.
100% Grant For Alaska Native Corporations, Tribal Governments, Colonias, Persistent Poverty Areas And Socially Vulnerable Communities. Up to $350 million is available. Awardees must meet a 100 Mbps symmetrical minimum service requirement in all proposed service areas. The maximum award amount is $35M, and no match is required. Applications are evaluated in a competitive process.
100% Grant For Projects Serving Areas Where 90% Of Households Lack Sufficient Access To Broadband. Up to $200 million is available. Awardees must meet a 100 Mbps symmetrical minimum service requirement in all proposed service areas. The maximum award amount is $25M, and no match is required. Applications are evaluated in a competitive process.
Voltage Pictures Commences DMCA Copyright Infringement Lawsuit Against AT&T
September 5, 2022 – Voltage Pictures, LLC and its affiliates have filed a copyright infringement lawsuit against internet service provider AT&T in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District Of Texas. Voltage Pictures alleges AT&T “has knowingly allowed [its] users to engage in online piracy, the illegal distribution and downloading of copyrighted materials, including films.” Voltage claims it notified AT&T of this piracy to no avail:
AT&T knows that it is facilitating mass online piracy. Copyright owners have repeatedly told AT&T that its services are used for piracy. Voltage and its affiliates—the producers and copyright owners of movies like Dallas Buyers Club and I Feel Pretty—have sent AT&T more than one hundred thousand infringement notices. In the last few years alone, AT&T users have pirated Voltage’s movies over six hundred thousand times.
Voltage claims AT&T is not eligible for the Digital Millennium Copyright Act’s safe harbor protections because during the time in which the alleged infringements occurred, “AT&T had neither adopted nor reasonably implemented a policy that provides for the termination of repeat infringers in appropriate circumstances.” Voltage provides this allegation:
For example, AT&T failed to terminate the account of its subscriber at IP address 104.5.19.25 even after AT&T received multiple notices of copyright infringement at this address. AT&T received at least 1000 notices of copyright infringement for this IP address. Each notice accounted for at least one instance of infringement.
The complaint contains four causes of action: contributory copyright infringement; vicarious copyright infringement; contributory violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act; and vicarious violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. Voltage is seeking actual and statutory damages. Additionally, Voltage wants the court to order AT&T “to block users from accessing notorious piracy websites of foreign origin including those listed in the annual trade report of Notorious Foreign Markets published by the United States Government such as (a) YTS; (b) Piratebay; (c) Rarbg; and (d) 1337x on networks under its control to prevent further [piracy].”
USAC Files 4th Quarter 2022 USF Contribution Base Data: $8,624,083,282
September 1, 2022 – The Universal Service Administrative Company (USAC) has filed projected universal service fund (USF) contribution base data which will be used to determine the USF contribution factor for the fourth quarter of calendar year 2022. The contribution base data was calculated using projected revenue amounts for October through December 2022 reported by telecommunications service providers on their FCC Forms 499-Q which were filed August 1, 2022.
USAC has determined that the total projected collected interstate and international end-user telecommunications revenue base for the fourth quarter of 2022 is $8,624,083,282. This is a slight increase in the USF base from the third quarter of 2022 ($8.285 billion). To provide a historical comparison, total USF contribution base amounts for the past 11 quarters were as follows:
Third Quarter 2022 – $8,285,056,307
Second Quarter 2022 – $8,751,403,396
First Quarter 2022 – $9,235,845,776
Fourth Quarter 2021 – $9,517,295,012
Third Quarter 2021 – $9,665,944,070
Second Quarter 2021 – $9,905,669,690
First Quarter 2021 – $10,068,712,553
Fourth Quarter 2020 – $10,428,377,862
Third Quarter 2020 – $10,219,123,520
Second Quarter 2020 – $10,865,131,593
First Quarter 2020 – $11,129,976,956
For the fourth quarter of 2022, USAC received revenue data from 3,188 USF contributors who filed the August 2022 Form 499-Q. USAC estimated revenue data for 181 non-de minimis service providers that had previously submitted Form 499-Q information to USAC, but failed to file in August. After the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approves the total USF contribution base, the quarterly funding requirements for USF support mechanisms, and projected USF administrative costs, the FCC will establish a USF contribution factor for the fourth quarter of 2022. The new contribution factor will be announced by an FCC Public Notice. USAC will then bill USF contributors on a monthly basis for their individual obligations based on the approved contribution factor.
FCC Announces Start Of Bulk Challenges To Broadband Serviceable Location Fabric
September 1, 2022 – The FCC’s Broadband Data Task Force has announced that as of September 12, 2022, state, local, and Tribal governments, service providers, and other entities can begin to file bulk challenges to data in the Broadband Serviceable Location Fabric (Fabric). The Fabric is the underlying foundation of the FCC’s new Broadband Data Collection (BDC) fixed broadband availability maps. In the announcement, the Broadband Data Task Force urges Fabric challenges participants to first become familiar with the details of the Fabric as well as the challenge parameters outlined earlier by the FCC:
We remind governments, service providers, and other entities and organizations planning to submit challenges that the Fabric is intended to identify BSLs as defined by the Commission, which will not necessarily include all structures at a particular location or parcel. We therefore urge potential challengers to familiarize themselves with the Commission’s definition of BSLs and the additional guidance provided in the Bulk Fabric Challenge Specs Public Notice where we describe some of the characteristics of BSLs so that challengers will be able to align their data with the Fabric location data to determine where BSLs may be missing or mischaracterized. We also reiterate that bulk Fabric challenges must conform to the specifications set forth in the Data Specifications for Bulk Fabric Challenge Data. The challenge data must include, among other things, the name and contact information of the submitting entity, the Fabric location subject to challenge, the category of the challenge for each location, and evidence supporting the challenge. Each bulk Fabric challenge data file must include records for each location being challenged in a Comma Separated Value (CSV) format, all fields must be included in the file upload, and all values must conform to the descriptions, codes, or formats identified for each field in the Data Specifications for Bulk Fabric Challenge Data. Bulk Fabric challengers also must certify that the information they submit is true and correct (to the best of their actual knowledge, information, and belief) for each location that is part of the bulk challenge.
The Broadband Data Task Force also has announced it will host a webinar on September 7, 2022, at 2 p.m. EDT, to assist those who intend to submit bulk challenges, or proposed corrections, to the location data in the Fabric. The webinar will provide an overview of Fabric challenges and a walkthrough of the BDC system’s bulk Fabric challenge submission process. It will stream on www.fcc.gov/live and the FCC YouTube page at www.youtube.com/FCC.
FCC Announces Results Of Auction 108 – 2.5 GHz Band Licenses
September 1, 2022 – The FCC’s Wireless Telecommunications Bureau has announced the results of Auction 108, the auction of new flexible-use geographic overlay spectrum licenses in the 2.5 GHz band. Bidding concluded on August 29, 2022, with a total of $419,133,261 in net bids and $427,789,670 in gross bids. A total of 63 bidders won 7,872 of the 8,017 offered licenses, or 98% of the total inventory. Of the 63 winning bidders, 77% qualified as small businesses or as entities serving rural communities. Winning bidders must submit down payments by 6:00 p.m. ET on September 16, 2022. The five bidders winning the largest number of licenses are as follows:
T-Mobile License LLC – 7,156
North American Catholic Educational Programming Foundation – 107
Evergy Kansas Central – 54
LICT Wireless Broadband Company, LLC – 46
Broadband One of the Midwest, Inc. – 42