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June 20, 2008 05:07 PM
Sprint Nextel (NYSE: S) has another 30 days to vacate its spectrum holdings in the 800-MHz band, according to regulatory officials as the company continues to move spectrum used for commercial purposes that can interfere with public safety communication systems.
In an order signed Friday by Derek K. Poarch, chief of the Federal Communications Commission's Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau, the telecommunications firm and wireless provider was given an additional 30 days to be tacked on the original June 26 deadline for vacating the spectrum.
In addition several hundred public safety networks were granted extensions to similar deadlines on their spectrum earlier this week.
The FCC noted that in July of 2004 it approved a plan to reconfigure the 800-MHz band "to address a growing problem of harmful interference." At the time the FCC said the plan was designed to protect the lives and emergency personnel including first responders.
Sprint's effort to comply with the FCC order and vacate the 800-MHz spectrum has bogged down the company for several months and has been a behind-the-scenes financial strain on Sprint, which is the third largest U.S. cell phone service provider behind AT&T and Verizon Wireless.
A Sprint spokesman said the firm was grateful for the deadline waiver. "We remain committed to completing the reconfiguration," spokesman Scott Sloat told the Associated Press. "By granting this waiver the FCC will help promote the reconfiguration process while helping Sprint protect its service to its Nextel customers."
June 20, 2008 05:07 PM
Sprint Nextel (NYSE: S) has another 30 days to vacate its spectrum holdings in the 800-MHz band, according to regulatory officials as the company continues to move spectrum used for commercial purposes that can interfere with public safety communication systems.
In an order signed Friday by Derek K. Poarch, chief of the Federal Communications Commission's Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau, the telecommunications firm and wireless provider was given an additional 30 days to be tacked on the original June 26 deadline for vacating the spectrum.
In addition several hundred public safety networks were granted extensions to similar deadlines on their spectrum earlier this week.
The FCC noted that in July of 2004 it approved a plan to reconfigure the 800-MHz band "to address a growing problem of harmful interference." At the time the FCC said the plan was designed to protect the lives and emergency personnel including first responders.
Sprint's effort to comply with the FCC order and vacate the 800-MHz spectrum has bogged down the company for several months and has been a behind-the-scenes financial strain on Sprint, which is the third largest U.S. cell phone service provider behind AT&T and Verizon Wireless.
A Sprint spokesman said the firm was grateful for the deadline waiver. "We remain committed to completing the reconfiguration," spokesman Scott Sloat told the Associated Press. "By granting this waiver the FCC will help promote the reconfiguration process while helping Sprint protect its service to its Nextel customers."