SB QST @ ARL $ARLB019 ARLB019 FCC extends reply comment deadline in BPL proceeding ZCZC AG19 QST de W1AW ARRL Bulletin 19 ARLB019 From ARRL Headquarters Newington CT May 28, 2004 To all radio amateurs SB QST ARL ARLB019 ARLB019 FCC extends reply comment deadline in BPL proceeding The FCC has extended the deadline to file reply comments (comments on filed comments) in its broadband over power line (BPL) Notice of Proposed Rule Making (NPRM), ET Docket 04-37, to Tuesday, June 22. The FCC acted this week on a request from the National Antenna Consortium and the Amherst Alliance (NAC/Amherst) for a much longer filing deadline extension. The organizations said the June 1 reply comment deadline FCC would not allow stakeholders adequate time to prepare comments that address the full two-part National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) Phase 2 BPL study. The FCC said the NTIA has indicated that it soon will submit comments and a technical appendix that will include key findings of the Phase 2 report, which is due for release later this year. NAC/Amherst had sought to have the FCC postpone the filing comment deadline until either September 1 or two months after the public release of the NTIA's Phase 2 study--whichever was later. The FCC said, however, that the additional three weeks should be ''ample time'' to respond to the anticipated NTIA submission, provided it's filed reasonably close to the anticipated May 28 date. Noting that its Part 15 rules already permit Access BPL systems and that its February BPL NPRM places additional requirements on BPL systems over and above current Part 15 requirements, the FCC asserted that any further delay would diminish the Commission's ability to protect licensed users now occupying the HF spectrum. A further extension, the FCC added, also would ''needlessly increase regulatory uncertainty'' about BPL. The FCC turned down a request that the FCC reissue in substantially greater detail the provisions of its proposed BPL rules concerning interference prevention and mitigation and the enforcement of standards. The FCC does not routinely grant such time extensions, and it denied earlier petitions, including filings from the ARRL and NAC/Amherst, to extend the initial May 3 comment filing deadline. NNNN /EX