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COMMENT submitted by Official Creditors Committee

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2003-03-18

This document pretains to SAT-MOD-20020722-00110 for Modification on a Satellite Space Stations filing.

IBFS_SATMOD2002072200110_718408

                                         Before The
                       FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
                                                                            .—QBIGINAL
                                   Washington, DC 20554                         MAR 1 8 2003

In the Matter of                                 ol
                                                 ile Nos:
GLOBALSTAR, L.P.                                 )         183/184/185/186—SAT—P/LA—97
                                                 )         182—SAT—P/LA—97(64)
                                                 )
For Modification of License for a Mobile         )         IBFS File Nos.
Satellite Service System in the 2 GHz Band       )         SAT—LOA—19970926—00151—154
                                                 )         SAT—LOA—19970926—00156
For Waiver and Modification of                   )         SAT—AMD—20001103—00154
Implementation Milestones for                    )         SAT—MOD—20020717—00116—119
2 GHz MSS System                                 )         SAT—MOD—20020722—00107—110
                                                 )         SAT—MOD—20020722—00112
                                                 )         Call Signs $2320/21/22/23/24

                                                                                    Received
                                                                                    MAR 2 5 2003
                            COMMENTS IN SUPPORT OF
                       EMERGENCY APPLICATION FOR REVIEW                               Policy Branch
                                                                                   International Bureau




                                                     Tom Davidson, Esq.
                                                     Phil Marchesiello, Esq.
                                                     AKIN, GUMP, STRAUSS,
                                                     HAUER & FELD, L.LP.
                                                     1676 International Drive
                                                     Penthouse
                                                     McLean, VA 22102
                                                     (703) 891—7540

                                                     Attorneys for Official Creditors Committee
                                                     of Globalstar, L.P.



Date: March 18, 2003


                                   EXECUTIVE SUMMARY



       The Official Creditors Committee ("Committee") of Globalstar, L.P. ("Globalstar")

respectfully requests the Federal Communications Commission ("Commussion") to reverse the

Memorandum Order and Opinion, DA 03—328 ("MO&O"), issued by the International Bureau

("‘Bureau") on Jan. 30, 2003. In its MO&O, the Bureau impermissibly rejected as inadequate the

satellite construction contract that Globalstar executed in compliance with the first

implementation milestone applicable to its 2 GHz MSS license ("License"). Consequently, the

Bureau determined that Globalstar failed to satisfy its first implementation milestone and that, as

a result, Globalstar‘s License cancelled automatically.


       As more fully set forth herein, the Bureau‘s actions violate Section 706 of the

Administrative P rocedure Act ("APA"), 5 U .S.C. § 706, w hich r equires C ommission actions,

including actions pursuant to delegated authority, to be set aside if they are "arbitrary, capricious,

an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law." Accordingly, the Commission

should reverse the MO&O under Section 1.115 of the Commission‘s rules, 47 C.F.R. §

115(b)(2)(i), because it "conflicts with statute, regulation, case precedent, or established

Commission policy."

       First, the Bureau impermissibly violated Globalstar‘s right to administrative due process

and utilized arbitrary and capricious decision making in violation of Section 706 of the APA by

failing to provide Globalstar with adequate notice of the standard that it would use to adjudicate

Globalstar‘s compliance with its first implementation milestone.             Globalstar satisfied the

implementation milestone by doing exactly what was specified in its License—executing a non—

contingent satellite construction contract. The Bureau, however, applied a novel interpretation of

the implementation milestone by holding that Globalstar‘s contract is required to contain a

satellite construction schedule mirroring Globalstar‘s future milestones.       The Bureau did not

provide Globalstar constitutionally adequate notice of this implementation milestone policy and


thus application of the policy to effectively cancel Globalstar‘s License violated Globalstar‘s

substantive due process rights and was arbitrary and capricious.


        Second, the Bureau failed to provide meaningful consideration of Globalstar‘s request for

a waiver of the standard used to review satellite milestone extension requests set forth in Section

25.117(e) of the Commission‘s rules, 47 C.F.R. § 25.117(e). Rather than considering: (1) the

special circumstances posed by Globalstar‘s bankruptcy; (ii) the fact that Globalstar‘s waiver

request would not have resulted in spectrum warehousing; (iii) and the public interest benefits

that w ould be o btained by Globalstar‘s commencement of2 GHz service, the Bureau simply

rejected Globalstar‘s waiver request without discussion. The courts are clear that the failure of

an administrative agency to provide meaningful consideration of waiver requests constitutes

reversible error.


        Third, the Bureau also impermissibly treated Globalstar differently than Celsat by

affirming Celsat‘s satellite construction contract, while rejecting Globalstar‘s contract.    This

violates the requirement that the Commission treat similarly situated licensees equivalently.

Both Globalstar and Celsat executed construction contracts that call for the deployment of a

single geostationary ("GSO") satellite in compliance with all applicable implementation

milestones.    The Commission should not permit the Bureau to penalize Globalstar for its

ambitious attempt to additionally launch three other GSO satellites and an entire constellation of

nongeostationary satellites.


        Finally, the Bureau effectively revoked Globalstar‘s License without providing

Globalstar with an opportunity to formally respond to the Commission‘s purported grounds for

the revocation, as required by Section 312(c) of the Communications Act , 47 U.S.C. § 312(c).


        For these reasons, the Committee respectfully requests the Commission to grant the

Application for Review of the MO&O filed by Globalstar on March 3, 2003.




                                               —i4i—


                                                          TABLE OF CONTENTS



EXECUTIVE SUMMARY .12202200000erersersrserercee0se0erecer esc eer es es es es cce ece ces se css ce cesc ccecce e ce ce ccecer en en esnc cere i

 R         BACKGROUND) ..,222200000000000000e000s0r08se00erserrer 00e se esce es en ces ce er es es eve se e ce er e se encc en e ce ns ece rec sc cc ccec sere2

IL.        ISSUES PRESENTED FOR REVIEW.....,02000200000000000000000080000 0080 se e 00 se 0s se e se es ereces se scescce0003

III.       THE BUREAU IMPERMISSIBLY FAILED TO GIVE
           GLOBALSTAR ADEQUATE NOTICE OF ITS INTERPRETATION
           OF THE REQUIREMENTS IMPOSED BY GLOBALSTAR‘S
           FIRST IMPLEMENTATION MILESTONE ...2200202202222s2se000e0ses0000ssessesces ces ce cesc esseccce es0e5

IV.        THE BUREAU FAILED TO PROVIDE MEANINGFUL
           CONSIDERATION OF GLOBALSTAR‘S WAIVER REQUEST AS
           REQUIRED BY LAW .....22000000s000eccescrecereverererererersrererces esc rerrerersererecrececsersccerecsccecerscerserers 11

           A.          Globalstar Demonstrated Special Circumstances Justifying its
                       WAIVET REQUESE c0s20000s000scerece0s000e 0e00e se ve se ce es esc en es s cesc en es en en se ces ce ceen cce es cce nc ce ce ce ns ce rese 13

           B.          Globalstar Will Not Warehouse Spectrum and Thus its Waiver
                       Request Does Not Undermine the Primary Objective of the
                       ImMpleMENt@tiONH MHiIESTOMES ....022ssessessesssscssssccsccesesseseecesescsseccess ces se ces cesscc cescce cssccere 14

           C.          Grant of Globalstar‘s Waiver Request Would Better Serve the
                       Public Interest Than Denial of the WAIVEY REQUESE ....000se00sssssrscsersesccessssccccc600e 15

V.         THE BUREAU IMPERMISSIBLY DISCRIMINATED AMONG
           SIMILARLY SITUATED LICENSEES IN ADJUDICATING
           COMPLIANCE WITH ITS 2 GHZ MSS IMPLEMENTATION
           MILESTONES ...10120220s2ssersesccsccsersesceressseresesecereees en cesesce ccee cesc e cesc ces ce cce cce ccececce cce cesc es cesoc eres 16

VIL._     THE COMMISSION IS STATUTORILY BARRED FROM
          CANCELING GLOBALSTAR‘S LICENSE WITHOUT A
          HEARING ..1220020erserercrscersescccseresesccerereeeeeee es esc ce 0scccce es esc ce se cce cces enc cce ce cce cce nc ccece cssc cssc enccceccere 18

VIL        CONCLUSION 222202000000000080000r0rerererererecererererere se ceseecerecerssececcecsere cesseccccsseccc ce cce cssc cssc ccccsccere 19




                                                                            — 111 —


                                    Before The
                       FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
                                     Washington, DC 20554

In the Matter of                                     )
                                                     )      File Nos:
GLOBALSTAR, LP.                                      )      183/184/185/186—SAT—P/LA—97
                                                     )      182—SAT—P/LA—97(64)
                                                     )
For Modification of License for a Mobile             )      IBFS File Nos.
Satellite Service System in the 2 GHz Band           )      SAT—LOA—19970926—00151—1 54
                                                     )      SAT—LOA—19970926—00156
For Waiver and Modification of                       )      SAT—AMD—20001103—00154
Implementation Milestones for                        )      SAT—MOD—20020717—00116—119
2 GHz MSS System                                     )      SAT—MOD—20020722—00107—110
                                                     )      SAT—MOD—20020722—00112
                                                     )      Call Signs $2320/21/22/23/24

To:    The Commission




                            COMMENTS IN SUPPORT OF
                       EMERGENCY APPLICATION FOR REVIEW




       Pursuant to Section 1.115 of the rules of the Federal Communication Commission

("Commission"),‘    the Official Creditors Committee ("Committee") of Globalstar, L.P.

("Globalstar""), hereby supports the application for review ("Application") filed by Globalstar® of

the Memorandum Opinion and Order ("MO&O") adopted by the Commuission‘s International

Bureau ("Bureau") on January 30, 2003 pursuant to delegated authority."          As explained by




       \47 C.F.R. § 1.115.
        See Emergency Application for Review, filed by Globalstar (March 3, 2003).

       ° The Committee has standing to participate in the instant proceeding. The Committee
invested approximately $3 billion of the $4.5 billion expended by Globalstar to deploy its Big
LEO MSS system and obtain its 2 GHz license. As a result, the Committee currently has direct
                                                                                   (continued...)


Globalstar in its Application, the Bureau‘s decision in the MO&O effectively canceling

Globalstar‘s 2 GHz Mobile—Satellite Service ("MSS") license ("License")* is "in conflict with

statute, regulation, case precedent, [and] established Commission policy.‘"


I.     BACKGROUND

       On July 17, 2002, Globalstar certified that it complied with its first 2 GHz

implementation milestone by entering into a non—contingent satellite construction contract




(...continued)
economic connection to, and substantial financial interest in, Globalstar. Moreover, the
Committee will have a substantial equity and voting interest in Globalstar when Globalstar exits
bankruptcy. Consequently, the Comumittee is directly and significantly aggrieved and injured by
the cancellation of Globalstar‘s License because, had the License not been cancelled, the
constituent members of the Committee would have been directly involved in the deployment of
Globalstar‘s 2 GHz MSS system. See Applications of WINY, Inc. and WGUL—FM, Inc.,
Memorandum Opinion and Order, 14 FCC Red 2032, 3 (1998) ("In order to show that it is
‘aggrieved‘ by an action taken pursuant to delegated authority, as required by 47 C.F.R. §
1.115(a), an applicant for review must demonstrate an actual or threatened injury to itself as a
direct result of the challenged action."); Application ofLawrence and Nayereh Wrathall d/b/a
Hanford FM Radio, and Rolando Collantes For Assignment of the Construction Permit of
Station KGEN—FM, Hanford, CA, Memorandum Opinion and Order, 11 FCC Red 8509, [ 4
(1996) (holding that an applicant for review must identify "direct economic or other connection"
between its interests and grant of the challenged applications).

        The Comumittee, however, has not yet had an opportunity to participate directly in the
instant proceeding. Although the Committee participated extensively in the Commission‘s
proceeding to consider granting ancillary terrestrial authority to 2 GHz MSS licensees in IB
Docket No. 01—185, the Committee was not yet organized during public comment periods
associated with the initial issuance of Globalstar‘s License. Also, because the Bureau did not
provide any advance indication that it intended to cancel Globalstar‘s License, neither the
Committee nor Globalstar were aware that Globalstar‘s License was at risk prior to the
cancellation of the License and thus neither party recognized a prior need to intervene before the
Commission.

       * See Application of Globalstar, L.P. for Modification ofLicense for a Mobile—Satellite
Service System in the 2 GHz Band, Memorandum Opinion and Order, 18 FCC Red 1249 (IB
2003).

       ° See 47 C.F.R. § 1.115(b)(2)G).


("Contract‘") with Space Systems/Loral, Inc. ("Loral")."       Contemporaneously, Globalstar

requested‘ the Bureau to: (i) modify the portions of the implementation milestone schedule in

Globalstar‘s License applicable to its non—geostationary ("NGSO") satellite constellation and to

three of the four geostationary ("GSO") satellites that comprise Globalstar‘s 2 GHz MSS system,

and (ii) waive Section 25.117(e) of the Commission‘s rules, which governs requests for

extensions of construction and implementation milestones (collectively "Extension Request")."

Globalstar also requested the FCC to grant Globalstar 90 days to reform the Contract as

necessary to make it consistent with Globalstar‘s existing implementation milestones if the

Commission refused to modify the milestones pursuant to the Extension Request ("Reformation

Request").   In its MO&O, the Bureau denied both Globalstar‘s Extension Request and

Reformation Request and cancelled Globalstar‘s License.


II.    ISSUES PRESENTED FOR REVIEW

       Pursuant to Section 1.115(b)(2)(i) of the Commussion‘s rules," the Committee seeks

Commission review of the MO&O, specifically with respect to the following issues:




        © See Letter from William D. Wallace, Counsel for Globalstar, to Marlene H. Dortch,
Secretary, Commission, dated July 17, 2002. On July 17, 2001, the Commission granted
Globalstar‘s License and required Globalstar to comply with specified implementation
milestones related to Globalstar‘s deployment of its proposed MSS system. See Application of
Globalstar, L.P. for Authority to Launch and Operate a Mobile—Satellite Service System in the 2
GHz Band, Order and Authorization, 16 FCC Red 13739, «[ 60 (2001). The first implementation
milestone deadline was July 17, 2002. By that date, Globalstar was required to have executed a
non—contingent satellite manufacturing contract. See id.

      ‘ See Request for Waiver and Modification of Implementation Milestones for 2 GHz
MSS System, filed by Globalstar, L.P. (July 17, 2002).

       8 See 47 C.F.R. § 25.117(6).
       ° See 47 C.F.R. § 1.115(b)(1).


(1)    whether the Bureau violated Globalstar‘s substantive due process rights and acted
       arbitrarily and capriciously by failing to give Globalstar adequate notice of the Bureau‘s
       interpretation of Globalstar‘s first implementation milestone;

(2)    whether the Bureau failed to give meaningful consideration to Globalstar‘s request for a
       waiver of Section 25.117(e) and, as a direct result, improperly denied Globalstar‘s
       Extension Request;

(3)    whether the Bureau impermissibly applied a different standard to Globalstar than to other
       similarly situated licensees to determine whether the licensees‘ satellite construction
       contracts satisfied their first implementation milestones; and

(4)    whether the Bureau was barred by Section 312 of the Communications Act of 1934, as
       amended ("Communications Act")"" from canceling Globalstar‘s License without first
       providing Globalstar with a show cause order and an opportunity for a hearing.



       Each of these issues warrant Commission consideration because the Bureau‘s action in

each instance violates Section 706 of the Administrative Procedure Act ("APA"), which requires

Commussion actions, including actions pursuant to delegated authority, to be set aside if they are

                                                                                                     »ll
"arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.

Accordingly, the MO&O is in conflict with "statute, regulation, case precedent, or established

Commission policy‘‘ and thus should be reversed by the Commission under Section

1.115(b)(@2)G).




         See 47 U.S.C. § 312(c).
        " 5 1.8.C. $ 706(2)(A); see, e.g., Citizens to Preserve Overton Park, Inc. v. Volpe, 401
U.S. 402, 413—14 (1971) ("In all cases agency action must be set aside if the action was
‘arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law‘ or if the
action failed to meet statutory, procedural, or constitutional requirements.").


III.   THE BUREAU IMPERMISSIBLY FAILED TO GIVE GLOBALSTAR
       ADEQUATE NOTICE OF ITS INTERPRETATION OF THE REQUIREMENTS
       IMPOSED BY GLOBALSTAR‘S FIRST IMPLEMENTATION MILESTONE

        The Bureau failed to provide Globalstar with adequate notice of the standard that it would

use to adjudicate Globalstar‘s compliance with the first implementation milestone set forth in

Globalstar‘s License, which impermissibly violated Globalstar‘s right to administrative due

process and constituted arbitrary and capricious decision making in violation of Section 706 of

the APA. The courts have been very clear that due process protections require administrative

agencies such as the Commission to provide regulated entities with constitutionally adequate

notice of the agencies‘ interpretations of their rules if application of the rules subjects the entities

to sanctions.‘" According to the courts:


       Traditional concepts of due process incorporated into administrative law
       preclude an agency from penalizing a private party for violating a rule
       without first providing adequate notice of the substance of the rule. . . .
       The agency‘s interpretation is entitled to deference, but if it wishes to use
       that interpretation to cut off a party‘s right, it must give full notice of its
        interpretation. 13


        The Bureau‘s determination that Globalstar was required to execute a satellite

construction contract that contained construction milestones aligned with Globalstar‘s future

implementation milestones represented a novel standard for the adjudication of milestone

compliance. Consequently, it is a violation of Globalstar‘s right to administrative due process




        2 See Diamond Roofing Co., Inc. v. Occupational Safety and Health Review
Commission, 528 F.2d4 645, 649 (5th Cir. 1976) ("If a violation of a regulation subjects private
parties to criminal or civil sanctions, a regulation cannot be construed to mean what an agency
intended but did not adequately express.") (citations omitted).

        3 See Satellite Broadcasting Co. v. FCC, 824 F.2d 1, 3, 7 (D.C. Cir. 1987) (holding that
dismissal of a license is "a sufficiently grave sanction to trigger this duty to provide clear
notice") (emphasis added).


for the Bureau to cause the cancellation of Globalstar‘s 2 GHz license based on this

interpretation of Globalstar‘s first implementation milestone."*


       Globalstar‘s first implementation milestone merely states that Globalstar is required to

"[eJnter [into al non—contingent satellite manufacturing contract for [the] GSO and NGSO

components" of its proposed system."" Globalstar‘s Contract is non—contingent and the Bureau

does not assert otherwise anywhere in the MO&O. Instead, the Bureau argues that it has a policy

that, although not referenced in any way in the text of the milestone, nevertheless requires

Globalstar‘s Contract to mandate the construction of its satellites in strict conformance with

future implementation milestones. The Bureau does not assert that this policy is stated anywhere

in the Commission‘s rules, Globalstar‘s License, or in the Bureau order issuing the License.

Rather, the B ureau cites a single sentence o f dicta in Mobile Communications H oldings, Inc.

("MCHI Order"),"° which was released just one m onth before Globalstar‘s Contract was due.

This single sentence in the MCHI Order does not constitute constitutionally adequate notice of

the Bureau‘s purported policy sufficient to justify effectively canceling the License that

Globalstar devoted significant resources to obtain over the past six years.




       4 See, eg., Trinity Broadcasting ofFlorida, Inc. v. FCC, 211 F.3d4 618, 619, 628 (D.C.
Cir. 2000) (vacating denial of license renewal application because FCC rule was not
"ascertainably certain" and could not be applied against applicant); Salzer v. FCC, 778 F.2d 869,
875 (D.C. Cir. 1985) ("The less forgiving the FCC‘s acceptability standard, the more precise its
requirements must be."); Radio Athens, Inc. v. FCC, 401 F.2d 398, 404 (D.C. Cir. 1968) ("When
the sanction is as drastic as dismissal without any consideration whatever of the merits,
elementary fairness compels clarity in the notice of the material required as a condition for
consideration").

       5 See MO&O, "| 60.
       ‘ See Mobile Communications Holdings, Inc., Memorandum Opinion and Order, 17 FCC
Red 11898, 11 & n.24 (IB 2002).


          In the MCHI Order, which was released just one month prior to Globalstar‘s first

implementation milestone deadline,‘‘ the Bureau did not hold that MCHI failed to incorporate

into its s atellite c ontract c onstruction d eadlines t hat m irror i ts i mplementation milestones. In

fact, the Commission does not even substantively discuss the construction schedule contained in

MCHI‘s contract.     Instead, the Bureau very clearly held that MCHI‘s contract did not satisfy the

first implementation milestone because the contract only required the construction of 2 of

MCHI‘s proposed 14 satellites.""       The Bureau‘s assertion in its MO&O that it has a policy

requiring a satellite contract to contain construction milestones that correlate with a licensee‘s

implementation milestones rests entirely on a footnote to a single sentence of dicta buried in the

MCHI Order that states that satellite contracts are required to include a construction schedule

consistent with the licensee‘s milestone schedule.""


          However, even the decisions cited in the footnote do not support this proposition. The

MCHI Order cites to EchoStar Satellite Corporation ("EchoStar Order‘y" and Tempo




          Given the incredible complexity and time required to negotiate satellite construction
contracts (Globalstar‘s Contract is approximately 200 pages long and calls for the expenditure of
several billion dollars), even if the policy claimed by the Bureau to be established by the MCHI
Order was clearly articulated in the order, one month‘s prior notice of the policy is not sufficient
to constitute constitutionally adequate notice.

        $ See MCHI Order, 10 ("Thus, instead of demonstrating that it made a binding
contractual commitment to pay for full construction of the otherfourteen ELLIPSO satellites,
MCHI is asking us to rule that it met the milestone requirement to commence constructing them
by signing a contract that expressly provided only for the construction and delivery of thefirst
two satellites.") (emphasis added).

          " MO&O, [ 6 n.3 (citing MCHI Order, § 11).
        *° Application ofEchoStar Satellite Corporation for Assignment ofDirect Broadcast
Satellite Orbital Positions and Channels, Memorandum Opinion and Order, 7 FCC Red 1765
(1992).


Enterprises, Inc. ("‘Tempo Order),"‘ both of which are Direct Broadcast Satellite ("DBS")

decisions. Although both decisions note in passing that DBS satellite construction contracts are

required generally to contain, inter alia, construction and payment schedules, neither decision

states that these schedules are required to be related to applicable implementation milestones.""

In the EchoStar Order, the Commission adjudicated challenges to construction contracts relevant

to two distinct DBS permits. The Commuission denied a multi—faceted challenge to one EchoStar

DBS permit by holding that the relevant construction contract qualified as non—contingent.""

With respect to the other DBS permit, the Commission held that EchoStar‘s "option" to purchase

a satellite was insufficient to qualify as a construction contract in satisfaction of the due diligence

    :        24
requirement.


       Similarly, in the relevant portion of the Tempo Order, the Commission merely finds that

Tempo satisfied its first due diligence requirement by entering into an appropriate           satellite

construction contract.   Although the Commission notes that the contract contains reasonable

payment and construction schedules, it does not apply any cognizable policy or analysis to its




       *‘ Application of Tempo Enterprises, Inc., Memorandum Opinion and Order, 1 FCC Red
20 (1986).

         * In fact, at the time that these decisions were issued, unlike MSS licensees, DBS
permittees were not subject to a series of implementation milestones. Instead, DBS permittees
were required by the FCC‘s rules to comply with only two "due diligence" requirements—(i) to
enter into a non—contingent satellite construction contract within one year of obtaining an initial
permit, and (ii) to deploy an operational system within six years of obtaining the permit. See 47
C.FR. § 25.148(b)(1). Subsequent to the EchoStar Order and Tempo Order, the Commission
added a third due diligence requirement mandating that DBS permittees complete construction of
their first satellite within four years of obtaining their permit. See 47 C.F.R. § 25.148(b)(2).

       * See EchoStar Order, "| 26.
       * 4.


mention ofthese s chedules.      Ultimately, neither ofthese DBS d ecisions s et forth the policy

attributed to the decisions by the Bureau.


       Similarly, in Morning Star Satellite Company, L.L.C. ("Morning Star Order"),"" the

Commission cancelled Morning Star‘s Ka—band satellite license for failure to timely execute a

non—contingent construction contract in compliance with its first implementation milestone. The

Commission held both that Morning Star executed its satellite construction contract one month

after the applicable deadline and that the contract was contingent because it contained "no terms

that indicated a binding commitment for satellite construction. °       By contrast, Globalstar‘s

construction contract was timely executed and is non—contingent.       The Commission does not

state anywhere in its Morning Star Order that the construction schedule in a satellite construction

contract must match implementation milestones.


       There is an obvious alternative to the Bureau‘s novel interpretation of Globalstar‘s first

implementation milestone.     The first milestone means exactly what it says—Globalstar was

required merely to enter into a non—contingent satellite construction contract by the applicable

July 17, 2002, deadline. There is no disputing, and the Bureau does not dispute, that Globalstar‘s

Contract is non—contingent. The Contract requires Loral to construct Globalstar‘s proposed MSS

system and Globalstar is required to pay Loral to do so. Therefore, Globalstar satisfied its first

implementation milestone.




      * See Morning Star Satellite Company, L.L.C., Memorandum Opinion and Order, 16
FCC Red 11550 (2001).

       * Morning Star Order, 5. Specifically, the Commission noted that the contract was
completely devoid of a construction schedule or payment schedule. I4.


       The future milestones are just that—future milestones. They are intended only to set

deadlines by which Globalstar m ust c omply w ith l ater i mplementation milestones and d o n ot

establish additional criteria by which Globalstar‘s compliance with its first implementation

milestone should be judged. They are not relevant to whether Globalstar complied with its first

implementation milestone because they have not yet occurred.        This in no way prevents the

Commission from strictly enforcing in the future that Globalstar comply with its future

milestones by "construct[ing], launch[ing], and plac[ing] into operation [its proposed MSS

system] in accordance with the technical parameters and terms and conditions of the

[License]. *"   Instead, the Bureau effectively canceled Globalstar‘s License based solely on

speculation that Globalstar will not comply w ith requirements that have not yet vested. This

result is arbitrary and capricious and should be overturned by the Commuission.


       As explained above, Globalstar requested the Bureau to modify its License to permit

Globalstar to delay construction of certain portions of its proposed MSS system. Globalstar‘s

Extension Request was intended to take into account Globalstar‘s perceived future capacity

needs and to ameliorate the current dearth of available financing for MSS systems. Given the

FCC‘s extensive record of granting satellite milestone extension requests, it does not seem at all

unreasonable for Globalstar to have made such a request.""       Moreover, having met its first

implementation milestone, Globalstar was fully capable of amending its Contract as necessary to



       *‘ MO&O, [ 60.
       * See, e. g., NetSat 28 Company, L.L.C. For Authority to Construct, Launch, and Operate
a Ka—Band Communications Satellite in the Fixed—Satellite Service in Orbital Location 95° W.L.,
Memorandum Opinion and Order, 16 FCC Red 11025 (IB 2001) (granting a milestone waiver
even though the waiver was requested after the milestone had passed); EchoStar Order, 1771
(granting EchoStar an extension of applicable due diligence requirements); 4T&T Co.
Application for Modification of Construction Permit and License for the Telstar 402 Satellite,
                                                                                  (continued...)


                                              -10.


comply with future milestones if the Bureau denied the Extension Request. However, Globalstar

could not have predicted based on available precedent that the Bureau‘s denial of Globalstar‘s

Extension Request would result in the invalidation of Globalstar‘s timely executed non—

contingent satellite contract.


       In summary, constitutional due process considerations prevent the Bureau from

interpreting Globalstar‘s first implementation milestone in accordance with a purported policy

that was never clearly articulated by the Commuission and that was first cognizably referenced by

the Bureau only a month before the application of the policy to effectively cancel Globalstar‘s

License. By contrast, Globalstar‘s strategy of timely executing a non—contingent construction

contract while requesting an extension of future milestones represents a patently reasonable

understanding o f Globalstar‘s o bligations under the first i mplementation m ilestone in l ight o f

Commission precedent.       Consequently, the Bureau‘s determination that Globalstar‘s Contract

failed to satisfy Globalstar‘s first implementation milestone represents unreasoned decision and

should be reversed.


IV.      THE BUREAU FAILED TO PROVIDE MEANINGEFUL CONSIDERATION OF
        GLOBALSTAR‘S WAIVER REQUEST AS REQUIRED BY LAW

       As set forth above, it was reversible error for the Bureau to determine that Globalstar

failed to comply with its first implementation milestone.        Even if this determination was

permissible, however, the Bureau nevertheless should have granted Globalstar‘s Extension

Request. Section 25.117(e) of the Commussion‘s rules establishes criteria generally used by the

Commission to adjudicate requests for extension of satellite implementation milestones.



(...continued)
Order and Authorization, 9 FCC Red 2607 (IB 1994) (granting a milestone extension to resolve
technical problems causing satellite failures).


                                               .11-


Globalstar explained in its Application that it satisfied these criteria and that the Bureau‘s finding

to the contrary was arbitrary and capricious."" In an abundance of caution, however, Globalstar

also requested the Commission to waive this standard if necessary to grant Globalstar‘s

Extension Request. Remarkable, rather than address Globalstar‘s waiver request on its merits,

the Bureau concluded without any substantive discussion that Globalstar failed to present special

circumstances justifying a waiver.


       This conclusory determination does not comply with the mandate of the United States

Circuit Court of the District of Columbia in WAIT Radio vs. FCC ("WAIT")."° In WAIT, the

court expressly held that the Commission "must articulate with clarity and precision its findings

                                                                                 5532
and the reasons for its decisions‘"‘ and provide "meaningful consideration‘"""          of waiver requests.

The complete dearth of discussion of Globalstar‘s waiver request demonstrates that the Bureau




        * Generally speaking, Section 25.117(e) states that requests for extensions of
implementation milestones by satellite licensees must state that "the additional time is required
due to unforeseeable circumstances beyond the applicant‘s control" and that there "are unique
and overriding public interest concerns that justify an extension." Globalstar explained in its
Application for Review that it satisfied the standards set forth in Section 25.117(e) in that its
bankruptcy and the recent poor market for MSS both were unforeseeable circumstances which
the Bureau failed to adequately consider. Accordingly, Globalstar argued that the Bureau‘s
failure to grant Globalstar‘s Extension Request under Section 25.117(e) was arbitrary and
capricious. See Application, 7—10. The Committee fully supports Globalstar‘s position with
respect to this matter but does not restate Globalstar‘s arguments herein.

       5° WAIT Radio v. FCC, 418 F.24 1153 (D.C. Cir. 1969).
        *‘ WAIT Radio, 1 (quoting Permian Basin Area Rate Cases, 390 U.S. 747, 792 (1968):
"The court‘s responsibility is not to supplant [a] Commission‘s balance o f competing interests
with one more nearly to its liking, but instead to assure itself that the Commission has given
reasoned consideration to each of the pertinent factors. Judicial review of the Commission‘s
orders will therefore function accurately and efficaciously only if the Commission indicates fully
and carefully the methods by which, and the purposes for which, it has chosen to act, as well as
its assessment of the consequences of its orders for the character and future development of the
industry.").

       * WAIT Radio, ® 4.

                                               .12.


did neither in its MO&O. Therefore the Bureau‘s denial of Globalstar‘s waiver request must be

reversed as arbitrary and capricious. The Bureau acknowledges that Commission policy requires _

the grant of waiver requests if the requests satisfy two criteria: (1) special circumstances warrant

a deviation from the general rule; and (ii) such deviation would better serve the public interest

than would strict adherence to the general rule, while not undermining the policy objective of the

rule in question."" As further set forth below, Globalstar‘s request met this standard.


       A.      Globalstar Demonstrated Special Circumstances Justifying its Waiver
               Request

       The Bureau asserts that Globalstar did not demonstrate a special circumstance but

entirely failed to discuss the special circumstance posited by Globalstar—the fact that it currently

is in bankruptcy. Although the Bureau discussed at length its position that bankruptcy does not

qualify as an unforeseeable circumstance under Section 25.117(e), the Bureau failed to consider

whether bankruptcy constitutes a special circumstance with respect to application of the

Commission‘s waiver policy. The Commussion has determined in numerous contexts that the

bankruptcy of a licensee constitutes a sufficient special circumstance to warrant grant of a waiver

mquest.3* For example, the Commission has created a presumption applied on a case—by—case




       * MO&O, [ 11.
        * See, eg., Geotek Communications, Inc., Order, 14 FCC Red 18860, 6 (WTB 1999)
(granting Geotek a waiver of the deadline to file a selection as to how it will demonstrate
compliance with a 900 MHz license construction requirement "/i/n light ofthe fact that Geotek
is in bankruptcy. . . .") (emphasis added); Implementation of the Subscriber Carrier Selection
Changes Provisions of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, Order, 14 FCC Red 10735, « 4—5
(CCB 1999) (granting a carrier a waiver of the Commission‘s slamming rules to change the
presubscribed customers of another bankrupt carrier); Pocket Communications, Inc.,
Memorandum Opinion and Order, 13 FCC Red 12968," 6 (WTB 1998) (temporarily waiving the
debtor licensee‘s requirement to elect between disaggregation, amnesty, or prepayment to satisfy
its debt to the Commission from a designated entity PCS auction in order to "promote a
consensual resolution of the bankruptcy"); Wireless Telecommunications Bureau StaffResponds
to Questions About the Broadband PCS C Block Auction, Public Notice, 1995 FCC LEXIS 3759,
                                                                                      (continued...)
                                               -13.


basis that it will waive its TV duopoly and TV—radio cross ownership rules to enable the

purchase of a bankrupt licensee.""     In addition, the Commission has a longstanding policy

permitting waiver of regulatory fees for licensees in financial hardship, such as bankruptcy.36

Also, on several recent occasions the Commission granted cable providers temporary waivers of

its Emergency Alert System ("EAS") rules because the cable providers were in bankruptcy and

unable to finance the deployment of the necessary equipment to comply with the EAS rules.""


       B.        Globalstar Will Not Warehouse Spectrum and Thus its Waiver Request Does
                 Not Undermine the Primary Objective of the Implementation Milestones

       The Bureau did not dispute in the MO&O that grant of Globalstar‘s waiver request does

not undermine the primary policy objectives of its implementation milestone policies—the




(...continued)
*10 (WTB rel. June 8, 1995) (granting a presumptive waiver of the Commuission‘s rule
prohibiting transfer of an entrepreneurs‘ block PCS licensee for three years from issuance of the
license "to other qualified entrepreneurs if the licensee has made a sufficient showing of
bankruptcy, foreclosure or financial distress to warrant a waiver. . . ."); Application ofKing
Kable, Inc., Order, 8 FCC Red 1515, [ 7 (MMB 1993) (waiving a cable anti—trafficking
provision to enable a bankrupt assignor to prematurely sell certain cable systems).

       35 See 47 C.F.R. § 73.3555 note 7.
       3° See Implementation ofSection 9 ofthe Communications Act Assessment and Collection
ofRegulatory Fees for the 1994 Fiscal Year, Memorandum Opinion and Order, 10 FCC Red
12759, 13 (1995) ("We will grant waivers of the fees on a sufficient showing of financial
hardship," such as bankruptcy).

               * See e.g., Classic Communications, Inc., Memorandum Opinion and Order, 17
FCC Red 19350, [ 4 (EB 2002) (granting a cable provider a temporary waiver of the
Commission‘s Emergency Alert System rules with respect to 559 cable systems because the
cable provider is in bankruptcy); Adelphia Communications Corporation, Order, 17 FCC Red
24544, @ 3—4 (EB rel. Dec. 4, 2002) (granting Adelphia a temporary waiver of the
Commission‘s EAS rules with respect to 65 cable systems because Adelphia‘s "bankruptcy filing
prevented Adelphia from pursuing its planned installation schedule for EAS equipment" and the
temporary waivers "will serve the public interest by accommodating the objectives underlying
the bankruptcy laws.").


                                              -14.


prevention of spectrum warehousing."" This policy objective is in no way undermined by grant

of Globalstar‘s waiver request because Globalstar will fully utilize its 2 GHz MSS spectrum

assignment as intended by the Commission. Although Globalstar requested milestone extensions

with respect to most of its proposed MSS system, Globalstar‘s Contract calls for the timely

deployment of a single GSO satellite in full compliance with all of the implementation

milestones set forth in Globalstar‘s License.        Globalstar explained to the Bureau in its

Application that this GSO satellite will be capable of utilizing Globalstar‘s entire spectrum

assignment to provide service to North America and the surrounding waters."" Thus, grant of

Globalstar‘s extension request will not cause any spectrum to lie fallow.


       C.      Grant of Globalstar‘s Waiver Request Would Better Serve the Public
               Interest Than Denial of the Waiver Request

       Even more fundamental than the Bureau‘s desire to prevent spectrum warehousing, the

Commission intends through the adoption of implementation milestones, and through the very

issuance of 2 GHz MSS licenses, to cause MSS applicants expeditiously to begin providing the

public interest benefits associated with MSS services to consumers in the United States and

worldwide.    The Commission stated in 1995, when it issued service rules and a license

assignment mechanism for the 2 GHz MSS allocation, that:


       [tlhese satellite systems will provide new and expanded regional and global data,
       voice, and messaging services using the 2 GHz frequency band. . .. The 2 GHz


        * MO&O, | 6 (holding that the Commission adopts implementation milestones to
"prevent spectrum and orbital assignments from being ‘warehoused‘"). Although the Bureau did
not assert in the MO&O that Globalstar‘s proposed waiver request would result in spectrum
warehousing, the Bureau did justify refusing to grant Globalstar‘s request for an extension of
certain of its milestone, in part, by stating that the request "would prolong the period for which
the spectrum lies fallow." /d. at ( 10. For the reasons discussed above in the text, this Bureau
assertion is factually inaccurate.

       °° Application, 8—10.


                                              .15-


       MSS systems also will enhance competition in mobile satellite and terrestrial
       communications services, and complement wireless service offerings through
       expanded geographic coverage. 2 GHz MSS systems will thereby promote
       development of regional and global communications to unserved communities in
       the United States, its territories and possessions, including rural and Native
       American areas, as well as worldwide."

Denial of Globalstar‘s waiver request and the resulting cancellation of Globalstar‘s License

prevents Globalstar from offering these substantial public interest benefits without offering any

concomitant public interest benefit to the American public. By contrast, grant of the waiver and

modification of Globalstar‘s license to extend its implementation milestones permits an

additional MSS licensee to compete in the nascent MSS market.


vV.    THE BUREAU IMPERMISSIBLY DISCRIMINATED AMONG SIMILARLY
       SITUATED LICENSEES IN ADJUDICATING COMPLIANCE WITH ITS 2 GHZ
       MSS IMPLEMENTATION MILESTONES

       The Bureau‘s decision to deny Globalstar‘s Extension Request, and thereby effectively

cancel its License, impermissibly treats Globalstar differently from similarly situated 2 GHz

MSS licensees. As explained above, Globalstar‘s Contract calls for Globalstar to deploy a GSO

satellite in full compliance with all applicable GSO implementation milestones and ensures that

Globalstar will make full use of its assigned spectrum from the date by which Globalstar is

required to deploy its MSS system. As a result, during the period that Globalstar is operating its

GSO satellite in compliance with applicable milestones, but has not yet launched the remainder

of its proposed system, Globalstar‘s deployed system will be indistinguishable for milestone

compliance purposes from the MSS system proposed by Celsat America, Inc. ("Celsat"), which

proposed to deploy only a single GSO satellite.*‘         Despite this, the Bureau affirmed the




      * Establishment ofPolicies and Service Rules for the Mobile Satellite Service in the 2
GHz Band, Report and Order, 15 FCC Red 16127, «[ 1 (2000).

       * See Celsat America, Inc., Order, 16 FCC Red 13712, « 1 (IB 2001).


                                              .16.


compliance of Celsat‘s satellite construction contract‘‘ with Celsat‘s first implementation

milestone while determining that Globalstar‘s Contract was insufficient to satisfy Globalstar‘s

first implementation milestone.


       The Commission is required to treat similarly situated licensees equivalently or to

explicitly justify why it failed to do so." Thus, the Bureau was barred from treating Globalstar

and Celsat in diametrically different ways, especially given that the B ureau did not offer any

justification for doing so. As of July 17, 2007 (1.e., 72 months after issuance of the 2 GHz MSS

licenses—the deadline for compliance with the final GSO implementation milestone), both

Globalstar and Celsat would have commenced serving the United States from a single GSO

satellite using their respective spectrum assignments.          The Bureau simply cannot justify

affirming   Celsat‘s   implementation    milestone     certification   while   effectively   canceling

Globalstar‘s license, even though both licensees filed satellite construction contracts calling for

the launch of very similar facilities in the same time frame.

                                        e                 .      e     44              e            .
       Moreover, under the Commussion‘s Teledesic decision,                 the Commussion permits

satellite licensees to substantially reduce the number of satellites authorized by their license



       * See Satellite Division Information: 2 GHz MSS Systems in Compliance with First
Milestone Requirement, Public Notice, 18 FCC Red 1732 (2003) (holding that the satellite
construction contract submitted by Celsat to the Commuission satisfies Celsat‘s first
implementation milestone).



       * See Melody Music, Inc. v. FCC, 345 F.2d4 730, 732—33 (D.C. Cir. 1965) (holding that
the Commission‘s failure to "explain its different treatment" of similarly situated licensees
constituted "error"‘).

       * Application of Teledesic LLC, For Minor Modification ofLicense to Construct, Launch
and Operate a Non—Geostationary Fixed—Satellite Service System, 14 FCC Red 2261 (IB 1999)
                                                                                (continued...)


                                               -1’7.


through a minor modification if doing so does not pose any new interference concerns.

Therefore, had Globalstar‘s license not effectively been cancelled by the Bureau, Globalstar

could have filed a minor modification to its license to reduce its licensed system to a single GSO

satellite, much like Celsat‘s licensed system. As a result, the construction schedule set forth in

Globalstar‘s Contract would required Loral to deploy Globalstar‘s entire licensed system in

compliance with all of Globalstar‘s future implementation milestones. Globalstar should not be

penalized for proposing to launch, in addition to its first GSO satellite, three more GSO satellites

and a constellation of NGSO satellites.      Rather than sanctioning Globalstar for having the

ambition to attempt to deploy a worldwide MSS system, the public interest requires the Bureau

to apply its rules flexibly to encourage proposals such as Globalstar‘s.


VI.__    THE COMMISSION IS STATUTORILY BARRED FROM CANCELING
         GLOBALSTAR‘S LICENSE WITHOUT A HEARING

         Section 312(c) of the Communications Act, as amended, prohibits the Commission from

revoking a license without first serving upon the licensee an order to show cause why the license

is not subject to revocation and first providing the licensee with an opportunity to present

evidence why its license should not be revoked."        In a recent decision related to the FCC‘s

cancellation of Nextwave‘s PCS licenses, the court held that automatic license cancellation for

failure to comply with license terms has the same "effect" as formal license revocation by

                       6
Commission action.""       In fact, the court found that the FCC‘s issuance of a public notice



(...continued)
(authorizing Teledesic to reduce its proposed satellite constellation from 840 satellites to 208
satellites through a minor modification of its license).

         * 47 U.S.C. § 312(0).
         * See Nextwave Personal Communications Inc. v. FCC, 254 F.3d4 130, 140 (D.C. Cir.
2001).


                                               .18-


announcing the automatic cancellation of a license pursuant to the license‘s terms qualifies as a

regulatory event capable of being judicially reviewed.       This is true even if the automatic

cancellation purportedly occurred long before the issuance of the public notice and, as a result,

the period of time to challenge the automatic cancellation already expired if measured by the

purported date of the automatic cancellation.


       Thus, the Bureau‘s determination that Globalstar‘s License automatically cancelled

pursuant to its term on July 17, 2002, when, according to the Bureau, Globalstar failed to satisfy

its first implementation milestone, is tantamount to a revocation of the License by the Bureau

under Section 312 of the Communications Act. As such, Section 312 provides an absolute bar to

the Bureau‘s cancellation of the license prior to providing Globalstar with a show cause order

and an opportunity for a hearing to respond to the Bureau‘s allegations.


VII.   CONCLUSION


       For the reasons set forth herein, the Committee respectfully requests the Commission to

review and reverse the Bureau‘s MO&O Order.            In its MO&O, the Bureau impermissibly

violated Globalstar‘s right to administrative due process and utilized arbitrary and capricious

decision making in violation of Section 706 of the APA by failing to provide Globalstar with

adequate notice of the standard that it would use to adjudicate Globalstar‘s compliance with the

first implementation milestone set forth in Globalstar‘s License. In addition, the Bureau failed to

provide meaningful consideration of Globalstar‘s request for waiver of Section 25.117(e)‘s

standard for the grant of a satellite milestone extension request. The Bureau also impermissibly

treated Globalstar differently than similarly situated licensees in a manner highly adverse to

Globalstar.   Finally, the Bureau effectively revoked Globalstar‘s License without providing

Globalstar with an opportunity to formally respond to the Commission‘s purported grounds for


                                                -19-


the revocation, as required by Section 312(c) of the Communications Act . Each of these claims

is in conflict with "statute, regulation, case precedent, or established Commuission policy"‘ and

thus should be reversed by the Commission under Section 1.115(b)(2)(1).



                                            Respectfully submitted,

                                            OFFICIAL CREDITORS COMMITTEE OF
                                            GLOBALSTAR, LP.



                                          mmTom W. Davidson, Esq.
                                            Phil Marchesiello, Esq.
                                            AKIN, GUMP, STRAUSS, HAUER
                                                    & FELD, L.LP.
                                            1676 International Drive
                                            McLean, VA 22012
                                            703—891—7540

                                            Its Attorneys



March 18, 2003




                                             -20.


                                CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE


       I, Judie Johnson, hereby certify that I have on this 18th day of March, 2003, caused to be

served true and correct copies of the foregoing "Comments in Support of Emergency Application

for Review" upon the following persons via hand delivery (marked with an asterisk (*)) or first—

class United States mail, postage prepaid:

The Honorable Michael K. Powell *                The Honorable Kathleen Q. Abernathy *
Chairman                                         Commissioner
Federal Communications Commission                Federal Communications Commission
445 12th Street, SW                              445 12th Street, S.W.
Washington, DC 20554                             Washington, D.C. 20554

The Honorable Michael Copps *                    The Honorable Kevin Martin *
Commissioner                                     Commissioner
Federal Communications Commission                Federal Communications Commission
445 12th Street, S.W.                            445 12th Street, S.W.
Washington, D.C. 20554                           Washington, D.C. 20554

The Honorable Jonathan S. Adelstein *            John Rogovin *
Commissioner                                     Office of General Counsel
Federal Communications Commission                Federal Communications Commission
445 12th Street, S.W.                            445 12th Street, SW., Room 6—A665
Washington, D.C. 20554                           Washington, D.C. 20554

Donald Abelson    *                              Thomas S. Tycz *
International Bureau                             International Bureau
Federal Communications Commission                Federal Communications Commission
445 12th Street, SW., Room 6—C750                445 12th Street, SW., Room 6—A¥665
Washington, D.C. 20554                           Washington, D.C. 20554

Karl A. Kensinger *                              Howard Griboff *
International Bureau                             International Bureau
Federal Communications Commission                Federal Communications Commission
445 Twelfth Street, S.W., Room 6—A663            445 12th Street, S.W., Room 6—CA467
Washington, D.C. 20554                           Washington, D.C. 20554


Fern J. Jarmulnek *                   Cassandra Thomas *
International Bureau                  International Bureau
Federal Communications Commission     Federal Communications Commuission
445 12th Street, S.W.                 445 12th Street, S.W.
Washington, D.C. 20554                Washington, D.C. 20554

Joseph A. Godles                      William D. Wallace
Goldberg, Godles, Wiener & Wright     Crowell & Moring, LLP
1229 19th Street, NW.                 1001 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, D.C. 20036                Washington, DC 20004—2595




                                    Judie Johnson _



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Document Modified: 2019-04-09 21:45:44

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