Attachment Ex Parte Letter

This document pretains to SES-LFS-20050930-01352 for License to use Foreign Satellite (earth) on a Satellite Earth Station filing.

IBFS_SESLFS2005093001352_512788

May 25, 2006



Chairman Kevin J. Martin
Federal Communications Commission
445 12th Street, S.W.
Washington, D.C. 20554

Re: Obstacles to Delivery of Next-Generation Satellite Communications Services
    (File Nos. SES-LFS-20050826-01175; SES-MFS-20051122-01614; SES-STA-20060307-00374; SES-
    STA-20060310-00419; SES-LFS-20050930-01352; SES-MFS-20060118-00050; SES-STA-
    20060308-00388; SES-STA-20060313-00430; SES-LFS-20051011-01396; SES-STA-20060314-
    00438; SES-MFS-20051207-01709; SES-STA-20060307-00372; SES-LFS-20051123-01634; SES-
    STA-20060316-00454; SES-MFS-20051202-01665; SES-STA-20060307-00373; SES-LFS-
    20060303-00343; SES-STA-20060315-00445)

Dear Chairman Martin:

The availability of broadband access for citizens of our state is quite important to me. For quite
some time, I have been intimately involved in the efforts to establish a distance learning program
to many rural and often forgotten areas of Mississippi. We had begun to make great progress
along the Gulf Coast and Gulf Islands when the unthinkable happened – Hurricane Katrina. This
powerful storm completely wiped out the infrastructure that we had planned to utilize for our
Distance Learning and Telemedicine Program. While this natural disaster was catastrophic and
as our Governor Barbour has stated so well, out of the rubble of Hurricane Katrina comes
opportunity.

During the post-Katrina information gathering stage, Community Development League sought
the advice of many experts in the field of broadband capabilities and availability. However, we
did not stop there. During this stage of the project, an unexpected by-product emerged. We
found that the first responders needed and depended on this broadband access following
Hurricane Katrina. We also found that Mobile Satellite Ventures’ mobile satellite
communications played a key role in recovery efforts in the storm-ravaged areas where other
means of communication had been destroyed. Further, we determined that by reallocating the L
band spectrum and making it contiguous, this would not only improve communications but would
allow better access for first responders, as well as provide service to rural areas - the same areas
we are attempting to reach with our distance learning program using broadband. There is such a
strong need for educational services in these areas and we feel that by reallocating the L band
spectrum and by returning the “loaned” L band to MSV from Inmarsat, these goals will be more
easily accomplished. In addition, the first responders would have the capability to “plug into”
this network. Our first responders deserve the best in communications, especially with another
hurricane season just around the corner.

Community Development Leagues of America is acutely aware of the responsibilities that the
Federal Communications Commission faces on a daily basis and that the Commission does not


take those responsibilities lightly. We would respectfully request serious consideration from the
Commission in making its decisions on these issues.

Thank you for your time and your consideration of this request.

                                                 Yours very truly,



                                                 Buck Flinn
                                                 President

cc:     Senator Thad Cochran
        Senator Trent Lott
        Governor Haley Barbour



Document Created: 2006-07-25 08:59:40
Document Modified: 2006-07-25 08:59:40

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