Attachment SESLIC2012061100502D

SESLIC2012061100502D

DECISION submitted by ISLAND UPLINK CORP.

DISMISSAL LETTER TO APPLICANT

0000-00-00

This document pretains to SES-LIC-20120611-00502 for License on a Satellite Earth Station filing.

IBFS_SESLIC2012061100502_970393

  _oz
 S#c,oMM(/
Fay     t\\                 Federal Communications Commission
                                      Washington, D.C. 20554
\\QMM;SS\‘)j



                                                                                                 DA 12—1541

                                             September 27, 2012

 Mr. Frank R. Jazzo, Esq.
 Fletcher, Heald & Hildreth, P.L.C.
 1300 North 17th Street
 11th Floor
 Arlington, VA 22209

                                               Call Sign: E120100
                                               File No.: SES—LIC—20120611—00502

 Dear Mr. Jazzo:

 On June 11, 2012, Island Uplink Corp. (Island Uplink) filed the above—captioned application for a
 license of a new transmit—only Temporary—Fixed earth station operating in the conventional C—
 band frequencies to be located in San Juan, Puerto Rico.‘ For the reasons listed below, we
 dismiss the application without prejudice to refiling."

 Section 25.112(a) of the Commission‘s rules, requires the Commission to return, as unacceptable
 for filing, any earth station application that is not substantially complete, contains internal
 inconsistencies, or does not substantially comply with the Commission‘s rules." Island Uplink‘s
 application is incomplete and does not comply with the Commission‘s rules, which renders it
 unacceptable and subject to dismissal. The deficiencies in the application are as follows:

 In response to item E21 in Schedule B of FCC Form 312 (Schedule B), Island Uplink lists
 "ALSAT" as the proposed point of communication for its earth station. Earth station applicants
 may designate ALSAT as a point of communication only in cases where the earth station is
 eligible for routine processing." An earth station proposing to operate in the conventional C—band
 must comply with Section 25.212(c) or, in the alternative, with Section 25.218 to be processed




 ‘    The conventional C—band encompasses the 5925—6425 MHz uplink frequencies.

      If Island Uplink refiles an application identical to the one dismissed, with the exception of supplying
 the missing information, it need not pay an application fee. See 47 C.E.R. § 1.1111(d).

 j    47 CFR. § 25.112(a)(1—2).

 *    See Amendment of the Commission‘s Regulatory Policies to Allow Non—U.S. Licensed Space Stations
 to Provide Domestic and International Services in the United States, B Docket No. 96—111, First Order on
 Reconsideration, 15 FCC Red 7207 (1999), at 7213 "[13 (stating that licenses for "routine" earth stations
 providing fixed—satellite service in the conventional C—band Ku—band may specify "ALSAT" as authorized
 points of communication, and noting that a "routine" earth station is one that operates consistently with the
 technical requirements of Part 25).


                                    Federal Communications Commission                       DA 12—1541



routinely." Applicants proposing an earth station that does not qualify for routine processing
must identify specific satellites as proposed points of communication.

Island Uplink‘s proposed 4.1 meter antenna does not qualify for routine processing under Section
25.212(c) of the Commission‘s rules." Thus, Island Uplink must demonstrate that the antenna,
which will carry digital signals in the conventional C—band, complies with the off—axis effective
isotropically radiated power (EIRP) limits in Section 25.218(d) to be eligible for routine
processing. To make this demonstration, an applicant must submit the off—axis EIRP tables
described in Section 25.115(h) of the Commission‘s rules.‘ Island Uplink‘s application did not
contain these tables. Consequently, we cannot find that Island Uplink‘s proposed 4.1—meter
antenna is eligible for routine processing pursuant to Section 25.218. Island Uplink cannot;
therefore, propose "ALSAT" as a point of communication for this antenna. Because Island
Uplink‘s application is not eligible for routine processing, if Island Uplink chooses to re—file, it
must inclusde with its application certifications from potentially affected adjacent satellite
operators.

Island Uplink‘s application is also missing required technical information. In particular, Island
Uplink failed to respond to items E56 and E58 in the Schedule B, which pertain to Earth station
azimuth angle of Eastern and Western limit. Island Uplink‘s failure to provide this information
renders its application defective.

Accordingly, pursuant to Section 0.261 of the Commission‘s rules on delegated authority, 47
C.F.R. § 0.261, we dismiss the application of Island Uplink, Corp. without prejudice to refiling.

                                                    Sincerely,




                                             %\fl/ Paul E. Blais
                                                  Chief, Systems Analysis Branch
                                                    Satellite Division
                                                    International Bureau




* 47 CFER. §§ 25.212(c) and 25.218. See 2000 Biennial Regulatory Review — Streamlining and Other
Revisions of Part 25 of the Commission‘s Rules Governing the Licensing Of, and Spectrum Usage By,
Satellite Network Earth Stations and Space Stations, IB Docket No. 95—117, Eighth Report and Order On
Reconsideration, 23 FCC Red 15099 (2008), at 15100 «C 2—3 and 15144 «[ 108 (extending routine licensing
to small antennas that meet specified off—axis effective isotropically radiated power (EIRP) envelopes).

8 47 CFR. § 25.212(c).

? 47 CFR. § 25.115(b).

8 See47 CFR. §220(d).
                                                   bJ



Document Created: 2012-10-04 16:05:12
Document Modified: 2012-10-04 16:05:12

© 2024 FCC.report
This site is not affiliated with or endorsed by the FCC