By Mike Dano; Light Reading ~ Sep 18, 2020
AT&T has officially joined Verizon in complaining that T-Mobile is on its way to an unassailable position in 5G spectrum.
The two carriers are now urging the FCC to take a hard look at how much low- and midband spectrum T-Mobile owns, and to take action against the carrier if it gains too much spectrum.
AT&T and Verizon ostensibly are arguing that T-Mobile’s latest spectrum-leasing deal will push its overall spectrum holdings over the FCC’s “spectrum screen.” The agency’s decidedly arbitrary screen was set up in 2004; it’s designed to trigger an investigation by the FCC if an operator moves to purchase more than one-third of the total amount of spectrum available in a given market. However, the agency has rarely used the screen as a basis to prevent spectrum purchases.
At least, the spectrum screen is what AT&T and Verizon are using to prop up their concerns. What’s really going on is that none of these companies care about the spectrum screen. What AT&T and Verizon are really worried about is that T-Mobile is going to wreak havoc in the upcoming C-band spectrum auction, forcing AT&T and Verizon to spend billions of dollars in extra money to ensure they gain critical midband spectrum for 5G – and T-Mobile doesn’t.
