AT&T, Verizon pause 5G expansion plans for 2 weeks

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in General Discussion
AT&T and Verizon have reversed course over their 5G rollouts, deciding late on Monday to abide by a request by the FAA to stall their major network upgrades for two weeks.

via Pascal Renet/Pexels
via Pascal Renet/Pexels


The carriers initially rejected the request from the Federal Aviation Administration and government officials to stall the introduction of C-Band spectrum to their networks for two weeks, with a few airport-related exceptions. However, late on Monday, the two carriers changed their minds, agreeing to hold off on the deployment temporarily instead of pressing forward.

"At Secretary [of Transport Pete]Buttigieg's request, we have voluntarily agreed to one additional two-week delay of our deployment of C-Band 5G services," a statement from AT&T received by CNN reads.

"We also remain committed to the six-month protection zone mitigations we outlined in our letter," the statement continues, referring to an exception where spectrum deployment wouldn't immediately occur around airports. "We know aviation safety and 5G can co-exist and we are confident further collaboration and technical assessment will allay any issues."

Verizon's statement reiterated the two-week delay, and that it "promises the certainty of bringing this nation our game-changing 5G network in January delivered over America's best and most reliable network."

The FAA was concerned that the C-Band spectrum could interfere with automated cockpit systems, a worry countered by the carriers by pointing out it is being used in countries like France with no reported problems. French carriers also operate exclusion zones around airports.

While negotiations were taking place between officials and the carriers, preparations were underway by aviation industry members to sue the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to halt the deployment. An industry official told the report the lawsuit would be delayed by two weeks to match the agreed pause by carriers.

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Comments

  • Reply 1 of 3
    GeorgeBMacGeorgeBMac Posts: 11,421member
    So Ajit Pai not gave us so called "Net Neutrality" (Which is actually the opposite) -- but sold spectrum used by Airlines to land planes safely. 

    Should Verizon and AT&T be charged with receiving stolen goods?
  • Reply 2 of 3
    Hank2.0Hank2.0 Posts: 151member
    I missed something...where is T-Mobile in all this?
  • Reply 3 of 3
    GeorgeBMacGeorgeBMac Posts: 11,421member
    Hank2.0 said:
    I missed something...where is T-Mobile in all this?

    T-Mobile bought and started using different frequencies for 5G (that don't interfere with aircraft landing equipment) awhile back.  Verizon and AT&T are late to the game, playing catch-up -- and not doing it very well.  They thought they had the FCC under control (and they pretty much did under Ajit Pai) so they thought they could keep selling the old crap at high prices while T-Mobile raced ahead into modern telecommunications.

    The auctions where these spectrums were sold were set-up by Ajit Pai who was a shill for Verizon.   Hopefully the new FCC head does a better job managing our airwaves.


    edited January 2022 Hank2.0
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