Verizon, AT&T to delay 5G deployment, averting aviation standoff
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[January 04, 2022] By
David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Verizon
Communications and AT&T Inc said late on Monday they had agreed to a
two-week delay in deploying C-Band wireless spectrum, averting an
aviation safety standoff that threatened to disrupt flights starting
this week.
The carriers had faced pressure from the White House, airlines and
aviation unions to delay the deployment amid concerns about potential
interference of 5G with sensitive aircraft electronics like radio
altimeters that could disrupt flights.
The agreement pushes back the deployment date to Jan. 19. Verizon said
the delay "promises the certainty of bringing this nation our
game-changing 5G network in January." AT&T said it agreed to the delay
at the request of Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg.
"We know aviation safety and 5G can co-exist and we are confident
further collaboration and technical assessment will allay any issues,"
AT&T said.
Over the next two weeks, regulators, airlines and wireless carriers will
look at ways of minimizing the potential impact of interference on
flight operations.
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) praised the wireless carriers
agreeing to a delay and the safety measures they offered. "We look
forward to using the additional time and space to reduce flight
disruptions associated with this 5G deployment," the FAA said.
Earlier
on Monday, groups representing U.S. airlines, aircraft manufacturers and
airports had urged the White House to intervene to delay the use by
wireless carriers of C-Band spectrum for 5G, which the carriers won in
an $80 billion government auction.
The delay came after the chief executives of AT&T and Verizon on Sunday
had rejected a request to push back the planned Jan. 5 introduction of
new 5G wireless service over aviation safety concerns but offered to
temporarily adopt new safeguards.
Buttigieg and FAA chief Steve Dickson had asked AT&T CEO John Stankey
and Verizon CEO Hans Vestberg on Friday for a delay of up to two weeks.
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Passengers carry their luggage at John F. Kennedy International
Airport during the spread of the Omicron coronavirus variant in
Queens, New York City, U.S., December 26, 2021. REUTERS/Jeenah
Moon/File Photo
In December, the FAA warned that interference from the planned use of 5G
wireless spectrum posed an air safety risk and could result in flight
diversions. But it had not yet issued formal notices that would further outline
potential impacts.
AT&T and Verizon in November had agreed to delay the commercial launch of C-band
wireless service for 30 days to Jan. 5 and to temporarily adopt some safeguards.
Sara Nelson, president of the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA, which
represents 50,000 flight attendants at 17 airlines, had said on Twitter that "if
medicine delivered to hospitals and homes is delayed" Verizon would be
responsible.
"If passengers are stranded, thank @Verizon," Nelson said. "Their incentive is
money. Our incentive is safety. It’s the purest form of profits over people."
The wireless companies Sunday said they would not deploy 5G around airports for
six months and said it was comparable to safeguards employed in France but had
rejected any broader limitation on using C-Band spectrum. That exclusion zone
around airports is not as large as the FAA wants.
The trade group Airlines for America, representing American Airlines, FedEx and
other carriers, had asked the Federal Communications Commission to halt
deployment around many airports, warning thousands of flights could be disrupted
daily.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Leslie Adler and Stephen Coates)
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