Government Technology

Four At-Large Organizations Join Public Safety Broadband Licensee's Board



November 15, 2007 By News Staff

On July 31, 2007, the Federal Communications Commission adopted a Second Report and Order revising the rules governing the upper 700 MHz band.   In the Second Report and Order, the Commission re-designated ten megahertz of public safety 700 MHz spectrum (763-768/793-798 MHz) for the purpose of establishing a nationwide, interoperable broadband public safety communications network.  The Commission also created a single nationwide license for this spectrum -- the Public Safety Broadband License.  Further, the Commission stated that it would assign this license to a single entity -- the Public Safety Broadband Licensee. 

To ensure broad representation and to provide a balance of the various public safety interests, the Commission required that the Public Safety Broadband Licensee be governed by a voting board that is broadly representative of the public safety community.   The Public Safety Broadband Licensee board of directors is made up of fifteen members, four of which are at-large members to be appointed jointly by the Chiefs of the Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau and Wireless Telecommunications Bureau.

By this Public Notice, and as specified in both the Second Report and Order and Order on Reconsideration, the Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau and Wireless Telecommunications Bureau jointly announce the selection of the following four organizations as at-large members to the Public Safety Broadband Licensee's board of directors:  the American Hospital Association (AHA), the National Fraternal Order of Police (NFOP), the National Association of State 9-1-1 Administrators (NASNA), and the National Emergency Management Association (NEMA). 
 

The AHA was founded in 1898 and is a national organization which represents the needs of its membership, consisting of close to 5,000 hospitals, health care systems, networks and other providers of care, and 37,000 individual members, on matters of national health policy development.   The FOP is an organization of sworn law enforcement officers with more than 324,000 members in more than 2,100 lodges, and it held its first meeting in 1915.   The NASNA is a professional organization representing the thirty-five states that currently have a central 911 planning or administrative function.   The NEMA is composed of state directors of emergency management, and is dedicated to enhancing public safety by improving the nation's ability to prepare for, respond to and recover from all emergencies, disasters, and threats to our nation's security.
 

Based on the range of additional expertise these four organizations possess, appointing these four organizations will further broaden representation of the public safety community in the Public Safety Broadband Licensee board of directors and, in turn, serve the public interest.   These four at-large members will join the eleven member organizations previously announced by the Commission.   These eleven organizations are:

  • American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO)
  • Association of Public Safety Communications Officials (APCO)
  • Forestry Conservation Communications Association (FCCA)
  • International City/County Management Association (ICMA)
  • International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP)
  • International Association of Fire Chiefs (IAFC)
  • International Municipal Signal Association (IMSA)
  • National Association of State Emergency Medical Services Officials (NASEMSO)
  • National Emergency Number Association (NENA)
  • National Sheriffs' Association (NSA)
  • National Governors Association (NGA)


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