Ashton Carter, U.S. deputy secretary for Defense, and John Porcari, deputy 
secretary for Transportation, have written an official letter to the assistant 
secretary of Commerce stating that “there appear to be no practical solutions 
or mitigations that would permit the LightSquared broadband service.” Carter 
and Porcari are co-chairs of the National Executive Committee for Space-Based 
Positioning, Navigation, and Timing. This represents the strongest 
intra-government statement to date on the issue.

Their letter further states that “both LightSquared’s original and modified 
plans for its proposed mobile network would cause harmul interference to many 
GPS receivers. Additionally, an analysis by the Federal Aviation Administration 
has concluded that the LightSquared proposals are not compatible with several 
GPS-dependent aircraft safety-of-flight systems.”

“No additional testing is warranted at this time,” the authors conclude.

They further propose to “draft new GPS spectrum interference standards that 
will help inform future proposals for non-space, commercial uses in the bands 
adjacent to the GPS signals.”

No response has emerged from either the Federal Communications Commission or 
the National Telecommunications and Information Administration, the two bodies 
charged with making a determination on the issue. But the letter appears to 
signal a coming end to a conflict that has occupied many, and tied up many 
resources and consumed many millions of dollars, for the past year.

One source commented off the record that “Our hope is this will be the end of 
the matter, and the FCC will withdrawal its initial approval and inform LSQ 
they must seek the 500 MHz in a different portion of the spectrum.”
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