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If you need the complete document, download the WordPerfect version or Adobe Acrobat version, if available. ***************************************************************** Before the Federal Communications Commission Washington, D.C. 20554 In the Matter of ) ) Amendment of Parts 2 and 95 of ) the Commission's Rules to Create a ) ET Docket 99-255 Wireless Medical Telemetry Service ) PR Docket 92-235 ) REPORT AND ORDER (proceeding terminated) Adopted: June 8, 2000 Released: June 12, 2000 By the Commission: I. INTRODUCTION 1. By this action, the Commission establishes a new Wireless Medical Telemetry Service (WMTS) which will enhance the ability of health care providers to offer high quality and cost- effective care to patients with acute and chronic health care needs. This action addresses consumer concerns that medical telemetry devices are increasingly at risk of harmful interference due to more extensive use of spectrum resources by other applications. The Commission allocates 14 Megahertz (MHz) to WMTS on a primary basis, which will allow potentially life-critical medical telemetry equipment to operate on an interference-protected basis. The Commission also adopts service rules for WMTS that "license by rule" to minimize regulatory procedures to facilitate rapid deployment. Medical telemetry equipment is used in hospitals and health care facilities to transmit patient measurement data, such as pulse and respiration rates to a nearby receiver, permitting greater patient mobility and increased comfort. As this service permits remote monitoring of several patients simultaneously it could also potentially decrease health care costs. The Commission's action will improve the reliability of this vital service. II. BACKGROUND 2. Previously, medical telemetry devices were only allowed to operate under either Part 15 or Part 90 of the Commission's rules. Part 15 of the rules permitted medical telemetry equipment to operate on an unlicensed basis on vacant Television (TV) channels 7-13 and 14-46 (174-216 MHz and 470-668 MHz). Part 90 of the rules permitted medical telemetry equipment to operate on a secondary basis to land mobile users in the 450-470 MHz band. Medical telemetry has no protection from interference from the primary users of these bands. 3. The spectrum used by medical telemetry equipment on an unlicensed or secondary basis under Parts 15 and 90 is increasingly being used more intensively by existing primary services, thereby posing an increased risk of interference to medical telemetry devices. In 1995, the Commission adopted changes to Part 90 of the rules to allow for more efficient use of the spectrum by land mobile services. These changes established a new channeling plan for private land mobile radio (PLMR) services in the 450-470 MHz band by decreasing the channel spacing from 25.0 kHz to 6.25 kHz. Under the new channeling scheme, high-power primary users of the band would be able to operate on the low power "offset" channels used by medical telemetry equipment. This could result in interference to medical telemetry equipment, possibly causing it to be unusable at times. For this reason, the Commission placed a freeze on the filing of applications for high power operation in the 450-470 MHz band on the offset channels in 1995, which remains in effect pending the development of a plan to protect low power operations in this band. 4. In addition to the above-mentioned Part 90 rule changes, there have been other recent changes to the Commission's rules that could result in harmful interference to medical telemetry equipment operating under Part 15. At the direction of Congress, the Commission has provided for the introduction of digital television (DTV) stations in the TV broadcast bands. In order to accomplish this, the Commission has provided each local TV station with an additional 6 MHz channel that will be used to broadcast DTV during the transition. This means that there will be fewer vacant channels in every market, and that in some areas, channels that were once unused for TV broadcasting may now be used for analog DTV. 5. The transition from analog to digital television is currently under way, with the first stations commencing DTV broadcasting in November 1998. The Commission has created over 1,600 allotments for DTV stations, a large percentage of which are on TV channels 7-46, which are also used for medical telemetry equipment operating under Part 15 of the rules. All television stations are required to commence DTV broadcasting no later than May 1, 2003. As existing stations begin DTV operation on their new channels, some low-power television stations currently operating on or adjacent to those channels may be forced to switch frequencies to avoid causing harmful interference to DTV, further crowding the spectrum used by medical telemetry equipment. 6. Concerns about possible interference to medical telemetry equipment by DTV operations were heightened in March 1998 when a TV station in Texas began test transmissions on a previously unused channel that had been assigned to it for DTV operation. The transmissions caused severe interference to the operation of medical telemetry equipment at a nearby hospital, rendering the equipment temporarily unusable. The station immediately ceased operation upon learning of the interference, and the medical telemetry equipment was changed to operate on another frequency. The Commission and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) have since taken steps to help ensure that hospitals are notified before new DTV stations come on the air to provide them with time to modify any medical telemetry equipment that operates on the same frequency. 7. In the Notice of Proposed Rule Making in this proceeding, we proposed to allocate spectrum where medical telemetry equipment could operate on a primary basis. We also proposed to establish a new Wireless Medical Telemetry Service (WMTS) under Part 95 of the rules. The Commission's proposal was based on recommendations provided by the American Hospital Association's (AHA) Medical Telemetry Task Force, which was established in coordination with the FDA, in response to the incidence of interference to medical telemetry equipment from a DTV station described above. A total of 33 parties filed comments in response to the Notice, and 9 parties filed reply comments. The vast majority of comments supported the Commission's proposal to establish a WMTS, and a number of parties provided recommendations to improve the proposals in the Notice. III. DISCUSSION A. Spectrum Allocation 1. Spectrum Requirements 8. The Notice proposed to allocate 14 MHz of spectrum to the WMTS. This proposal was based on an AHA survey of hospitals of various sizes in both metropolitan and suburban/rural areas to determine the amount of spectrum needed for medical telemetry equipment. In order to calculate the amount of spectrum required, AHA assumed six categories of patient medical parameters that would be measured and that the transmitters could operate with a spectral efficiency of 0.8 bits per second per Hertz (bps/Hz), which is approximately the same spectral efficiency the Commission requires in Part 90 of the rules. AHA determined that a total of 6.125 MHz is required to meet current patient needs and that the spectrum requirements for medical telemetry equipment would likely double within ten years, resulting in a requirement of at least 12 MHz of spectrum for medical telemetry equipment. 9. CDRH, IIT and Brian Porras agreed with the AHA recommendation for the amount of spectrum required. IIT stated that the methodology used by AHA to estimate current and future spectrum needs is sound, and Brian Porras stated that 12 MHz of spectrum is necessary because spectrum needs will increase dramatically in the future. Spacelabs believes that the assumed spectral efficiency of 0.8 bps/Hz is not currently achievable, but could be in about two years, while Zymed believes that a 0.4 bps/Hz spectral efficiency is more reasonable. Datex-Ohmeda and Mortara both believe that more spectrum will be required. Datex-Ohmeda states that 30 MHz will be needed for a hospital with 200 monitored patients. Mortara states that 12 lead electrocardiograms (ECGs) require significantly greater bandwidth than 6 MHz, and that the proposed amount of spectrum is based on the technology of the last 20 years and will not be adequate for the next 20 years. However, Final Analysis and PCIA both disagree with allocating 12 MHz of spectrum for medical telemetry. Final Analysis claims that 12 MHz was based on a survey biased to give inflated results, then doubled to estimate future growth. PCIA questions the need for 12 MHz of spectrum, stating that there has been an inadequate demonstration of a need sufficient to warrant double the amount of spectrum allegedly required today at the largest institutions. ACCE disagrees with Final Analysis that the proposed 14 MHz allocation is wasteful and unwarranted, stating that the AHA survey of hospitals documented the need in a reasonable and methodical manner. 10. The AHA study cited a need for 6 MHz now and at least 12 MHz in the near future of interference-free spectrum to satisfy the nation's needs for safe and reliable wireless medical telemetry capabilities. We find this estimate is reasonable. As the Department of Health and Human Services notes, it is likely that the use of medical telemetry will become more widespread, driven by the need to reduce medical care costs and by increasing advances in medical technology. Medical telemetry devices can reduce health care costs by helping to speed the patient recovery time and reduce the duration of hospital stays. Advances in medical technology will allow monitoring of an increasing number of patient parameters, which will increase spectrum requirements. We also note that demand is likely to be influenced by the growing population of elderly people in the United States. We do not concur with Final Analysis, which states that the AHA survey is based on inflated spectrum requirements, which were then doubled to estimate future growth. Nor do we agree with PCIA, which questions the need for 12 MHz and notes that this amount is over double the amount of spectrum currently required by the largest institutions. As noted by the American College of Clinical Engineering, the AHA results were based on a study of more than a half dozen clinical organizations and fourteen geographically dispersed hospitals of various sizes. We do believe, however, that the estimate of Datex-Ohmeda that 30 MHz of spectrum will be required for 200 patients appears excessive, because 150 kHz channels for data transmission should not be required if efficient modulation techniques are employed. Hence, we accept assertions of the medical community that the number of parameters being monitored using medical telemetry will increase in the future and support the AHA findings on spectrum requirements. 11. We are making available 14 MHz of spectrum in three blocks located at 608-614 MHz, 1395-1400 MHz, and 1429-1432 MHz for wireless medical telemetry. In making available 14 MHz of spectrum, we note that these bands each have significant constraints, such that the entire allocation is unlikely to be available in any individual market. The 608-614 MHz band is constrained as a result of radio astronomy quiet zones, including some sites in large markets, and interference from adjacent TV channels. The remaining 8 MHz that we are allocating is constrained by adjacent band interference from high power radars located below 1390 MHz and grandfathered protected Federal sites. However, this allocation ensures that at least 6 MHz is available for WMTS in all locations, consistent with the AHA needs assessment, with at least some additional spectrum available to accommodate long term needs. We note that this is in fact significantly less than the amount of spectrum that is currently available to medical telemetry on an unprotected basis. However, we find that the benefits of a primary allocation dedicated to this service compensates for the reduced availability of spectrum. We wish to underscore that we do not anticipate any further allocations for medical telemetry devices and expect manufacturers and the health care community to ensure that this spectrum is used efficiently to meet long term needs. We also wish to note that this medical telemetry allocation is an exception to the approach we have been taking toward more flexible allocations that are not service specific. A specific allocation is necessary in this case to protect the public safety by providing spectrum where medical telemetry equipment can operate without interference. Further, it will resolve conflicts that have delayed the land mobile refarming and that are affecting the deployment of DTV. 2. Frequency Bands 12. The Notice proposed the following two options for frequency bands to be allocated to the WMTS: Option 1 Option 2 608-614 MHz 608-614 MHz 1395-1400 MHz 1391-1400 MHz 1429-1432 MHz 13. The 608-614 MHz band corresponds to TV channel 37, which is not used for TV stations and is currently reserved for radio astronomy. It is available for medical telemetry under Part 15 of the rules on an unlicensed basis. The other proposed bands are former government bands that were reallocated for non-government use under the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993. Government operations in those bands may continue at certain sites around the country for a number of years. 14. Two different options were proposed because other parties had expressed an interest in operating in portions of the 1300 MHz and 1400 MHz bands. For example the Land Mobile Communications Council (LMCC) has filed a petition for rule making to allocate the 1390-1400 MHz and 1427-1432 MHz bands for private land mobile services under Part 90 of the rules. Itron, Inc. filed a petition for rule making on February 29, 2000 requesting that the Commission allocate the 1427-1432 MHz band for utility telemetry on a primary basis. In addition, several licensees of low earth orbit ("Little Leo") satellite systems have been performing studies on the feasibility of operating satellite feeder uplinks in the 1390-1393 MHz band and downlinks in the 1429-1432 MHz band as part of an effort to obtain an international frequency allocation for this purpose. 15. AHA, Brian Porras, MedStar, Spacelabs and Vitalcom support frequency option 1 because the split upper bands will facilitate two-way communications. AHA does not believe it is possible to share the 1429-1432 MHz band with Little Leo satellite systems, and it recommends allocating this band for medical telemetry even though it would preclude its use for Little Leo feeder downlinks. AHA states there is no guarantee that the band would ever be allocated internationally for Little Leos, so the Commission should allocate it for medical telemetry, which has a current substantiated need. CDRH is concerned that co-primary status for Little Leos and WMTS could result in interference to medical telemetry. IIT Research believes that WMTS is unlikely to cause interference to Little Leos, but Little Leos could cause interference to WMTS. MedStar suggests that the Commission find an alternative to the 1429-1432 MHz band because sharing with Little Leo downlinks is unlikely. NTIA supports proposed frequency Option 1 since it provides increased spectrum flexibility over the bands proposed in Option 2. The National Academies support Option 1 because is will have less impact on sensitive radio astronomy operations. 16. ORBCOMM prefers frequency Option 2 (608-614/1391-1400 MHz) because there would be only 2 MHz of overlap with the prospective Little Leo uplink frequencies and no overlap with the prospective downlink frequencies. It believes that sharing between Little Leos and medical telemetry is possible in both the prospective uplink and downlink bands. ORBCOMM assumes that medical telemetry equipment will be used indoors, so it will not receive interference on the downlink frequencies, and the uplinks can be located in remote areas to minimize the possibility of interference to medical telemetry. IIT states that there is no inherent technical advantage to WMTS from either of the frequency options proposed by the Commission. It believes that WMTS is unlikely to cause interference to Little Leos, but Little Leo operations could cause interference to medical telemetry. 17. Itron opposes allocating the 1429-1432 MHz band for medical telemetry, stating that the Notice does not consider the impact on their meter reading systems in the 1427-1432 MHz band, and that medical telemetry equipment in the band could jeopardize continued operation of meter-reading services. It notes that the comments in this proceeding do not resolve the question of whether medical telemetry equipment can share the 1429-1432 MHz band with meter reading equipment, and it urges the Commission not to allocate that band for medical telemetry, or at least explore interference issues thoroughly. Final Analysis opposes both proposed options for medical telemetry frequency bands. It states that the Commission should consider other alternatives for satisfying the needs of the WMTS without harming Little Leos, and that neither option is suitable due to the difficulties in sharing spectrum between Little Leos and medical telemetry. Final Analysis further states that the Commission may not remove spectrum from the reserve unless or until a determination has been made that it can be replenished. It also contends that the Commission could allocate frequencies in the bands 1385-1390 MHz and 1432-1435 MHz without the need for auction, or alternatively the Commission could allocate frequencies in the bands 1394-1400 MHz or 1427-1429 MHz. 18. We conclude that it is necessary to allocate spectrum where medical telemetry equipment can operate on a primary basis. Based on the record, we also conclude that WMTS's planned use is best accommodated by making three blocks of spectrum in the 608-614 MHz, 1395- 1400 MHz, and 1429-1432 MHz bands as discussed below. 19. 608-614 MHz. We find the 608-614 MHz band to be suitable for WMTS because, other than radio astronomy, it is only used for medical telemetry under Part 15 of the rules. We also note that no commenters opposed the use of this band. Accordingly, we allocate this band to medical telemetry equipment on a co-primary basis with radio astronomy. Operation of medical telemetry equipment in this band must not cause interference to sensitive radio astronomy operations, and users will be required to coordinate their operation with radio astronomy facilities. We note that medical telemetry service providers operating on 608-614 MHz (television channel 37) currently must accept adjacent channel interference from broadcast television stations operating on channels 36 and 38. With this allocation, we are not requiring television broadcasters to protect WMTS from adjacent band interference. We believe that the multi-band approach that we are adopting provides sufficient flexibility to WMTS. WMTS providers can operate on one of the other bands that we are making available in situations where a hospital is in close proximity to a television station operating on channels 36 or 38. Furthermore, WMTS providers can design equipment to provide sufficient protection from adjacent channel interference as is current practice. 20. 1395-1400 MHz and 1429-1432 MHz. In addition to the 608-614 MHz band, we are allocating the 1395-1400 MHz and 1429-1432 MHz bands for medical telemetry. Allocating the 1395- 1400 MHz band instead of the alternative band we proposed will result in a 4 MHz greater frequency separation between medical telemetry and government radars operating below 1385 MHz, thereby reducing the risk of interference to medical telemetry equipment. We find that the frequency separation between the 1395-1400 MHz and the 1429-1432 MHz bands will give greater flexibility for medical telemetry by making the bands more useful for two-way communications than a single contiguous band at 1391-1400 MHz. 21. We understand that Little Leo operators seek more spectrum for feeder links and have expressed interest in the 1429-1432 MHz band. The Little Leo industry is currently conducting studies on the feasibility of additional feeder links in this band. We note that a domestic allocation for Little Leo feeder links would be of little value without an international allocation due to the international nature of this service. We recognize that the recently completed World Radiocommunications Conference adopted a resolution calling for tests and demonstrations to validate sharing between Little Leos' feederlinks and existing and planned services in the 1390-1393 MHz and 1429-1432 MHz bands. We also recognize that allocating the 1429-1432 MHz band for medical telemetry may limit possible use of the this band in the United States by Little Leos due to likely sharing constraints. As medical telemetry has an immediate need for new spectrum, we conclude that 1429-1432 MHz should be made available for WMTS at this time and this allocation should be considered in forthcoming sharing feasibility analyses. The other bands recommended by Final Analysis for medical telemetry are simply not suitable. The 1385-1390 MHz band has been reallocated back to government use, the 1427- 1429 MHz band is already heavily used for utility telemetry equipment and we have not yet determined whether sharing between medical telemetry and utility telemetry is possible. Further, NTIA notes that the 1432-1435 MHz band was transferred to the Commission for assignment to new services by competitive bidding pursuant to the Balanced Budget Act of 1997. We disagree with Final Analysis' contention that spectrum placed in the reserve can not be removed until a replacement has been designated. The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993 which directed the Commission to establish a spectrum reserve does not specify a specific amount that must be held in reserve, and it states that the Commission is not precluded from making changes to the spectrum use plan it develops. The Commission previously noted that it would be open to petitions to use the 1390-1400 MHz and 1427- 1432 MHz bands prior to the date when allocation of the remaining spectrum in the reserve begins. 22. As stated above, both LMCC and Itron have filed petitions for rule making to allocate the 1429-1432 MHz band for other purposes. We find that medical telemetry has an immediate need for new spectrum, and that this band is suitable for medical telemetry. This action does not foreclose LMCC or Itron from obtaining new spectrum allocations. As we stated in our November 1999 Policy Statement, the bands 1390-1395 MHz, 1427-1429 MHz and 1432-1435 MHz could be used for land mobile services. In addition, the band 1427-1429 MHz could be used for utility telemetry, and it may be possible to share the 1429-1432 MHz band between utility telemetry and medical telemetry. Accordingly, we will consider the LMCC and Itron petitions in separate proceedings. B. Service Rules 23. In this section, we adopt service rules for the new Wireless Medical Telemetry Service (WMTS). These service rules only apply to the WMTS that will operate at 608-614 MHz, 1395-1400 MHz, and 1429-1432 MHz, and not to the current medical telemetry operations permitted under Parts 15 and 90. The rules include licensing requirements and technical standards for the equipment, as well as a frequency coordination procedure. 24. Definition. In the Notice, we proposed the following definition for medical telemetry: Wireless medical telemetry is defined as the measurement and recording of physiological parameters and other patient-related information via radiated bi- or unidirectional electromagnetic signals. 25. Final Analysis states that the definition of medical telemetry should exclude video and voice transmissions, and that medical telemetry should be limited to uni-directional transmissions on a primary basis, with bi-directional transmissions having secondary status. AHA disagrees that bi-directional transmissions should be secondary, stating that bi-directional transmissions are already used for telecommand, power control and retransmission functions by medical telemetry equipment operating in the ISM bands under Part 15. Allowing bi-directional functions will promote the most efficient and cost-effective use of the new WMTS spectrum and advance the development of higher quality WMTS systems. 26. We agree that allowing bi-directional transmissions could promote the development of more advanced medical telemetry equipment and encourage more efficient use of the spectrum. The split frequency allocation we are adopting in this item was selected in part to facilitate two-way communications. Accordingly, we are adopting a definition of medical telemetry that will allow bi- directional transmissions. We find it unnecessary to exclude voice and video transmissions in the definition for medical telemetry. The issue of the types of communications that will be permitted in the WMTS is discussed below. 27. Licensing. There were no comments opposing our proposal that WMTS equipment be "licensed by rule", rather than requiring individual operators' licenses. Individual licensing is generally designed to give a licensee a protected service area, and thus establishes rights among competing entities in the same service. Operators in the WMTS will not be in competition with each other as are parties in other radio services. The WMTS spectrum will be shared among medical telemetry users, and there will be no mutual exclusivity between users. In addition, "licensing by rule" will minimize regulatory procedures and thus facilitate deployment. We are therefore adopting our proposal that the WMTS exist as one of the Citizen's Band services contained in Part 95 of the rules and that the equipment used in this service be "licensed by rule". The Commission has authority under Section 307(e) of the Communications Act to define the citizen's band radio services and to license them by rule. 28. Eligibility. We proposed that only authorized health care providers be eligible to operate transmitters in the WMTS. For the purpose of this service, an "authorized health care provider" would be defined as 1) a physician or other individual authorized under state or federal law to provide health care services; 2) a health care facility operated by or employing individuals authorized under state or federal law to provide health care services; or 3) any trained technician under the supervision and control of an individual or health care facility authorized under state or federal law to provide health care services. We proposed to define a "health care provider facility" as a hospital or other establishment that offers services, facilities and beds for use beyond a 24 hour period in rendering medical treatment, and organizations regularly engaged in providing medical services through clinics, public health facilities and similar establishments, including government entities and agencies such as Veterans Administration Hospitals. Health care facilities on tribal lands would also be included under our proposed definition. A health care facility would not include an ambulance or other moving vehicle, and this definition would also not allow home use of WMTS equipment. We are adopting these eligibility definitions as proposed. 29. Final Analysis believes that the definition of a health care facility should be limited to facilities accredited under state or federal law to more clearly identify the limits on medical telemetry. AHA disagrees with Final Analysis, stating that not only do some hospitals operate without accreditation, but accreditation is provided by private parties and not under state or federal law. We find that this proposed change to the definition of health care facility would be unreasonably restrictive, and we are not adopting it. 30. OAT disagrees with our proposed prohibition on using equipment in an ambulance or other moving vehicle, because paramedics are or will be important users of telemetry and other wireless technology. OAT believes the FCC should expand the eligibility definition of medical telemetry to cover home uses because home medical care may become one of the fastest growing segments of the health care industry in the future. Spacelabs and Zymed also believe the eligibility requirements for WMTS should be extended to allow home use. Zymed believes that home use of WMTS should be permitted since there is a trend toward home health care, and Spacelabs states that home care telemetry monitoring will be technically feasible and practical in the near future. ACCE believes that the Commission should allow for expansion of WMTS to the home due to the rate of increase of patient needs for home health care and the expanding applications of WMTS technology. However, Vitalcom opposes the in-home use of WMTS at this time due to the fact it would complicate the frequency coordination process. AHA states that in-home uses of WMTS equipment are likely to be transient, both in terms of geographic location and duration and it is concerned that the frequency coordinator will not be able to ensure its database will not become unreasonably cluttered from transient uses that soon become inactive. AHA recommends that until health care providers, equipment manufacturers and the frequency coordinator gain experience in the frequency coordination process, the Commission should review the use of equipment in the WMTS bands for in-home uses on a case-by-case basis. MedStar recommends a prohibition against home use of WMTS, although it believes the Commission should be willing to grant waivers on a case-by-case basis. AHA, CDRH and Vitalcom all believe that the Commission should express a willingness to revisit this issue in a future proceeding. 31. Although many commenters support including mobile or in-home use of medical telemetry equipment under WMTS, the record does not clearly demonstrate that such uses can easily be accommodated. It would be difficult to ensure that the frequency of the WMTS equipment used on an ambulance would not conflict with the frequencies used at all the various hospitals and health care facilities in a given area, which could possibly result in interference. The temporary use of WMTS at many dispersed locations would make it difficult to coordinate their operating frequencies. We concur with AHA that home use may complicate coordination and that experience is required prior to allowing unrestricted home use. Accordingly, we decline to allow the use of the WMTS at home or in moving vehicles at this time, although we may revisit the issue of home use at a future date. While we will not rule out waivers to allow home use of WMTS, we believe that a hard look at such requests would be necessary due to interference concerns. 32. Frequency coordination. The comments supported our proposal to designate a frequency coordinator to maintain a database of all WMTS equipment identified by location, operating frequency, emission type and output power. NTIA notes that a frequency coordinator would facilitate band sharing between hospitals and the remaining government operations at protected sites. Accordingly, we are adopting the proposal to designate a frequency coordinator to maintain a database of WMTS equipment. Without a database, there would be no record of WMTS usage because WMTS transmitters will not be individually licensed. The database will provide a record of the frequencies used by each facility or device to assist parties in selecting frequencies to avoid interference. The database will be used by eligible users and manufacturers to plan for specific frequency use within a geographic area, especially where numerous WMTS operations may occur. 33. The frequency coordinator will not be a decision maker as to which frequency should be used. Rather, the coordinator will notify users of potential frequency conflicts, and users should be able to resolve any conflicts among themselves. We expect that there will be few conflicts between users of WMTS equipment due to its low operating power, but the Commission will make the final decision on a case-by-case basis in disputes between users, if necessary. The coordinator must be familiar with the medical telemetry user community, and must make its services available to all parties on a first-come, first-served and non-discriminatory basis. The frequency coordinator must be willing to serve a five-year term, which could be renewed by the Commission. In the event that a frequency coordinator does not wish to continue at the end of its term, it will have to transfer its database to another designated entity. 34. The Notice asked for comments on the following questions about the frequency coordinator: 1) any other qualifications that a frequency coordinator must have, 2) whether a single entity or multiple entities should be designated as frequency coordinator(s), 3) how the frequency records could be maintained with multiple coordinators, and 4) whether we should limit the fees the frequency coordinator(s) can charge. 35. Final Analysis, IIT and IAFC/IMSA all believe that a single frequency coordinator should be designated. IIT stated that there is no advantage and many disadvantages to partitioning the database among multiple coordinators. IAFC/IMSA does not believe Commission should limit fees charged by coordinator, stating that it would be difficult for the Commission to determine the appropriate fee and that it has not been necessary to impose fee limits on coordinators for other services operating under our Part 90 rules. IIT believes that costs should be recouped on a "cost-plus-fixed-fee" basis, and that cost ceilings could be set. 36. Several entities expressed an interest in being a frequency coordinator for WMTS. Further, in the past the Commission has tried, where appropriate, to introduce market forces into the frequency coordination process. Therefore, rather than adopt a Commission rule restricting database management of WMTS spectrum to a single coordinator, we will leave the ultimate decision on the number of coordinators up to the Commission's Wireless Telecommunications Bureau (WTB). WTB already has delegated authority to select frequency coordinators in the services it administers. WTB will announce its coordination selection procedures in a Public Notice in the near future. We have not found it necessary to set limits on the fees charged by coordinators in other services, and we have no reason to believe that fee limits will be necessary in the WMTS. Accordingly, we will allow the designated coordinator to set the fee structure as necessary to recoup costs. 37. The Notice proposed that certain information be submitted to the frequency coordinator for inclusion on the database, including: 1) frequency range(s) used 2) modulation scheme used 3) effective radiated power 4) number of transmitters in use at the health care facility at the time of registration 5) legal name of the authorized health care provider 6) location of transmitter (coordinates, street address, building) 7) point of contact for the authorized health care provider. 38. CDRH believes that the database should also include the makes and model numbers of equipment, and the fax numbers and e-mail addresses of the users. IIT believes the database should also have fields for assigned frequencies, occupied bandwidth, manufacturer and model number, and equipment susceptibility. IAFC/IMSA generally agrees with the information to be collected, but it is concerned that disclosure of the name of the health care provider and point of contact could be misused for commercial purposes and that it raises issues of the privacy of patient information. 39. We find that including the equipment manufacturer and model number in the database could be useful for helping the frequency coordinator and users in determining the interference potential of WMTS equipment. This information could also assist the Commission or the FDA in locating certain devices in the event a question of compliance with the rules arose. Accordingly, we will specify that the equipment manufacturer and model number be submitted to the frequency coordinator for inclusion on the database. Much of the other information recommended by CDRH and IIT (fax numbers, e-mail addresses, assigned frequencies and occupied bandwidth) simply represents a more detailed description of the information we proposed. We agree with these recommendations and are including them in the final rules. We recognize that including the name of the health care provider and point of contact in the database could possibly make that information available to commercial entities. However, we find that this information is necessary to allow the coordinator and parties using the WMTS to contact other users to verify information and resolve potential conflicts. Thus, we will require the name of the health care provider and a point of contact to be included on the database. Including this information should not raise issues of privacy of patient information, because the database will not contain the patient names or other patient identification information. However, we disagree with the suggestion of IIT to include information about equipment susceptibility. IIT did not specify exactly what type of information should be included, and in any case the Commission does not have clear authority to establish standards for the susceptibility of medical telemetry equipment. 40. We proposed that equipment registrations be effective until the health care provider requests their cancellation, and that access to the database be made available to all parties. We proposed that health care providers would have to notify the frequency coordinator when a system is permanently taken out of service, unless it is replaced with one with the same technical characteristics. We also proposed that health care providers notify the frequency coordinator of a change in the location of equipment to another facility or changes to other operating parameters of equipment. 41. AHA, MedStar and Vitalcom believe that equipment registrations should remain in the database until affirmatively removed, and that the database should be open to all parties. However, Brian Porras, IIT and IAFC/IMSA believe that there should be an expiration date on database entries, which could prevent the database from becoming "cluttered" with out-of-date entries. IIT recommends a ten year renewal period, and IAFC/IMSA recommends a five year renewal period, with the coordinator notifying users of the expiration of their registrations before deleting entries. CDRH believes that the information on the database should be restricted to government agencies and those parties with needs for it that are related to health care. 42. We find that requiring periodic equipment registration renewals from health care providers to be an unnecessary burden. Most hospitals would find it difficult to remember to renew their registrations after five years have passed, and requiring coordinators to send out periodic renewal notices and process renewal applications could significantly increase their workload. However, we will not preclude coordinators from verifying the continued use of registered equipment on an "as needed" basis, such as when the database shows a conflict between a registered user and a new user. Accordingly, we are adopting our proposal that equipment registrations will remain valid until the health care provider requests cancellation. Restricting access to the database to certain parties would be difficult and burdensome for the coordinator because the coordinator would have to verify that each and every party accessing the database has a need for the information that is related to health care. Such restrictions could make it difficult for parties with legitimate needs for information to view the database. We therefore find that the database should be open to all parties. 43. Permissible communications. We proposed that the WMTS could be used for all types of communications, except for voice or video transmissions. We proposed to exclude these types of transmissions because we were concerned that video could occupy a significant portion of the spectrum allocated to the WMTS, and that allowing voice transmissions could encourage the equipment to be used as a form of wireless intercom. 44. AHA, MedStar and Vitalcom generally agreed with prohibiting voice and video transmissions in the WMTS bands, provided this prohibition does not include waveform information. AHA believes that the Commission should be willing to revisit this issue at a later date, and MedStar believes that the Commission should consider allowing voice transmissions upon a special showing that such transmissions are consistent with the intended purpose of transmitting vital patient data. Brian Porras disagreed with prohibiting voice and video transmissions and stated that there are other systems far more suitable for use as a wireless intercom. CDRH, OAT and Zymed all believe that the Commission should allow voice and video transmissions. CDRH states that the ability to send audio or medical images could augment the capabilities of the WMTS. 45. We find that the transmission of waveform information such as electrocardiograms (ECGs) is within the intended purpose of the WMTS, which is to transmit vital patient data. Accordingly, we will permit the transmission of waveform information in the WMTS. However, allowing the general purpose use of video in the WMTS could potentially result in video occupying a large portion of the available spectrum. This is a greater concern initially because portions of the WMTS spectrum will be unavailable for a number of years in parts of the country due to grandfathered government operations. We are not persuaded that there is currently a need for voice capabilities in telemetry equipment, and we reiterate our concern that allowing such capabilities could encourage use of the equipment for other than its intended purpose of transmitting patient data. Accordingly, we will prohibit voice and video transmissions in the WMTS at this time, but we may revisit the issue at a later date after government operations cease in the WMTS bands. 46. Technical Standards. We proposed only minimal technical standards for WMTS equipment to give manufacturers the flexibility to develop different applications for medical telemetry. We did not propose a specific channelization scheme for the 1395-1400 MHz and 1429-1432 MHz bands. However, to prevent users from monopolizing the 608-614 MHz band, we proposed that equipment using broadband technologies, such as spread spectrum, be capable of operating on channels of 1.5 MHz each, up to a maximum of 6 MHz. Such equipment would operate on the minimum number of channels necessary, and must have the capability of being "throttled back" so it will occupy as little as one 1.5 MHz channel, if necessary, to allow multiple users to share that band. There were no objections to the proposed requirement on maximum channel usage in the 608-614 MHz band, so we are adopting this requirement which will allow the WMTS spectrum to be used more efficiently. We believe that stringent spectrum efficiency standards are unnecessary due to the highly competitive nature of the manufacturing industry for wireless biomedical telemetry equipment. Regulatory flexibility will encourage competitive manufacturers to innovate and to use more efficient technologies to meet future medical health care demands. We do not contemplate allocating additional spectrum for the WMTS. It is therefore incumbent on manufacturers and WMTS users to be spectrum efficient in the design and use of WMTS equipment. 47. We proposed the following field strength limits for transmitters in the WMTS. Frequency band Maximum field strength Measurement Distance Measurement Bandwidth Detector Function 608-614 MHz 200 mV/m 3 meters 120 +/- 20 kHz CISPR QP 1395-1400 MHz 740 mV/m 3 meters 1 MHz Average 1429-1432 MHz 740 mV/m 3 meters 1 MHz Average 48. The limit we proposed in the 608-614 MHz band was lower than the limit proposed by AHA in their report. AHA, Datascope, IIT, Martha McDonough, Vitalcom and Zymed all requested that the Commission adopt the higher limit proposed by AHA. AHA stated that the higher limit is necessary to allow WMTS equipment to overcome the noise levels typically found in hospitals. Datascope, Martha McDonough and Vitalcom stated that higher limits can help reduce the cost and complexity of medical telemetry systems, and IIT stated higher limits would improve the systems' reliability. However, HP believes that the limit we proposed is sufficient to address the severe noise and fading found in hospitals, and that the losses due to fading can be addressed more effectively through system design and antenna placement than through increased transmitter power. The National Academies and NTIA supported our proposed limit because it will protect radio astronomy operations from interference. 49. The current field strength limit in the 608-614 MHz band was developed after consultations between the Commission, NTIA and radio astronomy interests. The limit was selected to allow a reasonable operating level for medical telemetry equipment while still protecting radio astronomy operations from interference. We recognize that there could be certain benefits to medical telemetry users with a higher limit in this band, but as HP notes, the current limit is adequate with proper system design. In the interest of protecting radio astronomy operations, we will apply a limit of 200 mV/m measured at 3 meters to medical telemetry equipment in the 608-614 MHz band. There were no objections to the proposed limits in the 1395-1400 MHz and 1429-1432 MHz bands, and we are adopting them as proposed. 50. We proposed the same out-of-band field strength limits for transmitters in the WMTS bands that are used for most intentional radiators under Part 15 of the rules. We have found those limits to be effective at controlling interference. There were no objections to applying the Part 15 out-of-band emission limits to WMTS equipment, and we are adopting them. 51. Protection of other existing services. The WMTS must not cause interference to radio astronomy operations, and to certain grandfathered government operations. We are therefore adopting rules requiring the coordination of WMTS operations in the 608-614 MHz band with radio astronomy operations, which are the same as the coordination requirements currently found in Part 15. The rules also require operators in the 1395-1400 MHz and 1429-1432 MHz bands to protect certain government operations. Finally, parties using WMTS equipment should be aware that the operation of transmitters in close proximity to medical equipment could cause interference to the operation of the medical equipment. The rules provide a warning to this effect, which is the same warning found in Part 15. 52. RF Safety. We do not currently require the routine evaluation of medical telemetry equipment for compliance with the radiofrequency (RF) radiation safety guidelines in our rules due to the low power of the equipment. The Notice did not propose to require RF safety measurements for WMTS equipment because such equipment would also operate at relatively low power levels. However, PCTEST stated in its comments that WMTS equipment operating under the proposed technical parameters could exceed the RF safety guidelines. It therefore recommends that the Commission require measurements of the specific absorption rate (SAR) of RF energy by the body from WMTS equipment. AHA disagrees with PCTEST stating that the Commission already excludes other devices from RF exposure measurements that have similar power and operating frequencies to WMTS. Further WMTS devices will have to be approved by the FDA, which evaluates the safety and effectiveness of all medical devices. 53. Our rules for RF safety classify equipment into two categories: 1) mobile devices, which normally operate with at least a 20 centimeter separation from the radiating element to the body of the user or a nearby person, and 2) portable devices, which normally operate with less than a 20 centimeter separation from the radiating element to the body of the user. Based upon our analysis, we agree with PCTEST that portable WMTS equipment could possibly exceed the RF safety guidelines in our rules. Accordingly, we will require routine environmental evaluation for RF exposure of portable WMTS equipment prior to equipment authorization or use. We expect that the majority of WMTS equipment will be classified as "portable" because medical telemetry transmitters are typically worn on the body. However, we realize that there may be some applications where the transmitter is separated from the body by more than 20 centimeters, such as a unit mounted on a bed or incorporated within a separate device. Consistent with the RF safety requirements for other services, mobile WMTS equipment will be categorically excluded from routine environmental evaluation because WMTS equipment complying with the technical requirements we are adopting will operate with an effective radiated power (ERP) of less than 1.5 watts, which is the threshold for the exclusion of equipment operating below 1.5 GHz. 54. Equipment authorization requirement. The Notice proposed authorizing WMTS transmitters through the Declaration of Conformity (DoC) procedure in Part 2 of the rules. DoC is a manufacturer's self-approval procedure where the equipment is tested to ensure it complies with the Commission's technical standards, and may then be marketed without an approval by the Commission. Final Analysis and IIT agreed that WMTS transmitters should be authorized under the DoC procedure. However, PCTEST believes the Commission should require certification for WMTS equipment because no specific measurement procedure exists, and because there is little or no guidance for equipment setup, measurement equipment or test sites above 1 GHz. In an ex-parte filing, Phillip Inglis also stated that WMTS equipment should be subject to certification due to measurement uncertainties and the need to make SAR measurements. AHA disagrees with PCTEST that WMTS equipment should be subject to certification because the certification process just creates delays for manufacturers. 55. The certification procedure requires the manufacturer to file electronically a test report showing the equipment complies with the rules along with other supporting documentation to the Commission or to a designated Telecommunication Certification Body (TCB). The equipment may not be marketed until an approval has been received from the Commission or a TCB. Upon further consideration, we agree that certification is the appropriate authorization procedure for WMTS equipment. WMTS equipment involves new technologies, and the majority will be subject to routine environmental evaluation for RF safety. Requiring certification is consistent with the actions we have taken in similar cases, such as the Medical Implant Communication Service (MICS) in Part 95. However, we note that procedures for making the RF exposure measurements are currently under development. When such procedures are developed, we may consider relaxing the certification requirement for medical telemetry equipment. C. Transition Provisions 56. Equipment authorization. We proposed that all new medical telemetry equipment that receives an equipment authorization starting two years after the adoption of final rules must operate in the newly authorized frequency bands. We also proposed that medical telemetry equipment that has received an equipment authorization to operate in the old bands prior to that date may continue to be manufactured, imported, marketed and operated indefinitely. IIT, Spacelabs and Vitalcom agreed with the proposed two year transition period for new equipment. AHA, GE and Medstar agree that new equipment should have the capability of operating in the new bands, but believe that we should allow "dual-mode" equipment with the capability of operating in the current Part 15 and Part 90 bands in addition to the new bands. GE states that this would provide for the instances in which the new primary frequencies may not be usable or may not afford sufficient capacity. 57. Two years is a reasonable timetable for requiring manufacturers to produce equipment to operate in the new bands. Based on the comments received, we are confident that manufacturers will be able to meet this deadline. We decline to allow equipment approved after that deadline to have the capability of operating in the current Part 15 and Part 90 bands. Our goal in this proceeding is to not only provide spectrum where medical telemetry equipment can operate without interference, but also to encourage medical telemetry users to eventually migrate out of the current bands. Despite the fact that medical telemetry has no legal protection from interference in these bands, the fact remains that the Commission has had to take steps to protect medical telemetry from interference because it is used to protect safety of life. The steps the Commission has taken, such as the freeze in the 450-470 MHz band and the requirement for DTV stations to notify nearby health care facilities, affect other parties. We therefore wish to encourage medical telemetry users to migrate out of the current frequency bands and into the new frequency bands. Allowing the development of new equipment that can operate in the old bands after the transition date would discourage the eventual migration to the new bands. 58. Grandfathering. AHA believes that the Commission should grandfather the continued use and production of lawfully manufactured equipment in the Part 15 and Part 90 bands. IIT believes that there is no need to set a cutoff for equipment operating under Parts 15 and 90 since it is unlicensed and operates at the risk of the user. Medstar believes that the use of devices manufactured and in operation by the transition deadline should be permanently grandfathered, and the manufacture of devices authorized before the transition deadline should be grandfathered. Spacelabs urges the Commission to grandfather equipment currently authorized under Parts 15 and 90 that is purchased within 2 years after finalization of current rule making. Vitalcom believes that the Commission should grandfather the continued use and production of wireless medical telemetry equipment lawfully manufactured for the Part 15 band. 59. Requiring the replacement of functional medical telemetry systems that are not subject to interference would be an unnecessary financial burden on hospitals. Accordingly, we will permit medical telemetry equipment that has received an equipment authorization to operate in current Part 15 and Part 90 bands prior to the two year transition date to be manufactured, imported, marketed and operated without a cutoff date. This action will ensure that manufacturers will be able to make replacement parts for systems operating in the old bands, and that hospitals will be permitted to operate their existing systems as long as possible until replacement is necessary due to age or interference concerns. 60. Existing equipment registration. AHA believes that the Commission should allow the voluntary registration of existing Part 15 medical telemetry devices in the database. LMCC and PCIA want the Commission to mandate the registration of medical telemetry equipment in the land mobile bands so land mobile operators can avoid them during the transition period. ACCE and AHA do not oppose the registration of equipment in the 450-470 MHz band, but considers the LMCC proposal to be unworkable. 61. We find it unlikely that a complete database of all Part 15 and Part 90 medical telemetry transmitters could be developed prior to the transition to the new frequency bands. However, placing even some transmitters in a database could possibly assist parties in avoiding cases of interference. We therefore have no objection to allowing the voluntary registration of existing Part 15 and Part 90 medical telemetry devices. The rules we are adopting allow frequency coordinators to process voluntary requests to register equipment operating under Parts 15 and 90. D. 450-470 MHz Freeze 62. In 1995, the Commission adopted changes to Part 90 of the rules to allow more efficient use of the spectrum for land mobile services. These changes permitted high power operations on channels in the 450-470 MHz band. However, under the new channeling scheme, high-power primary users of the band would be able to operate on the same frequencies used for medical telemetry equipment. This could possibly result in interference to medical telemetry equipment. For this reason, on August 11, 1995, the Commission placed a freeze on the filing of applications for high power operation in the 450-470 MHz band on the 12.5 kHz offset channels. 63. 450-460 MHz band freeze. On October 20, 1999, the Commission issued a public notice asking parties operating medical telemetry equipment in the 450-460 MHz band to provide certain information to the Commission. We received responses from 25 parties around the country operating in this band. The majority of these users were operating a small number of devices on a limited number of frequencies around 457 and 458 MHz. Based on the limited usage of the 450-460 MHz band for medical telemetry, we find that the freeze on high-power land mobile applications in the 450-460 MHz band can be lifted. Accordingly, the Wireless Telecommunications Bureau will issue a public notice announcing the lifting the freeze in this band in the near future. We will work closely with the FDA to inform and educate the medical community of the lifting of the freeze to avoid interference to medical telemetry equipment. 64. 460-470 MHz band freeze. AHA and Spacelabs believe that a minimum five year transition period is necessary before lifting the freeze on high-power land mobile applications in the 460-470 MHz band. AHA objects to proposals to shorten the transition period for equipment in the 460-470 MHz band because sufficient spectrum is not immediately available for migration in all locations and replacement costs can not be absorbed by health care facilities in less than five years. Spacelabs wants a one-year transition period before lifting the freeze in the 450-460 MHz band. Brian Porras and CDRH support a four-year transition period to allow manufacturers and healthcare facilities adequate time to make the transition in an orderly manner. Brian Porras stated that hospitals are struggling financially and can't afford a major capital expenditure in a shorter timeframe to convert their equipment. However, AMTA, LMCC, Motorola and PCIA believe that AHA's proposed transition period can be shortened. LMCC, Motorola and PCIA state that medical telemetry could move to either the 608-614 MHz band or one of the designated low power channels in the 1997 LMCC low power plan. 65. We find that a five-year transition period is longer than is necessary to prepare for the lifting of the freeze in the 460-470 MHz band. The freeze was announced almost five years ago, so hospitals have been on notice that they may eventually have to change frequencies. Equipment is already available to operate in the 608-614 MHz band we are allocating in this proceeding, and equipment to operate in the other bands allocated in this proceeding should become available over the next two years. Five more years should not be required for hospitals to make the transition. We will therefore lift the freeze on high power land mobile application in the 460-470 MHz band within three years from the effective date of final rules in this proceeding. We will work closely with the FDA to inform and educate the medical community of the impending lifting of the freeze to accelerate this process. E. Other Matters 66. ISM bands. A small number of medical telemetry devices operate in the Industrial, Scientific and Medical (ISM) bands under provisions in Part 15 of the rules. These provisions are not specific to medical telemetry equipment, and any type of low power transmitter may be approved to operate under these sections, including cordless telephones, video transmitters and wireless modems. The Notice did not propose to prohibit medical telemetry equipment from operating under these sections. Symbol and Criticare both want the Commission to clarify whether medical telemetry will continue to be permitted to operate under these provisions. Mortara is concerned that dedicated bands for medical telemetry may create confusion for users that equipment in the ISM bands is unapproved, inappropriate, or outside of "standards". 67. The Notice did not propose to preclude medical telemetry equipment from operating in the ISM bands under Part 15 because only a small number of devices operate under these provisions. Therefore, there is not the same potential for a large number of cases of interference to medical telemetry equipment in these bands as there is for medical telemetry equipment operating in the TV and PLMR bands. We expect that the majority of medical telemetry equipment manufacturers will design equipment for the new bands allocated in this proceeding, and that only a small number of devices will continue to use the ISM bands. Therefore, we will continue to allow medical telemetry equipment to operate in the ISM bands under Part 15. While such operation will be permissible, manufacturers and users are cautioned that equipment operating in these bands has no protection from interference from ISM equipment operating under Part 18 of the rules or other low power transmitters operating under Part 15 of the rules. ADMINISTRATIVE MATTERS 68. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis. The Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis for this Report and Order, pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C.  604, is contained in Appendix C. 69. Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis. This Report and Order contains (either new or modified) information collection(s) subject to the PRA of 1995, Public Law 104-13. It will be submitted to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review under Section 3507(d) of the PRA. OMB, the general public, and other Federal agencies are invited to comment. Public and agency comments are due [insert date 60 days after date of publication in the Federal Register.] Comments should address: (a) whether the new or modified collection of information is necessary for the proper performance of the functions of the Commission, including whether the information shall have practical utility; (b) the accuracy of the Commission's burden estimates; (c) ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the information collected; and (d) ways to minimize the burden of the collection of information on the respondents, including the use of automated collection techniques or other forms of information technology. 70. To make cited sources more easily available to the readers, we are testing the use of hyperlinks to some FCC documents that are cited in this document. The World Wide Web addresses/URLs that we give here were correct at the time this document was prepared but may change over time. We do not have dedicated staff to update these URLs, however, so readers may find some URLs to be out of date as time progresses. We also advise that the only definitive text of FCC documents is the one that is published in the FCC Record. In case of discrepancy between the electronic documents cited here and the FCC Record, the version in the FCC Record is definitive. (Most word processors will allow users to "click through" to URLs in the electronic version of this document. However, some installations may preclude direct access to URLs with long character strings. In this case other techniques should be used to access the given URLs.) ORDERING CLAUSES 71. IT IS ORDERED, that Parts 2, 15, 90 and 95 of the Commission's Rules and Regulations ARE AMENDED as specified in Appendix A [effective 90 days after publication in the Federal Register]. This action is taken pursuant to Sections 4(i), 11, 301, 302, 303(e), 303(f), 303(r), 304, 307 and 332(b) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. Sections 154(i), 161, 301, 302, 303(e), 303(f), 303(r), 304, 307 and 332(b). 72. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Commission's Consumer Information Bureau, Reference Information Center, SHALL SEND a copy of this Report and Order, including the Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration. 73. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that ET Docket 99-255 is terminated. 74. For further information regarding this Report and Order, contact Hugh L. Van Tuyl, (202) 418-7506, Office of Engineering and Technology. FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION Magalie Roman Salas Secretary Appendix A Final Rules For the reasons discussed in the Report and Order, the Federal Communications Commission amends 47 C.F.R. Parts 2, 15, 90, and 95 as follows: PART 1 PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE 1. The authority citation for Part 1 continues to read as follows: Authority: 15 U.S.C. 79 et seq.; 47 U.S.C. 151, 154(i), 154(j), 155, 225, and 303(r). 2. Section 1.1307 is amended by revising paragraph (b)(2) to read as follows:  1.1307 Actions which may have a significant environmental effect, for which Environmental Assessments (EAs) must be prepared. * * * * * (b) * * * (2) Mobile and portable transmitting devices that operate in the Cellular Radiotelephone Service, the Personal Communications Services (PCS), the Satellite Communications Services, the General Wireless Communications Service, the Wireless Communications Service, the Maritime Services (ship earth stations only) and the Specialized Mobile Radio Service authorized under Subpart H of Parts 22, 24, 25, 26, 27, 80, and 90 of this chapter are subject to routine environmental evaluation for RF exposure prior to equipment authorization or use, as specified in  2.1091 and 2.1093 of this chapter. Unlicensed PCS, unlicensed NII and millimeter wave devices are also subject to routine environmental evaluation for RF exposure prior to equipment authorization or use, as specified in  15.253(f), 15.255(g), 15.319(i), and 15.407(f) of this chapter. Portable transmitting equipment for use in the Wireless Medical Telemetry Service (WMTS) is subject to routine environment evaluation as specified in  2.1093 and 95.1125 of this chapter. Equipment authorized for use in the Medical Implant Communications Service (MICS) as a medical implant transmitter (as defined in Appendix 1 to Subpart E of Part 95 of this chapter) is subject to routine environmental evaluation for RF exposure prior to equipment authorization, as specified in  2.1093 of this chapter by finite difference time domain computational modeling or laboratory measurement techniques. Where a showing is based on computational modeling, the Commission retains the discretion to request that specific absorption rate measurement data be submitted. All other mobile, portable, and unlicensed transmitting devices are categorically excluded from routine environmental evaluation for RF exposure under  2.1091, 2.1093 of this chapter except as specified in paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section. * * * * * PART 2 -- FREQUENCY ALLOCATIONS AND RADIO TREATY MATTERS; GENERAL RULES AND REGULATIONS 3. The authority citation for Part 2 continues to read as follows: AUTHORITY: 47 U.S.C. 154, 302, 303, 307, 336, and 337, unless otherwise noted. 4. Section 2.106 is amended as follows: a. Pages 37, 42, 43, and 44 of the Table of Frequency Allocations are revised. b. In the list of United States footnotes, revise footnote US246 and add footnotes US350, US351, and US352. c. In the list of Federal Government footnotes, revise footnotes G27, G30, and G114. The revisions and additions read as follows:  2.106 Table of Frequency Allocations. * * * * * 470-849 MHz (UHF) Page 37 International Table United States Table FCC Rule Part(s) Region 1 Region 2 Region 3 Federal Government Non-Federal Government 470-790 BROADCASTING 470-512 BROADCASTING Fixed Mobile S5.292 S5.293 470-585 FIXED MOBILE BROADCASTING 470-608 470-512 FIXED BROADCASTING LAND MOBILE NG66 NG114 NG127 NG128 NG149 Public Mobile (22) Broadcast Radio (TV) (73) Auxiliary Broadcasting (74) Private Land Mobile (90) 512-608 BROADCASTING S5.291 S5.298 512-608 BROADCASTING Broadcast Radio (TV) (73) Auxiliary Broadcasting (74) S5.297 585-610 FIXED MOBILE BROADCASTING RADIONAVIGATION NG128 NG149 608-614 RADIO ASTRONOMY Mobile-satellite except aeronautical mobile-satellite (Earth-to-space) S5.149 S5.305 S5.306 S5.307 608-614 LAND MOBILE US350 RADIO ASTRONOMY US74 Personal (95) 610-890 FIXED MOBILE BROADCASTING US246 614-806 BROADCASTING Fixed Mobile 614-890 614-698 BROADCASTING NG128 NG149 Broadcast Radio (TV) (73) Auxiliary Broadcast. (74) 698-746 BROADCASTING NG128 NG149 Broadcast Radio (TV) (73) Auxiliary Broadcast. (74) Note: Band to be Reallocated and auction- ed by Sept. 30, 2002. 1300-1350 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION S5.337 Radiolocation S5.149 1300-1350 AERONAUTICAL RADIO- NAVIGATION S5.337 Radiolocation G2 S5.149 1300-1350 AERONAUTICAL RADIO- NAVIGATION S5.337 Radiolocation S5.149 Aviation (87) 1350-1400 FIXED MOBILE RADIOLOCATION 1350-1400 RADIOLOCATION 1350-1390 FIXED MOBILE RADIOLOCATION G2 S5.149 S5.334 S5.339 US311 G27 G114 1350-1390 S5.149 S5.334 S5.339 1390-1395 RADIOLOCATION G2 Fixed Mobile S5.149 S5.339 US311 US351 G27 G114 1390-1395 S5.149 S5.339 US351 Note: 1390-1395 MHz became non-Federal Government exclusive spectrum in January 1999. S5.149 S5.338 S5.339 S5.149 S5.334 S5.339 1395-1400 LAND MOBILE US350 S5.149 US5.339 US311 US351 1395-1400 LAND MOBILE US350 S5.149 US5.339 US311 US351 Personal (95) 1400-1427 EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive) RADIO ASTRONOMY SPACE RESEARCH (passive) S5.340 S5.341 1400-1427 EARTH EXPLORATION-SATELLITE (passive) RADIO ASTRONOMY US74 SPACE RESEARCH (passive) S5.341 US246 1427-1429 SPACE OPERATION (Earth-to-space) FIXED MOBILE except aeronautical mobile S5.341 1427-1429 SPACE OPERATION (Earth-to-space) FIXED MOBILE except aeronautical mobile S5.341 G30 1427-1429 SPACE OPERATION (Earth-to-space) Fixed (telemetry) Land mobile (telemetry and telecommand) S5.341 Satellite Communications (25) Private Land Mobile (90) Note: 1427-1429 MHz became non-Federal Government exclusive spectrum in January 1999. 1429-1610 MHz (UHF) Page 43 International Table United States Table FCC Rule Part(s) Region 1 Region 2 Region 3 Federal Government Non-Federal Government 1429-1452 FIXED MOBILE except aeronautical Mobile 1429-1452 FIXED MOBILE S5.343 1429-1432 LAND MOBILE US350 S5.341 US352 1429-1432 LAND MOBILE US350 Fixed (telemetry) Land mobile (telemetry and telecommand) S5.341 US352 Private Land Mobile (90) Personal (95) 1432-1435 FIXED MOBILE S5.341 G30 1432-1435 Fixed (telemetry) Land mobile (telemetry and telecommand) S5.341 Private Land Mobile (90) Note: 1432-1435 MHz became mixed-use spectrum in January 1999 S5.341 S5.342 S5.341 1435-1525 MOBILE (aeronautical telemetry) Aviation (87) 1452-1492 FIXED MOBILE except aeronautical Mobile BROADCASTING S5.345 S5.347 BROADCASTING- SATELLITE S5.345 S5.347 S5.341 S5.342 1452-1492 FIXED MOBILE S5.343 BROADCASTING S5.345 S5.347 BROADCASTING-SATELLITE S5.345 S5.347 S5.341 S5.344 1492-1525 FIXED MOBILE except aeronautical Mobile S5.341 S5.342 1492-1525 FIXED MOBILE S5.343 MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) S5.348A S5.341 S5.344 S5.348 1492-1525 FIXED MOBILE S5.341 S5.348A S5.341 US78 1525-1530 SPACE OPERATION (space-to-Earth) FIXED MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) Earth exploration-satellite Mobile except aeronautical mobile S5.349 S5.341 S5.342 S5.350 S5.351 S5.352A S5.354 1525-1530 SPACE OPERATION (space-to-Earth) MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) Earth exploration-satellite Fixed Mobile S5.343 S5.341 S5.351 S5.354 1525-1530 SPACE OPERATION (space-to-Earth) FIXED MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) Earth exploration-satellite Mobile S5.349 S5.341 S5.351 S5.352A S5.354 1525-1530 MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) Mobile (aeronautical telemetry) S5.341 S5.351 US78 Satellite Communications (25) Aviation (87) 1530-1535 SPACE OPERATION (space-to-Earth) MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) S5.353A Earth exploration-satellite Fixed Mobile except aeronautical Mobile S5.341 S5.342 S5.351 S5.354 1530-1535 SPACE OPERATION (space-to-Earth) MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) S5.353A Earth exploration-satellite Fixed Mobile S5.343 S5.341 S5.351 S5.354 1530-1535 MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) MARITIME MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) Mobile (aeronautical telemetry) S5.341 S5.351 US78 US315 1535-1559 MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) 1535-1544 MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) MARITIME MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) S5.341 S5.351 US315 Satellite Communications (25) Maritime (80) 1544-1545 MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) S5.341 S5.356 1545-1549.5 AERONAUTICAL MOBILE-SATELLITE (R) (space-to-Earth) Mobile-satellite (space-to-Earth) S5.341 S5.351 US308 US309 Aviation (87) 1549.5-1558.5 AERONAUTICAL MOBILE-SATELLITE (R) (space-to-Earth) MOBILE-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) S5.341 S5.351 US308 US309 S5.341 S5.351 S5.353A S5.354 S5.355 S5.356 S5.357 S5.357A S5.359 S5.362A 1558.5-1559 AERONAUTICAL MOBILE-SATELLITE (R) (space-to-Earth) S5.341 S5.351 US308 US309 1559-1610 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION RADIONAVIGATION-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) S5.341 S5.355 S5.359 S5.363 1559-1610 AERONAUTICAL RADIONAVIGATION RADIONAVIGATION-SATELLITE (space-to-Earth) S5.341 US208 US260 Note: The NTIA Manual (footnote G126) states that differential GPS stations may be authori- zed in the 1559-1610 MHz band, but the FCC has not yet addressed this footnote. * * * * * UNITED STATES (US) FOOTNOTES * * * * * US246 Except for medical telemetry equipment operating in the band 608-614 MHz, no stations shall be authorized to transmit in the following bands: 608-614 MHz, 1400-1427 MHz, 1660.5-1668.4 MHz, 2690-2700 MHz, 4990-5000 MHz, 10.68-10.70 GHz, 15.35-15.40 GHz, 23.6- 24.0 GHz, 31.3-31.8 GHz, 51.4-54.25 GHz, 58.2-59.0 GHz, 64-65 GHz, 86-92 GHz, 100-102 GHz, 105-116 GHz, 164-168 GHz, 182-185 GHz and 217-231 GHz. Medical telemetry equipment shall not cause harmful interference to radio astronomy operations in the band 608-614 MHz and shall be coordinated under the requirements found in 47 C.F.R.  95.1119. * * * * * US350 In the bands 608-614 MHz, 1395-1400 MHz, and 1429-1432, the land mobile service is limited to medical telemetry and telecommand operations. Additionally, the band 1429-1432 MHz may be used on secondary basis for non-Government land mobile telemetry and telecommand and fixed telemetry. US351 In the band 1390-1400 MHz, Government operations, except for medical telemetry operations in the sub-band 1395-1400 MHz, are on a non-interference basis to authorized non- Government operations and shall not hinder implementation of any non-Government operations. However, Government operations authorized as of March 22, 1995 at 17 sites identified below will be continued on a fully protected basis until January 1, 2009. Sites Lat/Long Radius Sites Lat/Long Radius Eglin AFB, FL 30 28'N/086 31'W 80 km Ft. Greely, AK 63 47'N/145 52'W 80 km Dugway PG, UT 40 11'N/112 53'W 80 Ft. Rucker, AL 31 13'N/085 49'W 80 China Lake, CA 35 41'N/117 41'W 80 Redstone, AL 34 35'N/086 35'W 80 Ft. Huachuca, AZ 31 33'N/110 18'W 80 Utah Test Range, UT 40 57'N/113 05'W 80 Cherry Point, NC 34 57'N/076 56'W 80 WSM Range, NM 32 10'N/106 21'W 80 Patuxent River, MD 38 17'N/076 25'W 80 Holloman AFB, NM 33 29'N/106 50'W 80 Aberdeen PG, MD 39 29'N/076 08'W 80 Yuma, AZ 32 29'N/114 20'W 80 Wright-Patterson AFB, OH 39 50'N/084 03'W 80 Pacific Missile Range, CA 34 07'N/119 30'W 80 Edwards AFB, CA 34 54'N/117 53'W 80 US352 In the band 1429-1432 MHz, Government operations, except for medical telemetry operations, are on a non-interference basis to authorized non-Government operations and shall not hinder the implementation of any non-Government operations. However, Government operations authorized as of March 22, 1995 at 14 sites identified below will be continued on a fully protected basis until January 1, 2004. Sites Lat/Long Radius Sites Lat/Long Radius Patuxent River, MD 38 17'N/076 25'W 70 km Mountain Home AFB, ID 43 01'N/115 50'W 160 NAS Oceana, VA 36 49'N/076 02'W 100 NAS Fallon, NV 39 24'N/118 43'W 100 MCAS Cherry Point, NC 34 54'N/076 52'W 100 Nellis AFB, NV 36 14'N/115 02'W 100 Beaufort MCAS, SC 32 26'N/080 40'W 160 NAS Lemore, CA 36 18'N/119 47'W 120 NAS Cecil Field, FL 30 13'N/081 52'W 160 Yuma MCAS, AZ 32 39'N/114 35'W 160 NAS Whidbey IS., WA 48 19'N/122 24'W 70 China Lake, CA 35 29'N/117 16'W 80 Yakima Firing Ctr AAF, WA 46 40'N/120 15'W 70 MCAS Twenty Nine Palms, CA 34 15'N/116 03'W 80 GOVERNMENT (G) FOOTNOTES * * * * * G27 In the bands 225-328.6, 335.4-399.9, and 1350-1395 MHz, the fixed and mobile services are limited to the military services. G30 In the bands 138-144, 148-149.9, 150.05-150.8, 1427-1429, and 1432-1435 MHz, the fixed and mobile services are limited primarily to operations by the military services. * * * * * G114 In the band 1350-1395 MHz, the frequency 1381.05 MHz with emissions limited to ñ12 MHz is also allocated to fixed and mobile satellite services (space-to-earth) for the relay of nuclear burst data. * * * * * 5. Section 2.1093 is amended by revising paragraph (c) to read as follows:  2.1093 Radiofrequency radiation exposure evaluation: portable devices. * * * * * (c) Portable devices that operate in the Cellular Radiotelephone Service, the Personal Communications Service (PCS), the Satellite Communications Services, the General Wireless Communications Service, the Wireless Communications Service, the Maritime Services, the Specialized Mobile Radio Service, the Wireless Medical Telemetry Service (WMTS) and the Medical Implant Communications Service (MICS), authorized under subpart H of part 22 of this chapter, part 24 of this chapter, part 25 of this chapter, part 26 of this chapter, part 27 of this chapter, part 80 of this chapter (ship earth station devices only), part 90 of this chapter, subparts H and I of part 95, and unlicensed personal communication service, unlicensed NII devices and millimeter wave devices authorized under subparts D and E,  15.253 and  15.255 of part 15 of this chapter are subject to routine environmental evaluation for RF exposure prior to equipment authorization or use. All other portable transmitting devices are categorically excluded from routine environmental evaluation for RF exposure prior to equipment authorization or use, except as specified in  1.1307(c) and 1.1307(d) of this chapter. Applications for equipment authorization of portable transmitting devices subject to routine environmental evaluation must contain a statement confirming compliance with the limits specified in paragraph (d) of this section as part of their application. Technical information showing the basis for this statement must be submitted to the Commission upon request. * * * * * PART 15 -- RADIO FREQUENCY DEVICES 6. The authority citation for Part 15 continues to read as follows: AUTHORITY: 47 U.S.C. 154, 302, 303, 304, 307 and 544A. 7. Section 15.37 is amended by adding a new paragraph (h).  15.37 Transition provisions for compliance with the rules. * * * * * (h) Effective [two years from effective date of final rules], an equipment approval may no longer be obtained for medical telemetry equipment operating under the provisions of 15.242. The requirements for obtaining an approval for medical telemetry equipment after this date are found in Subpart H of Part 95 of this chapter. PART 90 -- PRIVATE LAND MOBILE RADIO SERVICES 8. The authority citation for Part 90 continues to read as follows: AUTHORITY: Sections 4(i), 11, 303(g), 303(r), and 332(c)(7) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 154(i), 161, 303(g), 303(r), 332(c)(7). 9. Section 90.203 is amended by revising paragraph (a)(1) to read as follows:  90.203 Certification required. (a) * * * (1) Effective [two years from effective date of final rules], an equipment approval may no longer be obtained for in-hospital medical telemetry equipment operating under the provisions of this part. The requirements for obtaining an approval for medical telemetry equipment after this date are found in Subpart H of Part 95 of this chapter. (2) * * * * * * * * PART 95 -- PERSONAL RADIO SERVICES 10. The authority citation for Part 95 continues to read as follows: AUTHORITY: Sections 4, 303, 48 Stat. 1066, 1082, as amended; 47 U.S.C. 154, 303. 11. Section 95.401 is amended by adding a new paragraph (d) to read as follows:  95.401 (CB Rule 1) What are the Citizens Band Radio Services? * * * * * (d) The Wireless Medical Telemetry Service (WMTS)--a private, short distance data communication service for the transmission of patient medical information to a central monitoring location in a hospital or other medical facility. Voice and video communications are prohibited. Waveforms such as electrocardiograms (ECGs) are not considered video. The rules for this service are contained in subpart H of this part. 12. Section 95.601 is amended by revising the last sentence to read as follows:  95.601 Basis and purpose. * * * The Personal Radio Services are the GMRS (General Mobile Radio Service)-subpart A, the Family Radio Service (FRS)-subpart B, the R/C (Radio Control Radio Service)-subpart C, the CB (Citizens Band Radio Service)-subpart D, the Low Power Radio Service (LPRS)-subpart G, the Wireless Medical Telemetry Service (WMTS)-subpart H, and the Medical Implants Communication Service (MICS)-subpart I. 13. A new section 95.630 is added as follows:  95.630 WMTS transmitter frequencies. WMTS transmitters may operate in the frequency bands specified below: 608-614 MHz 1395-1400 MHz 1429-1432 MHz 14. Section 95.631 is amended by adding a new paragraph (h) to read as follows:  95.631 Emission types. * * * * * (h) A WMTS station may transmit any emission type appropriate for communications in this service, except for video and voice. Waveforms such as electrocardiograms (ECGs) are not considered video. 15. Section 95.639 is amended by adding a new paragraph (f) to read as follows:  95.639 Maximum transmitter power. * * * * * (f) The maximum field strength authorized for WMTS stations in the 608-614 MHz band is 200 mV/m, measured at 3 meters. For stations in the 1395-1400 MHz and 1429-1432 MHz bands, the maximum field strength is 740 mV/m, measured at 3 meters. 16. Section 95.649 is revised to read as follows:  95.649 Power capability No CB, R/C, LPRS, FRS, MICS or WMTS unit shall incorporate provisions for increasing its transmitter power to any level in excess of the limits specified in  95.639. 17. Section 95.651 is revised to read as follows:  95.651 Crystal control required All transmitters used in the Personal Radio Services must be crystal controlled, except an R/C station that transmits in the 26-27 MHz frequency band, a FRS unit, a LPRS unit, a MICS transmitter, or a WMTS unit. 18. Appendix 1 to Subpart E to Part 95 Glossary of Terms is revised to add the term "WMTS. Wireless Medical Telemetry Service." at the end of the list. 19. A new Subpart H is added to Part 95 to read as follows: Subpart H Wireless Medical Telemetry Service (WMTS) Sec. 94.1101 Scope. 95.1103 Definitions. 94.1105 Eligibility. 95.1107 Authorized locations. 94.1109 Equipment authorization requirement. 95.1111 Frequency coordination. 94.1113 Frequency coordinator. 95.1115 General technical requirements. 94.1117 Types of communications. 95.1119 Specific requirements for wireless medical telemetry devices operating in the 608-614 MHz band. 94.1121 Specific requirements for wireless medical telemetry devices operating in the 1395-1400 MHz and 1429-1432 MHz bands. 95.1123 Protection of medical equipment. 94.1125 RF Safety. 95.1127 Station identification. 95.1129 Station inspection. * * * * * Subpart H -- Wireless Medical Telemetry Service (WMTS) General Provisions  95.1101 Scope. This part sets out the regulations governing the operation of Wireless Medical Telemetry Devices in the 608-614 MHz, 1395-1400 MHz and 1429-1432 MHz frequency bands.  95.1103 Definitions. (a) Authorized health care provider. A physician or other individual authorized under state or federal law to provide health care services, or any other health care facility operated by or employing individuals authorized under state or federal law to provide health care services, or any trained technician operating under the supervision and control of an individual or health care facility authorized under state or federal law to provide health care services. (b) Health care facility. A health care facility includes hospitals and other establishments that offer services, facilities and beds for use beyond a 24 hour period in rendering medical treatment, and institutions and organizations regularly engaged in providing medical services through clinics, public health facilities, and similar establishments, including government entities and agencies such as Veterans Administration hospitals; except the term health care facility does not include an ambulance or other moving vehicle. (c) Wireless medical telemetry. The measurement and recording of physiological parameters and other patient-related information via radiated bi- or unidirectional electromagnetic signals in the 608-614 MHz, 1395-1400 MHz, and 1429-1432 MHz frequency bands.  95.1105 Eligibility. Authorized health care providers are authorized by rule to operate transmitters in the Wireless Medical Telemetry Service without an individual license issued by the Commission provided the coordination requirements in  95.1111 have been met. Manufacturers of wireless medical telemetry devices and their representatives are authorized to operated wireless medical telemetry transmitters in this service solely for the purpose of demonstrating such equipment to, or installing and maintaining such equipment for, duly authorized health care providers. No entity that is a foreign government or which is active in the capacity as a representative of a foreign government is eligible to operate a WMTS transmitter.  95.1107 Authorized locations. The operation of a wireless medical telemetry transmitter under this part is authorized anywhere within a health care facility provided the facility is located anywhere a CB station operation is permitted under  95.405. This authority does not extend to mobile vehicles, such as ambulances, even if those vehicles are associated with a health care facility.  95.1109 Equipment authorization requirement. (a) Wireless medical telemetry devices operating under this part must be authorized under the certification procedure prior to marketing or use in accordance with the provisions of Part 2, Subpart J of this chapter. (b) Each device shall be labeled with the following statement: Operation of this equipment requires the prior coordination with a frequency coordinator designated by the FCC for the Wireless Medical Telemetry Service.  95.1111 Frequency coordination. (a) Prior to operation, authorized health care providers who desire to use wireless medical telemetry devices must register all devices with a designated frequency coordinator. The registration must include the following information: (1) specific frequencies or frequency range(s) used; (2) modulation scheme used (including occupied bandwidth); (3) effective radiated power; (4) number of transmitters in use at the health care facility as of the date of registration including manufacturer name(s) and model numbers); (5) legal name of the authorized health care provider; (6) location of transmitter (coordinates, street address, building); (7) point of contact for the authorized health care provider (name, title, office, phone number, fax number, e-mail address). (b) An authorized health care provider shall notify the frequency coordinator whenever a medical telemetry device is permanently taken out of service, unless the device is replaced with another transmitter utilizing the same technical characteristics as those reported on the effective registration. An authorized health care provider shall maintain the information contained in each registration current in all material respects, and shall notify the frequency coordinator when any change is made in the location or operating parameters previously reported which is material.  95.1113 Frequency coordinator. (a) The Commission will designate a frequency coordinator(s) to manage the usage of the frequency bands for the operation of medical telemetry devices. (b) The frequency coordinator shall (1) review and process coordination requests submitted by authorized health care providers as required in Section 95.1111 of this part; (2) maintain a database of WMTS use; (3) notify users of potential conflicts; and (4) coordinate WMTS operation with radio astronomy observatories and Federal Government radar systems as specified in  95.1119 and  95.1121.  95.1115 General technical requirements. (a) Field strength limits. (1) In the 608-614 MHz band, the maximum allowable field strength is 200 mV/m, as measured at a distance of 3 meters, using measuring instrumentation with a CISPR quasi-peak detector. (2) In the 1395-1400 MHz and 1429-1432 MHz bands, the maximum allowable field strength is 740 mV/m, as measured at a distance of 3 meters, using measuring equipment with an averaging detector and a 1 MHz measurement bandwidth. (b) Undesired emissions. (1) Out-of-band emissions below 960 MHz are limited to 200 mV/m, as measured at a distance of 3 meters, using measuring instrumentation with a CISPR quasi-peak detector. (2) Out-of-band emissions above 960 MHz are limited to 500 mV/m as measured at a distance of 3 meters using measuring equipment with an averaging detector and a 1 MHz measurement bandwidth. (c) Emission types. A wireless medical telemetry device may transmit any emission type appropriate for communications in this service, except for video and voice. Waveforms such as electrocardiograms (ECGs) are not considered video. (d) Channel use. (1) In the 1395-1400 MHz and 1429-1432 MHz bands, no specific channels are specified. Wireless medical telemetry devices may operate on any channel within the bands authorized for wireless medical telemetry use in this part. (2) In the 608-614 MHz band, wireless medical telemetry devices utilizing broadband technologies such as spread spectrum shall be capable of operating within one or more of the following channels of 1.5 MHz each, up to a maximum of 6 MHz, and shall operate on the minimum number of channels necessary to avoid harmful interference to any other wireless medical telemetry devices. 608.0-609.5 MHz 609.5-611.0 MHz 611.0-612.5 MHz 612.5-614.0 MHz (3) Channel usage is on a co-primary shared basis only, and channels will not be assigned for the exclusive use of any entity. (4) Authorized health care providers, in conjunction with the equipment manufacturers, must cooperate in the selection and use of frequencies in order to reduce the potential for interference with other wireless medical telemetry devices, or other co-primary users. Operations in the 608-614 MHz band (television channel 37) are not protected from adjacent band interference from broadcast television operating on channels 36 and 38. (e) Frequency stability. Manufacturers of wireless medical telemetry devices are responsible for ensuring frequency stability such that an emission is maintained within the band of operation under all of the manufacturer's specified conditions.  95.1117 Types of communications. (a) All types of communications except voice and video are permitted, on both a unidirectional and bidirectional basis, provided that all such communications are related to the provision of medical care. Waveforms such as electrocardiograms (ECGs) are not considered video. (b) Operations that comply with the requirements of this part may be conducted under manual or automatic control, and on a continuous basis.  95.1119 Specific requirements for wireless medical telemetry devices operating in the 608- 614 MHz band. For a wireless medical telemetry device operating within the frequency range 608-614 MHz and that will be located near the radio astronomy observatories listed below, operation is not permitted until a WMTS frequency coordinator specified in 95.1113 has coordinated with, and obtain the written concurrence of, the director of the affected radio astronomy observatory before the equipment can be installed or operated (a) Within 80 kilometers of: (1) National Astronomy and Ionosphere Center, Arecibo, Puerto Rico: 18o 20' 38.28" North Latitude, 66o 45' 09.42" West Longitude. (2) National Radio Astronomy Observatory, Socorro, New Mexico: 34o 04' 43" North Latitude, 107o 37' 04" West Longitude. (3) National Radio Astronomy Observatory, Green Bank, West Virginia: 38o 26' 08'' North Latitude, 79o 49' 42'' West Longitude. (b) Within 32 kilometers of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory centered on: Very Long Baseline Array Stations Latitude (North) Longitude (West) Pie Town, NM 34o 18' 108o 07' Kitt Peak, AZ 31o 57' 111o 37' Los Alamos, NM 35o 47' 106o 15' Fort Davis, TX 30o 38' 103o 57' North Liberty, IA 41o 46' 91o 34' Brewster, WA 48o 08' 119o 41' Owens Valley, CA 37o 14' 118o 17' Saint Croix, VI 17o 46' 64o 35' Mauna Kea, HI 19o 49' 155o 28' Hancock, NH 42o 56' 71o 59' The National Science Foundation point of contact for coordination is: Spectrum Manager, Division of Astronomical Sciences, NSF Room 1045, 4201 Wilson Blvd., Arlington, VA 22230, telephone: 703- 306-1823.  95.1121 Specific requirements for wireless medical telemetry devices operating in the 1395- 1400 MHz and 1429-1432 MHz bands. Due to the critical nature of communications transmitted under this part, the frequency coordinator in consultation with the National Telecommunications and Information Administration shall determine whether there are any federal government radar systems whose operations could affect, or could be affected by, proposed wireless medical telemetry operations in the 1395-1400 MHz and 1429-1432 MHz bands. The locations of government radar systems in these bands are specified in footnotes US351 and US352 of  2.106 of this chapter.  95.1123 Protection of medical equipment The manufacturers, installers and users of WMTS equipment are cautioned that the operation of this equipment could result in harmful interference to other nearby medical devices.  95.1125 RF safety. Portable devices as defined in  2.1093(b) operating in the WMTS are subject to radio frequency radiation exposure requirements as specified in  1.1307(b) and 2.1093 of this chapter. Applications for equipment authorization of WMTS devices must contain a statement confirming compliance with these requirements. Technical information showing the basis for this statement must be submitted to the Commission upon request.  95.1127 Station identification. A WMTS station is not required to transmit a station identification announcement.  95.1129 Station inspection. All WMTS transmitters must be available for inspection upon request by an authorized FCC representative. Appendix B List of commenting parties Comments 1. American Hospital Association Task Force on Medical Telemetry (AHA) 2. American Mobile Telecommunications Association, Inc. (AMTA) 3. Anthony D. White 4. Brian Porras 5. Cheryl A. Shimek 6. Comsearch 7. Criticare Systems, Inc. (Criticare) 8. Datascope Corporation (Datascope) 9. Datex-Ohmeda Division Instrumentarium Corporation (Datex-Ohmeda) 10. Department of Health and Human Services Center for Devices and Radiological Health (CDRH) 11. Department of Health and Human Services Office for the Advancement of Telehealth (OAT) 12. Donald R. Cummings 13. Final Analysis Communication Services, Inc. (Final Analysis) 14. Forrest Fox 15. GE Marquette Medical Systems, Inc. (GE) 16. George (last name unknown) 17. Georgios Kokovidis 18. Heather Miller 19. Hewlett-Packard Company (HP) 20. Holy Cross Hospital 21. IIT Research Institute (IIT) 22. International Association of Fire Chiefs, Inc. and International Municipal Signal Association (IAFC/IMSA) 23. Itron, Inc. (Itron) 24. James P. Welch 25. Joseph Lewandowski 26. Keith B. James 27. Land Mobile Communications Council (LMCC) 28. Martha McDonough 29. MedStar Health Corporation (MedStar) 30. Mortara Instrument, Inc. (Mortara) 31. Motorola, Inc. (Motorola) 32. Orbital Communications Corporation (ORBCOMM) 33. PCTEST Engineering Laboratory, Inc. (PCTEST) 34. Personal Communications Industry Association, Inc. (PCIA) 35. Rick Evans RN 36. Spacelabs Medical, Inc. (Spacelabs) 37. Steve M. Siefken 38. Symbol Technologies, Inc. (Symbol) 39. The National Academies 40. Vitalcom, Inc. (Vitalcom) 41. Zymed, Inc. (Zymed) Reply Comments 1. American College of Clinical Engineering (ACCE) 2. American Hospital Association Task Force on Medical Telemetry (AHA) 3. Datascope Corporation (Datascope) 4. Final Analysis Communication Services, Inc. (Final Analysis) 5. Itron, Inc. (Itron) 6. National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) 7. Office of Advocacy, U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) 8. POH Medical Center 9. Vitalcom, Inc. (Vitalcom) Ex Parte Comments 1. PCTEST Engineering Laboratory, Inc. (PCTEST) 2. Phillip Inglis APPENDIX C FINAL REGULATORY FLEXIBILITY ANALYSIS As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), an Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) was incorporated in the Notice of Proposed Rule Making, Amendment of Parts 2 and 95 of the Commission's Rules to Establish a Wireless Medical Telemetry Service. The Commission sought written public comment on the proposals in the Notice, including comment on the IRFA. The comments received are discussed below. This present Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) conforms to the RFA. A. Need for, and Objectives of, the Report and Order Medical telemetry equipment currently operates on an unlicensed basis on certain unused TV channels under Part 15 of the rules, and on a secondary basis to private land mobile services in the 450- 470 MHz band under Part 90 of the rules. With the transition to digital TV service, both full power and low-power TV stations may begin operating on some of the vacant channels used by medical telemetry equipment. In addition, the new channelization scheme being implemented in the 450-470 MHz band will allow high-power operation on the channels currently reserved for low-power use where medical telemetry equipment operates. Both of these changes could result in severe interference to medical telemetry equipment. The rules adopted in the Report and Order allocate new frequency bands where medical telemetry equipment can operate on a primary basis without receiving interference. B. Summary of Significant Issues Raised by Public Comments in Response to the IRFA There were no timely filed comments in response to the IRFA. The Office of Advocacy, U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) filed "reply comments" after the comment deadline, but prior to the reply comment deadline. Because they do not respond to comments on the IRFA, they are in fact untimely filed comments. Nevertheless, we will address the issues raised by the SBA. The SBA claims two deficiencies on the part of the Commission in this proceeding. First, SBA states that the NPRM did not consider the impact of the proposed rules on small businesses. Second, SBA states that the IRFA does not describe the impact of the rules on small businesses and does not provide significant alternatives designed to minimize this impact. We believe SBA is clearly in error on the first point. The RFA only requires agencies to provide an analysis of the impact of the proposed rules on small businesses in the IRFA. There is no requirement in the RFA to provide such an analysis in the NPRM, which would unnecessarily duplicate the analysis in the IRFA. Thus we reject SBA's first claim. We disagree with SBA on the second point as well. The RFA requires the Commission to provide an analysis that discusses significant alternatives such as (1) the establishment of differing compliance or reporting requirements or timetables that take into account the resources available to small entities; (2) the clarification, consolidation, or simplification of compliance and reporting requirements under the rule for such small entities; (3) the use of performance rather than design standards; and (4) an exemption from coverage of the rule, or any part thereof, for such small entities. These are merely examples of the type of information that should be included; this list is not a rigid checklist. The IRFA included with the Notice in this proceeding did in fact include an analysis of the type required by the RFA. Specifically, it discussed the simplified compliance and reporting requirements we considered to minimize the impact of the rules on small businesses. We considered the effect on small business from the outset and made the rules apply equally to all parties. Thus, we consider the IRFA in this proceeding to be adequate. We further note that no other parties had any objections to the IRFA or considered it to be inadequate. C. Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities To Which the Proposed Rules Will Apply The RFA directs agencies to provide a description of, and, where feasible, an estimate of the number of small entities that may be affected by the proposed rules, if adopted. Under the RFA, small entities may include small organizations, small businesses, and small governmental jurisdictions. 5 U.S.C.  601(6). The RFA, 5 U.S.C.  601(3), generally defines the term "small business" as having the same meaning as the term "small business concern" under the Small Business Act, 15 U.S.C.  632. A small business concern is one which: (1) is independently owned and operated; (2) is not dominant in its field of operation; and (3) satisfies any additional criteria established by the SBA. This standard also applies in determining whether an entity is a small business for purposes of the RFA. The Commission has not developed a definition of small entities applicable to RF Equipment Manufacturers. Therefore, the applicable definition of small entity is the definition under the SBA rules applicable to manufacturers of "Radio and Television Broadcasting and Communications Equipment." According to the SBA's regulation, an RF manufacturer must have 750 or fewer employees in order to qualify as a small business. Census Bureau data indicates that there are 858 companies in the United States that manufacture radio and television broadcasting and communications equipment, and that 778 of these firms have fewer than 750 employees and would be classified as small entities. Therefore, we believe that many of the companies that manufacture RF equipment would qualify as small entities. According to the SBA's regulations, nursing homes and hospitals must have annual gross receipts of $5 million or less in order to qualify as a small business concern. 13 C.F.R.  121.201. There are approximately 11,471 nursing care firms in the nation, of which 7,953 have annual gross receipts of $5 million or less. There are approximately 3,856 hospital firms in the nation, of which 294 have gross receipts of $5 million or less. Thus, the approximate number of small confined setting entities to which the Commission's new rules will apply is 8,247. D. Description of Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance Requirements WMTS equipment will be authorized through the certification procedure. The certification procedure requires the manufacturer to file electronically a test report showing the equipment complies with the rules along with other supporting documentation to the Commission or to a designated Telecommunication Certification Body (TCB). The equipment may not be marketed or operated until an approval has been received from the Commission or TCB. This is the same process adopted by the Commission for the Medical Implant Communication Service (MICS). We are requiring that all parties including small businesses have their equipment approved though the certification procedure because of concerns over radiofrequency radiation safety. Parties operating the equipment will not be required to obtain an individual operator's license from the Commission, but they will have to register with a frequency coordinator designated by the Commission. The Commission may designate multiple coordinators to provide competition to keep costs at a minimum. The information submitted to the frequency coordinator will be: (1) specific frequencies or frequency range(s) used; (2) modulation scheme used (including occupied bandwidth); (3) effective radiated power; (4) number of transmitters in use at the health care facility as of the date of registration (including manufacturer name(s) and model numbers); (5) legal name of the authorized health care provider; (6) location of transmitter (coordinates, street address, building); (7) point of contact for the authorized health care provider (name, title, office, phone number, fax number, e-mail address). E. Steps Taken to Minimize Significant Economic Impact on Small Entities, and Significant Alternatives Considered We are not requiring individual operators' licenses for equipment in the WMTS. Instead, the equipment will be "licensed by rule", meaning that users are permitted to operate WMTS equipment that complies with rules without the need to apply for a license from the Commission. Licensing by rule benefits small businesses by eliminating the expense and delays that would result if parties were required to obtain individual operators' licenses. New equipment for the WMTS will not have to operate in the newly allocated frequency bands until two years after the effective date of the new rules. This will allow sufficient time for manufacturers to develop equipment for the new bands, thus reducing the development costs for small businesses. We are also allowing equipment in the old frequency bands that has received an equipment authorization before the two year transition date to be manufactured, imported, marketed and operated without a cutoff date. This will ensure that replacement parts are available for existing telemetry systems and that hospitals will be able to use their existing systems as long as possible before replacement is required, thus reducing expenses for small businesses. There is currently a freeze on high-power land mobile operations in the 450-470 MHz band. The freeze was put in effect in 1995 to protect medical telemetry in that band from interference. We are providing a three-year transition period before lifting the freeze in the 460-470 MHz band. This will assist small businesses by providing adequate time for medical telemetry users to begin migration to the new frequency bands, if necessary. The freeze in the 450-460 MHz band will be lifted shortly after release of this Order because we have determined that little medical telemetry equipment operates in this portion of the band. Therefore, there will be little impact on small businesses. Report to Congress: The Commission will send a copy of the Report and Order, Amendment of Parts 2 and 95 of the Commission's Rules to Establish a Wireless Medical Telemetry Service, including this FRFA, in a report to be sent to Congress pursuant to the SBREFA, see 5 U.S.C.  801(a)(1)(A). In addition, the Commission will send a copy of the Report and Order, including FRFA, to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the SBA. A copy of the Report and Order and FRFA (or summaries thereof) will also be published in the Federal Register. See 5 U.S.C.  604(b).