Posted on 10/07/2020 10:48:58 AM PDT by Red Badger
Aimee Jorjani, chairman of the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation
Why is a Trump appointee stopping progress on Americas efforts to compete with China in the vital arena of 5G technology? Thats the question being asked in the wireless industry, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and the White House itself.
In June of 2019, Aimee Jorjani was confirmed by the U.S. Senate as the first full-time chairman of the obscure Advisory Council on Historic Preservation (ACHP).
The council is a creation of the National Historic Preservation Act (NHPA) and its job is to promote the preservation, enhancement, and sustainable use of our nations diverse historic resources, according to its mission statement, as well as advising the President and the Congress on national historic preservation policy.
But as of this week, Jorjani isnt advising the White House and Congress so much as obstructing them. At issue is the little-known but immensely important problem of Twilight Towers.
America and China are in a tooth-and-nail fight over dominance in fifth-generation wireless technology. Ren Zhengfei, founder of Chinas Huawei Technologies, describes his company as being in a state of war. According to a Wall Street Journal report, Zhengfei told a group of his employees in Hangzhou they must surge forward, killing as you go, to blaze us a trail of blood, in their competition with the U.S.
American companies are running neck-and-neck with their Chinese competitors, and President Trump has made boosting Americas 5G technology one of his top priorities. Secure 5G networks will absolutely be a vital link to Americas prosperity and national security in the 21st century, Trump said in August.
One stumbling block is U.S. infrastructure, in particular the towers needed to connect exurban and rural Americans to the new, faster, higher-capacity 5G network.
Twilight Towers, many in the industry believe, are part of the solution.
Twilight Towers is the FCCs name for some 4,000 or so cell towers built between 2001 and 2005 whose siting didnt undergo the historical preservation review now required, or lack documentation proving they passed muster. Many are larger (or macro) towers outside densely populated urban communities where smaller micro towers are sufficient.
Wireless companies want to upgrade these towers with 5G equipment. Some state-level historic preservation groups and representatives of Native American tribes want these existing towers to undergo a full review, a slow and costly process.
After a decade of debate and wrangling, FCC Chairman Ajit Pai announced last year a solution was in the works, and the ACHP was going to be a part of it.
After many discussions with Tribal representatives, industry, and other interested stakeholders, it is now clear that it is up to the FCC, working with our colleagues at the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation (ACHP), to finally solve this problem. And none too soon; the more rapidly we enable additional use of this infrastructure, the sooner consumers everywhere can benefit from next-generation wireless services.
Pais plan, passed 5-0 by the bipartisan members of the FCC, would prohibit these towers from being expanded or extended, but it would allow new, upgraded technology to be placed on them a practice known in the wireless industry as collocation.
In their filing with the FCC, the CTIA which represents the U.S. wireless communications industry called the plan a balanced solution that clears the way to expanded use of these towersenabling the publics access to expanded wireless servicesand also fully safeguards the historic preservation interests that the NHPA protects.
On August 24, the FCC sent over its request for the ACHP to issue a program comment on the proposal, putting the process on a 45-day clock. All thats left is for Chairwoman Jorjani to allow a vote by her commission and its GOP-backed majority this Thursday, when the measure is expected to pass easily.
Instead, Jorjani has single-handedly stopped the process in its tracks. Jorjani is telling the White House that she may support a delay a delay that would push the issue past the upcoming election and potentially into the hands of a less-business-friendly Biden administration.
This reversal has left GOP senators and administration officials flummoxed. Jorjani worked for six years at the Department of the Interior during the Bush administration and was a staffer in former GOP Speaker of the House Paul Ryans office. During her confirmation hearing, she told Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio) she looked forward to finding a solution to this set of towers.
The infrastructure is there, Jorjani said at the time. It would be a shame not to utilize it. Now, shes preventing American tech companies from doing just that.
She was essentially appointed to this job to do one thing: fix this Twilight Towers problem, an administration source told InsideSources. If she cant do that, the White House may decide to make a last-second change to get this done.
Asked why Jorjani was obstructing the FCCs plan, Jonathan S. Adelstein, president and CEO of the Wireless Infrastructure Association, told InsideSources: We dont know. Weve been desperately trying to reach out to her, but she wont return our calls. Shes not interested in hearing our side of the story.
The towers themselves dont appear to be the problem. Sources inside the FCC note the agency has only received four or five complaints about the existing towers in the past 19 years. If these towers have a siting problem, nobodys noticed it in nearly twenty years, an FCC insider said.
Meanwhile, Adelstein says its important to focus on who will lose out if these towers are kept offline in a 5G future: residents and business owners in rural, often low-income, communities.
Twilight Towers really are essential to rural and exurban wireless broadband service, Adelstein said. Macro towers are the most efficient way to reach the widest areas where theres less population density. These communities need 5G for education, for healthcare and for economic development. Its a shame if they get left behind.
About the Author Michael Graham Michael Graham is political editor at InsideSources. You can reach him at michael@insidesources.com.
Tech Ping!...................
The Bush Legacy continues to screw America over.
She sounds like a Deep State operative.
They are going to find pre-historic Smoke Signal locations if they start digging around.
Eliminate the agency, eliminate the employee. Move on.
The Chiefs want a payday..................
>was a staffer in former GOP Speaker of the House Paul Ryans office
This was not disqualifying?
We should have practiced STAY OUT DA BUSHES with this appointment. Sadly, potential SABOTEURS abound among the Bushes.
Not guilty, but fire her anyway.
5G is an electronic blanket that everyone with a 5G device will be under. Someone will know where you are at all times down to a few feet. For that matter, someone will always know where your refrigerator is.
She was a staffer for Paul Ryan?
Oh.
A Democrat.
Just serving her Chinese overlords.
Not me.....................
Paid off by Chynah/Democrats(same thing)? Deep state?
“Jorjani worked for six years at the Department of the Interior during the Bush administration and was a staffer in former GOP Speaker of the House Paul Ryans office.”
That might be the problem.
When I was building a large CATV system in the mid 80s I had to deal with the railroads and the Historical Preservation group.
We could deal with the feds involved with the railroad crossings (a major issue going OVER or UNDER). But the Historical Commision was like dealing with a bunch of 75 year old debutante bullies. You would get past one issue, and they would invent another.
Their bullshit caused us to not provide service to that neighborhood (~9,000 homes) for almost a year. (We ended up having to create a new kind of vinyl cover for wires on the side of homes...in multiple colors so as to match the paint on these Victorian homes.) I would prefer to deal with the mafia than a historical commission.
Personally, I don’t really see much need for this whole ‘5G’ thing. It’s mostly about lies used to sell more hardware to suckers glued to their phones.
Having dealt with a lot of tribes for public works projects, and after they give you the obligatory “sins of your fathers” rant, it’s always about the money.
As I heard it stated in a recent video, something along the lines of...
“They ain’t roiling or 5G so your video games take only 9 seconds to download instead of 26 seconds. It’s to spy on you. If it’s digital and it’s free YOU’RE THE PRODUCT- You and all your personal information that is gathered about you”
No thank you to 5G
Why not just cut to the chase and ask up front ‘How.......much?’..............................
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