[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 192 (Wednesday, December 14, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8573-S8574]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FCC HOLDS--LIGHTSQUARED
Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, the cornerstone of Congress's ability to
effectively oversee the Federal Government is the free and open access
to information--in other words, congressional oversight, what I was
talking about in regard to Fast and Furious.
On another investigation 231 days ago, on April 27, I made a very
simple request. I requested that the Federal Communications Commission
turn over communications regarding its controversial approval of the
LightSquared project. LightSquared is a company owned by a hedge fund
called Harbinger Capital Partners that is seeking FCC approval to use
its satellite spectrum to build a terrestrial wireless network. To
accomplish its goals, LightSquared has already spent millions of
dollars on lobbyists and made large political donations.
The problem is that LightSquared's signals would, according to
Federal Government tests, cause massive interference with the global
positioning system, more commonly referred to as GPS. GPS, as you know,
is a critical tool for anything from military drones and missiles to
car and ship navigation. LightSquared's initial plan, which the FCC
conditionally approved, would have interfered with just about every
single GPS user.
The surprising fact is that there is no evidence the FCC even tested
LightSquared's plan before approving it. In fact, the FCC granted this
waiver--which is estimated to be worth at least $10 billion to
LightSquared--in a shortened comment period starting right around
Thanksgiving, 2010. Giving a company a possible $10 billion windfall in
a holiday-shortened comment period without doing any testing is very
suspicious. Risking our Nation's GPS assets, including the role they
play in defending our Nation to accomplish this goal, is downright
dangerous.
The question I am asking is, Why would the FCC do this? Of course, to
get to the bottom of this question I asked the Federal Communications
Commission for some documents--again, a simple question, a request for
some information. The FCC, an agency with employees who are supposed to
work for the American people, said no to my request. My staff was told
the FCC intentionally ignored my document request. The FCC officials
said they have determined that they will only be responsive to two
Members of Congress: the Chairs of the House and Senate Commerce
Committees, not even to ranking members of those same committees, and,
of course, not to members of those committees whether you are majority
or minority. Presumably, they would not even answer to the majority
leader of the Senate or to the Speaker of the House, but for sure they
surely are not answering to this senior Senator from Iowa. If you
happen to be one of the 99.6 of the Congress who doesn't chair one of
those two committees, from the FCC's point of view, sorry, you are out
of luck. No documents for you. This attitude is unacceptable. I
conveyed my concerns to the FCC on July 5 and asked again for
documents. Again, I was stonewalled. This time the FCC claimed that
since I cannot subpoena the FCC, it would not respond.
President Obama committed to run the most transparent administration
in history. Yet the FCC is saying if you cannot force us to be open, we
won't do it. I wrote another letter asking the FCC for documents on
September 8, and again I was stonewalled.
This brings us to where we are today, 230-some days later. The FCC's
decision to impede Congress's constitutional duty of oversight has
forced me to make a difficult decision. I do not take that decision to
hold up nominees lightly, but I never do it in secret. I always put a
statement in the Record, and this is in addition to that statement. But
when an agency flagrantly disregards congressional oversight, something
must be done.
Before I publicly announced my intention to hold the nominees, I,
through staff, contacted the FCC officials. I informed them that if the
documents were not forthcoming, I would hold up the Federal
Communication Commission's nominees whom the President sent up here. I
was surprised and disappointed by their response. Despite knowing my
intentions, they chose not to provide any documents. As a result, I am
honoring my promise to hold those nominees.
It is unfortunate the FCC has chosen this path. Due to the FCC's
decision to hide its actions from the public and Congress, these
nominations are now stalled in the Senate. The question I would ask
today of my colleagues and the President of the Senate is: Why? The FCC
has already told me it would likely provide these documents if certain
members--chairmen of committees--asked for them, but somehow 99.6
percent of the Congress has no right to this information. In other
words, 99.6 percent of the Members of Congress cannot do their
constitutional job of oversight of the Federal Communications
Commission. To paraphrase a very popular slogan these days, I guess
that makes me part of the 99.6 percent.
My concern is not just specific to this document request. It is
broader than that. In the future, any Member of Congress may request
documents from the FCC. As the courts have put it, every Member has a
voice and a vote in the process under the Constitution. Each one of us
has the authority to request and receive information from the executive
branch in order to inform those votes. That is what our court has said.
That authority is inherent in each Member's responsibility to
participate in the legislative process.
The creation of the committee system and the delegation of certain
responsibilities to committee chairmen doesn't change that at all.
Individual Members still have a right, as well as a responsibility, to
inform themselves by requesting information directly from agencies. For
Congress to have a complete view of how an agency works, we need to
have access to documents. Turning off that flow of information
shortcircuits transparency and hurts accountability.
In this case, the Federal Communication Commission's actions have
real-
[[Page S8574]]
world effects. The FCC's decision to grant a waiver to LightSquared
created uncertainty for GPS users, and that includes our own National
Defense Agency, the Department of Defense, and other Federal agencies.
Another one is the Federal Aviation Administration which claims that
800 people would die as a result of LightSquared's initially proposed
network. To the FAA, the FCC's decision could have killed people.
The Department of Defense wrote a letter to the FCC saying that it
was not consulted by the FCC. Press reports say that General Shelton--
who heads up GPS for the Armed Forces--said that LightSquared's
interference would harm the military's use of GPS. To the Department of
Defense, the Federal Communication Commission's actions would have
harmed national security.
These are only two agencies, but the Department of Transportation,
NASA, and NOAA, among others, have already raised concerns about
LightSquared's plan. The effects of the FCC's decision are not just
limited to the Federal Government; they also affect ordinary Americans.
Here are two examples: For Americans who hope that NextGen air traffic
control will reduce air traffic delays, the FCC's action would have
continued to increase air traffic wasting time, fuel, and ultimately
money for the flying public. For Americans who use precision
agriculture to save time and money, the FCC's actions would harm the
accuracy and reliability of their equipment. This again leads to wasted
energy, lower crop yields, and higher prices for products such as wheat
and corn. At the end of the day, the FCC's actions would cost the
American consumers money.
Does the FCC even care? I don't know. But the agency certainly has
not provided any evidence that it took any of this information into
consideration. What we see today is an agency that is completely
unaccountable and unanswerable to 99.6 percent of the Congress and, by
extension, the American public. This is simply wrong, and I will
continue to hold the FCC's nominees until this attitude changes.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Udall of New Mexico). The Senator from
Rhode Island is recognized.
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