Notre Dame to host listening session on national radio spectrum strategy
Access to a key natural resource is at a premium, and it’s not petroleum or lithium — it’s the radio frequency spectrum.
Radio frequencies are allocated to broadcasting, navigation (GPS) services and public safety networks, but the increasing demands of commercial wireless, especially 5G and Wi-Fi networks, as well as the greater needs of scientific, satellite and defense applications, among others, require paradigm shifts in the management of the radio spectrum and in coordination of research and development around it.
On Tuesday, April 11, the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) will hold a listening session at the University of Notre Dame to garner broad input about future spectrum allocations. The listening session is open to the general public, to attend as well as to potentially speak, and will take place from 1 to 3:30 p.m. in the Patricia George Decio Theatre at the DeBartolo Performing Arts Center. Local and state policymakers and regional industry leaders are especially encouraged to participate as speakers. Interested individuals and organizations may submit written comments via the Request for Comments link; instructions for requesting an opportunity to speak are available at the Listening Sessions link.
This listening session, and another held in Washington, D.C., on Thursday, March 30, will inform the NTIA in the development of a National Spectrum Strategy, which will provide a long-term plan to meet both commercial and federal spectrum needs. Each listening session will be livestreamed on the NTIA’s website, and a recording and transcript of the session will be posted afterward.
The National Spectrum Strategy intends to address the current and future needs of spectrum-driven services, including:
- Fixed and mobile wireless broadband services;
- Next-generation satellite communications and other space-based systems;
- Advanced transportation technologies;
- Industrial and commercial applications, such as for manufacturing, agriculture and utilities;
- Wireless medical devices and telemedicine;
- Internet of Things (IoT) and smart cities; and
- Critical government missions, such as national defense, safeguarding the national airspace, securing the nation’s critical infrastructure, climate monitoring and forecasting and other scientific endeavors.
More information can be found in this NTIA news release: NTIA seeks feedback on future airwaves for innovative technologies
Learn more about SpectrumX and the University of Notre Dame.
Contact: Tiffanie Sammons, the University of Notre Dame’s logistics point of contact. She can be reached at tsammon1@nd.edu.
Originally published by publicaffairs.nd.edu on March 21, 2023.
atLatest Research
- Studying Survivor : How two Notre Dame courses apply reality TV to philosophy, psychology, and mathStudents…
- Junior Alex Young named 2025 Truman ScholarUniversity of Notre Dame junior Alex Young has been named a 2025 Truman Scholar. He is the University’s 13th Truman Scholar since 2010, a group that includes three Rhodes Scholars: Alex Coccia (’14), Christa Grace Watkins (’17) and Prathm Juneja (’20).
- Notre Dame listed as World Leader in Nuclear AstrophysicsNuclear astrophysics…
- “Contagious capitalism”: Keough School Dean Mary Gallagher shares research insights on law, labor and justice in ChinaMary Gallagher, the Marilyn Keough Dean of the Keough School of Global Affairs, delivered the fifth annual Justice and Asia Distinguished Lecture at the school’s Liu Institute for Asia and Asia Studies on April 8, drawing on her research expertise to share insights on law, labor and justice in China.
- Thirteenth Annual Harper Cancer Research DayRohit Bhargava The 13th annual…
- Two Notre Dame historians win Guggenheim fellowshipsTwo faculty members in the University of Notre Dame’s College of Arts & Letters have been awarded fellowships from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation as part of its 100th class of honorees.