Hawaiian Telephone Co. v. Federal Communications Commission

589 F.2d 647, 191 U.S. App. D.C. 124
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedNovember 13, 1978
DocketNos. 77-1533, 77-1544, 77-1722, 77-1723, 77-1555, 77-1556, 77-1557, 77-1658, 77-1659, 77-1660 and 77-1721
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 589 F.2d 647 (Hawaiian Telephone Co. v. Federal Communications Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hawaiian Telephone Co. v. Federal Communications Commission, 589 F.2d 647, 191 U.S. App. D.C. 124 (D.C. Cir. 1978).

Opinion

Opinion for the court filed by Chief Judge J. SKELLY WRIGHT.

J. SKELLY WRIGHT, Chief Judge:

This case involves eleven consolidated appeals in which appellants Hawaiian Telephone Company (HTC) and GTE Satellite Corporation (GSAT) seek review of three sets of orders of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) that authorized construction and operation of satellite earth stations (and in one case a terrestrial microwave link) to transmit communications between the Mainland and Hawaii.1 The authorizations were granted upon application [127]*127of American Satellite Corporation (ASC), Western Union International, Inc. (WUI), and RCA American Communications, Inc. (RCA Americom), all of whom are intervenors in the present proceedings. The FCC granted the authorizations pursuant to the relevant provisions of the Communications Act of 1934, 47 U.S.C. §§ 214, 308, 309, & 319 (1970 & Supp. V 1975), which require, inter alia, that the FCC ensure that the “public convenience and necessity” be served by any such authorizations.2

[128]*128In each of the three cases the applicant— RCA Americom, WUI, or ASC — sought authorization from the FCC so that it could comply with the terms of a contract for provision of private line communications services that it had recently been awarded by a government agency. RCA Americom had been awarded such a contract by the National Air and Space Administration; ASC by the Advanced Research Projects Agency; and WUI by the Defense Commercial Communications Office. The latter two agencies are within the Department of Defense. Appellants HTC and GSAT argue that, in authorizing construction and operation of the earth stations, the FCC relied excessively on the awarding of the contracts by the government agencies, which ■resulted in the Commission’s abdication to those agencies of its role in determining “public convenience and necessity.” Appellants argue further that the FCC’s decisions in these cases depart from its previously announced policy with respect to satellite communications between the Mainland and Hawaii.3 The FCC’s orders, they conclude, are infirm and should be reversed by this court.4

The FCC responds that it complied with its proper institutional role in applying the “public convenience and necessity” standard mandated by Section 214 and did not place undue emphasis on the contracts awarded by the three government agencies. Additionally, the Commission contends that its policy with respect to satellite communications to Hawaii is sufficiently flexible to accommodate the orders in the present proceedings. We agree with the FCC on both counts and accordingly affirm the three sets of Commission orders challenged in this case.

I. BACKGROUND

A. The ASC Applications

The Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA), an agency of the Department of Defense engaged in a variety of research projects involving national defense and security, awarded a contract to ASC to provide communications between the Mainland and Hawaii. The agency needed the additional communications capacity in connection with “planned activity in the Pacific Ocean Region which involves coordination of various [Department of Defense] participants in that area.” Joint Appendix (JA) 69. ASC was awarded this communications contract on a “sole source” basis, which means that, in the opinion of ARPA, ASC was the only carrier qualified to meet the technical and temporal demands of the project. In particular, ASC, at the time it was awarded the present contract, was party to another contract with ARPA to provide “communications facilities and service for a domestic acoustic research data network,” JA 68, and the new contract was intended merely to expand this network by addition of the Hawaiian link. This preexisting arrangement meant both that ASC was equipped technologically to handle the [129]*129communications needs of ARPA and that, because of the existing communications network and ASC’s proven technological competence, ASC could most expeditiously provide the additional communications service required by ARPA.

To provide the expanded service, however, ASC had to construct and operate an earth station at Barbers Point Naval Air Station, Hawaii, to supplement the two earth stations it already operated for ARPA. The expanded service and new earth station required that ASC apply for authorization from the FCC.5 Appellants HTC and GSAT, along with ITT World Communications, Inc. and AT&T Long Lines, filed petitions to deny the application essentially on grounds that their existing Hawaiian facilities were up to the task of providing the needed service, that an FCC grant of authority would depart from the Commission’s past policy of “rate integration”6 toward Hawaii, and that ASC had not projected sufficient revenues to justify the investment. JA 177 — 189.

ARPA had originally scheduled commencement of the new communications service on June 1, 1977, but as late as early April the FCC had yet to act upon the ASC application, which had been filed the previous February. As a result, ASC wrote the FCC on April 7 requesting a waiver of the construction permit requirement so that it could commence construction of the earth station in time to meet the June 1 deadline. JA 225. “In view of the urgency and critical nature of ARPA’s needs,” JA 9, the waiver was granted by the Chief of the FCC’s Common Carrier Bureau pursuant to 47 U.S.C. § 319(d) (1970). But the waiver made it clear that ASC undertook the preliminary construction at its own risk, for it might still be the case that the underlying application to operate the earth station would be rejected by the FCC. Appellant GSAT, asserting that the Chief of the Common Carrier Bureau had acted outside the scope of his delegated authority, applied for review of the waiver, but the Commission denied GSAT’s application.

On June 7, 1977, with ASC’s original application still not acted upon, the Office of the Secretary of Defense corresponded with the Commission to the effect that two major military exercises in the Pacific, named “Church Stroke” and “Panoic,” would have their scientific and data-gathering objectives compromised if the Barbers Point earth station were not providing service by June 10. The FCC found “that the public interest will be served by a grant of temporary authority to operate this circuit until the Commission has an opportunity to act on the underlying applications,” JA 23, and granted temporary authority not to exceed 90 days. Within that 90-day period the FCC, in a “Memorandum Opinion, Order, Authorization and Certificate” adopted on July 13, 1977 and released on July 22, 1977, approved ASC’s application to construct and operate the line of communications, including the earth station at Barbers Point.7

B. The RCA Americom Applications

The National Air and Space Administration (NASA) awarded a contract to RCA Americom, pursuant to competitive bidding, to provide a channel of high-speed data communications between NASA’s Hawaiian Satellite tracking station and its Goddard Space Center installation in Greenbelt, Maryland.

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Bluebook (online)
589 F.2d 647, 191 U.S. App. D.C. 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawaiian-telephone-co-v-federal-communications-commission-cadc-1978.