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Senators urge FCC to protect GPS

Sens. Jim Inhofe (R-Okla.) and Jack Reed (D-R.I.) led a bipartisan letter last week urging the FCC to stay and reconsider the Ligado Order, echoing concerns of 14 federal agencies and other end users, including U.S. farmers who rely on GPS to operate.

The FCC order went into effect April 2020 and allows Ligado Networks to establish a wireless network that will threaten the reception capability of hundreds of millions of GPS devices and growers’ abilities to use GPS technology in their operations.

Because growers rely heavily on navigation systems and precision technology, the prospect of GPS units not working is alarming to soybean farmers.

FCC’s order acknowledges the likelihood of interference to GPS signals and requires Ligado to pay the federal government the costs for repairs but does not specify what those costs are and does not currently include the private sector.

According to a news release from Inhofe’s office, 99% of the more than 900 million GPS devices across the country are used by the private sector and consumers, as well as state and local governments. Under the current order, private sector businesses like agriculture, or their consumers, are on the hook for repair costs.

In the letter, the Senators urged the FCC to set aside the Ligado Order and consider the concerns of the executive branch, withiin Congress, and from the private sector regarding the imminent risks for national security and other systems.

“We remain gravely concerned that the Ligado Order fails to adequately protect adjacent band operations–including those related to GPS and satellite communications–from harmful interference impacting countless military and commercial activities,” the senators wrote.

A reliable network is imperative for U.S. soybean farmers who use GPS-enabled precision ag technologies to efficiently and responsibly grow and harvest crops and irrigate their land.

ASA has continued pushing for changes to FCC’s Ligado decision and urging the administration and Congress to step in to protect GPS reliability.

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