Press ReleaseBipartisan2026-04-24

Rep. Pfluger Pushes Satellite Modernization and Emergency Alert Upgrades

August Pfluger
August Pfluger
RTX-11 · Representative
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TaxesEnvironmentTradeInfrastructureAgriculture

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This press release from Representative August Pfluger (R-TX) was published on 2026-04-24 and titled "Rep. Pfluger Pushes Satellite Modernization and Emergency Alert Upgrades". It focuses on taxes and touches on the environment, trade policy.

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Rep. Pfluger Pushes Satellite Modernization and Emergency Alert Upgrades

WASHINGTON, DC — Congressman August Pfluger (TX-11), a member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, participated in a Communications and Technology Subcommittee hearing focused on modernizing satellite policy and strengthening America's communications infrastructure. The hearing, titled "SAT Streamlining Act: Modernizing Satellite Licensing For the Rural Frontier," examined how updated licensing processes can accelerate innovation and support U.S.-based companies like AST SpaceMobile, headquartered in Midland, Texas. During the discussion, Rep. Pfluger pressed witnesses on how the SAT Streamlining Act would reduce regulatory barriers, boost investment, and help American satellite providers compete globally. Rep. Pfluger also highlighted the recent House passage of his Mystic Alerts Ac t , a major step forward for emergency preparedness nationwide. This bipartisan legislation integrates satellite networks into the Wireless Emergency Alert (WEA) system, expanding coverage so families and first responders can receive critical, life-saving information even in areas without reliable cell service. Witnesses included Tom Stroup , President, Satellite Industry Association, Kara Leibin Azocar , Vice President of Regulatory Public Policy, Iridium, and Shiva Goel , Partner, Wiley Rein LLP. Watch Rep. Pfluger's questioning HERE or by clicking on the image below. Read Rep. Pfluger's exchange with witnesses below: Rep. Pfluger : Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and I thank the witnesses for being here. There's a company in Midland, Texas, called AST Space Mobile, and they've testified before this committee before doing some amazing work. I've followed their progress closely, visited a couple of times, and this week we had a bill, the Mystic Alert Act, that passed the House incorporating space-based direct-to-device capability into the Wireless Emergency Alert System, and space-based-broadband is exactly the type of American innovation that I think we expect, and that Republicans in the Trump Administration are working hard to accelerate, streamlining the satellite regulations is critical into making that work. And I'll start with Ms. Azocar. How will the SAT Streamlining Act directly impact companies like AST SpaceMobile, and how will the implementation of laws such as the Mystic Alerts Act be affected if we don't fix the licensing process underlying them? Mrs. Leibin Azocar : Thank you for the question, Congressman. I just want to start by ensuring you understand that Iridium has been part of the natural disaster response since Hurricane Katrina. So while it's discussed extensively today as a direct-to-device solution, we've been doing this now for decades, and in the instance of the Texas flooding, for instance, we were used not just for critical communications during the restoration, but also drones utilize Iridium for seeing what has happened and also for search and rescue. So there are a variety of different use cases and natural disasters. The streamlining of licensing will enable more providers to provide a variety of different services to end users in the event of a natural disaster, because, as Tom has indicated, satellite service, by its nature, is resilient and redundant in a natural disaster scenario. Rep. Pfluger : Thank you. And I'll just kind of go one step further. You know, on the deemed grant provision, if the FCC misses a deadline, then the license is automatically approved upon the applicant's written notice, but after the floods where we lost communications, you know, I'm kind of looking at the agencies missing deadlines and how that technology could have saved lives. So can you explain how the provisions necessary to give these shot clocks real teeth, and what that effect would have, just overall on safety? Mrs. Leibin Azocar : Shot clocks are an important part of satellite streamlining, but they're not without potential consequence. So while it's beneficial to the US Space economy for licensing to occur quickly, it also needs to be deliberative and to resolve all concerns so that the licensee that receives the license, and existing licensees, have regulatory certainty to rely upon that to innovate the way that Iridium has been able to do for the last twenty-five years. Rep. Pfluger : Thank you very much. I'll go to another topic, kind of into the novel space activities topic, and Mr. Stroup, as we consider the SAT Streamlining Act. How should we think about addressing novel space activities, and how can we complement what Chairman Carr and the FCC is already doing and what they're specifically trying to do with the Part 100 proceeding? Mr. Stroup : Thank you for the question. There are a number of novel space activities proposed, one good example of being space data centers. And I think that from the time we started discussing satellite streamlining to today, we've seen a sea change in terms of the potential scope of the applications and the size of constellations. And so I think ensuring that there 
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