GLH Communications, Inc. v. FCC , 930 F.3d 449 ( 2019 )


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  •  United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
    Argued January 9, 2019                 Decided July 16, 2019
    No. 18-1176
    GLH COMMUNICATIONS, INC.,
    APPELLANT
    v.
    FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION,
    APPELLEE
    On Appeal of Orders of the Federal Communications
    Commission
    Donald J. Evans argued the cause for appellant. With him
    on the briefs was Keenan P. Adamchak.
    David M. Gossett, Deputy General Counsel, Federal
    Communications Commission, argued the cause for appellee.
    With him on the brief were Thomas M. Johnson Jr., General
    Counsel, Jacob M. Lewis, Associate General Counsel, and
    Pamela L. Smith, Counsel. Richard K. Welch, Deputy
    Associate General Counsel, entered an appearance.
    Before: ROGERS, SRINIVASAN, and PILLARD, Circuit
    Judges.
    Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SRINIVASAN.
    2
    SRINIVASAN, Circuit Judge:             In 2001, GLH
    Communications, Inc., a cellular telephone company, acquired
    a number of radio spectrum licenses from Leap Wireless
    International, another cellular telephone company. Leap had
    originally purchased a handful of those licenses from the
    Federal Communications Commission under an installment
    payment program. When GLH acquired the licenses, it
    assumed the obligation to make the installment payments.
    GLH, though, failed to make the payments for some of the
    licenses, prompting the Commission to cancel those licenses
    and reauction the underlying spectrum to new providers.
    In administrative proceedings before the Commission,
    GLH challenged both the Commission’s decision to cancel the
    licenses and its refusal to give GLH a credit against its debt for
    the proceeds of the reauction. The Commission rejected
    GLH’s arguments, and GLH now appeals. We conclude that
    the Commission acted appropriately in cancelling GLH’s
    licenses for failure to make the installment payments and in
    refusing to apply the reauction proceeds against GLH’s debt.
    I.
    The Federal Communications Commission has exclusive
    authority to grant licenses to use radio spectrum, and must, as
    a general matter, employ an auction system to assign licenses.
    See 
    47 U.S.C. §§ 307
    (a), 309(j). Congress identified various
    purposes that the Commission must seek to promote when
    designing an auction system. See 
    id.
     § 309(j)(3). One of those
    purposes is ensuring that licenses are disseminated “among a
    wide variety of applicants, including small businesses.” Id.
    § 309(j)(3)(B).
    To that end, the Commission developed an installment
    plan program, under which qualifying small businesses can pay
    3
    winning auction bids in installment payments made over the
    term of the license. Such a program, the Commission reasoned,
    would enhance the ability of small businesses to participate in
    spectrum auctions by reducing the up-front costs of a license.
    The structure, however, comes with a condition: any licenses
    won with an installment bid “shall be conditioned upon the full
    and timely performance of the licensee’s payment obligations
    under the installment plan.” 
    47 C.F.R. § 1.2110
    (g)(4). If an
    installment-payment licensee misses a payment (and does not
    make up the payment within two quarter-long grace periods),
    the licensee “shall be in default, its license shall automatically
    cancel, and it will be subject to debt collection procedures.” 
    Id.
    § 1.2110(g)(4)(iv).
    In 1996, the Commission auctioned off a number of
    licenses covering radio spectrum to be used for cellular
    telephone service. Two of the winning bidders in that auction
    were (i) NTCH, the parent company of GLH at the time, and
    (ii) a subsidiary of Leap Wireless International.
    Three years later, NTCH and Leap agreed to trade some of
    the licenses each had won in the auction. Although the NTCH
    licenses included in the deal had been fully paid at the time of
    the auction, six of the Leap licenses had been purchased using
    the installment program. In order to secure Commission
    approval of the assignment of those licenses, GLH assumed
    both the security agreements executed by the Leap subsidiary
    when it won the licenses and also the obligation to make all
    remaining installment payments. At the same time, Leap
    agreed to pay GLH the funds necessary to make the installment
    payments each quarter.
    The arrangement evidently worked without complication
    for a couple of years. But in January 2003, Leap failed to make
    its payment to GLH, and GLH then failed to make the next
    4
    installment payment to the Commission, due on January 31,
    2003. Under the Commission’s two-grace-period rule, GLH
    had until July 31, 2003 to cure the payment delinquency. But
    instead of curing the delinquency, GLH filed a waiver request,
    in which it explained the circumstances of the missed payment
    and asked the Commission for a two-year waiver of its debt
    collection rules and payment deadlines to “allow GLH
    additional time to try to satisfy its obligations.” Request of
    GLH Communications, Inc. for Temporary Waivers of
    Installment Payment Deadlines (
    47 C.F.R. § 1.2110
    (g)(4)) and
    Debt Collection Rules (
    47 C.F.R. § 1.1901
     et seq.), at 6 (Apr.
    16, 2003), J.A. 42.
    On July 18—approximately two weeks before the end of
    GLH’s grace period—the Commission’s Auctions and
    Industry Analysis Division released an order denying GLH’s
    request for a waiver of the payment deadlines. See In re
    Request of GLH Commc’ns, Inc. for Temporary Waivers of
    Installment Payment Deadlines, 18 FCC Rcd. 14,695 (2003),
    J.A. 76. The Division explained that “strict enforcement of the
    installment payment rules enhances the integrity of the auction
    and licensing process,” and determined that GLH had not
    shown any unique circumstances rendering enforcement of the
    deadline inequitable. 
    Id. ¶ 11
    ; see 
    id.
     ¶¶ 7–18.
    When the deadline arrived, GLH had paid its outstanding
    obligations on only two of the six licenses. The remaining four
    licenses automatically cancelled under the governing
    regulation. 
    47 C.F.R. § 1.2110
    (g)(4). After the cancellation,
    GLH filed a petition for reconsideration of the Division’s Order
    denying a waiver. In addition to the arguments made in its
    waiver request, GLH contended that the Commission had been
    required by a statute, 
    47 U.S.C. § 312
    (c), to provide a hearing
    before cancelling the licenses, and further argued that, if the
    5
    Commission decided to proceed with cancellation, it should
    return the payments GLH had previously made.
    While GLH’s rehearing petition was pending, the
    Commission reauctioned the spectrum covered by GLH’s
    cancelled licenses to new buyers. The Commission’s Wireless
    Telecommunications Bureau then released an order denying
    the petition for rehearing. See In re GLH Commc’ns, Inc., 22
    FCC Rcd. 2411 (2007), J.A. 104. With respect to GLH’s
    waiver request, the Bureau’s Order largely repeated the
    reasoning of the Division. See 
    id.
     ¶¶ 12–22. With respect to
    GLH’s new arguments, the Bureau determined that § 312(c)’s
    hearing requirement does not apply to automatic cancellations
    for defaults under 
    47 C.F.R. § 1.2110
    (g)(4)(iv) and that GLH
    was not entitled to any refund of its previous payments. 
    Id.
    ¶¶ 23–25.
    GLH then filed an application for review with the full
    Commission, in which it repeated the arguments it had
    previously made before the Division and the Bureau. Because
    the spectrum had since been reauctioned, GLH also argued that
    it was entitled to remission of any reauction proceeds
    exceeding GLH’s debt.
    The Commission denied GLH’s application for review. In
    re Alpine PCS, Inc., 255 FCC Rcd. 469 (2010), J.A. 163. It
    largely repeated the reasoning contained in the previous orders
    and additionally concluded that GLH was not entitled to have
    the reauction proceeds set off against its debt. 
    Id.
     ¶¶ 18–38,
    47–50, 58–66, 83–85. GLH unsuccessfully sought rehearing
    before the Commission, see In re GLH Commc’ns, Inc., 33
    FCC Rcd. 5926 (2018), J.A. 220, and then brought this appeal.
    6
    II.
    GLH raises two groups of challenges to the Commission’s
    decision. It initially argues that the Commission erred in
    cancelling its licenses, both because the decision to reject its
    waiver request was arbitrary and capricious and because it was
    entitled to a pre-cancellation hearing. Then, GLH argues that
    even if the Commission validly cancelled its licenses, the
    Commission should have granted it a credit for the reauction
    proceeds or forgiven its debt.
    “We review the FCC’s decision only to determine whether
    it was ‘arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or
    otherwise not in accordance with law.’ Our review is ‘very
    deferential.’” Press Commc’ns LLC v. FCC, 
    875 F.3d 1117
    ,
    1121 (D.C. Cir. 2017) (first quoting 
    5 U.S.C. § 706
    (2)(A); then
    quoting Rural Cellular Ass’n v. FCC, 
    588 F.3d 1095
    , 1105
    (D.C. Cir. 2009)) (citation omitted). A Commission decision
    is arbitrary and capricious if the Commission “has relied on
    factors which Congress has not intended it to consider, entirely
    failed to consider an important aspect of the problem, offered
    an explanation for its decision that runs counter to the evidence
    before the agency, or is so implausible that it could not be
    ascribed to a difference in view or the product of agency
    expertise.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Motor Vehicles Mfrs. Ass’n v. State
    Farm Mutual Auto. Ins. Co., 
    463 U.S. 29
    , 43 (1983)).
    A.
    We first address GLH’s arguments that the Commission
    erred in denying GLH’s waiver request and failing to provide
    it a hearing before cancelling its licenses.
    7
    1.
    GLH contends that the Commission’s denial of its request
    for a waiver of the installment-payment deadline was arbitrary
    and capricious. The Commission’s regulations allow it to grant
    a request to waive the installment payment rules if a licensee
    shows either (i) that “[t]he underlying purpose of the rule(s)
    would not be served or would be frustrated by application to
    the instant case, and that a grant of the requested waiver would
    be in the public interest,” or (ii) that “[i]n view of unique or
    unusual factual circumstances of the instant case, application
    of the rule(s) would be inequitable, unduly burdensome or
    contrary to the public interest, or the applicant has no
    reasonable alternative.” 
    47 C.F.R. § 1.925
    (b)(3).
    In rejecting GLH’s waiver request, the Commission
    explained that the auction system is designed to award each
    license “to the party that placed the highest value on the
    spectrum.” In re Alpine PCS, Inc., 255 FCC Rcd. 469, at
    ¶¶ 20–21. But “allow[ing] licensees to keep their licenses after
    they had failed to comply with the Commission’s payment
    rules” would interfere with that goal by “increas[ing] the
    incentive for bidders to make bids they could not pay and
    reduc[ing] opportunities for other bidders to win licenses.” 
    Id. ¶ 21
    . As a result, the Commission explained, “strict
    enforcement of the installment payment rules preserves a fair
    and efficient licensing process and promotes the rapid
    deployment of services for the benefit of the public,” and the
    rationale for strict enforcement applies “whether the licensee
    acquired the license directly through competitive bidding or
    through assignment in the secondary market.” 
    Id.
     The
    Commission thus had previously granted a waiver request
    “only after finding that there was no serious question regarding
    the defaulting licensee’s ongoing ability and willingness to
    fulfill its payment obligations despite the default and, therefore,
    8
    no question regarding the presumption that it remained best
    suited to utilize the spectrum.” 
    Id. ¶ 22
    .
    Applying that approach to GLH’s waiver request, the
    Commission determined that GLH had not demonstrated an
    “ongoing financial ability and willingness to fulfill [its]
    payment obligations post-default.” 
    Id. ¶ 29
    . The Commission
    concluded that granting GLH’s request therefore would serve
    neither the purposes of the automatic-cancellation rule nor the
    public interest. See 
    id. ¶ 31
    . Additionally, the Commission
    found that GLH had not demonstrated any “unique factual
    circumstances” entitling it to a waiver. 
    Id. ¶ 32
    . The
    Commission explained that “claims regarding financial
    difficulties resulting from a licensee’s business decisions and
    commercial dealings, including those in which a third party has
    withdrawn its financial support, do not amount to unique facts
    or circumstances that make application of the automatic
    cancellation rule inequitable, burdensome, or contrary to the
    public interest,” because the Commission “cannot take into
    account the private business arrangements that an applicant has
    made to finance its successful auction bid.” 
    Id.
     (citation and
    alteration omitted).
    The Commission’s explanation of its decision, at least on
    its face, is more than adequate to survive
    arbitrary-and-capricious review.         The Commission
    appropriately explained the legal standard, examined the
    particular facts of GLH’s case, and reasonably applied that
    standard to those facts. GLH advances three arguments as to
    why the Commission’s decision nonetheless is arbitrary and
    capricious, none of which we find persuasive.
    First, GLH contends that the public interest favored
    granting its waiver request because it had already built the
    necessary infrastructure and begun providing cellular service
    9
    before its default. Although avoiding a discontinuation of
    ongoing service weighed in GLH’s favor, the Commission
    considered that factor and determined that the “broader public
    interest in preserving the integrity and efficiency of the
    Commission’s auction process, as well as the Commission’s
    obligation to fairly and consistently enforce its installment
    payment rules,” outweighed the public “interest in a particular
    licensee’s provision of service.” 
    Id. ¶ 37
    . That determination
    was reasonable and fell squarely within the Commission’s
    technical competence.
    Second, GLH asserts that the Commission’s desire to
    preserve the integrity of the auction process should not have
    carried the day because GLH acquired its licenses by
    assignment rather than in an auction. That argument, too, was
    considered and rejected by the Commission. See 
    id.
     ¶ 21 &
    n.111 (citing In re GLH Commc’ns, Inc., 22 FCC Rcd. 2411, at
    ¶ 15). As the underlying Bureau Order explained, a winning
    bidder “demonstrat[es] the integrity of its valuation by paying
    the amount of the winning bids,” and that demonstration
    continues past assignment when an assignee “assume[s] the
    winning bidder’s obligation to fully and timely pay the amount
    of the winning bids.” In re GLH Commc’ns, Inc., 22 FCC Rcd.
    2411, at ¶ 15. Allowing an original purchaser who is unable to
    meet its obligations simply to assign the license with the
    understanding that the Commission will treat the assignee more
    leniently could compromise the Commission’s ability to ensure
    the integrity of the underlying valuation. The Commission thus
    reasonably concluded that an assignee’s timely payment “is
    important to the integrity of the auctions program.” In re
    Alpine PCS, Inc., 255 FCC Rcd. 469, at ¶ 21 n.111.
    Third, GLH argues that the Commission’s rejection of its
    waiver request was inconsistent with the Commission’s 1997
    decision to provide a suite of debt-relief options to distressed
    10
    installment payers. See In re Amendment of the Comm’n’s
    Rules Regarding Installment Payment Fin. for Personal
    Commc’ns Servs. (PCS) Licenses, Second Report and Order
    and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 12 FCC Rcd.
    16,436 (1997). We are unable to consider that argument
    because GLH did not appropriately raise it before the
    Commission. See 
    47 U.S.C. § 405
    (a). GLH advanced the
    argument only in a single oblique reference in its petition for
    reconsideration before the Bureau. See GLH Pet. for Recons.
    2 & n.3, J.A. 90. That single reference, however, was
    insufficient to provide the Commission “a fair opportunity to
    pass on” GLH’s argument, Time Warner Ent’mt Co. v. FCC,
    
    144 F.3d 75
    , 79 (D.C. Cir. 1998), both because it was only a
    passing reference and also because GLH failed to renew the
    argument in its application for review before the Commission
    itself, see Coal. for Noncommercial Media v. FCC, 
    249 F.3d 1005
    , 1009 (D.C. Cir. 2001).
    For those reasons, we conclude that the Commission’s
    denial of GLH’s waiver request was not arbitrary or capricious.
    2.
    GLH also contends that 
    47 U.S.C. § 312
    (c) required the
    Commission to hold a hearing before cancelling GLH’s
    licenses. That provision requires the Commission to hold a
    hearing “[b]efore revoking a license . . . pursuant to subsection
    (a).” 
    47 U.S.C. § 312
    (c). Subsection (a), in turn, grants the
    Commission authority to revoke a station license for seven
    specific reasons, such as “false statements knowingly made . . .
    in the application,” “willful or repeated failure to operate
    substantially as set forth in the license,” and “willful or
    repeated violation of, or willful or repeated failure to observe[,]
    any provision of this chapter or any rule or regulation of the”
    Commission. 
    Id.
     § 312(a).
    11
    As the Commission concluded in its Order, see In re
    Alpine PCS, Inc., 255 FCC Rcd. 469, at ¶¶ 84–85, GLH’s
    licenses were not revoked for any of the reasons enumerated in
    § 312(a). Instead, they were automatically cancelled under the
    applicable regulation, 
    47 C.F.R. § 1.2110
    (g)(4)(iv), when GLH
    defaulted on its installment payments. See 
    47 C.F.R. § 1.2110
    (g)(4)(iv) (“If an eligible entity obligated to make
    installment payments fails to pay the total Required Installment
    Payment, interest and any late payment fees associated with the
    Required Installment Payment within two quarters (6 months)
    of the Required Installment Payment due date, it shall be in
    default, its license shall automatically cancel, and it will be
    subject to debt collection procedures.”). The terms of § 312(c)
    thus do not afford GLH a right to a pre-cancellation hearing:
    § 312(c) provides a hearing right for revocations “pursuant to”
    § 312(a), and GLH’s licenses were not cancelled pursuant to
    § 312(a).
    GLH argues that, under that reading, the Commission
    could regulate its way around § 312(c) by simply repeating
    § 312(a)’s statutory grounds for revocation in a regulation,
    conditioning licenses on compliance with the regulation, and
    then cancelling licenses upon a failure to comply without
    affording any hearing. GLH’s argument might have some
    force if the Commission had in fact parroted § 312(a) in
    regulations and then relied on those regulations to cancel
    GLH’s licenses. In such a situation, it might fairly be said that
    the licenses were cancelled “pursuant to” both § 312(a) and the
    regulations. But that is not what happened here. Rather, the
    underlying reason for cancellation—that GLH defaulted on its
    installment payments—does not appear in § 312(a) at all. The
    cancellation of GLH’s licenses then cannot have taken place
    under § 312(a), and § 312(c) did not afford GLH a right to a
    pre-cancellation hearing.
    12
    B.
    In addition to arguing that the Commission erred in
    cancelling GLH’s licenses, GLH also argues that, now that the
    underlying auction spectrum has been resold, it is entitled to
    compensation from the reauction or a forgiveness of its debt.
    1.
    GLH first contends that the Uniform Commercial Code
    governs its relationship with the Commission and that the UCC
    entitles GLH to receive any reauction proceeds exceeding the
    amount of its debt to the Commission. With respect to that
    argument, GLH and the Commission initially agree that, in the
    absence of any on-point statute, a commercial transaction
    between the United States and a private party is governed by
    federal common law. See GLH Br. 39–40; FCC Br. 29 (citing
    Leonard J. Kennedy, Esq., & Richard S. Denning, Esq., 11
    FCC Rcd. 21,572, 21,577 (1996)); cf. United States v. Kimbell
    Foods, Inc., 
    440 U.S. 715
    , 728–29 (1979); Clearfield Trust Co.
    v. United States, 
    318 U.S. 363
    , 366–67 (1943). The content of
    that common law turns on a variety of factors, such as whether
    there is a need for a uniform federal standard or whether
    “application of a federal rule would disrupt commercial
    relationships predicated on state law.” Kimbell Foods, 
    440 U.S. at
    728–29. GLH argues, and the Commission has
    previously stated, that consideration of those factors should
    lead a federal court to “apply the basic principles of Article 9
    of the UCC” to secured transactions between the Commission
    and licensees, modifying them “as necessary to produce a
    uniform national result consistent with Congressional intent
    and FCC policies set forth in the Communications Act and
    applicable FCC rules and orders.” Leonard J. Kennedy, Esq.,
    & Richard S. Denning, Esq., 11 FCC Rcd. at 21,578; see also
    GLH Br. 39–40.
    13
    Assuming for the sake of argument that consideration of
    the appropriate factors would lead us to adopt the principles of
    the UCC to the extent they do not conflict with federal interests
    or policies, we cannot accept GLH’s argument that the UCC
    governs the Commission’s actions in this case. “Article 9 of
    the UCC sets forth a secured creditor’s lien-enforcement
    remedies,” which means it would support GLH’s “claim of
    entitlement to proceeds from the FCC’s sale of new licenses
    only if the FCC’s cancellation of the licenses was a lien-
    enforcement remedy under the UCC.” In re Magnacom
    Wireless, LLC, 
    503 F.3d 984
    , 993 (9th Cir. 2007). But unlike
    a private party, the Commission does not act only as a creditor,
    even when dealing with installment payers owing it a debt.
    Instead, the Commission also acts as a regulator. And while
    the Security Agreement assumed by GLH acknowledges that a
    default will trigger automatic cancellation pursuant to 
    47 C.F.R. § 1.2110
    , see Security Agreement ¶ 8(a), J.A. 11, the
    authority to cancel the licenses comes not from the Security
    Agreement but from the referenced regulation.
    Consequently, the Commission “had a regulatory . . . right
    to cancel [GLH’s] licenses” when GLH defaulted, and that
    “right was separate and independent from the FCC’s rights as
    a secured creditor.” Magnacom, 
    503 F.3d at 994
    ; cf. Security
    Agreement ¶ 2, J.A. 8 (acknowledging that the FCC’s security
    interest in the licenses is “not in derogation of any of the
    Commission’s regulatory authority over the License[s]”).
    “Because the FCC’s license cancellation is not a UCC lien-
    enforcement remedy, the UCC’s requirements are simply
    inapplicable” to the cancellation. Magnacom, 
    503 F.3d at 994
    .
    And because GLH held an interest only in the licenses and not
    in the underlying spectrum, see Security Agreement ¶ 2, J.A.
    8; 
    47 U.S.C. § 301
    , once the licenses were cancelled pursuant
    to the Commission’s regulatory authority, GLH had no claim
    14
    under the UCC to the proceeds of the reauction of the
    underlying spectrum.
    2.
    Next, GLH argues that the Commission’s refusal to offset
    its debt with the proceeds of the auction constituted an
    impermissible retroactive reinterpretation of 
    47 C.F.R. § 1.2104
    (g)(2). That regulation establishes a specified penalty
    for high bidders who default or are disqualified “after the
    close” of a license auction. In GLH’s view, the penalty set
    forth in that regulation should cap its exposure, such that it
    should effectively be entitled to a set-off (from the reauction
    proceeds) of any additional exposure.
    GLH’s argument derives from the history of the
    Commission’s interpretation of the regulation—concerning, in
    particular, the applicability of the regulation to installment
    payers. Under the version of the regulation in effect in 1996, a
    bidder who defaulted “after the close” of an auction was
    “subject to a penalty equal to the difference between the
    amount bid and the amount of the winning bid the next time the
    license is offered by the” Commission “plus an additional
    penalty equal to 3 percent of the subsequent winning bid” or
    the defaulter’s bid (whichever was lower). GLH Br. SA-7
    (quoting 
    47 C.F.R. § 1.2104
    (g) (1996)).
    In 1997, the Commission released an order explaining that,
    when an installment payer defaults, its license “will be
    cancelled automatically and the Commission will initiate debt
    collection procedures” pursuant to 
    47 C.F.R. § 1.2110
    , but that
    § 1.2110 did “not clearly indicate . . . whether under these
    circumstances the licensee will be liable for the default
    payment set forth in Section 1.2104(g).” In re Amendment of
    Part I of the Comm’n’s Rules – Competitive Bidding
    15
    Procedures, 13 FCC Rcd. 374, 442 (1997) (1997 Order). In
    determining that such defaulters should not be liable for the
    payment described in § 1.2104(g), the Commission concluded
    that “an additional payment requirement for licensees
    defaulting on installments is not necessary” because the
    Commission’s “current rules and installment payment terms
    are adequate to discourage defaults,” and “the conditions on the
    face of each license and the terms of the notes and security
    agreements executed by licensees provide the Commission
    appropriate remedies that will ensure that defaulted licenses are
    returned to the Commission for reauction and that all
    outstanding debts, as well as the Commission’s costs, are
    recoverable.” Id. at 443.
    The Commission thereby explained in the 1997 Order that
    installment payment defaulters would not be liable for the
    § 1.2104(g) penalty payment (and explained why the
    Commission adopted that interpretation of § 1.2104(g)). But
    two later statements in the Order appeared to suggest that
    defaulters in fact would be liable for the payments. First, the
    Order stated that, “by making licensees who default on an
    installment payment subject to the default payment set forth in
    Section 1.2104(g)(2), we create an additional deterrent to
    licensees considering default as a solution to financing
    shortfalls.” Id. at 446. Second, the Order stated that, “upon
    default on an installment payment, a license will automatically
    cancel without further action by the Commission, the licensee
    will become subject to the default payment set forth in Section
    1.2104(g) of our rules . . . , and the Commission will initiate
    debt collection procedures against the licensee.” Id. at 446–47.
    In an attempt to rectify any confusion created by the
    apparent contradictions in the Order, the Commission amended
    the Order the following year to remove the language in the
    second sentence quoted above saying that “the licensee will
    16
    become subject to the default payment set forth in Section
    1.2104(g) of our rules”; but the amendment erroneously failed
    to remove the first sentence. See id. at Erratum ¶ 8. In two
    subsequent orders in 2000 and 2004, the Commission
    eliminated any remaining confusion about the applicability of
    the § 1.2014(g) penalty provision to installment-payment
    defaulters by reaffirming that the penalty provision does not in
    fact apply to such defaulters. See In re Amendment of Part I of
    the Comm’n’s Rules – Competitive Bidding Procedures, 15
    FCC Rcd. 15,293 (2000) (2000 Order); In re Amendment of
    Part I of the Comm’n’s Rules – Competitive Bidding
    Procedures, 19 FCC Rcd. 2551 (2004) (2004 Order).
    Under GLH’s view of that history, it did not become clear
    until the 2004 Order (after GLH had defaulted) that
    § 1.2104(g)(2) does not apply to installment-payment debtors.
    And under GLH’s reading, applying § 1.2104(g)(2) to GLH’s
    default would effectively entitle it to a set-off of the reauction
    proceeds against its debt. Refusing to grant it a set-off, GLH
    argues, violates the principle against retroactivity embedded in
    the Administrative Procedure Act, see 
    5 U.S.C. § 551
    (4), by
    imposing the higher penalties mandated by the 2004 Order
    (rather than the lower penalties mandated by the 1997 Order)
    on its default.
    We are unpersuaded by GLH’s argument. First, GLH
    misunderstands the question considered by the Commission in
    the 1997 Order. GLH appears to believe that, if the
    Commission had concluded that § 1.2104(g) applies to
    installment payers, GLH then would have been entitled to the
    effective set-off it reads into that provision. But in actuality,
    the Commission indicated at every step of the way that
    installment payers were always subject to the cancellation and
    debt-collection penalties described in the separate regulation
    specifically addressing installment-payment defaults, 47
    
    17 C.F.R. § 1.2110
    , including full liability for the purchase price
    of the licenses. The only question the Commission considered
    with respect to installment payers and § 1.2104(g)(2) was
    whether defaulting payers would also be subject to the 3%
    penalty and deficiency payment described in § 1.2104(g). E.g.,
    1997 Order, 13 FCC Rcd. at 446 (“[B]y making licensees who
    default on an installment payment subject to the default
    payment set forth in Section 1.2104(g)(2), we create an
    additional deterrent to licensees considering default as a
    solution to financing shortfalls.” (emphasis added)). In short,
    even if GLH were correct that it did not become clear until
    2004 that § 1.2104(g) does not apply to its default, it was
    helped—not hurt—by that clarification.
    Second, even assuming GLH were correct about the
    question under consideration in the 1997 Order, the
    Commission had made sufficiently clear, at least by the time of
    GLH’s assumption of the installment-payment obligations, that
    § 1.2104(g) did not apply to installment payers who defaulted
    after the award of a license. The 1997 Order engaged in a
    detailed discussion of the Commission’s rationale for finding
    that § 1.2104(g) does not apply to installment payers. Although
    GLH identifies some seemingly contradictory language in a
    later portion of the Order, no reasonable licensee reading the
    Order as a whole would have concluded that § 1.2104(g)
    applies to installment payers. And one of the contradictory
    statements was removed in an erratum issued the following
    year, which would have reinforced the recognition that the
    Commission believed § 1.2104(g) does not apply to installment
    payers and that those contradictory statements were simply an
    error. The 2000 and 2004 Orders merely clarified, rather than
    changed, the Commission’s position. As a result, the
    Commission’s refusal to grant GLH a set-off of its debt with
    the reauction proceeds did not involve any impermissible
    18
    retroactive change in the Commission’s interpretation of
    § 1.2104(g).
    3.
    Finally, GLH argues that because the proceeds of the
    spectrum reauction exceeded the amount of GLH’s outstanding
    debt, the Commission has been made whole and GLH is
    entitled to a forgiveness of its debt. GLH’s argument stems
    from an opinion letter released by the Commission responding
    to concerns about the note and security agreement that the
    Commission required installment payers to execute. See
    Leonard J. Kennedy, Esq., & Richard S. Denning, Esq., 11
    FCC Rcd. 21,572. One of those concerns was that, in the event
    of a default, the Commission could both reauction the spectrum
    and collect on the note, resulting in a double recovery. Id. at
    21,576. According to the Commission, that concern was
    misplaced because “the equity principles established” in the
    Debt Collection Act, 31 U.S.C. ch. 37, and Federal Claims
    Collection Standards, 31 C.F.R. ch. IX, “should allow the
    federal government to forgive any outstanding debt so long as
    it has been made whole (penalties and costs included) in a
    subsequent auction.” Leonard J. Kennedy, Esq., & Richard S.
    Denning, Esq., 11 FCC Rcd. at 21,576. Therefore, GLH
    argues, because the Commission has been made whole through
    the reauctions in this case, it must forgive GLH’s outstanding
    debt.
    Although GLH is correct that, based on the opinion letter,
    the Commission may agree that GLH’s debt should be forgiven
    if the Commission has been made whole, GLH has raised its
    argument in the wrong proceeding. The Debt Collection Act
    and Federal Claims Collection Standards provide a mechanism
    for (and a set of standards governing) debt compromise
    requests, and place the ultimate authority to compromise debts
    19
    as large as GLH’s in the Department of Justice rather than in
    the Commission. See 
    31 C.F.R. § 902.1
    (b). GLH thus can raise
    its debt-forgiveness argument in a petition for debt compromise
    that it can submit to the Commission, see 
    47 C.F.R. § 1.1915
    ,
    or as a defense in any future debt-collection action (the
    Commission has not initiated any collection action), rather than
    as a subsidiary argument in this license-cancellation
    proceeding.     (And, if GLH’s argument persuades the
    Commission that a compromise is appropriate, the
    Commission can seek compromise approval from the
    Department of Justice.)
    That understanding is confirmed both by the 2004 Order,
    see 2004 Order, 19 FCC Rcd. at 2558 (explaining that the
    opinion letter “makes clear that any forgiveness of a debt
    arising from an installment payment default would occur only
    in the course of federal debt collection proceedings”), and also
    by Commission counsel in oral argument, see Oral Argument
    23:16–27:43. We thus affirm the Commission’s decision not
    to consider the argument or forgive GLH’s debt in this
    proceeding, understanding that GLH may initiate consideration
    of its equitable argument for debt forgiveness by filing a
    petition for debt compromise.
    *   *    *   *    *
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the decision of the
    Federal Communications Commission.
    So ordered.