The technical complexity of wireless infrastructure is not accidental. RF engineering standards, FCC exposure regulations, and Section 6409 eligibility criteria require specialized knowledge to interpret accurately. That knowledge has historically resided almost entirely on the carrier side of every negotiation and permit review.
SCM Advisors publishes these resources to change that. Each document below represents formal technical and regulatory analysis produced by our licensed RF engineers, submitted to federal bodies or made available to property owners, municipalities, and legal counsel who need independent reference material that does not originate from a carrier consultant.
These are primary documents. Letters submitted to Congress and the FCC under Michael Flores' signature, technical comparisons built from field measurement data, and contractor credentials that establish the licensing basis for our compliance work. They exist because the information asymmetry that defines this industry is addressable, and because the clients we represent deserve access to the same technical foundation carriers rely on.
Submitted to members of Congress regarding misuse of Section 6409, 5G safety oversight gaps, and municipal liability.
Submitted to the Federal Communications Commission regarding 6409 misclassification, OET-65 non-compliance, and unregulated 5G power increases.
A visual RF heatmap showing how high-power 5G upgrades change the exposure footprint, expand exclusion zones, and affect worker and public safety on typical rooftop sites.
We maintain an active California contractor license for wireless and low voltage work, issued by the Contractors State License Board (License #1137805). This certificate provides formal verification of our license status, classification, and bond, so property owners and municipalities can confirm who they are working with on rooftop and 5G related projects.