The U.S. Federal Communications Commission's staff has found AT&T's  proposed US$39 billion acquisition of rival T-Mobile USA to be contrary  to the public interest, with officials there saying the deal would  result in the largest single concentration in the U.S. mobile market in  history.
 
 The FCC, in a draft order released Tuesday, found the merger to be anticompetitive, echoing a similar conclusion in August by the U.S. Department of Justice. The FCC is now required to send the  merger request to a hearing before an administrative law judge, where  AT&T and T-Mobile USA will have the opportunity to argue against the  FCC's conclusion, FCC officials said.
 
 The merger would result in unprecedented concentration of market power  in the mobile market, FCC officials said in a press briefing in which  they spoke under the condition they not be named.
 
 At the same time, the FCC approved, with conditions, AT&T's application to purchase US$1.9 billion worth of spectrum in the lower 700MHz band from  Qualcomm. The Qualcomm spectrum would cover 300 million U.S. residents,  including 70 million people in New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Los  Angeles and San Francisco. 
 
 AT&T said it was disappointed with the FCC's decision. "It is yet  another example of a government agency acting to prevent billions in new  investment and the creation of many thousands of new jobs at a time  when the U.S. economy desperately needs both," Larry Solomon, AT&T's  senior vice president of corporate communications, said in a statement.  "At this time, we are reviewing all options."
 
 A trial in the DOJ's lawsuit to block the merger is scheduled to start  in February in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. The  administrative hearing at the FCC would start after the DOJ trial, an  FCC official said.
 
 FCC officials said they found no evidence that AT&T would roll out  its 4G mobile broadband service faster if it was allowed to buy  T-Mobile, as the company has suggested. The FCC's staff also rejected  AT&T promises saying the merger would lead to tens of thousands of  new jobs. FCC officials instead said it would be likely to lead to  "massive" layoffs as the two companies cut duplicative jobs.
 
 "The record clearly shows that -- in no uncertain terms -- this merger  would result in a massive loss of U.S. jobs and investment," an FCC  official said.
 
 Public Knowledge, a digital rights group opposed to the merger, praised  the FCC's decision. FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski "is to be applauded  for standing up to AT&T's lobbying machine and moving forward to a  hearing designation," said Gigi Sohn, Public Knowledge's president. 
 
 An administrative hearing will allow AT&T to present additional  evidence showing how it believes the merger will create jobs, Sohn said.  That result "would run contrary to every other takeover AT&T has  engineered," she said. "There is ample evidence in the record that this  deal would destroy jobs."
 
 The FCC's decision to refer the merger to a hearing means that the  agency has "substantial and material" questions about the deal, added  Andrew Jay Schwartzman, senior vice president and policy director of  Media Access Project, a nonprofit law firm focused on digital rights. 
 
 The hearing "means the FCC has found merit in our arguments that a  combined AT&T/T-Mobile will create a duopoly in the wireless market,  which will increase prices for service and for handsets," he said.
