This document presents a statistical path loss model for wireless channels in suburban environments derived from experimental data collected at 1.9 GHz across the United States. The model distinguishes between three terrain categories and applies to base antenna heights from 10 to 80 m and distances from 0.1 to 8 km. Path loss is modeled as the sum of a distance-dependent term and a random shadow fading term. The path loss exponent and shadow fading standard deviation are treated as random variables characterized by statistical distributions derived from the experimental data for each terrain category.