Here are some of the regulatory developments of significance to broadcasters from the past week, with links to where you can go to find more information as to how these actions may affect your operations.
- The FCC’s Media Bureau released a Public Notice purporting to remind broadcasters about their lowest unit charge (LUC) obligations for political ads. LUC requirements apply to ads sponsored by legally qualified candidates and their authorized committees. In the Public Notice, the Bureau said for the first time that the LUC obligation extends to joint fundraising committees made up of a federal candidate’s principal campaign committee and other political committees. The Notice also said that the obligation extends to “coordinated expenditures” between political parties and legally qualified federal candidates. The determination that coordinated expenditures qualify for LUC contradicted a statement from the Solicitor General on behalf of the Department of Justice in a brief filed in February with the Supreme Court in a case that, if decided as urged by certain Republican party groups, could dramatically expand the ability of political parties to coordinate their spending with legally qualified federal candidates. The FCC’s rules require that stations provide LUC in the 45 days before a primary election and in the 60 days before a general election.
- Senators Ted Cruz (R-TX) and Maria Cantwell (D-WA) sent FCC Chairman Carr a letter expressing their concerns about the FCC delegating to the Media Bureau the approval of the Nexstar’s acquisition of TEGNA (see our article here). The Senators stated that the merger’s size – which created the largest TV station group in history – and the decisions to waive the local and national TV ownership rules, required a vote of the full Commission. The Senators asked what mergers would require full Commission review if the approval of the novel issues involved in this decision could be delegated to the Media Bureau. The Senators noted that Carr previously disagreed with the FCC’s delegation of authority to the Media Bureau to designate the proposed Standard General-TEGNA merger for hearing in 2023, which killed that deal (see our article here), and the Media Bureau’s approval of Audacy’s bankruptcy plan in 2024 (see our note here). The Senators requested that Carr provide information on the decision to allow the Bureau to approve the Nexstar-TEGNA deal and how this situation differed from prior FCC delegations of authority which Carr opposed.
- A Federal District Court enjoined the integration of TEGNA into Nexstar while it considered antitrust arguments raised by 8 state attorneys general arguing that the acquisition resulted in Nexstar acquiring too much market power. Nexstar has argued against the continuation of the temporary restraining order claiming that it cannot operate TEGNA as a separate company given that it already closed its acquisition after that acquisition was approved by the FCC and the Department of Justice.
- A federal judge in the District of Columbia ruled that President Trump’s Executive Order forbidding federal agencies from providing any funding to NPR and PBS violated NPR and PBS’ First Amendment rights. The judge found that the administration cannot deny funding to NPR and PBS simply because it disagrees with their viewpoints – which the EO characterized as “left-wing propaganda” – because such an action violates the First Amendment. While the decision has been characterized in some headlines as restoring funding to NPR and PBS, because Congress eliminated that funding separate and apart from the EO, the real effect of this decision is limited to situations where government agencies may want to provide grants or other funding to these organizations out of funds other than those rejected by Congress.
- The Media Bureau granted the assignment of a TV station in the Jacksonville, FL Nielsen Designated Market Area (DMA) from Hoffman Communications to Cox Television, resulting in Cox owning two of the top-4 TV stations in the DMA. As was the case last month when the Bureau approved Sinclair acquiring two of the top-4 ranked TV stations in multiple DMAs (see our notes here and here), the Bureau rejected claims by DIRECTV that Cox had to make a showing that the public interest justified the transaction. The Bureau found that, after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit vacated the top-4 restrictions (see our article here), no special showing was needed and that any arguments about other harms from the assignment, including increased retransmission consent fees, were speculative.
- The FCC released a Forfeiture Order imposing a $60,000 fine against an individual for operating a pirate radio station in Miami Gardens, Florida. The pirate broadcaster now has 30 days to pay the fine or the FCC may refer the case to the U.S. Department of Justice. The FCC itself cannot sue to collect fines or take actions against individuals who ignore these fines so it must rely on the DOJ to enforce them in Court.
- The Media Bureau entered into a Consent Decree with a Mississippi AM station to resolve an investigation arising from an informal complaint, finding violations including that the station’s control changed without prior FCC approval when one of its three owners bought out the interests of the other two, the station failed to upload Quarterly Issues/Programs lists to its Online Public Inspection File (OPIF), the station failed to file several biennial ownership reports, and the station falsely certified its compliance with its OPIF and biennial ownership reporting requirements in its license renewal application. The Consent Decree requires that the station pay a $1,000 voluntary contribution to the U.S. Treasury and implement a compliance plan to ensure future compliance with the FCC’s rules.


