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.
- FCC Chairman Carr announced the “Pledge America Campaign” which calls on broadcasters to pledge to provide programming promoting civic education, national pride, and shared history to mark the 250th Anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence. Carr notes that broadcasters have longstanding public interest obligations to educate, inform, and entertain viewers and to air programming that is responsive to the needs and interests of their local communities. Carr’s announcement provided examples of such programming -including running PSAs, short segments, or full specials promoting civic education or about inspiring local stories; segments during regular news that highlight local sites that are significant to American and regional history, such as National Park Service sites; starting each broadcast day with the national anthem or the Pledge of Allegiance; and providing daily “Today in American History” announcements highlighting significant events that took place on that day in history. The announcement stated that broadcasters “can voluntarily choose to indicate their commitment to the Pledge America Campaign and highlight their ongoing and relevant programming to their viewing and listening audiences.” On BlueSky, Commissioner Gomez reacted to this announcement by suggesting that broadcasters who choose to participate in this campaign “do so by defending their First Amendment rights and refusing government interference.”
- At its February Open Meeting, the FCC adopted a Public Notice announcing its plans to open a filing window in 2026 for new noncommercial FM translator stations in the reserved band (Channels 201-220). The FCC will be seeking comment on a proposal to limit the filing window to the licensee or permittee of a noncommercial educational FM, noncommercial AM, or LPFM station that the proposed translator will rebroadcast; and to limit applicants to no more than 10 applications, except that Tribal LPFM applicants would be limited to 4 applications and all other LPFM applicants would be limited to 2 applications. Comments and reply comments on the proposed application limits will be due 15 and 25 days, respectively, after the Public Notice is published in the Federal Register. Dates for the window and filing procedures will be announced in a future notice from the FCC’s Media Bureau. For more on this filing window, see our article on our Broadcast Law Blog.
- FCC Commissioner Gomez released a statement following reports that CBS blocked the broadcast of Stephen Colbert’s “The Late Show”interview with Democratic Texas State Representative James Talarico—who is also a candidate for the Texas U.S. Senate seat—due to concerns about the interview’s compliance with the FCC’s revised political candidate equal time rules for talk show interviews (see our discussion here). Gomez stated that CBS’s decision is “yet another troubling example of corporate capitulation in the face of this Administration’s broader campaign to censor and control speech,” and that “the FCC has no lawful authority to pressure broadcasters for political purposes or to create a climate that chills free expression.” FCC Chairman Carr also commented on the incident at a press conference following the FCC’s Open Meeting, stating that the FCC did not censor the interview and noted that the equal time rules are intended to provide for more speech, not less, by allowing all candidates to get access to the airwaves.
- The Media Bureau granted three assignment applications proposing Sinclair’s ownership of two of the top-4 ranked TV stations in the following Designated Market Areas (DMAs): Flint-Saginaw-Bay City, MI; Traverse City-Cadillac, MI; and Rochester, NY. As was the case earlier this month when the Bureau granted several applications proposing Sinclair’s ownership of two of the top-4 ranked TV stations in multiple DMAs (see our note here), DIRECTV filed petitions to deny, arguing that granting the applications were not in the public interest because Sinclair would charge higher retransmission consent fees due to its greater market share, and that, even after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit decision to vacate the top-4 restrictions (see our article here), applicants still must show that owning two of the top-4 ranked stations in a DMA was in the public interest. The Bureau again rejected DIRECTV’s arguments, finding that DIRECTV failed to provide any transaction-specific arguments why granting the applications was not in the public interest, concluding that harm from increased retransmission consent fees was speculative, and determining that, after the Eighth Circuit’s decision, no special showing was needed to own two of the top-4 stations in any market.
- As we have seen in recent weeks, the FCC’s Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau again granted limited waivers of the FCC’s Emergency Alert Service (EAS) rules to permit radio stations to operate without EAS equipment while they were moved to new transmitter sites. The FCC’s rules require stations to have EAS devices installed and capable of sending and receiving EAS tests and messages whenever they are operational. This week, the Bureau granted two EAS rule waivers (see here and here) noting that the waivers were for a very short period of time during the station moves (up to 2 hours) and the licensees pledged not to proceed with the moves if there was a risk of an emergency event. One of these waiver grants was for two FM stations which supplemented a request that, last week, the Bureau found had insufficient information to grant (as it had not provided the specific times during which the station’s EAS equipment would not be functional – see our note here). Earlier this month, we also noted here another similar EAS waiver grant.
- The Media Bureau issued a Notification of License Cancellation to a California FM station, stating that the station’s license was automatically terminated pursuant to Section 312(g) of the Communications Act which cancels a license when a station is silent for more than a year. The Commission has interpreted the cancellation requirement to also apply when a station has been operating from facilities that were not authorized by the FCC. Here, it was unclear if the station had been operating at all for several years and, even if it had, it would have been from facilities at which any authority to operate had expired years ago. The Bureau also stated that, even if the station’s license had not automatically expired pursuant to Section 312(g), the Bureau would have still dismissed the station’s license renewal application for its failure to respond adequately to the Bureau’s inquiries regarding the station’s operational status as the licensee failed repeatedly to provide information requested by the FCC’s staff.
- The Media Bureau entered into a Consent Decree with a Connecticut LPFM station to resolve its investigation into whether the station was operating with its licensed facilities. A nearby FM station filed a petition for reconsideration of the station’s 2022 license to cover a modification of the LPFM’s facilities, alleging that the new LPFM operations were causing interference to the petitioner’s signal and to air navigation. At first, in declarations from its President and consulting engineer, the LPFM station denied that it was operating above its authorized power levels, but it later admitted that its station was in fact operating over its authorized power. The Bureau expressed its concern about the gravity of the false statement made by the LPFM operator (even though it was later retracted) but decided that there was not enough to conclude that the LPFM licensee intentionally tried to mislead the FCC. The Bureau agreed to a rescission of the license for its new facilities but still admonished the LPFM station for providing incorrect information, requiring that the admonition be reported in the station’s next license renewal. The Consent Decree does not impose a fine on the LPFM station, but it requires the station to submit a technical compliance report which must be reviewed and approved by the Bureau before it starts operating with its previously licensed facilities.

