This article is no longer available. For more information on this topic, see Could There Be a Delay in the February 17 DTV Transition Deadline?
Television
Annual Regulatory Fees Due Sept. 19th
This article is no longer available. For more information on this topic, see FCC Sets Deadline for Annual Regulatory Fees – September 13, 2012
An Option, A Guaranty, and a Shared Services Agreement – OK By the FCC
The FCC last week approved two television "Shared Services Agreements," here and here, each between the proposed Buyer of a television station and a company that owns another television station in the same market. In each case, the existing owner would sell advertising time for the station being purchased, as well as provide a loan guaranty for the funds necessary for the purchase of the station. And the station already in the market would receive from the purchaser of the new station an option to purchase the station in the future, if that purchase is permitted under some future set of multiple ownership rules. It is interesting that these decisions were released in the same week as the FCC issued two requests for public comment on the multiple ownership rules (see our post here).
These decisions probably mark the outside limit of what two stations can do in a television market where they cannot be co-owned without triggering multiple ownership concerns. In the radio world, such agreements would not be possible to the same extent. A radio licensee who provides sales services for another station in the same market, where more than 15% of the advertising time on the station is sold pursuant to such an agreement, would result in an "attributable interest," meaning that such services could only be provided to a station that could be owned under the multiple ownership rules.
Continue Reading An Option, A Guaranty, and a Shared Services Agreement – OK By the FCC
The 700 Mhz Controversy – Fighting Over the Reclaimed TV Spectrum
There are no items on the agenda for next week’s FCC meeting from the Media Bureau, so one might think that the "broadcast" community could ignore this meeting. However, there is one matter that will be considered that may well have an effect on the media landscape for the foreseeable future. That is the adoption of service rules for the 700 MHz spectrum – the remaining portion of the spectrum to be reclaimed from television broadcasters after the digital transition. Part of that spectrum has already been reclaimed and is beginning to be used by companies such as Qualcomm offering digital multimedia services such as the MediaFLO system, about which we have written before. The remaining portion of the spectrum that will be auctioned by the Commission by January 2008 and has the potential to provide significant high-speed digital wireless services to the public. However, anyone reading the communications press would realize that there is a major controversy over how that service will be provided.
The argument is over whether service will be provided on the new spectrum in an open manner – in essence a wireless high speed connection to the Internet where any service can get direct access to the consumer – or whether it will function more like the current systems run by the existing wireless carriers, where the carriers will be able to control the content that will be delivered to the consumer. This is, by no means an easy decision, and it is currently being debated in Congress and at the FCC.
Continue Reading The 700 Mhz Controversy – Fighting Over the Reclaimed TV Spectrum
5 of 6 – The Next Multiple Ownership Public Hearing
The FCC on Friday announced the time and location for the fifth of its planned six multiple ownership hearings. The hearing will be held in Chicago on Thursday, September 20. Exact times, location and topics will be announced later. The public notice does indicate that the meeting will begin in the afternoon and continue through…
Enhanced Public Interest Requirements for TV Too?
In our recent summary of the Commission’s order on Digital Radio, we wrote about the Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking that raised specific proposals to adopt new rules regulating the public interest obligations of radio broadcasters. These proposals included the possible requirements for a standardized disclosure form for a stations public service programs, limits on a station’s ability to originate programming from locations other than the station’s main studio, and possible limitations on the current ability of stations to operate without manned studios. A recent Commission decision reminds television broadcasters that there is another proceeding – one six years old – that proposes many of the same restrictions on television broadcasters. Does the recent mention of this proceeding that so closely parallels the recent radio proposals indicate that some action may soon be forthcoming on the TV proceeding?
The TV proceeding was mentioned in an FCC decision released last week rejecting Petitions to Deny that had been filed against a number of license renewal applications for television stations in Wisconsin and Illinois alleging that the stations had not adequately served the public interest through the broadcast of issue responsive programming, especially programming covering election issues. In rejecting those Petitions, the FCC stated that its ability to second guess the editorial discretion of a licensee was limited by the First Amendment and by the Communications Act’s prohibition against broadcast censorship. In this case, the FCC said that the showing made by the Petitioner was not sufficient to demonstrate that the stations had not served the public interest of their communities. However, the decision noted that the Commission was considering quantitative standards for evaluating the public service of broadcast licensees, citing to the long-pending rulemaking proceeding, and implying that the evaluation of these licensees might have been at least somewhat different had these proposed standards been in place.Continue Reading Enhanced Public Interest Requirements for TV Too?
Another Localism Hearing and Service to America
The FCC, after taking two years off, is looking to finish their field hearings on Localism by scheduling a hearing in Portland, Maine on June 29. This hearing is not one of the six hearings to discuss possible new multiple ownership rules, but instead a continuation of the hearings started by Chairman Powell after public controversy over the 2003 multiple ownership rules. In an ironic twist of fate, this public notice was released on the Friday before the National Association of Broadcasters Educational Foundation hosts their Service to America Awards Dinner to honor broadcasters and the public service commitment that they have to their communities. Thus, while the FCC is looking in the hinterlands for evidence of the responsiveness of the broadcast industry to the needs of their listeners, some of the best evidence of that service was on display some 12 blocks from the FCC’s headquarters.
The Localism hearings were part of a larger proceeding begun in response to the controversy after the 2003 multiple ownership rules. When the Democratic Commissioners, Congressional legislators from both parties, and a variety of citizen’s groups from across the political spectrum complained about how the public’s input was not sought before the rules were adopted, the FCC tried to respond to some of those complaints by putting out a Notice of Inquiry on Localism. The proceeding was to assess how well broadcasters were serving their communities, and the Notice asked for public comment on a grab bag of issues including the following:
- whether a broadcaster’s public interest obligations should be quantified (bringing back obligations abolished in the 1980s that required specific amounts of the programming of broadcast stations to be devoted to news and public affairs programming),
- should broadcasters be required to play specific amounts of local music,
- is payola a major issue,
- whether more programming should be devoted to political campaigns,
- whether the voices of minorities were being heard on the airwaves.
- if the FCC should authorize more LPFM stations and take other steps to make airtime available to new entrants
Continue Reading Another Localism Hearing and Service to America
FCC Steps Up DTV Education and Enforcement Efforts
This article is no longer available. For more information on this topic, see House Passes DTV Delay Bill – Now on the President to Sign, and the FCC to Implement
New Children’s Television Programming Form 398 Available – First Quarter 2007 Reports due by June 10th
This article is no longer available. For more information on this topic, see FCC Deadlines in January – Quarterly Issues Programs Lists, Children’s Program Reports, Comments on TV Online Public File and Public Interest Obligation Proposals, FM Window and More
Copyright Office to Hold Hearings on Video Statutory Licenses
We wrote last month about the fact that the Copyright Office has initiated a major proceeding to reexamine the statutory licenses that allow cable systems and satellite distributors to retransmit the programming of local television stations. A statutory license allows retransmission of television signals by these multichannel video providers without getting the consent of copyright owners of each and every program (and program elements contained in the programming, e.g. music) that a broadcast station may feature in its programming. As part of this proceeding, the Copyright Office promised to hold public hearings on these licenses. The Office has announced the schedule for these hearings, to be held from July 23 to July 26. Parties interested in participating in the hearings need to register their interest on or before June 15. The Copyright Office’s notice about the hearing, which contains instructions on the process for filing a request to testify, can be found here.
Written comments in this important proceeding are due July 2. The Copyright Office has also encouraged interested parties to file suggested questions to be posed to the participants in the hearing by July 2. Reply comments in the case are due on September 13. The Copyright Office has also encouraged parties to respond to the testimony presented at the hearing in their reply comments. Continue Reading Copyright Office to Hold Hearings on Video Statutory Licenses
