The FCC has granted a short extension for Reply Comments on the implementation of the CALM Act. The new deadline for Reply Comments is August 1, 2011. We wrote about the issues in this porceeding here, The CALM Act ("Commercial Announcement Loudness Mitigation" Act), which must be implemented by the end of this year
television
Comment Date Set on Rulemaking to Implement the CALM Act Regulating Loud TV Commercials
Dates for comments and replies on the FCC’s Notice of Proposed Rulemaking to implement the CALM Act, regulating the volume levels of commercials, have now been set. We provided a detailed summary of that NPRM here. As set out in that summary, the NPRM asks many questions of broadcasters, cable companies, and other Multichannel Video Programming…
FCC Seeks Comments on Implementation of CALM Act Regulating Loud Commercials on Broadcast and Cable Television
In December, the Commercial Advertisement Loudness Mitigation (“CALM”) Act was adopted by Congress and signed by the President, addressing consumer complaints about television commercials that seem louder than the program content that they accompanied. As we wrote in our summary of the Act when it was adopted, Congress has long received many complaints about loud commercials and decided to act, even though many industry groups were concerned about the ability to design an effective system to deal with the contrasts that sometimes exist between the quiet dialogue that might precede a commercial break and the commercial advertisement itself. Nevertheless, Congress adopted the CALM Act, and instructed the FCC to adopt implementing rules within a year. This past week, the FCC released its Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, looking to adopt rules to implement the statute for over-the-air television broadcast stations, cable systems, satellite, and other multichannel video programming providers. In its NPRM, the FCC asks many questions trying to clarify the details of CALM Act implementation.
The NPRM raises a broad array of implementation issues, ranging from deciding exactly which broadcast stations and which MVPDs are subject to its terms, to the establishment of safe harbors for technical compliance. As discussed in more detail below, the Commission also asks whether stations and systems can shift the burden for compliance with these rules to program suppliers, such as broadcast and cable networks, and whether contractual means of guaranteeing compliance (such as indemnification provisions in contracts between networks and affiliates) are sufficient to ensure compliance by these program providers. Questions about how MVPDs deal with retransmission of broadcast programs, and who is responsible for noncompliant broadcast programming, are also asked. Finally, the FCC suggests processes for consumer complaints and the grant of waivers to stations and systems that cannot quickly comply with the new rules.…
FCC to Review Video Programming Marketplace; Requests Data on MVPDs, Broadcast TV, and Online Video Providers
The FCC is taking a close look at the video programming marketplace and gathering data that will undoubtedly shape its rules and policies in the coming years. Its review comes in the form of a periodic assessment of the multichannel video programming industry required by the Communications Act. By its Further Notice of Inquiry issued…
As Broadcasters Return From NAB Convention, FCC Extends Date for Comments on Policies Leading to Repurposing TV Spectrum for Broadband
The FCC has granted a one week extension for reply comments in the proceeding looking to take many of the preliminary steps toward incentive auctions by which the FCC would reclaim parts of television spectrum for use by wireless broadband companies. Comments are now due on April 25. We wrote about the many issues in this…
Comment Deadline on Video Description Rulemaking Extended
The FCC has granted an extension of time to submit comments in its proceeding to re-institute video description rules for television programming. Comments are now due April 28th, and Reply Comments are due by May 27th. A copy of the FCC’s recent Order extending the deadline is available here. As we wrote…
Comments on Television Retransmission Consent Rules due to FCC by May 27
The Commission’s recent Notice of Proposed Rule Making exploring possible changes to the television retransmission consent rules has now been published in the Federal Register setting the date for Comments as May 27th, with Reply Comments due by June 27. As we wrote about recently (here), the FCC has commenced a rule making…
Comments on Revised Video Description Rules for Television Programming due to FCC by April 18
UPDATE: On March 23rd, the FCC granted a ten-day extension of the filing deadline. Comments are now due April 28th, and Reply Comments are due by May 27th.
The FCC’s recent item proposing the adoption of video description rules was published in the Federal Register today setting the deadline for Comments in…
April 5: Deadline to File Waiver Request with the FCC for TV White Spaces Protection
The FCC recently revised its TV “white spaces” rules to facilitate the use of unlicensed communications devices on spectrum originally allocated exclusively for broadcast television. Although there is still a long way to go before new unlicensed devices are deployed in this spectrum, the recent revision of the rules has triggered an important deadline. As…
FCC to Take a Fresh Look at Retransmission Consent Rules Governing Carriage of Broadcast Television Stations
Among the many items adopted by the Commission at last week’s open meeting was a Notice of Proposed Rule Making (NPRM) regarding retransmission consent agreements and the carriage of broadcast television stations by cable and satellite providers. Retransmission consent has been a hot topic of late both in Washington and in the national press. During the past year, a few carriage negotiations between broadcast television stations and cable or satellite operators have resulted in interruptions – or threats of interruptions – in the carriage of local stations. As a result, both Congress and the public have paid increasing attention to retransmission consent negotiations, and the Commission’s NPRM is a effort to review some aspects of its rules governing the relationship between local broadcast stations and the cable and satellite providers that retransmit their signals. A copy of the NPRM is available here.
The NPRM is the outgrowth of a petition for rule making filed in March 2010 by cable and satellite providers, along with several public interest groups. These groups jointly petitioned the FCC seeking significant changes to the current retransmission consent process. Perhaps the most notably aspect of last week’s NPRM is not the changes the FCC proposes, but rather the changes it refrains from pursuing. The Commission states in the NPRM that it does not believe that it has the authority to adopt either interim carriage mechanisms – to require the continued carriage of a station without a station owner’s consent while negotiations continue – or mandatory binding dispute resolution procedures for retransmission consent negotiations, both of which were proposed by the cable and satellite providers in their petition for rule making. In both cases, the Commission found that it lacked the statutory authority to pursue the rule changes proposed by the petitioners.
While it proposes to refrain from action on those two elements of the petition for rule making, the Commission does propose to review several aspects of its rules in an effort to, in its words, "protect the public from, and decrease the frequency of, retransmission consent negotiation impasses within our existing statutory authority." To that end, the NPRM seeks input on strengthening the good faith negotiation rules, including whether it would be per se violation of the good faith negotiation rules for a station to give a network with which it is affiliated the right to negotiate for carriage, or for a station to grant another station or station group the right to negotiate for carriage, such as when a station is party to a local marketing agreement (LMA) or joint sales agreement (JSA). In addition, the NPRM proposes changes to the notice requirements of its carriage rules to require advance notice to consumers if there is the possibility that a station will be dropped from a providers’ programming line up. This advance notice would allow consumers to make alternative plans if negotiations ultimately fail and a station’s signal is deleted from the lineup.…