The LPTV Spectrum Rights Coalition urged the FCC to avoid requiring a low-power TV station to perform its own international coordination as a result of being displaced by the spectrum auction process. A coalition member was told by members of the Media and International bureaus about such a requirement, the coalition said in an ex parte filing in docket 12-268 (http://bit.ly/1hNM3PA). Doing so would require this small station to have to directly negotiate with the Mexican government for its new spectrum allocation and use, the coalition said. “This is a totally unacceptable additional condition put on an already highly-burdened LPTV industry, and does not meet any type of common sense test.” The coalition also urged the FCC to avoid creating guard bands that are larger than necessary to prevent interference between TV and the wireless services. The coalition repeated its request for having LPTV issues addressed in the NPRM on the auctions. Meanwhile, the FCC Monday proposed fining an LPTV station what some call a record amount. (See separate report in this issue.)
The Expanding Opportunities for Broadcasters Coalition asked the FCC to provide as much information as possible about how the commission will establish offers to broadcasters on the upcoming broadcast spectrum incentive auctions. A coalition member said that, due to the mistrust created by efforts “to limit payments to broadcast participants, she is less inclined to participate in the auction today than she was a year ago,” EOBC said in an ex parte filing posted Monday to docket 12-268 (http://bit.ly/1hIZ5xy). The coalition urged the commission to “disavow any explicit use of scoring in the auction, or, if the commission insists on any further ’scoring’, to base it solely on demonstrated interference or preclusion factors,” it said. The coalition also urged the FCC to establish prices that are sufficient to incentivize participation and establish a market for broadcast spectrum, it said. The filing pertains to meetings last week with commissioners Ajit Pai and Jessica Rosenworcel and staff from the FCC Incentive Auction Task Force.
FCC members proposed fining a Class A TV station owner $89,200, said a notice of apparent liability Monday (http://bit.ly/S2VqBR). It alleged DTV LLC didn’t let commission agents inspect the facilities of WPHA Philadelphia on two occasions, didn’t maintain full staffing at its main studio and operated from an unauthorized location. Not allowing the inspections “is simply unacceptable,” said the NAL. The company had no immediate comment.
NAB members are “at a complete loss” as to why and under what authority FCC staff continue to make changes to methodology set forth in OET Bulletin No. 69, NAB said Monday in a filing at the commission. The filing reflects arguments NAB members made in a series of meetings with commissioners Ajit Pai and Mike O'Rielly and various staffers. It lists the trade group’s leading concerns as the FCC takes up incentive auction rules. “Congress took a significant and purposeful step when it specified the manner by which the Commission should determine the coverage areas and populations served by each broadcast television licensee,” NAB said. The Spectrum Act says explicitly the “coverage area and population served of each broadcast television licensee” is to be “determined using the methodology described in OET Bulletin 69,” NAB said. “For the better part of two decades, the FCC has applied OET-69 routinely and consistently. So when Congress enshrined its use in the Spectrum Act, Congress was directing the Commission not to change its computation methods. Congress attempted to remove any uncertainty as to how those numbers would be derived.” NAB also raised concerns about wireless mics commonly used by broadcasters. “The Commission’s failure to include any exclusive spectrum for wireless microphones will not only harm the public interest generally (by limited the ability to provide breaking news), but will specifically threaten the public’s safety,” NAB said. NAB also asked the FCC to make sure enough money is available in the TV Broadcaster Relocation Fund to pay the costs some broadcasters will face as a result of auction-related repacking. “The auction should not move forward unless the staff first determines its repacking headroom under the $1.75 billion budget and takes every step it can to minimize repacking in the context of a successful incentive auction,” NAB said.
Sinclair asked the FCC to grant its application to assign the license of WMMP-TV Charleston, S.C., to Howard Stirk Holdings (HSH). Sinclair would like the FCC to give clarity by ruling that the public interest would be served by waiving the joint sales agreement attribution rule to permit HSH to acquire WMMP and WABM Birmingham, Ala., “and enter into sharing arrangements with Sinclair without causing such stations to be attributable to Sinclair,” Sinclair said in a letter to the commission (http://bit.ly/1kms0I2). Granting approval of the application concerning WMMP “would give all parties an opportunity to make an informed decision as to how to proceed with respect to the other stations,” it said. Sinclair hired investment banker Moelis & Co. as its financial adviser in connection with Sinclair’s purchase of TV stations from Allbritton Communications. “While Moelis has not yet identified a specific purchaser or purchasers of the stations, Sinclair continues to actively pursue this course of action,” Sinclair said in a letter to the FCC (http://bit.ly/1kms0I2).
If the FCC needs more spectrum after the incentive auction, it should hold an auction of low-power TV spectrum, said the LPTV Spectrum Rights Coalition in a meeting with Chairman Tom Wheeler, agency staff and other broadcasters, according to an ex parte filing posted Thursday in docket 12-268 (http://bit.ly/1mIhvQ3). “Many licensees in the LPTV community would very much like to have an LPTV auction after the Voluntary Incentive Auction.” Such a follow-up auction could generate enough spectrum for the National Broadband Plan, if LPTV licensees “could have the same flex-use rights the auction-eligible stations could receive if they do not take channel relocation funds,” the filing said. In conducting the incentive auction, the FCC should strictly adhere to the Spectrum Act, and the coalition supports the use of the new TVStudy software to conduct the auction, the filing said. The coalition also said it supports the Media Bureau’s recommendation that the FCC issue an NPRM on LPTV after the auction (CD April 8 p2).
The FCC Public Safety Bureau extended comment deadlines for a proceeding on establishing a multilingual emergency alert system. Initial comments are now due May 28, replies June 12, the bureau said in a public notice (http://bit.ly/1lOF0pn). The extension was granted following a request from the Minority Media & Telecommunications Council (CD April 18 p11). A proposal from MMTC for the rule change also triggered the proceeding.
The FCC seeks comment on the proposed changes to the FM table of allotments that would substitute Channel 260A for vacant Channel 263A for WCUZ(FM) Bear Lake, Mich., said a Media Bureau rulemaking notice Friday (http://bit.ly/QFRB4k). It said the channel substitution would let licensee Roy Henderson upgrade station operations while preserving the Class A vacant allotment at Custer, Mich., and comments are due June 16, replies July 1.
The FCC Media Bureau fined TV stations for failing to file children’s programming reports in a timely manner. It found Thunder Bay Broadcasting liable for $20,000 for its WBKB-TV Alpena, Mich., the bureau said in a forfeiture order (http://bit.ly/QM7mqj). Liberty Communications was fined $4,200 for its UHF station W50CH Alton, Ill., the bureau said in a separate forfeiture order (http://bit.ly/QM8oCI). The fine was reduced from $13,000, it said. The bureau also fined Kelley Enterprises $4,000 for failing to file issues and programs lists for Class A station WMKG Muskegon, Mich. The amount “is in line with previous forfeitures the commission has determined are not excessive relative to the licensee’s ability to pay,” the bureau said (http://bit.ly/1gY0jBj).
LocusPoint Networks is paying $5.1 million to buy WLPH Miami from Marksteiner, said a news release Thursday from TV station broker Patrick Communications, which represented the buyer in the deal. FCC records show it’s a digital station with Class A status, meaning it’s a low-power outlet with some similar interference protection as full-power stations.