Slight improvements in majority ownership for full-power commercial broadcast TV stations by African Americans and women and declines in Asian-American ownership (see 2109070051) point to a need for more focus and work on ownership diversity, FCC Commissioner Geoffrey Starks said Wednesday. Starks applauded reintroduction of the Expanding Broadcast Opportunities Act (HR-4871) by Rep. G.K. Butterfield, D-N.C.
The FCC Media Bureau wants feedback on the accessibility of children’s programming, following the 2019 changes to kidvid rules (see 1907100067), said a public notice Tuesday in docket 18-202. Comments are due Oct. 7 and replies Nov. 8. The PN “will help inform the Commission’s determination of whether additional action is warranted to promote increased accessibility of children’s programming,” it said. The 2019 order required the bureau to ask how the rules have affected accessibility within two years. The changes to the rules allowed broadcasters to meet children’s programming requirements with content on multicast channels and short-form programming, which doesn’t all fall under audio description and captioning requirements, the PN said. The bureau wants information on how much short-form and multicast content is captioned or audio-described, and what might have changed in broadcasting since 2019 to affect accessibility for children’s content.
Low-power FM broadcaster Tri-Cities Broadcasting Foundation agreed to pay a $17,500 penalty for violating the FCC’s underwriting rules and airing commercials, said a consent decree and order Tuesday. Tri-Cities’ station WAWL-LP Grand Haven, Michigan, broadcast the ads for over two years, from 2018 to 2020, Tri-Cities admitted to the agency. The allegations came to light due to a petition to deny the station’s renewal application filed by another broadcaster, WGHN. The Media Bureau rejected WGHN’s petition to deny, including arguments that WAWL’s content wasn’t educational. “The Commission has made clear that it defers to a licensee’s editorial judgment as to what constitutes ‘educational’ programming, unless that judgment is arbitrary or unreasonable,” the bureau said. Under the consent decree, WAWL will be granted a short-term license renewal until 2024, and must implement a compliance plan and file a compliance report with the FCC.
The FCC should remove language about intermediate frequency protection from proposed minor changes to radio technical rules, said REC Networks in comments posted Tuesday in docket 21-163 (see 2107070062). That language, which REC called “a remnant of a discontinued rule that has been allowed to linger in the regulations for nearly a decade,” was likely included due to a staff oversight, said the REC filing. REC endorsed all the FCC’s proposed changes as “mainly ‘housekeeping’ items that bring the rules to a more consistent manner.”
Meredith “does not have and never has had a corporate policy against accepting advertisements for over-the-air antennas,” said Meredith in a reply filing to an informal objection against its pending deal with Gray Television (see 2108300066). The reply was posted Tuesday in docket 21-234. Las Vegas-area antenna installer Mr. Antenna said Meredith’s station KVVU-TV told it it had a policy against accepting ads from vendors of products that encourage cord cutting, and urged the FCC to condition Meredith’s sale of stations to Gray on a prohibition of such policies. “Meredith’s rejection of Mr. Antenna’s advertisements on KVVU-TV, Henderson, Nevada, for a brief period in July of 2021, was based on a short-lived misunderstanding,” Meredith said. The station offered to restore the ads after the misunderstanding came to light, Meredith said. Gray Television had no input into the matter, Meredith said. “On July 14, 2021, I became aware that my sales staff may have misinterpreted my directions as indicating that such a policy existed,” said KVVU General Manager Michael Korr in a statement included with the filing. “I immediately took action to correct that miscommunication with my sales staff and with Mr. Antenna,” Korr said. “Since these two key allegations that form the basis for the Informal Objection are, in fact, false, Mr. Antenna provides the Commission with no basis for the requested condition,” Meredith said.
The FCC foreign-sponsored content order “purports to govern more broadcast content than proposed in the NPRM in a way that is not readily understandable” to network affiliate groups, said all four, in comments posted Friday in docket 20-299 in support of their request to clarify the rules (see 2107190053). The order doesn’t explain the basis for applying the rules to commercial ads and “does not provide broadcasters with the information necessary for them to confidently comply,” the groups said: The “only fair path” is to refrain from applying the new rules to commercial ads that fall under general sponsorship identification requirements.
The FCC lacks authority to require audio description of content on the internet and broadcasters need the eight- and 12-hour grace periods allowed to caption video clips delivered via IP, said representatives of the top four networks, NAB and Meredith on a call Wednesday with staff from the Consumer and Governmental Affairs and Media bureaus. “Uploading IP-captioned clips is more than a simple copy-and-paste exercise, and involves work-flow processes that can sometimes present challenges,” per a filing posted in docket 21-140 Friday. “Technical challenges” remain for carrying audio description on secondary audio feeds, but those could be addressed by ATSC 3.0, the filing said. “That remains uncertain at the moment.”
The FCC Media Bureau proposed a $3,500 fine for Katahdin Communications over failure to timely file a license to cover FM translator station W273DJ Millinocket, Maine, and for operating the translator after the broadcaster’s construction permit expired, said an order and notice of apparent liability Thursday. The bureau will grant the broadcaster’s license renewal application when the forfeiture is resolved. Katahdin engaged in unauthorized operation for almost three months before seeking the license, staff said.
Comments are due Oct.1, replies Oct. 18, in docket 21-293 on FCC-proposed changes to record-keeping requirements for broadcast political advertisements, says Wednesday’s Federal Register. The tweaks could be minor and uncontroversial (see 2108040058).
The Enforcement Bureau didn’t abuse FCC processes in Auburn Network’s license hearing proceeding and won’t be sanctioned (see 2108170064), said Administrative Law Judge Jane Halprin in an order posted in docket 21-20 Tuesday. She disagreed with Auburn's argument the bureau was flouting rules with extra unauthorized filings and “hoops” for Auburn to jump through. “On the contrary, the purported ‘hoops’ were discovery decisions made by the Presiding Judge and, as detailed above, [Auburn] did not provide an appropriately targeted and explanatory response,” Halprin said. She denied Auburn's challenges to previous EB filings, required Auburn to resubmit discovery filings that the judge says weren’t sufficiently specific, and warned that future discovery filings should be focused on Auburn principal Michael Hubbard’s fitness to hold an FCC license.