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Two more low-power TV stations lost FCC-mandated interference protection. Media Bureau...

Two more low-power TV stations lost FCC-mandated interference protection. Media Bureau orders Friday to Texas broadcasters yanked their Class A status, after neither responded to bureau information demands. Lubbock Television’s KGLR Lubbock (http://xrl.us/bnosy3) and B Communications’ KFLZ San Antonio (http://xrl.us/bnosyt)…

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didn’t meet “obligations as a Class A licensee” and changing “the Class A license to a low power television license therefore serves the public interest,” said orders signed by Chief Barbara Kreisman of the bureau’s Video Division. The bureau has ended Class A status of at least 15 low-power stations since the commission in February got power from Congress to auction full-power TV frequencies and reimburse those and Class A licensees for relocation expenses, our data show (http://www.warren-news.com/showcause.htm). Other Class A’s opposed bureau show-cause orders threatening to revoke Class A status (CD May 3 p2).