Consumer groups representing the hearing impaired don’t agree with NAB, NCTA and others on the technical challenges posed by a proposal to require closed captioning for video clips, according to comments filed in response to a Media Bureau public notice on the topic. The notice was issued after consumer groups filed a petition of reconsideration against the FCC’s IP closed captioning order because it didn’t include rules for captioning clips (CD April 19 p11). Since many local and national video programming distributors (VPDs) caption all their news clips, there’s little reason to expect others to face “technical barriers” doing so, said Telecommunications for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing Inc. (TDI) and seven other consumer groups in a joint filing. The FCC shouldn’t “undermine the success of its IP closed captioning rules by imposing a video clips captioning requirement that would match or exceed the complexity and cost of captioning full-length programming,” said the Digital Media Association.
An FCC move to make TV joint services agreements (JSAs) attributable at the same level they are in radio would be unpopular with broadcasters but is unlikely to cause widespread divestitures or end the practice of using pacts like JSAs to get around ownership rules, said broadcast attorneys in interviews Friday. Such a rule “would be a good first step” for the public interest groups that oppose such sharing arrangements, said Free Press Policy Counsel Lauren Wilson. “We wouldn’t see that as the end."
A report and order establishing the framework of the incentive auction will be presented to the FCC this spring, announced the Incentive Auction Task Force in its update presentation at Thursday’s open commission meeting. The R&O will be followed by two public notices and comment periods to finalize every aspect of the auction, applications from prospective bidders will begin to be accepted in early 2015, and the auction itself will be held in mid-2015, said task force’s Chairman Gary Epstein. The NAB and CTIA praised the commission’s timeline, though some broadcast attorneys told us they're concerned about a lack of specificity and the commission’s plans for reaching out to broadcasters. “We are on course at speed to get this thing done,” said FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler.
FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler’s office had planned to circulate a draft order Thursday that would attribute TV joint sales agreements (JSAs) for the purposes of calculating ownership, but the item is expected to be delayed until March, an agency official told us. The order would have treated the attribution of TV JSAs the same way as for radio, counting as 15 percent toward ownership, the official said. It’s not clear why the item may be delayed. The item would also have included a further notice of proposed rulemaking on media cross-ownership, the official said.
The FCC shouldn’t appeal the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit decision that struck down most of the agency’s net neutrality order (CD Jan 15 p1), said Commissioner Ajit Pai. The “better course” would be to let Congress clarify the scope of FCC authority over the Internet, he said. Pai also discussed during the appearance to be shown this weekend on C-SPAN the FCC incentive auction and repacking, broadcaster sharing agreements and hotel phone problems with dialing 911.
A Charter Communications buy of Time Warner Cable would likely clear regulatory hurdles more easily than a Comcast buy, but TWC’s initial rejection of the Charter offer (CD Jan 15 p12) could spark a competing bid from Comcast or another company, said several cable attorneys in interviews Tuesday. A Comcast deal to buy TWC would bring more political and regulatory scrutiny and stir up issues about vertical integration that wouldn’t be as pronounced if Charter is the buyer, said Garvey Schubert cable attorney Bruce Beckner. “It’s a much tougher sell.”
The threat of large-scale cable mergers involving vertically integrated providers has moved the American Cable Association to pressure lawmakers and the FCC to redefine buying groups to allow program access rules to apply to the National Cable Telecom Cooperative (NCTC), the ACA told us. ACA said it has been “educating members of Congress” and meeting with FCC officials to push the issue, which was addressed but not acted on in an FNPRM more than a year ago (CD Oct 9/12 p1). With vertically integrated providers Charter and Comcast rumored to be among the companies vying to buy Time Warner Cable, “there is a heightened need” to have program access protections extended to the operators who purchase content through the NCTC, said ACA in a presentation to FCC officials. NCTC membership includes nearly all small and medium multichannel video programming distributors, said ACA Vice President-Government Affairs Ross Lieberman.
FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler’s decision to push the incentive auction back to 2015 doesn’t address industry concerns about how broadcasters will be affected by the repacking process, engineers, attorneys and broadcasters told us in interviews. The extra time before the auction doesn’t equate to extra preparation time for the various changes in channel assignments that repacking would be required by equipment manufacturers, broadcast stations, and engineers, because “we don’t know what to get ready for,” said Don Everist, president of broadcast engineering firm Cohen, Dippel.
A U.S. Court of Appeals, D.C., opinion in the FCC’s favor may also be a bad omen for the commission’s must-carry regime, several attorneys told us Friday. In a unanimous decision in Agape Church v. FCC (http://1.usa.gov/19ojjp3), a three-judge panel upheld the commission’s authority to sunset its dual carriage “viewability” rule, which required cable operators to downconvert the digital signals of “must-carry” channels for subscribers with analog television sets.
Gannett’s $2.73 billion purchase of Belo and Tribune’s $2.2 billion purchase of Local TV were approved by the FCC Media Bureau, according to a pair of orders released Friday (http://bit.ly/1ds4aFD) and (http://bit.ly/1cGP7WV). That was as expected (CD Dec 19 p1). Though cable companies and public interest groups had filed oppositions to both transactions, bureau Chief Bill Lake said in an email to us that the agency had considered both deals in terms of their effect on the public interest. “Our public interest mandate encompasses giving careful attention to the economic effects of, and incentives created by, a proposed transaction taken as a whole and its consistency with the Commission’s policies,” said the bureau in the Gannett/Belo order. Free Press, which along with other public interest groups had opposed both deals, said it was “disappointed” by the decisions. The FCC “needs to fix its rules now, and throw out the rubber stamp that’s making America’s media system less local, less diverse and less accountable to the people in hundreds of communities,” said Free Press President Craig Aaron in a release.