COVID-19 is having a negative impact on radio advertising, which could worsen once ratings start showing drops in listenership due to less telecommuting and rising unemployment, said analysts, broadcasters and company news releases late last week. iHeart Radio, Salem Media and Urban One rescinded projections for 2020, citing uncertainty caused by the pandemic.
Low-power and TV translator stations can start getting reimbursed for expenses for being displaced by the post-incentive auction repack, said a public notice Thursday from the FCC Media Bureau and Incentive Auction Task Force. Stations “may immediately begin submitting documentation of actual expenses incurred for approval to be drawn down against their individual allocations,” blogged IATF Chair Jean Kiddoo and Deputy Chair Hillary DeNigro. “It is important to make an initial allocation promptly and without waiting for greater visibility into any future changes so that LPTV/Translator stations can begin to be reimbursed for their expenses, which in some cases have already been incurred,” the PN said.
The FCC’s March 31 commissioners' meeting will be livestream only (see 2003240030). Items will be voted ahead of time on circulation and commissioner remarks will be shortened, agency officials said in interviews. The meeting’s changed format takes into account the agency’s COVID-19 preventive measures, which include closing headquarters to most visitors and staff being asked to telework.
The March 31 FCC commissioners' meeting will be livestream only and all items will be voted beforehand on circulation, agency officials said in interviews this week. The unusual format stems from the agency’s COVID-19 prevention measures, which have most staffers teleworking and headquarters closed to visitors without special permission.
After a broadcast tower company suspended work for two weeks because of the novel coronavirus, the FCC announced Tuesday it will allow stations that can’t meet the upcoming phase 9 deadline because of COVID-19-related delays to shift to the next phase (see 2003170023). Phase 10, which begins May 3, is scheduled to be the final phase of the repacking.
The FCC Incentive Auction Task Force and the Media Bureau are allowing stations in the current repack phase affected by delays related to the novel coronavirus to wait until the next phase, said a public notice Tuesday. The repack just began phase 9, scheduled to end May 1. Stations that can’t meet that deadline will be granted a waiver of that deadline and a reassignment to phase 10, May 2-July 3, the PN said.
The FCC is scheduled to move to its new headquarters in late June, officials told us. The agency wouldn’t comment on the details of the move to the new building, Sentinel Square III at 45 L St. NE. Officials told us the new offices will be more “open concept” than in the current building. Real estate industry officials say that’s in line with other federal agencies that have relocated (see 1701120044). During the move, agency staff will telework from home for a week while the offices are packed up and relocated, FCC officials said. It’s not clear how the move plan interacts with the agency’s current pandemic response, which also involves telework (see 2003120063).
Broadcast officials differ on what canceling the NAB Show from its April slot (see 2003110036) means for the industry, they said in interviews last week. Many said there are other avenues to connect with clients and vendors and new tech, but some said the show is a “one-stop shop” that can’t really be replicated.
FCC staffers are being encouraged to work from home starting Friday and have been told to remove perishables from agency refrigerators and take their plants home, Chief of Staff Matthew Berry emailed staff Thursday in a memo obtained by Communications Daily. The agency also released a public notice Thursday banning all visitors from its facilities unless they receive special permission from the Office of Managing Director. It declined to detail what that permission may entail.
The FCC released drafts Tuesday of proposed items for the March 31 commissioners’ meeting, including details of proposals to deregulate voice incumbent pricing and require authentication of caller ID information, plus Media Bureau proposals on ATSC 3.0 and program carriage. Chairman Ajit Pai outlined the agenda Monday (see 2003090050).