82_FR_37498 82 FR 37345 - Video Description: Implementation of the Twenty-First Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010

82 FR 37345 - Video Description: Implementation of the Twenty-First Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010

FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION

Federal Register Volume 82, Issue 153 (August 10, 2017)

Page Range37345-37354
FR Document2017-15526

In this document, the Commission adopts rules pursuant to Section 202 of the Twenty-First Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010 (CVAA) to expand the availability of video described programming on top-rated broadcast and nonbroadcast networks. Specifically, the document adopts the proposal to increase the amount of described programming on each ``included network'' carried by a covered broadcast station or multichannel video programming distributor (MVPD), from 50 hours per calendar quarter to 87.5 hours per quarter. Covered broadcast stations and MVPDs must start providing the additional hours of video described programming on ``included networks'' in the calendar quarter beginning on July 1, 2018. The document also provides more flexibility than exists under the Commission's current rules regarding when the additional hours of described programming may be aired. This update to the Commission's video description rules will help ensure that Americans who are blind or visually impaired can be connected, informed, and entertained by television.

Federal Register, Volume 82 Issue 153 (Thursday, August 10, 2017)
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 153 (Thursday, August 10, 2017)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 37345-37354]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2017-15526]


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FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION

47 CFR Part 79

[MB Docket No. 11-43; FCC 17-88]


Video Description: Implementation of the Twenty-First Century 
Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010

AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.

ACTION: Final rule.

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SUMMARY: In this document, the Commission adopts rules pursuant to 
Section 202 of the Twenty-First Century Communications and Video 
Accessibility Act of 2010 (CVAA) to expand the availability of video 
described programming on top-rated broadcast and nonbroadcast networks. 
Specifically, the document adopts the proposal to increase the amount 
of described programming on each ``included network'' carried by a 
covered broadcast station or multichannel video programming distributor 
(MVPD), from 50 hours per calendar quarter to 87.5 hours per quarter. 
Covered broadcast stations and MVPDs must start providing the 
additional hours of video described programming on ``included 
networks'' in the calendar quarter beginning on July 1, 2018. The 
document also provides more flexibility than exists under the 
Commission's current rules regarding when the additional hours of 
described programming may be aired. This update to the Commission's 
video description rules will help ensure that Americans who are blind 
or visually impaired can be connected, informed, and entertained by 
television.

DATES: Effective September 11, 2017.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Maria Mullarkey, 
[email protected], or Lyle Elder, [email protected], of the 
Media Bureau, Policy Division, (202) 418-2120. For additional 
information concerning the Paperwork Reduction Act information 
collection requirements contained in this document, contact Cathy 
Williams at (202) 418-2918 or send an email to [email protected].

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Commission's Report 
and Order, FCC 17-88, adopted on July 11, 2017, and released on July 
12, 2017. The full text of this document is available electronically 
via the FCC's Electronic Document Management System (EDOCS) Web site at 
http://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/ or via the FCC's Electronic 
Comment Filing System (ECFS) Web site at http://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/ecfs2/. Documents will be available electronically in ASCII, Microsoft 
Word, and/or Adobe Acrobat. This document is also available for public 
inspection and copying during regular business hours in the FCC 
Reference Information Center, Federal Communications Commission, 445 
12th Street SW., CY-A257, Washington, DC 20554. Alternative formats are 
available for people with disabilities (Braille, large print, 
electronic files, audio format), by sending an email to [email protected] 
or calling the Commission's Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau at 
(202) 418-0530 (voice), (202) 418-0432 (TTY).

I. Introduction

    1. In this Report and Order, we expand the availability of video 
described programming on top-rated broadcast and nonbroadcast networks. 
Specifically, we adopt the proposal to increase the amount of described 
programming on each ``included network'' \1\ carried by a covered 
broadcast station or multichannel video programming distributor (MVPD), 
from 50 hours per calendar quarter to 87.5 hours per quarter. Covered 
broadcast stations and MVPDs must start providing the additional hours 
of video described programming on ``included networks'' in the calendar 
quarter beginning on July 1, 2018. We also provide more flexibility 
than exists under our current rules regarding when the additional hours 
of described programming may be aired. This update to our rules will 
help ensure that Americans who are blind or visually impaired can be 
connected, informed, and entertained by television.
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    \1\ An ``included network'' is a network carried on a 
programming stream or channel on which a broadcaster or MVPD is 
required to provide video description. Video Description: 
Implementation of the Twenty-First Century Communications and Video 
Accessibility Act of 2010, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 81 FR 
33642, May 27, 2016, 31 FCC Rcd 2463, 2464, n.4 (2016) (NPRM).

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[[Page 37346]]

II. Background

    1. In 2011, the Commission reinstated the video description 
regulations that previously were adopted in 2000, requiring certain 
television broadcast stations and MVPDs to provide video description on 
top-rated networks.\2\ Video description makes video programming 
accessible to individuals who are blind or visually impaired through 
``[t]he insertion of audio narrated descriptions of a television 
program's key visual elements into natural pauses between the program's 
dialogue.'' \3\ These rules play a key role in affording better access 
to television programs for individuals who are blind or visually 
impaired, ``enabling millions more Americans to enjoy the benefits of 
television service and participate more fully in the cultural and civic 
life of the nation.''
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    \2\ 47 CFR 79.3. See generally Video Description: Implementation 
of the Twenty-First Century Communications and Video Accessibility 
Act of 2010, Report and Order, 26 FCC Rcd 11847 (2011) 
(Reinstatement Order). See also Video Description: Implementation of 
the Twenty-First Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act 
of 2010, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 26 FCC Rcd 2975 (2011). 
Video description rules were initially adopted in 2000, but were 
struck down due to lack of authority. Implementation of Video 
Description of Video Programming, MM Docket No. 99-339, Report and 
Order, 15 FCC Rcd 15230 (2000), recon. granted in part and denied in 
part, Implementation of Video Description of Video Programming, MM 
Docket No. 99-339, Memorandum Opinion and Order on Reconsideration, 
16 FCC Rcd 1251 (2001), vacated sub nom, Motion Picture Ass'n of 
Am., Inc. v. FCC, 309 F.3d 796 (D.C. Cir. 2002). The history of the 
Commission's video description rules and their reinstatement under 
the CVAA, as well as the current requirements under those rules, are 
discussed in depth in both the 2014 Report to Congress and the 
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking in this proceeding. Twenty-First 
Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010, Public 
Law 111-260, 124 Stat. 2751 (2010) (CVAA); H.R. Rep. No. 111-563, 
111th Cong., 2d Sess. at 19 (2010); S. Rep. No. 111-386, 111th 
Cong., 2d Sess. at 1 (2010); Video Description: Implementation of 
the Twenty-First Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act 
of 2010, Report to Congress, 29 FCC Rcd 8011 (2014) (2014 Report); 
47 U.S.C. 613(f)(3); NPRM, paras. 3-7.
    \3\ 47 CFR 79.3(a)(3).
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    2. Currently, the Commission's video description rules require 
commercial broadcast television stations that are affiliated with ABC, 
CBS, Fox, or NBC and are located in the top 60 television markets to 
provide 50 hours per calendar quarter of video described prime time or 
children's programming.\4\ In addition, MVPD systems that serve 50,000 
or more subscribers must provide 50 hours of video description per 
calendar quarter during prime time or children's programming on each of 
the top five national nonbroadcast networks that they carry on those 
systems.\5\ The nonbroadcast networks currently subject to these video 
description requirements are USA, TNT, TBS, History, and Disney 
Channel.\6\ Any programming initially aired with video description must 
include video description if it is re-aired on the same station or MVPD 
channel, unless the station or MVPD is using the technology for another 
program-related purpose.\7\
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    \4\ Id. Sec.  79.3(b)(1)-(2).
    \5\ Id. Sec.  79.3(b)(4).
    \6\ Video Description: Implementation of the Twenty-First 
Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010, Order 
and Public Notice, 30 FCC Rcd 2071, 2071, para. 1 (2015). The list 
of the top five networks is updated every three years in response to 
any changes in ratings. 47 CFR 79.3(b)(4). The next update will be 
in effect on July 1, 2018 based on the ratings for the time period 
from October 2016 to September 2017.
    \7\ 47 CFR 79.3(c)(3), 79.3(c)(4)(i)-(ii).
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    3. In the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking in this proceeding (NPRM) 
(81 FR 33642, May 27, 2016), we proposed revisions to our rules that 
would expand the availability of, and support consumer access to, video 
described programming.\8\ Among other proposals, we proposed to 
increase the amount of described programming on each included network 
carried by a covered broadcast station or MVPD, from 50 hours per 
calendar quarter to 87.5, and we sought comment on whether to provide 
more flexibility to covered entities by allowing some amount of non-
prime time, non-children's described programming to count toward the 
increased hours. We also sought comment on our tentative conclusion 
that the benefits of the proposed rules outweigh the costs, and on 
other issues such as appropriate timelines for the proposals. We take 
no action on our other NPRM proposals at this time.\9\
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    \8\ See generally NPRM.
    \9\ We also sought comment in the NPRM on proposals to increase 
the number of included networks carried by covered distributors, 
from four broadcast and five nonbroadcast networks to five broadcast 
and ten nonbroadcast networks; adopt a no-backsliding rule; remove 
the threshold requirement that nonbroadcast networks reach 50 
percent of pay-TV (or MVPD) households in order to be subject to 
inclusion; require that covered distributors provide dedicated 
customer service contacts who can answer questions about video 
description; and require that petitions for exemptions from the 
video description requirements, together with comments on or 
objections to such petitions, be filed with the Commission 
electronically.
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III. Authority

    4. We conclude that we have the authority under the Twenty-First 
Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010 (CVAA) to 
increase the number of hours of described programming on each included 
network by 75 percent, from 50 hours per calendar quarter to 87.5 hours 
per quarter. This conclusion is consistent with Section 713(f)(4) of 
the Communications Act of 1934, as amended (``Continuing Commission 
Authority''),\10\ Section 713(f)(4) states that the Commission may not 
issue additional video description rules unless their benefits outweigh 
their costs, and ``may not increase, in total, the hour requirement for 
additional described programming by more than 75 percent of the 
requirement in the regulations reinstated under'' Section 713(f)(1).
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    \10\ Section 713 of the Act was amended by Section 202(a) of the 
CVAA and is codified at 47 U.S.C. 613.
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    5. In the NPRM, we explained that our continuing authority is 
limited by the express requirement in Section 713(f)(4)(A) that the 
need for and benefits of any new or expanded regulations outweigh their 
costs, as well as by the express limitations set out in subsection 
(f)(4)(B) with respect to total described hours and subsection 
(f)(4)(C) regarding the expansion of video description requirements to 
additional designated market areas (DMAs).\11\ As noted in the NPRM, 
the statute provides that any new requirements must be limited to 
programming transmitted for display on television (that is, by 
broadcasters and MVPDs).\12\ In this Order, we conclude that the new 
requirements we adopt herein are consistent with the limitations in the 
statute. We note that, as required in subsection (f)(4)(A), more than 
two years have passed since the completion of the CVAA-mandated report 
to Congress on video description ``in television programming'' and ``in 
video programming distributed on the Internet.'' \13\ Further, the 
additional regulations adopted today apply only to ``programming . . . 
transmitted for display on television.'' \14\ As discussed below, we 
also find that ``the need for and benefits of'' the regulations ``are 
greater than the[ir] technical and economic costs'' for the rules we 
adopt herein. Finally, consistent with subsection (f)(4)(B), the 
additional regulations do not increase the hour requirement ``by more 
than 75 percent

[[Page 37347]]

of the requirement in the regulations reinstated.'' \15\
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    \11\ NPRM, paras. 8, 13-15. The CVAA prohibits the Commission, 
until October 8, 2020, from phasing in additional DMAs outside the 
top 60. 47 U.S.C. 613(f)(4)(C)(iii)-(iv).
    \12\ NPRM, para. 16; 47 U.S.C. 613(f)(4)(A).
    \13\ 47 U.S.C. 613(f)(4)(A). In particular, on June 30, 2014, 
the Commission submitted a report to Congress presenting its 
findings on the technical and creative issues, benefits, and 
financial costs of video description in television programming, as 
well as on the technical and operational issues, benefits, and costs 
of providing video description for IP-delivered video programming. 
See generally 2014 Report. See also NPRM, para. 7.
    \14\ 47 U.S.C. 613(f)(4)(A).
    \15\ The requirement in the reinstated regulations is 50 hours 
of video description on each programming stream or channel per 
calendar quarter. 47 CFR 79.3(b)(1)-(2), (4). 75 percent of those 50 
hours is 37.5 hours. Accordingly, 87.5 hours per quarter represents 
a 75 percent increase in the number of hours of video description 
(50 + 37.5 = 87.5). We have not expanded the number of DMAs, which 
we conclude we may not do until 2020 at the earliest. 47 U.S.C. 
613(f)(4)(C)(iii)-(iv).
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IV. Increased Availability of Video Described Programming

A. Additional Hours

    6. The CVAA provides that the Commission may increase ``in total'' 
the hour requirement by no more than 75 percent, up to a total of 87.5 
hours per quarter, and we proposed to adopt such an increase in the 
NPRM.\16\ Based on our analysis of the benefits and costs of the 
proposal as required under Section 713(f)(4)(A) of the Communications 
Act, we adopt our proposed increase in this Order.\17\ Thus, we will 
require each covered broadcast station and MVPD, on each stream or 
channel on which it carries an ``included network,'' to provide 87.5 
hours of described programming, per quarter.\18\ Our decision to 
increase the number of required hours of video description per included 
network is supported by the record. Almost every commenter who 
addressed this issue supports the proposed increase to 87.5 hours per 
quarter,\19\ and only one commenter opposes it.\20\ Although this is 
the maximum increase permissible under the CVAA, the total number of 
hours required per included network will be limited, averaging less 
than one hour per day.\21\ We find that implementing the maximum 
increase at this time, rather than a partial increase, will provide the 
most benefit to consumers without resulting in excessive costs. As 
discussed below, we also provide more flexibility than exists under our 
current rules regarding when the additional hours of described 
programming may be aired.
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    \16\ NPRM, para. 18. See also 47 U.S.C. 613(f)(4)(B).
    \17\ Absent Congressional action, the Commission does not have 
authority to further increase the number of hours of video described 
programming required per quarter on any specific network beyond the 
87.5 hours adopted today. NPRM, para. 13. However, we encourage all 
networks to continue to expand their video described offerings.
    \18\ We also delete what was formerly Sec.  79.3(b)(1) of the 
rules, which specified the video description requirements that were 
in effect prior to July 1, 2015, and were superseded on that date. 
This rule is obsolete and has no current effect, and its substance 
is now covered by the new paragraph (b)(1) (what was formerly 
paragraph (b)(2)).
    \19\ See, e.g., MPAA Comments at 1; ACB Comments at 3; AFB 
Comments at 1; MCB Reply at 1; ABVI Reply at 1; Barlow Comments at 
1; Grossman Comments at 1; Merriweather Comments at 1; Pinto 
Comments at 1; Zodrow Comments at 1; Swartz Reply at 1.
    \20\ See NAB Reply at 3-9.
    \21\ Thirteen weeks per calendar quarter, seven days per week, 
means an average of 91 days per quarter. Given that the updated 
requirement calls for only 87.5 hours of described programming per 
quarter, this averages out to less than one hour per day of 
described programming on any given included network.
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    7. On any given day, the average American can choose to watch any 
program on any one of approximately 264 channels.\22\ That adds up to 
roughly 6,000 hours of linear television options, from which that 
average American chooses about five hours of programming to watch over 
the course of the day.\23\ Ideally, viewers who are blind or visually 
impaired would have the same range of options, including the same 
freedom to select and independently view and follow any of the 
programming for which they pay.\24\ Instead, many find that ``the 
current amount of available audio-described content [is] significantly 
below demand'' and indicate that they have difficulty finding programs 
with video description.\25\ Television programming is a shared piece of 
American culture \26\ that the blind and visually impaired community is 
unable to fully experience without video description.\27\ For people 
with blindness and visual impairments, video description has been shown 
not only to increase comprehension of television programming, but also 
to increase opportunities to discuss television programs with sighted 
people.\28\ As a result of increased video description requirements, 
persons who are blind or visually impaired will be able to engage more 
fully in television viewing, increasing their social inclusion within 
community life. Nonetheless, as we noted in the NPRM, we must ``seek to 
ensure that consumers are able to realize the benefits of video 
description'' while ``keeping in mind our Congressional directive to 
proceed judiciously with any expansion of the requirements.''
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    \22\ Implementation of Section 3 of the Cable Television 
Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992; Statistical Report 
on Average Rates for Basic Service, Cable Programming Service, and 
Equipment, MM Docket No. 92-266, Report on Cable Industry Prices, 31 
FCC Rcd 11498, 11508-09, Tbls. 4, 5 (2016) (showing an increased 
average of 264.4 total available channels on the most subscribed 
tiers of service). Close to 90 percent of American television 
households subscribe to MVPD service. Annual Assessment of the 
Status of Competition in the Market for the Delivery of Video 
Programming, MB Docket No. 15-158, Seventeenth Report, 31 FCC Rcd 
4472, 4514, para. 102 (2016).
    \23\ John Koblin, How Much Do We Love TV? Let Us Count the Ways, 
N.Y. Times, June 30, 2016, available at http://www.nytimes.com/2016/07/01/business/media/nielsen-survey-media-viewing.html.
    \24\ Although over-the-air viewers have access to a smaller 
range of options, that is true regardless of whether they are blind 
or visually impaired. The virtue of equivalent access remains the 
same.
    \25\ ACB October 26, 2016 Ex Parte, ACB Survey Finds Need for 
Increased Audio Description, at 1 (ACB Survey) (reporting that over 
75% of survey respondents ``strongly agree that a greater amount of 
audio-described programming is needed,'' and that 45% of survey 
respondents ``have difficulty in finding programs with audio 
description'').
    \26\ See David Carr, Barely Keeping Up in TV's New Golden Age, 
N.Y. Times, Mar. 9, 2014, available at http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/10/business/media/fenced-in-by-televisions-excess-of-excellence.html.
    \27\ See 2014 Report, para. 2. See also ACB Survey at 1 
(reporting that over 75% of survey respondents ``strongly agree that 
a greater amount of audio-described programming is needed'').
    \28\ Emilie Schmeidler and Corinne Kirchner, Ph.D., Adding Audio 
Description: Does it Make a Difference?, 95 Journal of Visual 
Impairment & Blindness 197 (2001).
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    8. As required by the statute, we find that the benefits of 
increasing the required number of hours of described programming by 
37.5 hours per quarter are greater than the costs. The costs are 
minimal and represent a very small percentage of total programming 
expenses and network revenues.\29\ Although the price for adding 
description to television programming can vary, based on filings in the 
docket we estimate that the maximum cost per hour is $4,202.50.\30\ 
Because a given hour of described programming can be counted twice 
toward the requirements of the rules (once when initially aired, and 
once when rerun), any given included network would need a total of 175 
hours of first-run described programming on that network per year to 
comply with the expanded video description requirement adopted 
today.\31\ For the nine networks required

[[Page 37348]]

to provide 50 hours of video description per quarter, we estimate the 
cost of increasing the number of hours of described programming to 87.5 
hours per quarter is approximately $315,000 per year.\32\
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    \29\ Moreover, such costs might be partially offset by increases 
in advertising revenue due to additional audience reach.
    \30\ NAB, in a 2013 submission, estimated that the cost of one 
hour of video description lies between $2,500 and $4,100. NAB Sept. 
4, 2013 Comments at 4. Because producing video described programming 
is a labor intensive task, we adjust the reported costs to reflect 
the change in wages in the media industry. See The Described and 
Captioned Media Program, DCMP's Description Tip Sheet (rev. Jan. 
2012), available at https://dcmp.org/ai/227/ (visited Oct. 17, 
2016). We adjust this cost estimate by 2.5 percent because the mean 
wage in media occupations increased by 2.5 percent between 2013 and 
2015. Adjusting the NAB estimates yields a range of $2,562.50 to 
$4,202.50, and we use this upper bound in our calculations 
throughout this item. See United States Department of Labor, Bureau 
of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment Statistics (2013, 
2015), available at http://www.bls.gov/oes/tables.htm. On the other 
hand, one commenter noted that production costs have fallen in the 
past five years and are expected to continue to fall due to entry by 
firms into the video description industry because of increased 
demand for video description services, and therefore the estimates 
given above may be high. See Dicapta Comments at 1.
    \31\ 87.5 hours per quarter x times; 4 quarters = 350 hours, 
divided in half (175) because each described hour can be counted 
twice.
    \32\ 37.5 additional hours per quarter x 4 quarters = 150, 
divided in half (75) because each described hour can be counted 
twice. 75 hours x $4,202.50 per hour = $315,187.5. For the currently 
included broadcast networks, the cost of the additional 37.5 hours 
of described programming per quarter would approximate one hundredth 
of one percent of their programming costs and net revenues. For the 
currently included nonbroadcast networks, the cost of the additional 
37.5 hours of described programming per quarter would range from 
0.02 to 0.08 percent of their programming costs, and from 0.01 to 
0.04 percent of their net revenues. Programming expenses and net 
operating revenue come from SNL Kagan, TV Network Profile and 
Economics (2017). Programming expenses are defined by SNL Kagan as 
the direct cost of creating, acquiring, and distributing content and 
services. Programming expenses and net operating revenue are 
available for each of the four broadcast networks (ABC, NBC, CBS, 
and Fox) and the five nonbroadcast networks (USA, TNT, TBS, Disney 
Channel, and History) required to provide video description under 
the current rules. Programming expenses range from $2.5 billion to 
$3.9 billion for the broadcast networks and from $394 million to 
$1.6 billion for the nonbroadcast networks. Net operating revenue 
ranges from $3.4 billion to $5.2 billion for the broadcast networks 
and from $870 million to $3.4 billion for the nonbroadcast networks. 
Based on this data, we conclude that the costs of increasing the 
required number of hours of described programming by 37.5 hours will 
not impose an undue burden on regulatees.
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    9. The benefits of additional description, while less easy to 
quantify than the relatively low costs of providing it, are nonetheless 
substantial. Longstanding evidence indicates that persons who are blind 
or visually impaired have television viewing habits that are comparable 
to those who are not.\33\ Studies have also shown that persons who are 
blind or visually impaired subscribe to MVPD services in roughly the 
same proportion as other Americans.\34\ Nothing in the current record 
suggests otherwise and, indeed, there is no reason to believe that 
those who are blind or visually impaired would not seek to access a 
medium of communications as central to American life and culture as 
television in the same way, and at the same rates, as other Americans. 
Estimates of the number of Americans who are blind or visually impaired 
range from seven million to over 23 million.\35\ Thus, the number of 
Americans who could benefit from video description is substantial.
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    \33\ Jaclyn Packer, Ph.D. & Corinne Kirchner, Ph.D., Who's 
Watching? A Profile of the Blind and Visually Impaired Audience for 
Television and Video (1997), available at http://www.afb.org/info/programs-and-services/public-policy-center/technology-and-information-accessibility/whos-watching-a-profile-of-the-blind-and-visually-impaired-audience-for-television-and-video/1235 (Who's 
Watching? Report).
    \34\ Id. (``Blind and visually impaired people . . . subscribe 
to cable television, to the same extent as other households.'').
    \35\ The Census Bureau estimates the total blind or visually 
impaired population is 7,333,805. United States Census Bureau, 
American Community Survey, Table B18103 (2015), available at http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=ACS_15_1YR_B18103&prodType=table. According to 
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 23.7 million 
Americans age 18 and older reported experiencing vision loss. 
American Foundation for the Blind, Blindness Statistics, Facts and 
Figures on Adults with Vision Loss (updated Jan. 2017), available at 
www.afb.org/info/blindness-statistics/adults/facts-and-figures/235 
(citing CDC, National Center for Health Statistics, 2015 National 
Health Interview Survey). Of these 23.7 million, 14.4 million women 
and 9.3 million men report experiencing significant vision loss. Id. 
The National Eye Institute (NEI) estimates the blind or visually 
impaired population over 40 years old is 12,440,000. Varma et al., 
Visual Impairment and Blindness in Adults in the United States: 
Demographic and Geographic Variations from 2015 to 2050, 134 (7) 
JAMA Ophthalmology 802-809 (2016).
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    10. Commenters who are blind or visually impaired emphasize the 
need for greater amounts of video described programming,\36\ as well as 
the substantial benefits of this service.\37\ There is considerable 
evidence that video description of television programming significantly 
enhances the value of television programming to individuals who are 
blind or visually impaired. Many television programs contain visual 
elements that are crucial to understanding what is happening, and are 
missed by those who are blind or visually impaired.\38\ The 
Commission's 2014 Report found that video description greatly enhances 
the experience of viewing video programming because viewers who are 
blind or visually impaired no longer miss critical visual elements of 
television programming and, therefore, can fully understand and enjoy 
the program without having to rely on their sighted family members and 
friends to narrate these visual elements.\39\ Commenters express that 
this ability to watch video programming independently is an incredibly 
important benefit of video description.\40\

[[Page 37349]]

The Described and Captioned Media Program (DCMP) and the American 
Council of the Blind (ACB) also note the benefits of video description 
to children and individuals on the autism spectrum, because it can help 
with the development of vocabulary.\41\
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    \36\ See AFB Comments at 2 (``[D]emand for, and interest in, 
described TV is overwhelming and can only be expected to grow.''); 
ACB Comments at 1 (noting that, as the ``incidence of blindness'' 
continues to significantly increase, this will ``continue[] to 
create an increase in demand for accessible video programming''); 
ACB Reply at 4 (explaining that, while a wide breadth of programming 
is closed captioned for individuals who are deaf or hard of hearing, 
``the blindness community is relegated[sic] to a handful of hours 
each week during prime-time, or at odd intervals''). See also, e.g., 
Brack Reply at 1 (offering support for expanding the amount of video 
description because only ``[a] relatively small portion of shows has 
description''); Correia Reply at 1 (stating that ``many of my most 
favorite shows are still not available with audio description'' and 
that the proposed increase ``will mean that I will be able to enjoy 
many more of my favorite programs''); Crawford Reply at 1 (``There 
is no question that the amount of programming I watch would increase 
if I had a larger selection of choices [that are video 
described].''); Crumley Reply at 1 (stating that video description 
``should be expanded as much as possible''); Huffman Reply at 1 
(``The number of audio-described programs remains low.''); Hunsinger 
Reply at 1 (urging the FCC to make more video description 
available); Getz Reply at 1 (``I very much enjoy the television 
programming [that] is currently being described, however, the shows 
I am able to fully enjoy is[sic] much too limited at this time.''); 
ABVI Reply at 1 (``Currently, only a small fraction of all 
television programming is required to be audio described.''); 
Lieberg Reply at 1 (``[W]e who rely on description have very few 
hours per week and very few programs from which to choose.''); 
Pimley Reply at 1 (noting that there are ``only very, very, few 
hours of video description''); Swartz Reply at 1 (imploring the FCC 
``[i]n the strongest possible terms'' to increase the number of 
programs with video description); Zaken Reply at 1 (requesting that 
the FCC make more video description available on television so 
``that I will be able to listen to more programs'').
    \37\ See, e.g., Brack Reply at 1 (explaining that ``[t]he added 
value of description to television shows . . . for a person who is 
blind is immeasurable'' and ``it offers a night-and-day difference 
in both understanding and enjoying programming''); Doane Reply at 1 
(``[V]ideo description gives blind and visually impaired people 
knowledge that we can share with others in conversation and allows 
us to make informed opinions on the programming.''); Edwards Reply 
at 1 (noting that ``[t]here is clearly a huge benefit to be gained'' 
by increasing the number of hours of video description by 75 
percent); Grenevitch Reply at 1 (``It is hard for me to put into 
words what audio description adds to programming for a visually 
impaired individual. You do not realize how many important details 
you have been missing until you hear a program described.''); Hasley 
Reply at 1 (``Increasing availability of such description will allow 
greater access to the entertainment, education, and information 
provided by television programming, for a large population of 
viewers.''); Strzalkowski Reply at 1 (``Audio description makes it 
possible to understand what is happening and to feel a part of the 
cultural experience that is television.''); Tobin Reply at 1 
(stating that the ``importance of audio description in my life 
cannot be overstated'' and ``the impact . . . is profound, as the 
narrative elements of the description make television . . . come 
alive for me'').
    \38\ Who's Watching? Report (``People who have experienced video 
description feel that it affords important benefits, which fall into 
the categories of enhanced viewing, learning, and social 
experiences.''; ``The vast majority of blind and visually impaired 
people who have experienced description say that it is important to 
their enjoyment of programming.'').
    \39\ 2014 Report, paras. 14-15. See also NPRM, paras. 9-10.
    \40\ 2014 Report, para. 15. See, e.g., Smith Comments at 1 
(explaining that video description benefits individuals who are 
blind because it gives them greater independence and the ability to 
understand television programs); Zodrow Comments at 1 (``Having 
video description now is very beneficial for me as a totally blind 
person because now I don't have to rely on someone else that's 
sighted [to] explain to me what is happening on the screen. . . . I 
can now understand what's going on during a TV program and know what 
the characters are doing.''); ABVI Reply at 1 (``It means enjoying a 
program or movie with your spouse or family as an equal rather than 
someone who needs an explanation of what is happening.''); Sorenson 
Reply at 1 (``Watching tv with audio description gives me more 
understanding about the action on the screen.'').
    \41\ DCMP and ACB, Listening Is Learning, How Does Description 
Benefit Students Without Visual Impairments?, http://listeningislearning.org/background_description-no-bvi.html (last 
visited Oct. 12, 2016).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    11. Through its enactment of the CVAA, Congress acknowledged the 
value of video description. Indeed, the importance of accessibility of 
video programming to persons who are blind or visually impaired 
underlies several provisions of the CVAA. Congress mandated not only 
that the Commission require video description, but also that emergency 
information contained in video programming, as well as the user 
interfaces on navigation devices and other digital apparatus that allow 
users to navigate video programming, be made accessible to those who 
are blind or visually impaired.\42\ Furthermore, in addition to its 
considerable benefits to the millions of individuals who are blind or 
visually impaired today, television programming that is produced with 
video description now will continue to benefit the growing population 
of people with blindness or a visual impairment when it is shown again 
in the future, thus increasing its value. The National Eye Institute 
estimates that the blind or visually impaired population will double by 
2050.\43\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \42\ Twenty-First Century Communications and Video Accessibility 
Act of 2010, Public Law 111-260, 124 Stat. 2751, secs. 202, 204-205 
(2010).
    \43\ Varma et al.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    12. Although we do not assign a specific monetary value to the 
benefits these additional hours of described programming will provide 
to the millions of persons who are blind or visually impaired,\44\ we 
find that the benefits exceed the relatively low costs.\45\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \44\ It is difficult to quantify in monetary terms the intrinsic 
benefits of video description for people who are blind or visually 
impaired, and there are no quantitative estimates of the value of an 
additional hour of video described television programming for a 
blind or visually impaired individual. See, e.g., Brack Reply at 1 
(``The added value of description to television shows . . . for a 
person who is blind is immeasurable.''). Even very low estimates of 
the value indicate that it would take only a small number of viewers 
who are blind or visually impaired to get more benefit from 
described programming than the cost of describing it. NCTA promotes 
on its Web site an estimate of the ``viewing value by the hour'' of 
cable programming. This estimate--$0.26 per hour--reflects the price 
for enjoying each hour of cable video service, which presumably is 
an estimate of its value. See NCTA, Industry Data, https://www.ncta.com/industry-data. Viewers who are blind or visually 
impaired get some value from television programming even without 
video description. Assuming conservatively that, without the benefit 
of video description, such viewers get 75 percent of the enjoyment 
of a sighted viewer (or $0.195 per hour), adding video description 
might add $0.065 of value per hour, per viewer (to equal $0.26, 
NCTA's estimate of the total value of an hour of programming). As 
discussed above, we estimate the highest potential cost for 
describing an hour of programming to be $4,202.50. At $0.065 per 
person, 64,654 viewers equal $4,202.51. Various governmental 
estimates place the number of persons who are blind or visually 
impaired at between 7,333,805 and 23,700,000. Thus, even accepting 
NCTA's low estimate of the value of an hour of programming for the 
sake of argument, benefits that reached only a fraction of citizens 
who are blind or visually impaired -0.3 to 0.9 percent depending on 
the estimate--would nonetheless outweigh costs. And this calculation 
does not even take into account the benefits to the friends and 
family of persons who are blind or visually impaired, or the 
benefits to networks and distributors of increases in viewership.
    \45\ NAB argues that the preliminary cost-benefit analysis in 
the NPRM forms an insufficient basis for the adoption of any new 
rules. NAB Reply at 3-9. As always, however, we do not adopt any 
rules based on the analysis in the NPRM. As discussed throughout 
this Order, our finding that ``the need for and benefits of'' the 
new rules ``are greater than the technical and economic costs'' is 
based on a comprehensive analysis of the available facts in the 
record. NAB has submitted no sound basis to reach a different 
conclusion here. As stated above, the total number of described 
hours required under our revised rules is modest (requiring an 
average of less than one hour of described programming per day) and 
accordingly will not impose a significant burden on included 
networks. We have designed our rules to further minimize the burden 
on included networks by providing flexibility on when the additional 
hours of described programming may be aired and allowing a given 
hour of described programming to be counted twice, once when 
initially aired and once when rerun. We thus reject NAB's argument 
that the new rules are not sufficiently supported by a cost-benefit 
analysis.
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B. Increased Flexibility

    13. In addition to increasing the required hours of video described 
programming, we also provide more flexibility than exists under our 
current rules regarding when the additional hours of described 
programming may be aired. Several industry commenters argue without 
opposition that ``[t]he Commission should incorporate flexibility into 
any rules increasing the number of hours.'' \46\ MPAA argues that we 
should consider ``whether to allow additional types of programming to 
count toward the hourly video description requirement if the 
requirement is moved from 50 hours to 87.5 hours per quarter.'' \47\ 
Time Warner ``agrees with other commenters that additional flexibility 
is essential'' if the Commission adopts such an increase.\48\ While 
commenters generally did not respond to the Commission's inquiry about 
changing the rule to allow some or all described programming to air 
between 6 a.m. and midnight, industry commenters agreed that ``the 
Commission should [ ] consider allowing additional types of programming 
to count towards the rule.'' \49\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \46\ NCTA Comments at 14-15.
    \47\ MPAA Comments at 12.
    \48\ Time Warner Reply at 4. See also NAB Reply at 18.
    \49\ NAB Reply at 19.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    14. We will provide flexibility regarding when the additional 
required hours may be aired, but retain our current rule with respect 
to the existing hour requirement. Specifically, although we will 
continue to require included networks to provide 50 hours per quarter 
of video described programming during prime time or children's 
programming,\50\ we will permit the additional 37.5 hours per quarter 
to be provided at any time between 6 a.m. and midnight.\51\ We noted in 
the NPRM that, while ``we have no evidence of compliance difficulties 
for covered distributors or the currently-included networks'' operating 
under the current rules, we recognize that some parties may not have 
sufficient eligible prime time and children's programming to meet our 
increased hour requirement.\52\ Commenters provide some examples of 
situations in which, they claim, certain programmers would be unable to 
comply with the expanded hour obligation by describing prime time or 
children's programming, even if they described all such non-exempt 
programming.\53\ The added flexibility provided under our new rules 
should alleviate this concern.\54\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \50\ 50 hours/quarter in prime time or children's programming is 
the amount required under the current rules. 47 CFR 79.3(b).
    \51\ To avoid ambiguity, the rule refers to 11:59 p.m. rather 
than midnight. See National Institute of Standards and Technology, 
Times of Day FAQs, available at https://www.nist.gov/pml/time-and-frequency-division/times-day-faqs.
    \52\ NPRM, paras. 18-19.
    \53\ See, e.g., Time Warner Reply at 4 (a significant amount of 
programming was aired with description, but had been previously 
aired with description and counted toward the requirements more than 
once); NAB Reply at 18-19 (a broadcast network carries ``relatively 
fewer hours of children's programming''); NCTA September 19, 2016 Ex 
Parte (all programming was described reruns).
    \54\ To the extent that any individual network has problems 
satisfying the new hour requirement even with this flexibility, it 
may file a waiver request with the Media Bureau. 47 CFR 1.3, 0.283.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    15. Commenters suggest a number of additional ways to provide 
included networks with more flexibility to satisfy the increased hour 
requirement. We find that these suggested measures are unnecessary in 
light of the timing flexibility we are providing, as well as ill-
advised. NCTA suggests permitting distributors to average their 
compliance

[[Page 37350]]

across multiple quarters.\55\ Although unlikely, this could mean, in 
practice, that a network could air a year's worth of described 
programming in one quarter, and none at all the rest of the year. We 
find that the ability to vary compliance with the hour requirement in 
this manner would have the potential to upset consumer expectations and 
significantly undermine the value of video description to those who 
rely upon it. It would not serve the needs of individuals who are blind 
or visually impaired to have no video described programming on a 
channel for an entire quarter. NAB suggests increasing the number of 
times a program and its reruns can be counted toward the hour 
requirement, from twice to ``three or four or more'' times.\56\ This 
would ultimately reduce the overall amount of described programming 
available to consumers, because some networks might rerun the same 
described programming over and over. At the same time, the majority of 
top networks that air primarily first-run programming in prime time 
would continue to need to produce the same amount of new described 
programming, meaning this change would not give them additional 
flexibility. Time Warner proposes that we permit networks to count 
described hours provided on affiliated networks to satisfy the hour 
requirement for the primary network.\57\ This, too, would undermine the 
purpose of the rules, which are designed to ensure that programming on 
the most popular networks is described.\58\ While we appreciate the 
desire for flexibility reflected in these proposals, we decline to 
adopt them for the reasons explained above.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \55\ NCTA Comments at 15. See also Time Warner Reply at 5.
    \56\ NAB Reply at 18.
    \57\ Time Warner Reply at 5.
    \58\ Other proposals are less problematic but are rendered 
unnecessary given the approach we have adopted. For instance, NCTA 
proposes to create a categorical exemption if all eligible 
programming in a quarter is described. NCTA Comments at 15. This 
does not seem likely to occur now that 18 hours a day of programming 
are eligible to count toward the description requirement, but, as 
discussed below, if it does occur we will consider that circumstance 
when deciding whether to grant a waiver.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    16. We recognize, however, that some networks may have a difficult 
time meeting the new hour requirement in specific calendar quarters, 
even with the additional flexibility we are providing. For example, 
Time Warner argues that TNT, an included network, carried a significant 
amount of live programming in prime time in the second quarter of 2016, 
and as a result just barely met the existing 50 hour quarterly 
requirement.\59\ In addition to the increased flexibility we provide to 
programmers to meet our hour requirement, distributors and included 
networks continue to be permitted to petition for waivers if needed. 
Some commenters argue that ``potentially frequent waiver requests'' 
under an ``ad hoc waiver process'' are insufficient to resolve certain 
problems that need to be considered ``at the outset'' to avoid 
impacting program scheduling.\60\ Parties made the same arguments prior 
to the reinstatement of the video description rules.\61\ As we observed 
in the NPRM, however, not a single waiver request has been filed in the 
more than five years since the rules became effective, and under the 
rules we adopt today, included networks will not need to provide any 
more description during prime time or children's programming than they 
do under the reinstated rules. Therefore, we do not foresee that the 
new rules will create any problems with program scheduling or that 
regulatees will have difficulty complying with our revised rules. 
Nonetheless, we continue to emphasize that waiver requests may be filed 
if our requirements are infeasible or prove to be unduly burdensome 
under particular circumstances.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \59\ Time Warner Reply at 4.
    \60\ See, e.g., NCTA Comments at 14; Time Warner Reply at 6. See 
also NCTA July 5, 2017 Ex Parte at 1 (proposing ``that the 
Commission provide additional flexibility in its rules--either 
through providing a safe harbor or an appropriately-framed 
exemption'').
    \61\ Reinstatement Order, para. 46.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    17. Although the record does not suggest that either broadcast 
stations or MVPDs will typically have difficulty complying with our 
revised rules, it does suggest that compliance problems could arise in 
two atypical circumstances.\62\ First, a network may be carrying an 
unusually large amount of live or near-live programming due to special 
events during a single calendar quarter (the Olympics, March Madness, 
etc.).\63\ Second, a network may be airing an unusually large number of 
video-described reruns during a particular quarter. Bearing these 
concerns in mind, we will look favorably upon waiver requests 
demonstrating that:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \62\ See, e.g., Time Warner Reply at 4-5; NCTA Comments at 14; 
NCTA September 19, 2016 Ex Parte.
    \63\ See Time Warner Reply at 4. However, we note that some live 
programming has been provided with video description. See, e.g., 
NPRM, n.47 (citing articles about NBC's video-described production 
of `The Wiz Live!').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

     All pre-recorded programming between 6 a.m. and midnight 
in the relevant calendar quarter is being described, even if not all of 
it can be counted toward the rules \64\; and
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \64\ Although we received no comments on this issue, we 
recognize that broadcast networks do not program a broadcast 
station's full day. Broadcast stations also program part of the 
broadcast day independently of their network, airing locally 
originated programming and syndicated programming. Therefore, in the 
case of waiver requests from broadcasters or broadcast networks, we 
will also look favorably on waiver requests demonstrating that all 
non-``live or near-live'' programs provided in hours programmed by 
the broadcast network are described. Also, for all covered networks 
filing waiver requests, to the extent they have not provided video 
description on all pre-recorded programming they are, of course, 
free to make a showing that reasonable circumstances prevent their 
having done so.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

     The petitioner commits to provide additional hours of 
video description in calendar quarters other than the one for which it 
is seeking the waiver,\65\ or commits to provide the additional hours 
of video description in the same calendar quarter but on an affiliated 
network.\66\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \65\ If a waiver were granted, the petitioners would shift some 
hours of video described programming to a different quarter than the 
one in which they would otherwise be counted. As a result, there 
should be no additional burden on covered parties. Although 
description is most beneficial when it is consistently available, 
additional description always provides value to consumers, both in 
the quarter when it airs and whenever the programming is rerun with 
description. 47 CFR 79.3(c)(3), (4). Finally, this potential waiver 
condition is distinguishable from the NCTA proposal to permit 
distributors to average their compliance across multiple quarters, 
both because it will be of limited duration and because it depends 
on Commission review and approval rather than the discretion of 
regulatees, and will consequently be easier to monitor and enforce. 
It also is distinguishable from the NCTA proposal because it is 
unlikely to lead to a scenario where a network airs no or very 
little video described programming during a quarter, which could 
happen under NCTA's proposal. That proposal would place no limits on 
the circumstances in which a network could move video described 
programming to a different calendar quarter, and would not require 
that any video described programming at all be aired in a particular 
quarter.
    \66\ The Commission will evaluate whether the affiliated network 
receives MVPD coverage and viewership sufficient to make it an 
adequate substitute for the network on which video description is 
required to be provided.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    If both of these conditions are met, we believe that it is more 
likely than not that consumer needs will still be met at the level 
contemplated by these rules without unduly burdening the industry.

C. Timing

    18. The revised rule will be effective 30 days after publication in 
the Federal Register, and covered broadcast stations and MVPDs must 
start providing the additional hours of video described programming on 
``included networks'' in the calendar quarter beginning on July 1, 
2018. We sought comment in the NPRM on an appropriate compliance 
deadline for the rule. In particular, we

[[Page 37351]]

noted that when we reinstated the video description rules in 2011, the 
time from their release to the full compliance date was approximately 
ten months, and we asked whether we should allow a similar amount of 
time for distributors to come into compliance.\67\ We also noted that 
July 1, 2018 is the date on which the updated list of included 
nonbroadcast networks will go into effect, based on the ratings period 
from October 2016 to September 2017, and we inquired whether the 
compliance deadline for the rules should coincide with this date.\68\ 
Some commenters argue for compliance to be required as soon as 
possible,\69\ while others either support a longer period to come into 
compliance or were silent on the issue.\70\ To provide sufficient time 
for distributors to ensure that included networks provide an additional 
37.5 hours of described programming per quarter, we will give covered 
entities until July 1, 2018, the date of the next three-year network 
list update, to come into compliance.\71\ Given that currently covered 
networks already have processes in place for creating and complying 
with the video description requirements, we believe that giving them a 
one-year period to provide an additional 37.5 hours of video described 
programming per quarter is reasonable.\72\ We therefore will require 
that the additional hours of described programming be provided by the 
four broadcast and five nonbroadcast networks covered by the rules in 
the calendar quarter beginning July 1, 2018.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \67\ NPRM, para. 30.
    \68\ Id. See AT&T Comments at 1 (stating that July 1, 2018 
should be the ``effective date for the modified video description 
network and hours requirements'' to coincide with the start of the 
next three-year cycle for covered non-broadcast networks).
    \69\ See, e.g., Zodrow Comments at 2; Grossman Comments at 1.
    \70\ See, e.g., NAB Reply at 16-17 (suggesting a compliance 
period of two years from the effective date of the rules); NCTA 
Comments at 19 (requesting an 18-month compliance period). See also 
MPAA Comments at 14 (stating that ``any significant changes in the 
video description rules will require additional time to 
implement''). Of note, the compliance timeframes cited in the 
aforementioned comments are based on the assumption that the 
Commission would adopt all of the proposals set forth in the NPRM, 
including the proposed expansion to new networks. Because the 
Commission has chosen to take an incremental approach, and this 
Order adopts only one of those proposals--an increased hours 
requirement for currently covered broadcast stations and MVPDs--we 
do not agree that an extended compliance period of 18 months to two 
years is necessary.
    \71\ Some commenters suggest a shorter compliance deadline of 
less than one year. See, e.g., Dicapta Comments at 5 (arguing for 
the hours increase to go into effect within one month for currently 
included networks). In addition, as we noted in the NPRM, the 
reinstated rules gave newly covered networks less than one year 
(approximately ten months) to begin the process of providing video 
description and to fully comply with the Commission's new 
requirements. See NPRM, para. 30. However, we believe that it is 
better for the compliance deadline to coincide with the next three-
year update of the list of covered nonbroadcast networks than to 
have a shorter time frame. In particular, any of the currently 
covered nonbroadcast networks may fall out of the top-five based on 
network ratings and, if so, will no longer be subject to the 
requirement to provide video description as of July 1, 2018. Under 
such circumstances, a covered nonbroadcast network would have to 
take steps to increase its video described hours, only to find 
itself a few months later not to be subject to the video description 
requirement at all. This may also create an expectation in consumers 
that they can rely on that network for increased video described 
programming, only to have such requirement last for a few short 
months. For these reasons, we believe that it is reasonable to align 
the compliance deadline with the network update so that only those 
networks responsible for compliance as of July 1, 2018 are required 
to provide the additional hours of video description, though we 
encourage any network that falls off the list to continue to provide 
video description.
    \72\ Because a given hour of described programming can be 
counted twice toward the requirements of the rules (once when 
initially aired, and once when rerun), the total number of new hours 
of described programming per year needed to comply with the expanded 
video description requirement is actually 75.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

V. Procedural Matters

A. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis

    1. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as 
amended (RFA) \73\ an Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) 
was incorporated in the NPRM in this proceeding. The Commission sought 
written public comment on the proposals in the NPRM, including comment 
on the IRFA. The Commission received no comments on the IRFA. This 
present Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) conforms to the 
RFA.\74\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \73\ See 5 U.S.C. 603. The RFA, see 5 U.S.C. 601-612, has been 
amended by the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 
1996 (SBREFA), Public Law 104-121, Title II, 110 Stat. 847 (1996). 
The SBREFA was enacted as Title II of the Contract With America 
Advancement Act of 1996 (CWAAA).
    \74\ See 5 U.S.C. 604.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

1. Need for, and Objectives of, the Report and Order
    2. This Report and Order, adopts the proposal to increase the 
amount of video described programming on each ``included network'' 
carried by a covered broadcast station or multichannel video 
programming distributor (MVPD), from 50 hours per calendar quarter to 
87.5 hours per quarter. Covered broadcast stations and MVPDs must start 
providing the additional hours of described programming on ``included 
networks'' in the calendar quarter beginning on July 1, 2018. The 
Report and Order also provides more flexibility than exists under the 
current rules regarding when the additional hours of described 
programming may be aired. In particular, the additional 37.5 hours per 
quarter of described programming can be provided at any time between 6 
a.m. and midnight. This update to our rules will help ensure that 
Americans who are blind or visually impaired can be connected, 
informed, and entertained by television.
    3. Legal Basis. The authority for the action taken in this 
rulemaking is contained in the Twenty-First Century Communications and 
Video Accessibility Act of 2010, Public Law 111-260, 124 Stat. 2751, 
and Section 713 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 
U.S.C. 613.
2. Summary of Significant Issues Raised by Public Comments in Response 
to the IRFA
    4. No comments were filed in response to the IRFA.
    5. Pursuant to the Small Business Jobs Act of 2010, the Commission 
is required to respond to any comments filed by the Chief Counsel for 
Advocacy of the Small Business Administration (SBA), and to provide a 
detailed statement of any change made to the proposed rules as a result 
of those comments. The Chief Counsel did not file any comments in 
response to the proposed rules in this proceeding.
3. Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities to Which 
the Rules Will Apply
    6. The RFA directs the Commission to provide a description of and, 
where feasible, an estimate of the number of small entities that will 
be affected by the rules adopted in the Report and Order.\75\ The RFA 
generally defines the term ``small entity'' as having the same meaning 
as the terms ``small business,'' small organization,'' and ``small 
government jurisdiction.'' \76\ In addition, the term ``small 
business'' has the same meaning as the term ``small business concern'' 
under the Small Business Act.\77\ A small business concern is one 
which: (1) Is independently owned and operated; (2) is not dominant in 
its field of operation; and (3) satisfies any

[[Page 37352]]

additional criteria established by the SBA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \75\ Id. sec. 603(a)(3).
    \76\ Id. sec. 601(6).
    \77\ Id. sec. 601(3) (incorporating by reference the definition 
of ``small business concern'' in 15 U.S.C. 632). Pursuant to 5 
U.S.C. 601(3), the statutory definition of a small business applies 
``unless an agency, after consultation with the Office of Advocacy 
of the Small Business Administration and after opportunity for 
public comment, establishes one or more definitions of such term 
which are appropriate to the activities of the agency and publishes 
such definition(s) in the Federal Register.'' 5 U.S.C. 601(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    7. Television Broadcasting. This Economic Census category 
``comprises establishments primarily engaged in broadcasting images 
together with sound.'' These establishments operate television 
broadcast studios and facilities for the programming and transmission 
of programs to the public. These establishments also produce or 
transmit visual programming to affiliated broadcast television 
stations, which in turn broadcast the programs to the public on a 
predetermined schedule. Programming may originate in their own studio, 
from an affiliated network, or from external sources. The SBA has 
created the following small business size standard for such businesses: 
Those having $38.5 million or less in annual receipts. The 2012 
Economic Census reports that 751 firms in this category operated in 
that year. Of that number, 656 had annual receipts of $25,000,000 or 
less, 25 had annual receipts between $25,000,000 and $49,999,999, and 
70 had annual receipts of $50,000,000 or more. Based on this data we 
therefore estimate that the majority of commercial television 
broadcasters are small entities under the applicable SBA size standard.
    8. The Commission has estimated the number of licensed commercial 
television stations to be 1,384. Of this total, 1,264 stations (or 
about 91 percent) had revenues of $38.5 million or less, according to 
Commission staff review of the BIA Kelsey Inc. Media Access Pro 
Television Database (BIA) on February 24, 2017, and therefore these 
licensees qualify as small entities under the SBA definition. In 
addition, the Commission has estimated the number of licensed 
noncommercial educational (NCE) television stations to be 394. 
Notwithstanding, the Commission does not compile and otherwise does not 
have access to information on the revenue of NCE stations that would 
permit it to determine how many such stations would qualify as small 
entities.
    9. We note, however, that in assessing whether a business concern 
qualifies as ``small'' under the above definition, business (control) 
affiliations must be included. Our estimate, therefore likely 
overstates the number of small entities that might be affected by our 
action, because the revenue figure on which it is based does not 
include or aggregate revenues from affiliated companies. In addition, 
another element of the definition of ``small business'' requires that 
an entity not be dominant in its field of operation. We are unable at 
this time to define or quantify the criteria that would establish 
whether a specific television broadcast station is dominant in its 
field of operation. Accordingly, the estimate of small businesses to 
which rules may apply does not exclude any television station from the 
definition of a small business on this basis and is therefore possibly 
over-inclusive.
    10. There are also 1,965 LPTV stations, 417 Class A stations, and 
3,778 TV translator stations. Given the nature of these services, we 
will presume that all of these entities qualify as small entities under 
the above SBA small business size standard.
    11. Wired Telecommunications Carriers. The U.S. Census Bureau 
defines this industry as ``establishments primarily engaged in 
operating and/or providing access to transmission facilities and 
infrastructure that they own and/or lease for the transmission of 
voice, data, text, sound, and video using wired communications 
networks. Transmission facilities may be based on a single technology 
or a combination of technologies. Establishments in this industry use 
the wired telecommunications network facilities that they operate to 
provide a variety of services, such as wired telephony services, 
including VoIP services, wired (cable) audio and video programming 
distribution, and wired broadband internet services. By exception, 
establishments providing satellite television distribution services 
using facilities and infrastructure that they operate are included in 
this industry.'' The SBA has developed a small business size standard 
for Wired Telecommunications Carriers, which consists of all such 
companies having 1,500 or fewer employees. Census data for 2012 show 
that there were 3,117 firms that operated that year. Of this total, 
3,083 operated with fewer than 1,000 employees. Thus, under this size 
standard, the majority of firms in this industry can be considered 
small.
    12. Cable and Other Subscription Programming. This industry 
comprises establishments primarily engaged in operating studios and 
facilities for the broadcasting of programs on a subscription or fee 
basis. The broadcast programming is typically narrowcast in nature 
(e.g., limited format, such as news, sports, education, or youth-
oriented). These establishments produce programming in their own 
facilities or acquire programming from external sources. The 
programming material is usually delivered to a third party, such as 
cable systems or direct-to-home satellite systems, for transmission to 
viewers. The SBA has established a size standard for this industry 
stating that a business in this industry is small if it has 1,500 or 
fewer employees. The 2012 Economic Census indicates that 367 firms were 
operational for that entire year. Of this total, 357 operated with less 
than 1,000 employees. Accordingly we conclude that a substantial 
majority of firms in this industry are small under the applicable SBA 
size standard.
    13. Cable Companies and Systems (Rate Regulation). The Commission 
has developed its own small business size standards for the purpose of 
cable rate regulation. Under the Commission's rules, a ``small cable 
company'' is one serving 400,000 or fewer subscribers nationwide. 
Industry data indicate that there are currently 4,600 active cable 
systems in the United States. Of this total, all but eleven cable 
operators nationwide are small under the 400,000-subscriber size 
standard. In addition, under the Commission's rate regulation rules, a 
``small system'' is a cable system serving 15,000 or fewer subscribers. 
Current Commission records show 4,600 cable systems nationwide. Of this 
total, 3,900 cable systems have fewer than 15,000 subscribers, and 700 
systems have 15,000 or more subscribers, based on the same records. 
Thus, under this standard as well, we estimate that most cable systems 
are small entities.
    14. Cable System Operators (Telecom Act Standard). The 
Communications Act of 1934, as amended, also contains a size standard 
for small cable system operators, which is ``a cable operator that, 
directly or through an affiliate, serves in the aggregate fewer than 1 
percent of all subscribers in the United States and is not affiliated 
with any entity or entities whose gross annual revenues in the 
aggregate exceed $250,000,000.'' There are approximately 52,403,705 
cable video subscribers in the United States today. Accordingly, an 
operator serving fewer than 524,037 subscribers shall be deemed a small 
operator if its annual revenues, when combined with the total annual 
revenues of all its affiliates, do not exceed $250 million in the 
aggregate. Based on available data, we find that all but nine incumbent 
cable operators are small entities under this size standard. We note 
that the Commission neither requests nor collects information on 
whether cable system operators are affiliated with entities whose gross 
annual revenues exceed $250 million. Although it seems certain that 
some of these cable system operators are affiliated with entities whose 
gross annual revenues exceed $250,000,000, we are unable at this time 
to estimate with greater precision the number of cable system operators 
that would qualify as small cable operators under the definition in the 
Communications Act.

[[Page 37353]]

    15. Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS) Service. DBS Service is a 
nationally distributed subscription service that delivers video and 
audio programming via satellite to a small parabolic dish antenna at 
the subscriber's location. DBS is now included in SBA's economic census 
category ``Wired Telecommunications Carriers.'' The Wired 
Telecommunications Carriers industry comprises establishments primarily 
engaged in operating and/or providing access to transmission facilities 
and infrastructure that they own and/or lease for the transmission of 
voice, data, text, sound, and video using wired telecommunications 
networks. Transmission facilities may be based on a single technology 
or combination of technologies. Establishments in this industry use the 
wired telecommunications network facilities that they operate to 
provide a variety of services, such as wired telephony services, 
including VoIP services, wired (cable) audio and video programming 
distribution; and wired broadband internet services. By exception, 
establishments providing satellite television distribution services 
using facilities and infrastructure that they operate are included in 
this industry. The SBA determines that a wireline business is small if 
it has fewer than 1500 employees. Census data for 2012 indicate that 
3,117 wireline companies were operational during that year. Of that 
number, 3,083 operated with fewer than 1,000 employees. Based on that 
data, we conclude that the majority of wireline firms are small under 
the applicable standard. However, currently only two entities provide 
DBS service, which requires a great deal of capital for operation: 
DIRECTV (owned by AT&T) and DISH Network. DIRECTV and DISH Network each 
report annual revenues that are in excess of the threshold for a small 
business. Accordingly, we must conclude that internally developed FCC 
data are persuasive that in general DBS service is provided only by 
large firms.
4. Description of Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other 
Compliance Requirements for Small Entities
    16. In this section, we describe the reporting, recordkeeping, and 
other compliance requirements adopted in the Report and Order and 
consider whether small entities are affected disproportionately by 
these requirements.
    17. Reporting Requirements. The Report and Order does not adopt 
reporting requirements.
    18. Recordkeeping Requirements. The Report and Order does not adopt 
recordkeeping requirements.
    19. Other Compliance Requirements. The Report and Order does adopt 
other compliance requirements. Specifically, the new rules require each 
covered broadcast station and MVPD, on each stream or channel on which 
it carries an ``included network,'' to provide 87.5 hours of described 
programming, per quarter. Covered broadcast stations and MVPDs must 
start providing the additional hours of described programming on 
``included networks'' in the calendar quarter beginning on July 1, 
2018. Currently, the Commission's video description rules require 
commercial television broadcast stations that are affiliated with ABC, 
CBS, Fox, or NBC and are located in the top 60 television markets to 
provide 50 hours per calendar quarter of video described prime time or 
children's programming. In addition, MVPD systems that serve 50,000 or 
more subscribers must provide 50 hours of video description per 
calendar quarter during prime time or children's programming on each of 
the top five national nonbroadcast networks that they carry on those 
systems. We do not believe that this compliance requirement will 
disproportionately affect small entities, but we have described ways in 
which the Commission's rules will minimize the impact on such entities 
(see discussion below).
5. Steps Taken To Minimize Significant Economic Impact on Small 
Entities, and Significant Alternatives Considered
    20. The RFA requires an agency to describe any significant 
alternatives that it has considered in reaching its proposed approach, 
which may include the following four alternatives (among others): (1) 
The establishment of differing compliance or reporting requirements or 
timetables that take into account the resources available to small 
entities; (2) the clarification, consolidation, or simplification of 
compliance or reporting requirements under the rule for small entities; 
(3) the use of performance, rather than design, standards; and (4) an 
exemption from coverage of the rule, or any part thereof, for small 
entities.\78\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \78\ 5 U.S.C. 603(c)(1)-(c)(4).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    21. The obligation to provide 87.5 hours of video described 
programming per quarter applies to commercial television broadcast 
stations that are affiliated with ABC, CBS, Fox, or NBC and are located 
in the top 60 television markets, as well as MVPD systems that serve 
50,000 or more subscribers. Thus, the rules adopted in this Report and 
Order may have an economic impact on small entities. In formulating the 
final rules, however, the Commission has considered methods to minimize 
the economic impact on small entities. In particular, the Report and 
Order provides more flexibility than exists under the current rules 
regarding when the additional hours of described programming may be 
aired to reduce any potential burden that covered entities may 
encounter in scheduling video described programming. The new rule 
allows covered broadcast stations and MVPDs to provide the additional 
37.5 hours per quarter of described programming at any time between 6 
a.m. and midnight. The Report and Order also emphasizes that waiver 
requests may be filed if our requirements are infeasible or prove to be 
unduly burdensome under particular circumstances. This process will 
allow the Commission to address the impact of the rules on individual 
entities, including smaller entities, on a case-by-case basis and to 
modify the application of the rules to accommodate individual 
circumstances, which can reduce the costs of compliance for these 
entities.
    22. Overall, we believe we have appropriately considered both the 
interests of individuals with disabilities and the interests of the 
entities who will be subject to the rules, including those that are 
smaller entities, consistent with Congress' goal to ``update the 
communications laws to help ensure that individuals with disabilities 
are able to fully utilize communications services and equipment and 
better access video programming.'' \79\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \79\ H.R. Rep. No. 111-563, 111th Cong., 2d Sess. at 19 (2010); 
S. Rep. No. 111-386, 111th Cong., 2d Sess. at 1 (2010).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

6. Report to Congress
    23. The Commission will send a copy of the Report and Order, 
including this FRFA, in a report to be sent to Congress pursuant to the 
Congressional Review Act.\80\ In addition, the Commission will send a 
copy of the Report and Order, including this FRFA, to the Chief Counsel 
for Advocacy of the SBA. The Report and Order and FRFA (or summaries 
thereof) will also be published in the Federal Register.\81\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \80\ See 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
    \81\ See id. sec. 604(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

B. Final Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 Analysis

    24. This Report and Order does not contain information collections 
subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA), Public Law 104-
13. In addition, pursuant to the Small Business Paperwork Relief Act of 
2002, Public Law 107-198, see 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(4),

[[Page 37354]]

the Commission previously sought specific comment on how we might 
``further reduce the information collection burden for small business 
concerns with fewer than 25 employees.''

VI. Ordering Clauses

    1. It is ordered that, pursuant to the Twenty-First Century 
Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010, Public Law 111-260, 
124 Stat. 2751, and the authority contained in Section 713 of the 
Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 613, this Report and 
Order is hereby adopted.
    2. It is further ordered that part 79 of the Commission's rules, 47 
CFR part 79, is amended as set forth herein, and such rule amendments 
shall be effective September 11, 2017.
    3. It is further ordered that the Commission's Consumer and 
Governmental Affairs Bureau, Reference Information Center, shall send a 
copy of this Report and Order, including the Final Regulatory 
Flexibility Analysis, to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small 
Business Administration.
    4. It is further ordered that the Commission shall send a copy of 
this Report and Order in a report to be sent to Congress and the 
Government Accountability Office pursuant to the Congressional Review 
Act, see 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).

List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 79

    Cable television operators, Multichannel video programming 
distributors (MVPDs), Satellite television service providers.

Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene H. Dortch,
Secretary.

Final Rules

    For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Federal 
Communications Commission amends 47 CFR part 79 as follows:

PART 79--ACCESSIBILITY OF VIDEO PROGRAMMING

0
1. The authority citation for part 79 continues to read as follows:

    Authority:  47 U.S.C. 151, 152(a), 154(i), 303, 307, 309, 310, 
330, 544a, 613, 617.


0
2. Amend Sec.  79.3 by revising paragraph (b)(1), removing and 
reserving paragraph (b)(2), and revising paragraphs (b)(4), (c)(2), and 
(c)(4) introductory text.
    The revisions read as follows:


Sec.  79.3  Video description of video programming.

* * * * *
    (b) * * *
    (1) Beginning July 1, 2015, commercial television broadcast 
stations that are affiliated with one of the top four commercial 
television broadcast networks (ABC, CBS, Fox, and NBC), and that are 
licensed to a community located in the top 60 DMAs, as determined by 
The Nielsen Company as of January 1, 2015, must provide 50 hours of 
video description per calendar quarter, either during prime time or on 
children's programming, and, beginning July 1, 2018, 37.5 additional 
hours of video description per calendar quarter between 6 a.m. and 
11:59 p.m. local time, on each programming stream on which they carry 
one of the top four commercial television broadcast networks. If a 
station in one of these markets becomes affiliated with one of these 
networks after July 1, 2015, it must begin compliance with these 
requirements no later than three months after the affiliation agreement 
is finalized;
* * * * *
    (4) Multichannel video programming distributor (MVPD) systems that 
serve 50,000 or more subscribers must provide 50 hours of video 
description per calendar quarter during prime time or children's 
programming, and, beginning July 1, 2018, 37.5 additional hours of 
video description per calendar quarter between 6 a.m. and 11:59 p.m. 
local time, on each channel on which they carry one of the top five 
national nonbroadcast networks, as defined by an average of the 
national audience share during prime time of nonbroadcast networks that 
reach 50 percent or more of MVPD households and have at least 50 hours 
per quarter of prime time programming that is not live or near-live or 
otherwise exempt under these rules. Initially, the top five networks 
are those determined by The Nielsen Company, for the time period 
October 2009-September 2010, and will update at three year intervals. 
The first update will be July 1, 2015, based on the ratings for the 
time period October 2013-September 2014; the second will be July 1, 
2018, based on the ratings for the time period October 2016-September 
2017; and so on; and
* * * * *
    (c) * * *
    (2) In order to meet its quarterly requirement, a broadcaster or 
MVPD may count each program it airs with video description no more than 
a total of two times on each channel on which it airs the program. A 
broadcaster or MVPD may count the second airing in the same or any one 
subsequent quarter. A broadcaster may only count programs aired on its 
primary broadcasting stream towards its quarterly requirement. A 
broadcaster carrying one of the top four commercial television 
broadcast networks on a secondary stream may count programs aired on 
that stream toward its quarterly requirement for that network only.
* * * * *
    (4) Once an MVPD as defined under paragraph (b)(4) of this section:
* * * * *

[FR Doc. 2017-15526 Filed 8-9-17; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 6712-01-P



                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 153 / Thursday, August 10, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                37345

                                                the percentage of the property’s current                income.) and 45 CFR 1628.3 (Recipient                 requirements contained in this
                                                fair market value that is equal to the                  Fund Balances: Policy.).                              document, contact Cathy Williams at
                                                percentage of the costs of the original                   (b) The recipient must account for                  (202) 418–2918 or send an email to
                                                acquisition and costs of any capital                    income earned from the sale, rent, or                 PRA@fcc.gov.
                                                improvements by non-LSC funds;                          lease of real or personal property
                                                                                                        purchased with LSC funds according to                 SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:       This is a
                                                   (2) Buyout LSC’s interest in the
                                                                                                        the requirements of 45 CFR 1630.17.                   summary of the Commission’s Report
                                                property (i.e., pay LSC the percentage of
                                                the property’s current fair market value                                                                      and Order, FCC 17–88, adopted on July
                                                                                                          Dated: August 3, 2017.
                                                proportional to its percent interest in                                                                       11, 2017, and released on July 12, 2017.
                                                                                                        Mark Freedman,                                        The full text of this document is
                                                the property); or                                       Senior Associate General Counsel.
                                                   (3) Sell the property to a third party                                                                     available electronically via the FCC’s
                                                                                                        [FR Doc. 2017–16764 Filed 8–9–17; 8:45 am]            Electronic Document Management
                                                and pay LSC a share of the sale proceeds
                                                proportional to its interest in the
                                                                                                        BILLING CODE 7050–01–P                                System (EDOCS) Web site at http://
                                                property, after deducting actual and                                                                          fjallfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/ or via the
                                                reasonable closing costs, if any.                                                                             FCC’s Electronic Comment Filing
                                                                                                        FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS                                System (ECFS) Web site at http://
                                                   (4) When a recipient stops receiving
                                                                                                        COMMISSION                                            fjallfoss.fcc.gov/ecfs2/. Documents will
                                                LSC funds because it merged with or is
                                                succeeded by another recipient, it may                                                                        be available electronically in ASCII,
                                                                                                        47 CFR Part 79                                        Microsoft Word, and/or Adobe Acrobat.
                                                transfer the property to the new
                                                recipient. The two entities must execute                [MB Docket No. 11–43; FCC 17–88]                      This document is also available for
                                                an LSC-approved successor in interest                                                                         public inspection and copying during
                                                                                                        Video Description: Implementation of                  regular business hours in the FCC
                                                agreement that requires the transferee to
                                                                                                        the Twenty-First Century                              Reference Information Center, Federal
                                                use the property primarily to provide
                                                                                                        Communications and Video                              Communications Commission, 445 12th
                                                legal services to eligible clients under
                                                                                                        Accessibility Act of 2010                             Street SW., CY–A257, Washington, DC
                                                the requirements of the LSC Act,
                                                applicable appropriations acts, and LSC                 AGENCY:  Federal Communications                       20554. Alternative formats are available
                                                regulations.                                            Commission.                                           for people with disabilities (Braille,
                                                   (c) Prior approval process. No later                 ACTION: Final rule.
                                                                                                                                                              large print, electronic files, audio
                                                than 60 days before a recipient or former                                                                     format), by sending an email to fcc504@
                                                recipient proposes to dispose of real                   SUMMARY:   In this document, the                      fcc.gov or calling the Commission’s
                                                estate purchased with LSC funds, the                    Commission adopts rules pursuant to                   Consumer and Governmental Affairs
                                                recipient or former recipients must                     Section 202 of the Twenty-First Century               Bureau at (202) 418–0530 (voice), (202)
                                                submit a written request for prior                      Communications and Video                              418–0432 (TTY).
                                                approval to dispose of the property to                  Accessibility Act of 2010 (CVAA) to
                                                                                                        expand the availability of video                      I. Introduction
                                                LSC. The request must include:
                                                   (1) The proposed method of                           described programming on top-rated                      1. In this Report and Order, we
                                                disposition and an explanation of why                   broadcast and nonbroadcast networks.                  expand the availability of video
                                                the proposed method is in the best                      Specifically, the document adopts the                 described programming on top-rated
                                                interests of LSC and the recipient;                     proposal to increase the amount of                    broadcast and nonbroadcast networks.
                                                   (2) Documentation showing the fair                   described programming on each                         Specifically, we adopt the proposal to
                                                market value of the property at the time                ‘‘included network’’ carried by a                     increase the amount of described
                                                of transfer or sale, including, but not                 covered broadcast station or                          programming on each ‘‘included
                                                limited to, an independent appraisal of                 multichannel video programming                        network’’ 1 carried by a covered
                                                the property and competing bona fide                    distributor (MVPD), from 50 hours per                 broadcast station or multichannel video
                                                offers to purchase the property;                        calendar quarter to 87.5 hours per                    programming distributor (MVPD), from
                                                   (3) A description of the recipient’s                 quarter. Covered broadcast stations and               50 hours per calendar quarter to 87.5
                                                process for advertising the property for                MVPDs must start providing the                        hours per quarter. Covered broadcast
                                                sale and receiving offers;                              additional hours of video described                   stations and MVPDs must start
                                                   (4) An accounting of all LSC funds                   programming on ‘‘included networks’’                  providing the additional hours of video
                                                used in the acquisition and any capital                 in the calendar quarter beginning on                  described programming on ‘‘included
                                                improvements of the property. The                       July 1, 2018. The document also
                                                                                                                                                              networks’’ in the calendar quarter
                                                accounting must include the amount of                   provides more flexibility than exists
                                                                                                                                                              beginning on July 1, 2018. We also
                                                LSC funds used to pay for acquisition                   under the Commission’s current rules
                                                                                                                                                              provide more flexibility than exists
                                                costs, financing, and capital                           regarding when the additional hours of
                                                                                                                                                              under our current rules regarding when
                                                improvements; and                                       described programming may be aired.
                                                                                                                                                              the additional hours of described
                                                                                                        This update to the Commission’s video
                                                   (5) Information on the proposed                                                                            programming may be aired. This update
                                                                                                        description rules will help ensure that
                                                transferee or buyer of the property and                                                                       to our rules will help ensure that
                                                                                                        Americans who are blind or visually
                                                a document evidencing the terms of                                                                            Americans who are blind or visually
                                                                                                        impaired can be connected, informed,
                                                transfer or sale.                                                                                             impaired can be connected, informed,
                                                                                                        and entertained by television.
                                                                                                                                                              and entertained by television.
                                                § 1631.21 Retaining income from sale of                 DATES: Effective September 11, 2017.
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                                                real estate purchased with LSC funds.                   FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:                        1 An ‘‘included network’’ is a network carried on
                                                  (a) During the term of an LSC grant or                Maria Mullarkey, Maria.Mullarkey@                     a programming stream or channel on which a
                                                contract, a recipient may retain and use                fcc.gov, or Lyle Elder, Lyle.Elder@                   broadcaster or MVPD is required to provide video
                                                income from any sale of real estate                     fcc.gov, of the Media Bureau, Policy                  description. Video Description: Implementation of
                                                                                                                                                              the Twenty-First Century Communications and
                                                purchased with LSC funds according to                   Division, (202) 418–2120. For additional              Video Accessibility Act of 2010, Notice of Proposed
                                                45 CFR 1630.17 (Cost Standards and                      information concerning the Paperwork                  Rulemaking, 81 FR 33642, May 27, 2016, 31 FCC
                                                Procedures: Applicability to derivative                 Reduction Act information collection                  Rcd 2463, 2464, n.4 (2016) (NPRM).



                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   16:09 Aug 09, 2017   Jkt 241001   PO 00000   Frm 00051   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\10AUR1.SGM   10AUR1


                                                37346            Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 153 / Thursday, August 10, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                                II. Background                                          systems.5 The nonbroadcast networks                     hours per quarter. This conclusion is
                                                   1. In 2011, the Commission reinstated                currently subject to these video                        consistent with Section 713(f)(4) of the
                                                the video description regulations that                  description requirements are USA, TNT,                  Communications Act of 1934, as
                                                previously were adopted in 2000,                        TBS, History, and Disney Channel.6 Any                  amended (‘‘Continuing Commission
                                                requiring certain television broadcast                  programming initially aired with video                  Authority’’),10 Section 713(f)(4) states
                                                stations and MVPDs to provide video                     description must include video                          that the Commission may not issue
                                                description on top-rated networks.2                     description if it is re-aired on the same               additional video description rules
                                                Video description makes video                           station or MVPD channel, unless the                     unless their benefits outweigh their
                                                programming accessible to individuals                   station or MVPD is using the technology                 costs, and ‘‘may not increase, in total,
                                                who are blind or visually impaired                      for another program-related purpose.7                   the hour requirement for additional
                                                                                                           3. In the Notice of Proposed                         described programming by more than 75
                                                through ‘‘[t]he insertion of audio
                                                                                                        Rulemaking in this proceeding (NPRM)                    percent of the requirement in the
                                                narrated descriptions of a television
                                                                                                        (81 FR 33642, May 27, 2016), we                         regulations reinstated under’’ Section
                                                program’s key visual elements into
                                                                                                        proposed revisions to our rules that                    713(f)(1).
                                                natural pauses between the program’s
                                                                                                        would expand the availability of, and                      5. In the NPRM, we explained that our
                                                dialogue.’’ 3 These rules play a key role
                                                                                                        support consumer access to, video                       continuing authority is limited by the
                                                in affording better access to television                described programming.8 Among other
                                                programs for individuals who are blind                                                                          express requirement in Section
                                                                                                        proposals, we proposed to increase the                  713(f)(4)(A) that the need for and
                                                or visually impaired, ‘‘enabling millions               amount of described programming on
                                                more Americans to enjoy the benefits of                                                                         benefits of any new or expanded
                                                                                                        each included network carried by a                      regulations outweigh their costs, as well
                                                television service and participate more                 covered broadcast station or MVPD,
                                                fully in the cultural and civic life of the                                                                     as by the express limitations set out in
                                                                                                        from 50 hours per calendar quarter to                   subsection (f)(4)(B) with respect to total
                                                nation.’’                                               87.5, and we sought comment on
                                                   2. Currently, the Commission’s video                                                                         described hours and subsection (f)(4)(C)
                                                                                                        whether to provide more flexibility to                  regarding the expansion of video
                                                description rules require commercial                    covered entities by allowing some
                                                broadcast television stations that are                                                                          description requirements to additional
                                                                                                        amount of non-prime time, non-                          designated market areas (DMAs).11 As
                                                affiliated with ABC, CBS, Fox, or NBC                   children’s described programming to
                                                and are located in the top 60 television                                                                        noted in the NPRM, the statute provides
                                                                                                        count toward the increased hours. We                    that any new requirements must be
                                                markets to provide 50 hours per                         also sought comment on our tentative
                                                calendar quarter of video described                                                                             limited to programming transmitted for
                                                                                                        conclusion that the benefits of the                     display on television (that is, by
                                                prime time or children’s programming.4                  proposed rules outweigh the costs, and
                                                In addition, MVPD systems that serve                                                                            broadcasters and MVPDs).12 In this
                                                                                                        on other issues such as appropriate                     Order, we conclude that the new
                                                50,000 or more subscribers must                         timelines for the proposals. We take no
                                                provide 50 hours of video description                                                                           requirements we adopt herein are
                                                                                                        action on our other NPRM proposals at                   consistent with the limitations in the
                                                per calendar quarter during prime time                  this time.9
                                                or children’s programming on each of                                                                            statute. We note that, as required in
                                                the top five national nonbroadcast                      III. Authority                                          subsection (f)(4)(A), more than two
                                                networks that they carry on those                          4. We conclude that we have the                      years have passed since the completion
                                                                                                        authority under the Twenty-First                        of the CVAA-mandated report to
                                                   2 47 CFR 79.3. See generally Video Description:
                                                                                                        Century Communications and Video                        Congress on video description ‘‘in
                                                Implementation of the Twenty-First Century
                                                                                                        Accessibility Act of 2010 (CVAA) to                     television programming’’ and ‘‘in video
                                                Communications and Video Accessibility Act of                                                                   programming distributed on the
                                                2010, Report and Order, 26 FCC Rcd 11847 (2011)         increase the number of hours of
                                                (Reinstatement Order). See also Video Description:      described programming on each                           Internet.’’ 13 Further, the additional
                                                Implementation of the Twenty-First Century              included network by 75 percent, from                    regulations adopted today apply only to
                                                Communications and Video Accessibility Act of           50 hours per calendar quarter to 87.5                   ‘‘programming . . . transmitted for
                                                2010, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 26 FCC Rcd                                                                 display on television.’’ 14 As discussed
                                                2975 (2011). Video description rules were initially
                                                adopted in 2000, but were struck down due to lack         5 Id. § 79.3(b)(4).                                   below, we also find that ‘‘the need for
                                                of authority. Implementation of Video Description         6 Video  Description: Implementation of the           and benefits of’’ the regulations ‘‘are
                                                of Video Programming, MM Docket No. 99–339,             Twenty-First Century Communications and Video           greater than the[ir] technical and
                                                Report and Order, 15 FCC Rcd 15230 (2000), recon.       Accessibility Act of 2010, Order and Public Notice,     economic costs’’ for the rules we adopt
                                                granted in part and denied in part, Implementation      30 FCC Rcd 2071, 2071, para. 1 (2015). The list of
                                                of Video Description of Video Programming, MM           the top five networks is updated every three years      herein. Finally, consistent with
                                                Docket No. 99–339, Memorandum Opinion and               in response to any changes in ratings. 47 CFR           subsection (f)(4)(B), the additional
                                                Order on Reconsideration, 16 FCC Rcd 1251 (2001),       79.3(b)(4). The next update will be in effect on July   regulations do not increase the hour
                                                vacated sub nom, Motion Picture Ass’n of Am., Inc.      1, 2018 based on the ratings for the time period        requirement ‘‘by more than 75 percent
                                                v. FCC, 309 F.3d 796 (D.C. Cir. 2002). The history      from October 2016 to September 2017.
                                                of the Commission’s video description rules and            7 47 CFR 79.3(c)(3), 79.3(c)(4)(i)–(ii).
                                                                                                                                                                  10 Section 713 of the Act was amended by Section
                                                their reinstatement under the CVAA, as well as the         8 See generally NPRM.
                                                current requirements under those rules, are                9 We also sought comment in the NPRM on              202(a) of the CVAA and is codified at 47 U.S.C. 613.
                                                                                                                                                                  11 NPRM, paras. 8, 13–15. The CVAA prohibits
                                                discussed in depth in both the 2014 Report to           proposals to increase the number of included
                                                Congress and the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking in       networks carried by covered distributors, from four     the Commission, until October 8, 2020, from
                                                this proceeding. Twenty-First Century                   broadcast and five nonbroadcast networks to five        phasing in additional DMAs outside the top 60. 47
                                                Communications and Video Accessibility Act of           broadcast and ten nonbroadcast networks; adopt a        U.S.C. 613(f)(4)(C)(iii)–(iv).
                                                2010, Public Law 111–260, 124 Stat. 2751 (2010)                                                                   12 NPRM, para. 16; 47 U.S.C. 613(f)(4)(A).
                                                                                                        no-backsliding rule; remove the threshold
                                                (CVAA); H.R. Rep. No. 111–563, 111th Cong., 2d          requirement that nonbroadcast networks reach 50           13 47 U.S.C. 613(f)(4)(A). In particular, on June 30,
                                                Sess. at 19 (2010); S. Rep. No. 111–386, 111th          percent of pay-TV (or MVPD) households in order         2014, the Commission submitted a report to
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                                                Cong., 2d Sess. at 1 (2010); Video Description:         to be subject to inclusion; require that covered        Congress presenting its findings on the technical
                                                Implementation of the Twenty-First Century              distributors provide dedicated customer service         and creative issues, benefits, and financial costs of
                                                Communications and Video Accessibility Act of           contacts who can answer questions about video           video description in television programming, as
                                                2010, Report to Congress, 29 FCC Rcd 8011 (2014)        description; and require that petitions for             well as on the technical and operational issues,
                                                (2014 Report); 47 U.S.C. 613(f)(3); NPRM, paras. 3–     exemptions from the video description                   benefits, and costs of providing video description
                                                7.                                                      requirements, together with comments on or              for IP-delivered video programming. See generally
                                                   3 47 CFR 79.3(a)(3).                                                                                         2014 Report. See also NPRM, para. 7.
                                                                                                        objections to such petitions, be filed with the
                                                   4 Id. § 79.3(b)(1)–(2).                              Commission electronically.                                14 47 U.S.C. 613(f)(4)(A).




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                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 153 / Thursday, August 10, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                   37347

                                                of the requirement in the regulations                    the maximum increase at this time,                     increase opportunities to discuss
                                                reinstated.’’ 15                                         rather than a partial increase, will                   television programs with sighted
                                                                                                         provide the most benefit to consumers                  people.28 As a result of increased video
                                                IV. Increased Availability of Video
                                                                                                         without resulting in excessive costs. As               description requirements, persons who
                                                Described Programming
                                                                                                         discussed below, we also provide more                  are blind or visually impaired will be
                                                A. Additional Hours                                      flexibility than exists under our current              able to engage more fully in television
                                                  6. The CVAA provides that the                          rules regarding when the additional                    viewing, increasing their social
                                                Commission may increase ‘‘in total’’ the                 hours of described programming may be                  inclusion within community life.
                                                hour requirement by no more than 75                      aired.                                                 Nonetheless, as we noted in the NPRM,
                                                percent, up to a total of 87.5 hours per                    7. On any given day, the average                    we must ‘‘seek to ensure that consumers
                                                quarter, and we proposed to adopt such                   American can choose to watch any                       are able to realize the benefits of video
                                                an increase in the NPRM.16 Based on                      program on any one of approximately                    description’’ while ‘‘keeping in mind
                                                our analysis of the benefits and costs of                264 channels.22 That adds up to roughly                our Congressional directive to proceed
                                                the proposal as required under Section                   6,000 hours of linear television options,              judiciously with any expansion of the
                                                                                                         from which that average American                       requirements.’’
                                                713(f)(4)(A) of the Communications Act,
                                                                                                         chooses about five hours of                               8. As required by the statute, we find
                                                we adopt our proposed increase in this
                                                                                                         programming to watch over the course                   that the benefits of increasing the
                                                Order.17 Thus, we will require each
                                                                                                         of the day.23 Ideally, viewers who are                 required number of hours of described
                                                covered broadcast station and MVPD, on
                                                                                                         blind or visually impaired would have                  programming by 37.5 hours per quarter
                                                each stream or channel on which it
                                                                                                         the same range of options, including the               are greater than the costs. The costs are
                                                carries an ‘‘included network,’’ to
                                                                                                         same freedom to select and                             minimal and represent a very small
                                                provide 87.5 hours of described
                                                                                                         independently view and follow any of                   percentage of total programming
                                                programming, per quarter.18 Our
                                                                                                         the programming for which they pay.24                  expenses and network revenues.29
                                                decision to increase the number of
                                                                                                         Instead, many find that ‘‘the current                  Although the price for adding
                                                required hours of video description per                  amount of available audio-described
                                                included network is supported by the                                                                            description to television programming
                                                                                                         content [is] significantly below                       can vary, based on filings in the docket
                                                record. Almost every commenter who                       demand’’ and indicate that they have
                                                addressed this issue supports the                                                                               we estimate that the maximum cost per
                                                                                                         difficulty finding programs with video                 hour is $4,202.50.30 Because a given
                                                proposed increase to 87.5 hours per                      description.25 Television programming
                                                quarter,19 and only one commenter                                                                               hour of described programming can be
                                                                                                         is a shared piece of American culture 26               counted twice toward the requirements
                                                opposes it.20 Although this is the                       that the blind and visually impaired
                                                maximum increase permissible under                                                                              of the rules (once when initially aired,
                                                                                                         community is unable to fully experience                and once when rerun), any given
                                                the CVAA, the total number of hours                      without video description.27 For people
                                                required per included network will be                                                                           included network would need a total of
                                                                                                         with blindness and visual impairments,                 175 hours of first-run described
                                                limited, averaging less than one hour                    video description has been shown not
                                                per day.21 We find that implementing                                                                            programming on that network per year
                                                                                                         only to increase comprehension of                      to comply with the expanded video
                                                   15 The requirement in the reinstated regulations is
                                                                                                         television programming, but also to                    description requirement adopted
                                                50 hours of video description on each programming           22 Implementation of Section 3 of the Cable
                                                                                                                                                                today.31 For the nine networks required
                                                stream or channel per calendar quarter. 47 CFR
                                                79.3(b)(1)–(2), (4). 75 percent of those 50 hours is     Television Consumer Protection and Competition
                                                                                                                                                                   28 Emilie Schmeidler and Corinne Kirchner,
                                                37.5 hours. Accordingly, 87.5 hours per quarter          Act of 1992; Statistical Report on Average Rates for
                                                                                                         Basic Service, Cable Programming Service, and          Ph.D., Adding Audio Description: Does it Make a
                                                represents a 75 percent increase in the number of                                                               Difference?, 95 Journal of Visual Impairment &
                                                                                                         Equipment, MM Docket No. 92–266, Report on
                                                hours of video description (50 + 37.5 = 87.5). We                                                               Blindness 197 (2001).
                                                                                                         Cable Industry Prices, 31 FCC Rcd 11498, 11508–
                                                have not expanded the number of DMAs, which we                                                                     29 Moreover, such costs might be partially offset
                                                                                                         09, Tbls. 4, 5 (2016) (showing an increased average
                                                conclude we may not do until 2020 at the earliest.
                                                                                                         of 264.4 total available channels on the most          by increases in advertising revenue due to
                                                47 U.S.C. 613(f)(4)(C)(iii)–(iv).
                                                   16 NPRM, para. 18. See also 47 U.S.C. 613(f)(4)(B).
                                                                                                         subscribed tiers of service). Close to 90 percent of   additional audience reach.
                                                                                                         American television households subscribe to MVPD          30 NAB, in a 2013 submission, estimated that the
                                                   17 Absent Congressional action, the Commission
                                                                                                         service. Annual Assessment of the Status of            cost of one hour of video description lies between
                                                does not have authority to further increase the          Competition in the Market for the Delivery of Video    $2,500 and $4,100. NAB Sept. 4, 2013 Comments
                                                number of hours of video described programming           Programming, MB Docket No. 15–158, Seventeenth         at 4. Because producing video described
                                                required per quarter on any specific network             Report, 31 FCC Rcd 4472, 4514, para. 102 (2016).       programming is a labor intensive task, we adjust the
                                                beyond the 87.5 hours adopted today. NPRM, para.            23 John Koblin, How Much Do We Love TV? Let
                                                                                                                                                                reported costs to reflect the change in wages in the
                                                13. However, we encourage all networks to                Us Count the Ways, N.Y. Times, June 30, 2016,          media industry. See The Described and Captioned
                                                continue to expand their video described offerings.      available at http://www.nytimes.com/2016/07/01/        Media Program, DCMP’s Description Tip Sheet (rev.
                                                   18 We also delete what was formerly § 79.3(b)(1)
                                                                                                         business/media/nielsen-survey-media-viewing.html.      Jan. 2012), available at https://dcmp.org/ai/227/
                                                of the rules, which specified the video description         24 Although over-the-air viewers have access to a   (visited Oct. 17, 2016). We adjust this cost estimate
                                                requirements that were in effect prior to July 1,        smaller range of options, that is true regardless of   by 2.5 percent because the mean wage in media
                                                2015, and were superseded on that date. This rule        whether they are blind or visually impaired. The       occupations increased by 2.5 percent between 2013
                                                is obsolete and has no current effect, and its           virtue of equivalent access remains the same.          and 2015. Adjusting the NAB estimates yields a
                                                substance is now covered by the new paragraph               25 ACB October 26, 2016 Ex Parte, ACB Survey        range of $2,562.50 to $4,202.50, and we use this
                                                (b)(1) (what was formerly paragraph (b)(2)).             Finds Need for Increased Audio Description, at 1       upper bound in our calculations throughout this
                                                   19 See, e.g., MPAA Comments at 1; ACB
                                                                                                         (ACB Survey) (reporting that over 75% of survey        item. See United States Department of Labor,
                                                Comments at 3; AFB Comments at 1; MCB Reply              respondents ‘‘strongly agree that a greater amount     Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational
                                                at 1; ABVI Reply at 1; Barlow Comments at 1;             of audio-described programming is needed,’’ and        Employment Statistics (2013, 2015), available at
                                                Grossman Comments at 1; Merriweather Comments            that 45% of survey respondents ‘‘have difficulty in    http://www.bls.gov/oes/tables.htm. On the other
                                                at 1; Pinto Comments at 1; Zodrow Comments at 1;         finding programs with audio description’’).            hand, one commenter noted that production costs
                                                Swartz Reply at 1.                                          26 See David Carr, Barely Keeping Up in TV’s New    have fallen in the past five years and are expected
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                                                   20 See NAB Reply at 3–9.                                                                                     to continue to fall due to entry by firms into the
                                                                                                         Golden Age, N.Y. Times, Mar. 9, 2014, available at
                                                   21 Thirteen weeks per calendar quarter, seven         http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/10/business/            video description industry because of increased
                                                days per week, means an average of 91 days per           media/fenced-in-by-televisions-excess-of-              demand for video description services, and
                                                quarter. Given that the updated requirement calls        excellence.html.                                       therefore the estimates given above may be high.
                                                for only 87.5 hours of described programming per            27 See 2014 Report, para. 2. See also ACB Survey    See Dicapta Comments at 1.
                                                quarter, this averages out to less than one hour per     at 1 (reporting that over 75% of survey respondents       31 87.5 hours per quarter × times; 4 quarters = 350

                                                day of described programming on any given                ‘‘strongly agree that a greater amount of audio-       hours, divided in half (175) because each described
                                                included network.                                        described programming is needed’’).                    hour can be counted twice.



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                                                37348            Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 153 / Thursday, August 10, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                                to provide 50 hours of video description                over 23 million.35 Thus, the number of                    There is considerable evidence that
                                                per quarter, we estimate the cost of                    Americans who could benefit from                          video description of television
                                                increasing the number of hours of                       video description is substantial.                         programming significantly enhances the
                                                described programming to 87.5 hours                       10. Commenters who are blind or                         value of television programming to
                                                per quarter is approximately $315,000                   visually impaired emphasize the need                      individuals who are blind or visually
                                                per year.32                                             for greater amounts of video described                    impaired. Many television programs
                                                                                                        programming,36 as well as the                             contain visual elements that are crucial
                                                   9. The benefits of additional                        substantial benefits of this service.37
                                                description, while less easy to quantify                                                                          to understanding what is happening,
                                                than the relatively low costs of                                                                                  and are missed by those who are blind
                                                                                                           35 The Census Bureau estimates the total blind or
                                                providing it, are nonetheless substantial.                                                                        or visually impaired.38 The
                                                                                                        visually impaired population is 7,333,805. United
                                                Longstanding evidence indicates that                    States Census Bureau, American Community                  Commission’s 2014 Report found that
                                                persons who are blind or visually                       Survey, Table B18103 (2015), available at http://         video description greatly enhances the
                                                                                                        factfinder.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/      experience of viewing video
                                                impaired have television viewing habits                 productview.xhtml?pid=ACS_15_1YR_
                                                                                                                                                                  programming because viewers who are
                                                that are comparable to those who are                    B18103&prodType=table. According to the Centers
                                                                                                        for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 23.7            blind or visually impaired no longer
                                                not.33 Studies have also shown that
                                                                                                        million Americans age 18 and older reported               miss critical visual elements of
                                                persons who are blind or visually                       experiencing vision loss. American Foundation for         television programming and, therefore,
                                                impaired subscribe to MVPD services in                  the Blind, Blindness Statistics, Facts and Figures on
                                                                                                        Adults with Vision Loss (updated Jan. 2017),              can fully understand and enjoy the
                                                roughly the same proportion as other
                                                                                                        available at www.afb.org/info/blindness-statistics/       program without having to rely on their
                                                Americans.34 Nothing in the current                     adults/facts-and-figures/235 (citing CDC, National        sighted family members and friends to
                                                record suggests otherwise and, indeed,                  Center for Health Statistics, 2015 National Health        narrate these visual elements.39
                                                there is no reason to believe that those                Interview Survey). Of these 23.7 million, 14.4
                                                                                                        million women and 9.3 million men report                  Commenters express that this ability to
                                                who are blind or visually impaired                                                                                watch video programming
                                                                                                        experiencing significant vision loss. Id. The
                                                would not seek to access a medium of                    National Eye Institute (NEI) estimates the blind or       independently is an incredibly
                                                communications as central to American                   visually impaired population over 40 years old is
                                                                                                                                                                  important benefit of video description.40
                                                life and culture as television in the same              12,440,000. Varma et al., Visual Impairment and
                                                                                                        Blindness in Adults in the United States:
                                                way, and at the same rates, as other                    Demographic and Geographic Variations from 2015           difference in both understanding and enjoying
                                                Americans. Estimates of the number of                   to 2050, 134 (7) JAMA Ophthalmology 802–809               programming’’); Doane Reply at 1 (‘‘[V]ideo
                                                Americans who are blind or visually                     (2016).                                                   description gives blind and visually impaired
                                                                                                           36 See AFB Comments at 2 (‘‘[D]emand for, and          people knowledge that we can share with others in
                                                impaired range from seven million to                                                                              conversation and allows us to make informed
                                                                                                        interest in, described TV is overwhelming and can
                                                                                                        only be expected to grow.’’); ACB Comments at 1           opinions on the programming.’’); Edwards Reply at
                                                  32 37.5 additional hours per quarter × 4 quarters                                                               1 (noting that ‘‘[t]here is clearly a huge benefit to
                                                                                                        (noting that, as the ‘‘incidence of blindness’’
                                                = 150, divided in half (75) because each described      continues to significantly increase, this will            be gained’’ by increasing the number of hours of
                                                hour can be counted twice. 75 hours × $4,202.50         ‘‘continue[] to create an increase in demand for          video description by 75 percent); Grenevitch Reply
                                                per hour = $315,187.5. For the currently included       accessible video programming’’); ACB Reply at 4           at 1 (‘‘It is hard for me to put into words what audio
                                                broadcast networks, the cost of the additional 37.5     (explaining that, while a wide breadth of                 description adds to programming for a visually
                                                hours of described programming per quarter would        programming is closed captioned for individuals           impaired individual. You do not realize how many
                                                approximate one hundredth of one percent of their       who are deaf or hard of hearing, ‘‘the blindness          important details you have been missing until you
                                                programming costs and net revenues. For the             community is relegated[sic] to a handful of hours         hear a program described.’’); Hasley Reply at 1
                                                currently included nonbroadcast networks, the cost      each week during prime-time, or at odd intervals’’).      (‘‘Increasing availability of such description will
                                                of the additional 37.5 hours of described               See also, e.g., Brack Reply at 1 (offering support for    allow greater access to the entertainment,
                                                programming per quarter would range from 0.02 to        expanding the amount of video description because         education, and information provided by television
                                                0.08 percent of their programming costs, and from       only ‘‘[a] relatively small portion of shows has          programming, for a large population of viewers.’’);
                                                0.01 to 0.04 percent of their net revenues.             description’’); Correia Reply at 1 (stating that ‘‘many   Strzalkowski Reply at 1 (‘‘Audio description makes
                                                Programming expenses and net operating revenue          of my most favorite shows are still not available         it possible to understand what is happening and to
                                                come from SNL Kagan, TV Network Profile and             with audio description’’ and that the proposed            feel a part of the cultural experience that is
                                                Economics (2017). Programming expenses are              increase ‘‘will mean that I will be able to enjoy         television.’’); Tobin Reply at 1 (stating that the
                                                defined by SNL Kagan as the direct cost of creating,    many more of my favorite programs’’); Crawford            ‘‘importance of audio description in my life cannot
                                                acquiring, and distributing content and services.       Reply at 1 (‘‘There is no question that the amount        be overstated’’ and ‘‘the impact . . . is profound, as
                                                Programming expenses and net operating revenue          of programming I watch would increase if I had a          the narrative elements of the description make
                                                are available for each of the four broadcast networks   larger selection of choices [that are video               television . . . come alive for me’’).
                                                (ABC, NBC, CBS, and Fox) and the five                                                                                38 Who’s Watching? Report (‘‘People who have
                                                                                                        described].’’); Crumley Reply at 1 (stating that video
                                                nonbroadcast networks (USA, TNT, TBS, Disney            description ‘‘should be expanded as much as               experienced video description feel that it affords
                                                Channel, and History) required to provide video         possible’’); Huffman Reply at 1 (‘‘The number of          important benefits, which fall into the categories of
                                                description under the current rules. Programming        audio-described programs remains low.’’);                 enhanced viewing, learning, and social
                                                expenses range from $2.5 billion to $3.9 billion for    Hunsinger Reply at 1 (urging the FCC to make more         experiences.’’; ‘‘The vast majority of blind and
                                                the broadcast networks and from $394 million to         video description available); Getz Reply at 1 (‘‘I        visually impaired people who have experienced
                                                $1.6 billion for the nonbroadcast networks. Net         very much enjoy the television programming [that]         description say that it is important to their
                                                operating revenue ranges from $3.4 billion to $5.2      is currently being described, however, the shows I        enjoyment of programming.’’).
                                                billion for the broadcast networks and from $870        am able to fully enjoy is[sic] much too limited at           39 2014 Report, paras. 14–15. See also NPRM,
                                                million to $3.4 billion for the nonbroadcast            this time.’’); ABVI Reply at 1 (‘‘Currently, only a       paras. 9–10.
                                                networks. Based on this data, we conclude that the      small fraction of all television programming is              40 2014 Report, para. 15. See, e.g., Smith
                                                costs of increasing the required number of hours of     required to be audio described.’’); Lieberg Reply at      Comments at 1 (explaining that video description
                                                described programming by 37.5 hours will not            1 (‘‘[W]e who rely on description have very few           benefits individuals who are blind because it gives
                                                impose an undue burden on regulatees.                   hours per week and very few programs from which           them greater independence and the ability to
                                                  33 Jaclyn Packer, Ph.D. & Corinne Kirchner, Ph.D.,    to choose.’’); Pimley Reply at 1 (noting that there       understand television programs); Zodrow
                                                Who’s Watching? A Profile of the Blind and              are ‘‘only very, very, few hours of video                 Comments at 1 (‘‘Having video description now is
                                                Visually Impaired Audience for Television and           description’’); Swartz Reply at 1 (imploring the FCC      very beneficial for me as a totally blind person
                                                Video (1997), available at http://www.afb.org/info/     ‘‘[i]n the strongest possible terms’’ to increase the     because now I don’t have to rely on someone else
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                                                programs-and-services/public-policy-center/             number of programs with video description); Zaken         that’s sighted [to] explain to me what is happening
                                                technology-and-information-accessibility/whos-          Reply at 1 (requesting that the FCC make more             on the screen. . . . I can now understand what’s
                                                watching-a-profile-of-the-blind-and-visually-           video description available on television so ‘‘that I     going on during a TV program and know what the
                                                impaired-audience-for-television-and-video/1235         will be able to listen to more programs’’).               characters are doing.’’); ABVI Reply at 1 (‘‘It means
                                                (Who’s Watching? Report).                                  37 See, e.g., Brack Reply at 1 (explaining that        enjoying a program or movie with your spouse or
                                                  34 Id. (‘‘Blind and visually impaired people . . .    ‘‘[t]he added value of description to television          family as an equal rather than someone who needs
                                                subscribe to cable television, to the same extent as    shows . . . for a person who is blind is                  an explanation of what is happening.’’); Sorenson
                                                other households.’’).                                   immeasurable’’ and ‘‘it offers a night-and-day            Reply at 1 (‘‘Watching tv with audio description



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                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 153 / Thursday, August 10, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                      37349

                                                The Described and Captioned Media                         benefits exceed the relatively low                       respond to the Commission’s inquiry
                                                Program (DCMP) and the American                           costs.45                                                 about changing the rule to allow some
                                                Council of the Blind (ACB) also note the                                                                           or all described programming to air
                                                                                                          B. Increased Flexibility
                                                benefits of video description to children                                                                          between 6 a.m. and midnight, industry
                                                and individuals on the autism spectrum,                      13. In addition to increasing the                     commenters agreed that ‘‘the
                                                because it can help with the                              required hours of video described                        Commission should [ ] consider
                                                development of vocabulary.41                              programming, we also provide more                        allowing additional types of
                                                   11. Through its enactment of the                       flexibility than exists under our current                programming to count towards the
                                                CVAA, Congress acknowledged the                           rules regarding when the additional                      rule.’’ 49
                                                value of video description. Indeed, the                   hours of described programming may be                       14. We will provide flexibility
                                                importance of accessibility of video                      aired. Several industry commenters                       regarding when the additional required
                                                programming to persons who are blind                      argue without opposition that ‘‘[t]he                    hours may be aired, but retain our
                                                or visually impaired underlies several                    Commission should incorporate                            current rule with respect to the existing
                                                provisions of the CVAA. Congress                          flexibility into any rules increasing the                hour requirement. Specifically, although
                                                mandated not only that the Commission                     number of hours.’’ 46 MPAA argues that                   we will continue to require included
                                                require video description, but also that                  we should consider ‘‘whether to allow                    networks to provide 50 hours per
                                                emergency information contained in                        additional types of programming to                       quarter of video described programming
                                                video programming, as well as the user                    count toward the hourly video                            during prime time or children’s
                                                interfaces on navigation devices and                      description requirement if the                           programming,50 we will permit the
                                                other digital apparatus that allow users                  requirement is moved from 50 hours to                    additional 37.5 hours per quarter to be
                                                to navigate video programming, be made                    87.5 hours per quarter.’’ 47 Time Warner                 provided at any time between 6 a.m.
                                                accessible to those who are blind or                      ‘‘agrees with other commenters that                      and midnight.51 We noted in the NPRM
                                                visually impaired.42 Furthermore, in                      additional flexibility is essential’’ if the             that, while ‘‘we have no evidence of
                                                addition to its considerable benefits to                  Commission adopts such an increase.48                    compliance difficulties for covered
                                                the millions of individuals who are                       While commenters generally did not                       distributors or the currently-included
                                                blind or visually impaired today,                                                                                  networks’’ operating under the current
                                                                                                          blind or visually impaired get some value from
                                                television programming that is                            television programming even without video                rules, we recognize that some parties
                                                produced with video description now                       description. Assuming conservatively that, without       may not have sufficient eligible prime
                                                will continue to benefit the growing                      the benefit of video description, such viewers get       time and children’s programming to
                                                population of people with blindness or                    75 percent of the enjoyment of a sighted viewer (or      meet our increased hour requirement.52
                                                                                                          $0.195 per hour), adding video description might
                                                a visual impairment when it is shown                      add $0.065 of value per hour, per viewer (to equal       Commenters provide some examples of
                                                again in the future, thus increasing its                  $0.26, NCTA’s estimate of the total value of an hour     situations in which, they claim, certain
                                                value. The National Eye Institute                         of programming). As discussed above, we estimate         programmers would be unable to
                                                estimates that the blind or visually                      the highest potential cost for describing an hour of
                                                                                                          programming to be $4,202.50. At $0.065 per person,
                                                                                                                                                                   comply with the expanded hour
                                                impaired population will double by                        64,654 viewers equal $4,202.51. Various                  obligation by describing prime time or
                                                2050.43                                                   governmental estimates place the number of               children’s programming, even if they
                                                   12. Although we do not assign a                        persons who are blind or visually impaired at            described all such non-exempt
                                                specific monetary value to the benefits                   between 7,333,805 and 23,700,000. Thus, even
                                                                                                          accepting NCTA’s low estimate of the value of an
                                                                                                                                                                   programming.53 The added flexibility
                                                these additional hours of described                       hour of programming for the sake of argument,            provided under our new rules should
                                                programming will provide to the                           benefits that reached only a fraction of citizens who    alleviate this concern.54
                                                millions of persons who are blind or                      are blind or visually impaired ¥0.3 to 0.9 percent          15. Commenters suggest a number of
                                                                                                          depending on the estimate—would nonetheless
                                                visually impaired,44 we find that the                     outweigh costs. And this calculation does not even       additional ways to provide included
                                                                                                          take into account the benefits to the friends and        networks with more flexibility to satisfy
                                                gives me more understanding about the action on           family of persons who are blind or visually              the increased hour requirement. We find
                                                the screen.’’).                                           impaired, or the benefits to networks and
                                                   41 DCMP and ACB, Listening Is Learning, How
                                                                                                                                                                   that these suggested measures are
                                                                                                          distributors of increases in viewership.
                                                Does Description Benefit Students Without Visual             45 NAB argues that the preliminary cost-benefit       unnecessary in light of the timing
                                                Impairments?, http://listeningislearning.org/             analysis in the NPRM forms an insufficient basis for     flexibility we are providing, as well as
                                                background_description-no-bvi.html (last visited          the adoption of any new rules. NAB Reply at 3–9.         ill-advised. NCTA suggests permitting
                                                Oct. 12, 2016).                                           As always, however, we do not adopt any rules            distributors to average their compliance
                                                   42 Twenty-First Century Communications and             based on the analysis in the NPRM. As discussed
                                                Video Accessibility Act of 2010, Public Law 111–          throughout this Order, our finding that ‘‘the need
                                                                                                                                                                     49 NAB    Reply at 19.
                                                260, 124 Stat. 2751, secs. 202, 204–205 (2010).           for and benefits of’’ the new rules ‘‘are greater than
                                                                                                                                                                     50 50  hours/quarter in prime time or children’s
                                                   43 Varma et al.                                        the technical and economic costs’’ is based on a
                                                   44 It is difficult to quantify in monetary terms the   comprehensive analysis of the available facts in the     programming is the amount required under the
                                                                                                          record. NAB has submitted no sound basis to reach        current rules. 47 CFR 79.3(b).
                                                intrinsic benefits of video description for people                                                                    51 To avoid ambiguity, the rule refers to 11:59
                                                who are blind or visually impaired, and there are         a different conclusion here. As stated above, the
                                                no quantitative estimates of the value of an              total number of described hours required under our       p.m. rather than midnight. See National Institute of
                                                additional hour of video described television             revised rules is modest (requiring an average of less    Standards and Technology, Times of Day FAQs,
                                                programming for a blind or visually impaired              than one hour of described programming per day)          available at https://www.nist.gov/pml/time-and-
                                                individual. See, e.g., Brack Reply at 1 (‘‘The added      and accordingly will not impose a significant            frequency-division/times-day-faqs.
                                                value of description to television shows . . . for a      burden on included networks. We have designed               52 NPRM, paras. 18–19.

                                                person who is blind is immeasurable.’’). Even very        our rules to further minimize the burden on                 53 See, e.g., Time Warner Reply at 4 (a significant

                                                low estimates of the value indicate that it would         included networks by providing flexibility on when       amount of programming was aired with description,
                                                take only a small number of viewers who are blind         the additional hours of described programming may        but had been previously aired with description and
                                                or visually impaired to get more benefit from             be aired and allowing a given hour of described          counted toward the requirements more than once);
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                                                described programming than the cost of describing         programming to be counted twice, once when               NAB Reply at 18–19 (a broadcast network carries
                                                it. NCTA promotes on its Web site an estimate of          initially aired and once when rerun. We thus reject      ‘‘relatively fewer hours of children’s
                                                the ‘‘viewing value by the hour’’ of cable                NAB’s argument that the new rules are not                programming’’); NCTA September 19, 2016 Ex Parte
                                                programming. This estimate—$0.26 per hour—                sufficiently supported by a cost-benefit analysis.       (all programming was described reruns).
                                                                                                             46 NCTA Comments at 14–15.                               54 To the extent that any individual network has
                                                reflects the price for enjoying each hour of cable
                                                                                                             47 MPAA Comments at 12.
                                                video service, which presumably is an estimate of                                                                  problems satisfying the new hour requirement even
                                                its value. See NCTA, Industry Data, https://                 48 Time Warner Reply at 4. See also NAB Reply         with this flexibility, it may file a waiver request
                                                www.ncta.com/industry-data. Viewers who are               at 18.                                                   with the Media Bureau. 47 CFR 1.3, 0.283.



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                                                37350            Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 153 / Thursday, August 10, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                                across multiple quarters.55 Although                    requirement.59 In addition to the                     described, even if not all of it can be
                                                unlikely, this could mean, in practice,                 increased flexibility we provide to                   counted toward the rules 64; and
                                                that a network could air a year’s worth                 programmers to meet our hour                            • The petitioner commits to provide
                                                of described programming in one                         requirement, distributors and included                additional hours of video description in
                                                quarter, and none at all the rest of the                networks continue to be permitted to                  calendar quarters other than the one for
                                                year. We find that the ability to vary                  petition for waivers if needed. Some                  which it is seeking the waiver,65 or
                                                compliance with the hour requirement                    commenters argue that ‘‘potentially                   commits to provide the additional hours
                                                in this manner would have the potential                 frequent waiver requests’’ under an ‘‘ad              of video description in the same
                                                to upset consumer expectations and                      hoc waiver process’’ are insufficient to              calendar quarter but on an affiliated
                                                significantly undermine the value of                    resolve certain problems that need to be              network.66
                                                video description to those who rely                     considered ‘‘at the outset’’ to avoid                   If both of these conditions are met, we
                                                upon it. It would not serve the needs of                impacting program scheduling.60 Parties               believe that it is more likely than not
                                                individuals who are blind or visually                   made the same arguments prior to the                  that consumer needs will still be met at
                                                impaired to have no video described                     reinstatement of the video description                the level contemplated by these rules
                                                programming on a channel for an entire                  rules.61 As we observed in the NPRM,                  without unduly burdening the industry.
                                                quarter. NAB suggests increasing the                    however, not a single waiver request has              C. Timing
                                                number of times a program and its                       been filed in the more than five years
                                                reruns can be counted toward the hour                   since the rules became effective, and                   18. The revised rule will be effective
                                                requirement, from twice to ‘‘three or                   under the rules we adopt today,                       30 days after publication in the Federal
                                                four or more’’ times.56 This would                      included networks will not need to                    Register, and covered broadcast stations
                                                ultimately reduce the overall amount of                 provide any more description during                   and MVPDs must start providing the
                                                described programming available to                      prime time or children’s programming                  additional hours of video described
                                                consumers, because some networks                        than they do under the reinstated rules.              programming on ‘‘included networks’’
                                                might rerun the same described                          Therefore, we do not foresee that the                 in the calendar quarter beginning on
                                                programming over and over. At the                       new rules will create any problems with               July 1, 2018. We sought comment in the
                                                same time, the majority of top networks                 program scheduling or that regulatees                 NPRM on an appropriate compliance
                                                that air primarily first-run programming                will have difficulty complying with our               deadline for the rule. In particular, we
                                                in prime time would continue to need                    revised rules. Nonetheless, we continue
                                                                                                                                                                 64 Although we received no comments on this
                                                to produce the same amount of new                       to emphasize that waiver requests may
                                                                                                                                                              issue, we recognize that broadcast networks do not
                                                described programming, meaning this                     be filed if our requirements are                      program a broadcast station’s full day. Broadcast
                                                change would not give them additional                   infeasible or prove to be unduly                      stations also program part of the broadcast day
                                                flexibility. Time Warner proposes that                  burdensome under particular                           independently of their network, airing locally
                                                we permit networks to count described                   circumstances.                                        originated programming and syndicated
                                                                                                                                                              programming. Therefore, in the case of waiver
                                                hours provided on affiliated networks to                   17. Although the record does not                   requests from broadcasters or broadcast networks,
                                                satisfy the hour requirement for the                    suggest that either broadcast stations or             we will also look favorably on waiver requests
                                                primary network.57 This, too, would                     MVPDs will typically have difficulty                  demonstrating that all non-‘‘live or near-live’’
                                                undermine the purpose of the rules,                                                                           programs provided in hours programmed by the
                                                                                                        complying with our revised rules, it                  broadcast network are described. Also, for all
                                                which are designed to ensure that                       does suggest that compliance problems                 covered networks filing waiver requests, to the
                                                programming on the most popular                         could arise in two atypical                           extent they have not provided video description on
                                                networks is described.58 While we                       circumstances.62 First, a network may                 all pre-recorded programming they are, of course,
                                                appreciate the desire for flexibility                                                                         free to make a showing that reasonable
                                                                                                        be carrying an unusually large amount                 circumstances prevent their having done so.
                                                reflected in these proposals, we decline                of live or near-live programming due to                  65 If a waiver were granted, the petitioners would
                                                to adopt them for the reasons explained                 special events during a single calendar               shift some hours of video described programming
                                                above.                                                  quarter (the Olympics, March Madness,                 to a different quarter than the one in which they
                                                                                                                                                              would otherwise be counted. As a result, there
                                                   16. We recognize, however, that some                 etc.).63 Second, a network may be airing              should be no additional burden on covered parties.
                                                networks may have a difficult time                      an unusually large number of video-                   Although description is most beneficial when it is
                                                meeting the new hour requirement in                     described reruns during a particular                  consistently available, additional description
                                                specific calendar quarters, even with the               quarter. Bearing these concerns in mind,              always provides value to consumers, both in the
                                                                                                                                                              quarter when it airs and whenever the programming
                                                additional flexibility we are providing.                we will look favorably upon waiver                    is rerun with description. 47 CFR 79.3(c)(3), (4).
                                                For example, Time Warner argues that                    requests demonstrating that:                          Finally, this potential waiver condition is
                                                TNT, an included network, carried a                        • All pre-recorded programming                     distinguishable from the NCTA proposal to permit
                                                significant amount of live programming                                                                        distributors to average their compliance across
                                                                                                        between 6 a.m. and midnight in the                    multiple quarters, both because it will be of limited
                                                in prime time in the second quarter of                  relevant calendar quarter is being                    duration and because it depends on Commission
                                                2016, and as a result just barely met the                                                                     review and approval rather than the discretion of
                                                existing 50 hour quarterly                                59 Time   Warner Reply at 4.
                                                                                                                                                              regulatees, and will consequently be easier to
                                                                                                                                                              monitor and enforce. It also is distinguishable from
                                                                                                          60 See,  e.g., NCTA Comments at 14; Time Warner     the NCTA proposal because it is unlikely to lead to
                                                   55 NCTA Comments at 15. See also Time Warner         Reply at 6. See also NCTA July 5, 2017 Ex Parte       a scenario where a network airs no or very little
                                                Reply at 5.                                             at 1 (proposing ‘‘that the Commission provide         video described programming during a quarter,
                                                   56 NAB Reply at 18.                                  additional flexibility in its rules—either through    which could happen under NCTA’s proposal. That
                                                   57 Time Warner Reply at 5.                           providing a safe harbor or an appropriately-framed    proposal would place no limits on the
                                                   58 Other proposals are less problematic but are      exemption’’).                                         circumstances in which a network could move
                                                                                                           61 Reinstatement Order, para. 46.
                                                rendered unnecessary given the approach we have                                                               video described programming to a different
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                                                                                                           62 See, e.g., Time Warner Reply at 4–5; NCTA       calendar quarter, and would not require that any
                                                adopted. For instance, NCTA proposes to create a
                                                categorical exemption if all eligible programming in    Comments at 14; NCTA September 19, 2016 Ex            video described programming at all be aired in a
                                                a quarter is described. NCTA Comments at 15. This       Parte.                                                particular quarter.
                                                does not seem likely to occur now that 18 hours a          63 See Time Warner Reply at 4. However, we note       66 The Commission will evaluate whether the

                                                day of programming are eligible to count toward the     that some live programming has been provided with     affiliated network receives MVPD coverage and
                                                description requirement, but, as discussed below, if    video description. See, e.g., NPRM, n.47 (citing      viewership sufficient to make it an adequate
                                                it does occur we will consider that circumstance        articles about NBC’s video-described production of    substitute for the network on which video
                                                when deciding whether to grant a waiver.                ‘The Wiz Live!’).                                     description is required to be provided.



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                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 153 / Thursday, August 10, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                    37351

                                                noted that when we reinstated the video                 covered networks already have                            under the current rules regarding when
                                                description rules in 2011, the time from                processes in place for creating and                      the additional hours of described
                                                their release to the full compliance date               complying with the video description                     programming may be aired. In
                                                was approximately ten months, and we                    requirements, we believe that giving                     particular, the additional 37.5 hours per
                                                asked whether we should allow a                         them a one-year period to provide an                     quarter of described programming can
                                                similar amount of time for distributors                 additional 37.5 hours of video described                 be provided at any time between 6 a.m.
                                                to come into compliance.67 We also                      programming per quarter is                               and midnight. This update to our rules
                                                noted that July 1, 2018 is the date on                  reasonable.72 We therefore will require                  will help ensure that Americans who
                                                which the updated list of included                      that the additional hours of described                   are blind or visually impaired can be
                                                nonbroadcast networks will go into                      programming be provided by the four                      connected, informed, and entertained by
                                                effect, based on the ratings period from                broadcast and five nonbroadcast                          television.
                                                October 2016 to September 2017, and                     networks covered by the rules in the                        3. Legal Basis. The authority for the
                                                we inquired whether the compliance                      calendar quarter beginning July 1, 2018.                 action taken in this rulemaking is
                                                deadline for the rules should coincide                                                                           contained in the Twenty-First Century
                                                                                                        V. Procedural Matters
                                                with this date.68 Some commenters                                                                                Communications and Video
                                                argue for compliance to be required as                  A. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis                 Accessibility Act of 2010, Public Law
                                                soon as possible,69 while others either                   1. As required by the Regulatory                       111–260, 124 Stat. 2751, and Section
                                                support a longer period to come into                    Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended                      713 of the Communications Act of 1934,
                                                compliance or were silent on the                        (RFA) 73 an Initial Regulatory Flexibility               as amended, 47 U.S.C. 613.
                                                issue.70 To provide sufficient time for                 Analysis (IRFA) was incorporated in the
                                                distributors to ensure that included                                                                             2. Summary of Significant Issues Raised
                                                                                                        NPRM in this proceeding. The                             by Public Comments in Response to the
                                                networks provide an additional 37.5                     Commission sought written public
                                                hours of described programming per                                                                               IRFA
                                                                                                        comment on the proposals in the NPRM,
                                                quarter, we will give covered entities                  including comment on the IRFA. The                          4. No comments were filed in
                                                until July 1, 2018, the date of the next                Commission received no comments on                       response to the IRFA.
                                                three-year network list update, to come                                                                             5. Pursuant to the Small Business Jobs
                                                                                                        the IRFA. This present Final Regulatory
                                                into compliance.71 Given that currently                                                                          Act of 2010, the Commission is required
                                                                                                        Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) conforms to
                                                                                                                                                                 to respond to any comments filed by the
                                                                                                        the RFA.74
                                                  67 NPRM,    para. 30.                                                                                          Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
                                                  68 Id. See AT&T Comments at 1 (stating that July      1. Need for, and Objectives of, the                      Business Administration (SBA), and to
                                                1, 2018 should be the ‘‘effective date for the          Report and Order                                         provide a detailed statement of any
                                                modified video description network and hours
                                                requirements’’ to coincide with the start of the next      2. This Report and Order, adopts the                  change made to the proposed rules as a
                                                three-year cycle for covered non-broadcast              proposal to increase the amount of                       result of those comments. The Chief
                                                networks).
                                                                                                        video described programming on each                      Counsel did not file any comments in
                                                   69 See, e.g., Zodrow Comments at 2; Grossman
                                                                                                        ‘‘included network’’ carried by a                        response to the proposed rules in this
                                                Comments at 1.
                                                   70 See, e.g., NAB Reply at 16–17 (suggesting a       covered broadcast station or                             proceeding.
                                                compliance period of two years from the effective       multichannel video programming                           3. Description and Estimate of the
                                                date of the rules); NCTA Comments at 19                 distributor (MVPD), from 50 hours per
                                                (requesting an 18-month compliance period). See
                                                                                                                                                                 Number of Small Entities to Which the
                                                also MPAA Comments at 14 (stating that ‘‘any            calendar quarter to 87.5 hours per                       Rules Will Apply
                                                significant changes in the video description rules      quarter. Covered broadcast stations and
                                                                                                                                                                    6. The RFA directs the Commission to
                                                will require additional time to implement’’). Of        MVPDs must start providing the
                                                note, the compliance timeframes cited in the                                                                     provide a description of and, where
                                                                                                        additional hours of described
                                                aforementioned comments are based on the                                                                         feasible, an estimate of the number of
                                                assumption that the Commission would adopt all of       programming on ‘‘included networks’’
                                                                                                                                                                 small entities that will be affected by the
                                                the proposals set forth in the NPRM, including the      in the calendar quarter beginning on
                                                                                                                                                                 rules adopted in the Report and Order.75
                                                proposed expansion to new networks. Because the         July 1, 2018. The Report and Order also
                                                Commission has chosen to take an incremental                                                                     The RFA generally defines the term
                                                                                                        provides more flexibility than exists
                                                approach, and this Order adopts only one of those                                                                ‘‘small entity’’ as having the same
                                                proposals—an increased hours requirement for                                                                     meaning as the terms ‘‘small business,’’
                                                currently covered broadcast stations and MVPDs—         an expectation in consumers that they can rely on
                                                we do not agree that an extended compliance             that network for increased video described               small organization,’’ and ‘‘small
                                                period of 18 months to two years is necessary.          programming, only to have such requirement last          government jurisdiction.’’ 76 In addition,
                                                   71 Some commenters suggest a shorter compliance      for a few short months. For these reasons, we            the term ‘‘small business’’ has the same
                                                                                                        believe that it is reasonable to align the compliance
                                                deadline of less than one year. See, e.g., Dicapta
                                                                                                        deadline with the network update so that only those
                                                                                                                                                                 meaning as the term ‘‘small business
                                                Comments at 5 (arguing for the hours increase to go                                                              concern’’ under the Small Business
                                                into effect within one month for currently included     networks responsible for compliance as of July 1,
                                                networks). In addition, as we noted in the NPRM,        2018 are required to provide the additional hours        Act.77 A small business concern is one
                                                the reinstated rules gave newly covered networks        of video description, though we encourage any            which: (1) Is independently owned and
                                                                                                        network that falls off the list to continue to provide
                                                less than one year (approximately ten months) to
                                                                                                        video description.
                                                                                                                                                                 operated; (2) is not dominant in its field
                                                begin the process of providing video description                                                                 of operation; and (3) satisfies any
                                                                                                          72 Because a given hour of described
                                                and to fully comply with the Commission’s new
                                                requirements. See NPRM, para. 30. However, we           programming can be counted twice toward the
                                                believe that it is better for the compliance deadline   requirements of the rules (once when initially aired,      75 Id. sec. 603(a)(3).
                                                to coincide with the next three-year update of the      and once when rerun), the total number of new              76 Id. sec. 601(6).
                                                list of covered nonbroadcast networks than to have      hours of described programming per year needed to          77 Id. sec. 601(3) (incorporating by reference the

                                                a shorter time frame. In particular, any of the         comply with the expanded video description               definition of ‘‘small business concern’’ in 15 U.S.C.
                                                currently covered nonbroadcast networks may fall        requirement is actually 75.                              632). Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 601(3), the statutory
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                                                                                                          73 See 5 U.S.C. 603. The RFA, see 5 U.S.C. 601–
                                                out of the top-five based on network ratings and, if                                                             definition of a small business applies ‘‘unless an
                                                so, will no longer be subject to the requirement to     612, has been amended by the Small Business              agency, after consultation with the Office of
                                                provide video description as of July 1, 2018. Under     Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996              Advocacy of the Small Business Administration
                                                such circumstances, a covered nonbroadcast              (SBREFA), Public Law 104–121, Title II, 110 Stat.        and after opportunity for public comment,
                                                network would have to take steps to increase its        847 (1996). The SBREFA was enacted as Title II of        establishes one or more definitions of such term
                                                video described hours, only to find itself a few        the Contract With America Advancement Act of             which are appropriate to the activities of the agency
                                                months later not to be subject to the video             1996 (CWAAA).                                            and publishes such definition(s) in the Federal
                                                description requirement at all. This may also create      74 See 5 U.S.C. 604.                                   Register.’’ 5 U.S.C. 601(3).



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                                                37352            Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 153 / Thursday, August 10, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                                additional criteria established by the                  in its field of operation. Accordingly,               Economic Census indicates that 367
                                                SBA.                                                    the estimate of small businesses to                   firms were operational for that entire
                                                   7. Television Broadcasting. This                     which rules may apply does not exclude                year. Of this total, 357 operated with
                                                Economic Census category ‘‘comprises                    any television station from the                       less than 1,000 employees. Accordingly
                                                establishments primarily engaged in                     definition of a small business on this                we conclude that a substantial majority
                                                broadcasting images together with                       basis and is therefore possibly over-                 of firms in this industry are small under
                                                sound.’’ These establishments operate                   inclusive.                                            the applicable SBA size standard.
                                                television broadcast studios and                           10. There are also 1,965 LPTV                         13. Cable Companies and Systems
                                                facilities for the programming and                      stations, 417 Class A stations, and 3,778             (Rate Regulation). The Commission has
                                                transmission of programs to the public.                 TV translator stations. Given the nature              developed its own small business size
                                                These establishments also produce or                    of these services, we will presume that               standards for the purpose of cable rate
                                                transmit visual programming to                          all of these entities qualify as small                regulation. Under the Commission’s
                                                affiliated broadcast television stations,               entities under the above SBA small                    rules, a ‘‘small cable company’’ is one
                                                which in turn broadcast the programs to                 business size standard.                               serving 400,000 or fewer subscribers
                                                the public on a predetermined schedule.                    11. Wired Telecommunications                       nationwide. Industry data indicate that
                                                Programming may originate in their own                  Carriers. The U.S. Census Bureau                      there are currently 4,600 active cable
                                                studio, from an affiliated network, or                  defines this industry as ‘‘establishments             systems in the United States. Of this
                                                from external sources. The SBA has                      primarily engaged in operating and/or                 total, all but eleven cable operators
                                                created the following small business                    providing access to transmission                      nationwide are small under the 400,000-
                                                size standard for such businesses: Those                facilities and infrastructure that they               subscriber size standard. In addition,
                                                having $38.5 million or less in annual                  own and/or lease for the transmission of              under the Commission’s rate regulation
                                                receipts. The 2012 Economic Census                      voice, data, text, sound, and video using             rules, a ‘‘small system’’ is a cable system
                                                reports that 751 firms in this category                 wired communications networks.                        serving 15,000 or fewer subscribers.
                                                operated in that year. Of that number,                  Transmission facilities may be based on               Current Commission records show 4,600
                                                656 had annual receipts of $25,000,000                  a single technology or a combination of               cable systems nationwide. Of this total,
                                                or less, 25 had annual receipts between                 technologies. Establishments in this                  3,900 cable systems have fewer than
                                                $25,000,000 and $49,999,999, and 70                     industry use the wired                                15,000 subscribers, and 700 systems
                                                had annual receipts of $50,000,000 or                   telecommunications network facilities                 have 15,000 or more subscribers, based
                                                more. Based on this data we therefore                   that they operate to provide a variety of             on the same records. Thus, under this
                                                estimate that the majority of commercial                services, such as wired telephony                     standard as well, we estimate that most
                                                television broadcasters are small entities              services, including VoIP services, wired              cable systems are small entities.
                                                under the applicable SBA size standard.                 (cable) audio and video programming                      14. Cable System Operators (Telecom
                                                   8. The Commission has estimated the                  distribution, and wired broadband                     Act Standard). The Communications
                                                number of licensed commercial                           internet services. By exception,                      Act of 1934, as amended, also contains
                                                television stations to be 1,384. Of this                establishments providing satellite                    a size standard for small cable system
                                                total, 1,264 stations (or about 91                      television distribution services using                operators, which is ‘‘a cable operator
                                                percent) had revenues of $38.5 million                  facilities and infrastructure that they               that, directly or through an affiliate,
                                                or less, according to Commission staff                  operate are included in this industry.’’              serves in the aggregate fewer than 1
                                                review of the BIA Kelsey Inc. Media                     The SBA has developed a small                         percent of all subscribers in the United
                                                Access Pro Television Database (BIA) on                 business size standard for Wired                      States and is not affiliated with any
                                                February 24, 2017, and therefore these                  Telecommunications Carriers, which                    entity or entities whose gross annual
                                                licensees qualify as small entities under               consists of all such companies having                 revenues in the aggregate exceed
                                                the SBA definition. In addition, the                    1,500 or fewer employees. Census data                 $250,000,000.’’ There are approximately
                                                Commission has estimated the number                     for 2012 show that there were 3,117                   52,403,705 cable video subscribers in
                                                of licensed noncommercial educational                   firms that operated that year. Of this                the United States today. Accordingly, an
                                                (NCE) television stations to be 394.                    total, 3,083 operated with fewer than                 operator serving fewer than 524,037
                                                Notwithstanding, the Commission does                    1,000 employees. Thus, under this size                subscribers shall be deemed a small
                                                not compile and otherwise does not                      standard, the majority of firms in this               operator if its annual revenues, when
                                                have access to information on the                       industry can be considered small.                     combined with the total annual
                                                revenue of NCE stations that would                         12. Cable and Other Subscription                   revenues of all its affiliates, do not
                                                permit it to determine how many such                    Programming. This industry comprises                  exceed $250 million in the aggregate.
                                                stations would qualify as small entities.               establishments primarily engaged in                   Based on available data, we find that all
                                                   9. We note, however, that in assessing               operating studios and facilities for the              but nine incumbent cable operators are
                                                whether a business concern qualifies as                 broadcasting of programs on a                         small entities under this size standard.
                                                ‘‘small’’ under the above definition,                   subscription or fee basis. The broadcast              We note that the Commission neither
                                                business (control) affiliations must be                 programming is typically narrowcast in                requests nor collects information on
                                                included. Our estimate, therefore likely                nature (e.g., limited format, such as                 whether cable system operators are
                                                overstates the number of small entities                 news, sports, education, or youth-                    affiliated with entities whose gross
                                                that might be affected by our action,                   oriented). These establishments produce               annual revenues exceed $250 million.
                                                because the revenue figure on which it                  programming in their own facilities or                Although it seems certain that some of
                                                is based does not include or aggregate                  acquire programming from external                     these cable system operators are
                                                revenues from affiliated companies. In                  sources. The programming material is                  affiliated with entities whose gross
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                                                addition, another element of the                        usually delivered to a third party, such              annual revenues exceed $250,000,000,
                                                definition of ‘‘small business’’ requires               as cable systems or direct-to-home                    we are unable at this time to estimate
                                                that an entity not be dominant in its                   satellite systems, for transmission to                with greater precision the number of
                                                field of operation. We are unable at this               viewers. The SBA has established a size               cable system operators that would
                                                time to define or quantify the criteria                 standard for this industry stating that a             qualify as small cable operators under
                                                that would establish whether a specific                 business in this industry is small if it              the definition in the Communications
                                                television broadcast station is dominant                has 1,500 or fewer employees. The 2012                Act.


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                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 153 / Thursday, August 10, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                  37353

                                                   15. Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS)                    19. Other Compliance Requirements.                   small entities. In formulating the final
                                                Service. DBS Service is a nationally                    The Report and Order does adopt other                   rules, however, the Commission has
                                                distributed subscription service that                   compliance requirements. Specifically,                  considered methods to minimize the
                                                delivers video and audio programming                    the new rules require each covered                      economic impact on small entities. In
                                                via satellite to a small parabolic dish                 broadcast station and MVPD, on each                     particular, the Report and Order
                                                antenna at the subscriber’s location.                   stream or channel on which it carries an                provides more flexibility than exists
                                                DBS is now included in SBA’s                            ‘‘included network,’’ to provide 87.5                   under the current rules regarding when
                                                economic census category ‘‘Wired                        hours of described programming, per                     the additional hours of described
                                                Telecommunications Carriers.’’ The                      quarter. Covered broadcast stations and                 programming may be aired to reduce
                                                Wired Telecommunications Carriers                       MVPDs must start providing the                          any potential burden that covered
                                                industry comprises establishments                       additional hours of described                           entities may encounter in scheduling
                                                primarily engaged in operating and/or                   programming on ‘‘included networks’’                    video described programming. The new
                                                providing access to transmission                        in the calendar quarter beginning on                    rule allows covered broadcast stations
                                                facilities and infrastructure that they                 July 1, 2018. Currently, the                            and MVPDs to provide the additional
                                                own and/or lease for the transmission of                Commission’s video description rules                    37.5 hours per quarter of described
                                                voice, data, text, sound, and video using               require commercial television broadcast                 programming at any time between 6
                                                wired telecommunications networks.                      stations that are affiliated with ABC,                  a.m. and midnight. The Report and
                                                Transmission facilities may be based on                 CBS, Fox, or NBC and are located in the                 Order also emphasizes that waiver
                                                a single technology or combination of                   top 60 television markets to provide 50                 requests may be filed if our
                                                technologies. Establishments in this                    hours per calendar quarter of video                     requirements are infeasible or prove to
                                                industry use the wired                                  described prime time or children’s                      be unduly burdensome under particular
                                                telecommunications network facilities                   programming. In addition, MVPD                          circumstances. This process will allow
                                                that they operate to provide a variety of               systems that serve 50,000 or more                       the Commission to address the impact
                                                services, such as wired telephony                       subscribers must provide 50 hours of                    of the rules on individual entities,
                                                services, including VoIP services, wired                video description per calendar quarter                  including smaller entities, on a case-by-
                                                (cable) audio and video programming                     during prime time or children’s                         case basis and to modify the application
                                                distribution; and wired broadband                       programming on each of the top five                     of the rules to accommodate individual
                                                internet services. By exception,                        national nonbroadcast networks that                     circumstances, which can reduce the
                                                establishments providing satellite                      they carry on those systems. We do not                  costs of compliance for these entities.
                                                television distribution services using                  believe that this compliance                              22. Overall, we believe we have
                                                facilities and infrastructure that they                 requirement will disproportionately                     appropriately considered both the
                                                operate are included in this industry.                  affect small entities, but we have                      interests of individuals with disabilities
                                                The SBA determines that a wireline                      described ways in which the                             and the interests of the entities who will
                                                business is small if it has fewer than                  Commission’s rules will minimize the                    be subject to the rules, including those
                                                1500 employees. Census data for 2012                    impact on such entities (see discussion                 that are smaller entities, consistent with
                                                indicate that 3,117 wireline companies                  below).                                                 Congress’ goal to ‘‘update the
                                                were operational during that year. Of                                                                           communications laws to help ensure
                                                                                                        5. Steps Taken To Minimize Significant                  that individuals with disabilities are
                                                that number, 3,083 operated with fewer
                                                                                                        Economic Impact on Small Entities, and                  able to fully utilize communications
                                                than 1,000 employees. Based on that
                                                                                                        Significant Alternatives Considered                     services and equipment and better
                                                data, we conclude that the majority of
                                                wireline firms are small under the                         20. The RFA requires an agency to                    access video programming.’’ 79
                                                applicable standard. However, currently                 describe any significant alternatives that
                                                                                                        it has considered in reaching its                       6. Report to Congress
                                                only two entities provide DBS service,
                                                which requires a great deal of capital for              proposed approach, which may include                       23. The Commission will send a copy
                                                operation: DIRECTV (owned by AT&T)                      the following four alternatives (among                  of the Report and Order, including this
                                                and DISH Network. DIRECTV and DISH                      others): (1) The establishment of                       FRFA, in a report to be sent to Congress
                                                Network each report annual revenues                     differing compliance or reporting                       pursuant to the Congressional Review
                                                that are in excess of the threshold for a               requirements or timetables that take into               Act.80 In addition, the Commission will
                                                small business. Accordingly, we must                    account the resources available to small                send a copy of the Report and Order,
                                                conclude that internally developed FCC                  entities; (2) the clarification,                        including this FRFA, to the Chief
                                                data are persuasive that in general DBS                 consolidation, or simplification of                     Counsel for Advocacy of the SBA. The
                                                service is provided only by large firms.                compliance or reporting requirements                    Report and Order and FRFA (or
                                                                                                        under the rule for small entities; (3) the              summaries thereof) will also be
                                                4. Description of Projected Reporting,                  use of performance, rather than design,                 published in the Federal Register.81
                                                Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance                     standards; and (4) an exemption from
                                                Requirements for Small Entities                                                                                 B. Final Paperwork Reduction Act of
                                                                                                        coverage of the rule, or any part thereof,              1995 Analysis
                                                   16. In this section, we describe the                 for small entities.78
                                                reporting, recordkeeping, and other                        21. The obligation to provide 87.5                     24. This Report and Order does not
                                                compliance requirements adopted in the                  hours of video described programming                    contain information collections subject
                                                Report and Order and consider whether                   per quarter applies to commercial                       to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
                                                small entities are affected                             television broadcast stations that are                  (PRA), Public Law 104–13. In addition,
                                                disproportionately by these                             affiliated with ABC, CBS, Fox, or NBC                   pursuant to the Small Business
                                                                                                                                                                Paperwork Relief Act of 2002, Public
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                                                requirements.                                           and are located in the top 60 television
                                                   17. Reporting Requirements. The                      markets, as well as MVPD systems that                   Law 107–198, see 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(4),
                                                Report and Order does not adopt                         serve 50,000 or more subscribers. Thus,                    79 H.R. Rep. No. 111–563, 111th Cong., 2d Sess.
                                                reporting requirements.                                 the rules adopted in this Report and                    at 19 (2010); S. Rep. No. 111–386, 111th Cong., 2d
                                                   18. Recordkeeping Requirements. The                  Order may have an economic impact on                    Sess. at 1 (2010).
                                                Report and Order does not adopt                                                                                    80 See 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).

                                                recordkeeping requirements.                               78 5   U.S.C. 603(c)(1)–(c)(4).                          81 See id. sec. 604(b).




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                                                37354            Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 153 / Thursday, August 10, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                                the Commission previously sought                           (b) * * *                                          aired on its primary broadcasting stream
                                                specific comment on how we might                           (1) Beginning July 1, 2015,                        towards its quarterly requirement. A
                                                ‘‘further reduce the information                        commercial television broadcast stations              broadcaster carrying one of the top four
                                                collection burden for small business                    that are affiliated with one of the top               commercial television broadcast
                                                concerns with fewer than 25                             four commercial television broadcast                  networks on a secondary stream may
                                                employees.’’                                            networks (ABC, CBS, Fox, and NBC),                    count programs aired on that stream
                                                                                                        and that are licensed to a community                  toward its quarterly requirement for that
                                                VI. Ordering Clauses
                                                                                                        located in the top 60 DMAs, as                        network only.
                                                   1. It is ordered that, pursuant to the               determined by The Nielsen Company as                  *     *     *    *     *
                                                Twenty-First Century Communications                     of January 1, 2015, must provide 50                     (4) Once an MVPD as defined under
                                                and Video Accessibility Act of 2010,                    hours of video description per calendar               paragraph (b)(4) of this section:
                                                Public Law 111–260, 124 Stat. 2751, and                 quarter, either during prime time or on
                                                the authority contained in Section 713                                                                        *     *     *    *     *
                                                                                                        children’s programming, and, beginning
                                                of the Communications Act of 1934, as                   July 1, 2018, 37.5 additional hours of                [FR Doc. 2017–15526 Filed 8–9–17; 8:45 am]
                                                amended, 47 U.S.C. 613, this Report and                 video description per calendar quarter                BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
                                                Order is hereby adopted.                                between 6 a.m. and 11:59 p.m. local
                                                   2. It is further ordered that part 79 of             time, on each programming stream on
                                                the Commission’s rules, 47 CFR part 79,                 which they carry one of the top four                  FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
                                                is amended as set forth herein, and such                commercial television broadcast                       COMMISSIONS
                                                rule amendments shall be effective                      networks. If a station in one of these
                                                September 11, 2017.                                                                                           47 CFR Parts 73 and 74
                                                                                                        markets becomes affiliated with one of
                                                   3. It is further ordered that the                    these networks after July 1, 2015, it
                                                Commission’s Consumer and                               must begin compliance with these                      [MB Docket Nos. 03–185, 15–137; GN
                                                Governmental Affairs Bureau, Reference                                                                        Docket No. 12–268; FCC 17–29]
                                                                                                        requirements no later than three months
                                                Information Center, shall send a copy of                after the affiliation agreement is
                                                this Report and Order, including the                                                                          Channel Sharing Rules
                                                                                                        finalized;
                                                Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, to                                                                     AGENCY:   Federal Communications
                                                                                                        *      *     *     *     *
                                                the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the                                                                         Commission.
                                                                                                           (4) Multichannel video programming
                                                Small Business Administration.                                                                                ACTION: Final rule; announcement of
                                                                                                        distributor (MVPD) systems that serve
                                                   4. It is further ordered that the
                                                                                                        50,000 or more subscribers must                       effective date.
                                                Commission shall send a copy of this
                                                                                                        provide 50 hours of video description
                                                Report and Order in a report to be sent                                                                       SUMMARY:   In this document, the Federal
                                                                                                        per calendar quarter during prime time
                                                to Congress and the Government                                                                                Communications Commission
                                                                                                        or children’s programming, and,
                                                Accountability Office pursuant to the                                                                         (Commission) announces that the Office
                                                                                                        beginning July 1, 2018, 37.5 additional
                                                Congressional Review Act, see 5 U.S.C.                                                                        of Management and Budget (OMB) has
                                                                                                        hours of video description per calendar
                                                801(a)(1)(A).                                                                                                 approved, for a period of three years, the
                                                                                                        quarter between 6 a.m. and 11:59 p.m.
                                                List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 79                      local time, on each channel on which                  information collections associated with
                                                                                                        they carry one of the top five national               the Commission’s decision, in Report
                                                   Cable television operators,                                                                                and Order, Channel Sharing by Full
                                                Multichannel video programming                          nonbroadcast networks, as defined by
                                                                                                        an average of the national audience                   Power and Class A Stations Outside of
                                                distributors (MVPDs), Satellite                                                                               the Broadcast Television Spectrum
                                                television service providers.                           share during prime time of
                                                                                                        nonbroadcast networks that reach 50                   Incentive Auction Context. Specifically,
                                                Federal Communications Commission.                                                                            OMB has approved the Commission’s
                                                                                                        percent or more of MVPD households
                                                Marlene H. Dortch,                                      and have at least 50 hours per quarter                rules that require that sharing stations:
                                                Secretary.                                              of prime time programming that is not                 file applications for construction permit
                                                                                                        live or near-live or otherwise exempt                 and license to implement their channel
                                                Final Rules
                                                                                                        under these rules. Initially, the top five            sharing arrangement (CSA); that they
                                                  For the reasons discussed in the                                                                            include a copy of their CSA with their
                                                                                                        networks are those determined by The
                                                preamble, the Federal Communications                                                                          construction permit application; and
                                                                                                        Nielsen Company, for the time period
                                                Commission amends 47 CFR part 79 as                                                                           that they provide notice of their CSA to
                                                                                                        October 2009–September 2010, and will
                                                follows:                                                                                                      multichannel video programming
                                                                                                        update at three year intervals. The first
                                                                                                        update will be July 1, 2015, based on the             distributors (MVPDs). OMB also
                                                PART 79—ACCESSIBILITY OF VIDEO                                                                                approved changes to the Commission’s
                                                PROGRAMMING                                             ratings for the time period October
                                                                                                        2013–September 2014; the second will                  Form 2100 Schedules A, B, C, D, E and
                                                ■ 1. The authority citation for part 79                 be July 1, 2018, based on the ratings for             F to implement these changes. This
                                                continues to read as follows:                           the time period October 2016–                         document is consistent with the Report
                                                                                                        September 2017; and so on; and                        and Order, which stated that the
                                                  Authority: 47 U.S.C. 151, 152(a), 154(i),
                                                                                                                                                              Commission would publish a document
                                                303, 307, 309, 310, 330, 544a, 613, 617.                *      *     *     *     *
                                                                                                           (c) * * *                                          in the Federal Register announcing
                                                ■ 2. Amend § 79.3 by revising paragraph                                                                       OMB approval and the effective date of
                                                (b)(1), removing and reserving                             (2) In order to meet its quarterly
                                                                                                        requirement, a broadcaster or MVPD                    these rule changes.
                                                paragraph (b)(2), and revising
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                                                                                                        may count each program it airs with                   DATES: The final rules regarding 47 CFR
                                                paragraphs (b)(4), (c)(2), and (c)(4)                                                                         73.3800, 73.6028, 74.799 and FCC Form
                                                introductory text.                                      video description no more than a total
                                                                                                        of two times on each channel on which                 2100, Schedules A, B, C, D, E and F
                                                  The revisions read as follows:
                                                                                                        it airs the program. A broadcaster or                 published at 82 FR 18240 on April 18,
                                                § 79.3 Video description of video                       MVPD may count the second airing in                   2017, are effective August 10, 2017.
                                                programming.                                            the same or any one subsequent quarter.               FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
                                                *      *     *       *      *                           A broadcaster may only count programs                 additional information contact Cathy


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Document Created: 2017-08-10 01:01:40
Document Modified: 2017-08-10 01:01:40
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionRules and Regulations
ActionFinal rule.
DatesEffective September 11, 2017.
ContactMaria Mullarkey, [email protected], or Lyle Elder, [email protected], of the Media Bureau, Policy Division, (202) 418-2120. For additional information concerning the Paperwork Reduction Act information collection requirements contained in this document, contact Cathy Williams at (202) 418-2918 or send an email to [email protected]
FR Citation82 FR 37345 
CFR AssociatedCable Television Operators; Multichannel Video Programming Distributors (mvpds) and Satellite Television Service Providers

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