82_FR_44505 82 FR 44322 - Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2017

82 FR 44322 - Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2017

FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION

Federal Register Volume 82, Issue 183 (September 22, 2017)

Page Range44322-44346
FR Document2017-19386

In this document, the Commission revises its Schedule of Regulatory Fees to recover an amount of $356,710,992 that Congress has required the Commission to collect for fiscal year 2017. Section 9 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, provides for the annual assessment and collection of regulatory fees under sections 9(b)(2) and 9(b)(3), respectively, for annual ``Mandatory Adjustments'' and ``Permitted Amendments'' to the Schedule of Regulatory Fees.

Federal Register, Volume 82 Issue 183 (Friday, September 22, 2017)
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 183 (Friday, September 22, 2017)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 44322-44346]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2017-19386]


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FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION

47 CFR Part 1

[MD Docket No. 17-134; FCC 17-111]


Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2017

AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.

ACTION: Final rule.

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SUMMARY: In this document, the Commission revises its Schedule of 
Regulatory Fees to recover an amount of $356,710,992 that Congress has 
required the Commission to collect for fiscal year 2017. Section 9 of 
the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, provides for the annual 
assessment and collection of regulatory fees under sections 9(b)(2) and 
9(b)(3), respectively, for annual ``Mandatory Adjustments'' and 
``Permitted Amendments'' to the Schedule of Regulatory Fees.

DATES: Effective September 22, 2017. To avoid penalties and interest, 
regulatory fees should be paid by the due date of September 26, 2017.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Roland Helvajian, Office of Managing 
Director at (202) 418-0444.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Commission's Report 
and Order, FCC 17-111, MD Docket No. 17-134, adopted on September 1, 
2017 and released on September 5, 2017. The full text of this document 
is available for public inspection and copying during normal business 
hours in the FCC Reference Center (Room CY-A257), 445 12th Street SW., 
Washington, DC 20554, or by downloading the text from the Commission's 
Web site at http://transition.fcc.gov/Daily_Releases/Daily_Business/2017/db0906/FCC-17-111A1.pdf.

I. Administrative Matters

A. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis

    1. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (RFA),\1\ 
the Commission has prepared a Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis 
(FRFA) relating to this Report and Order. The FRFA is located towards 
the end of this document.
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    \1\ 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).
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B. Final Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 Analysis

    2. This document does not contain new or modified information 
collection requirements subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 
(PRA), Public Law 104-13. In addition, therefore, it does not contain 
any new or modified information collection burden for small business 
concerns with fewer than 25 employees, pursuant to the Small Business 
Paperwork Relief Act of 2002, Public Law 107-198, see 44 U.S.C. 
3506(c)(4).

C. Congressional Review Act.

    3. The Commission will send a copy of the Report and Order to 
Congress and the Government Accountability Office pursuant to the 
Congressional Review Act, 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).

II. Introduction

    4. The Report and Order adopts a schedule of regulatory fees to 
assess and collect $356,710,992 in regulatory fees for fiscal year (FY) 
2017, pursuant to section 9 of the Communications Act of 1934, as 
amended (Communications Act or Act) and the Commission's FY 2017 
Appropriation.\2\ The schedule of regulatory fees for FY 2017 adopted 
here is listed in Table 4. These regulatory fees are due in September 
2017. The FY 2017 regulatory fees are based on the proposals in the FY 
2017 NPRM,\3\ considered in light of the comments received and 
Commission analysis.
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    \2\ 47 U.S.C. 159. Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2017, 
Division E--Financial Services and General Government Appropriations 
Act, 2017, Title V--Independent Agencies, Public Law 115-31 (May 5, 
2017), available at https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/244/text.
    \3\ Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 
2017, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 32 FCC Rcd 4526 (FY 2017 NPRM); 
82 FR 26019, June 6, 2017.
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III. Background

    5. Congress adopted a regulatory fee schedule in 1993 \4\ and 
authorized the

[[Page 44323]]

Commission to assess and collect annual regulatory fees pursuant to the 
schedule, as amended by the Commission.\5\ The Commission annually 
reviews the regulatory fee schedule, proposes changes to the schedule 
to reflect changes in the amount of its appropriation, and proposes 
increases or decreases to the schedule of regulatory fees.\6\ The 
Commission makes changes to the regulatory fee schedule ``if the 
Commission determines that the schedule requires amendment to comply 
with the requirements'' \7\ of section 9(b)(1)(A) of the Act.\8\ The 
Commission may also add, delete, or reclassify services in the fee 
schedule to reflect additions, deletions, or changes in the nature of 
its services ``as a consequence of Commission rulemaking proceedings or 
changes in law.'' Regulatory fees must also cover the costs the 
Commission incurs in regulating entities that are statutorily exempt 
from paying regulatory fees,\9\ entities whose regulatory fees are 
waived,\10\ and entities that provide nonregulated services. Thus, for 
each fiscal year, the Commission proposes a fee schedule in the annual 
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking that reflects changes in the amount 
appropriated for the performance of the Commission's regulatory 
activities, changes in the industries represented by the regulatory fee 
payors, changes in FTE \11\ levels, and any other issues of relevance 
to the proposed fee schedule.\12\ After reviewing the comments, the 
Commission issues a Report and Order adopting the fee schedule for the 
fiscal year and sets out the procedures for payment of fees.
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    \4\ 47 U.S.C. 159(g) (showing original fee schedule prior to 
Commission amendment).
    \5\ 47 U.S.C. 159.
    \6\ 47 U.S.C. 159(b)(1)(B).
    \7\ 47 U.S.C. 159(b)(2).
    \8\ 47 U.S.C. 159(b)(1)(A).
    \9\ Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 
2004, Report and Order, 19 FCC Rcd 11662, 11666, para 11 (FY 2004 
Report and Order); 69 FR 41028, July 7, 2004. For example, 
governmental and nonprofit entities are exempt from regulatory fees 
under section 9(h) of the Act. 47 U.S.C. 159(h); 47 CFR 1.1162.
    \10\ 47 CFR 1.1166.
    \11\ One FTE, a ``Full Time Equivalent'' or ``Full Time 
Employee,'' is a unit of measure equal to the work performed 
annually by a full-time person (working a 40 hour workweek for a 
full year) assigned to the particular job, and subject to agency 
personnel staffing limitations established by the U.S. Office of 
Management and Budget.
    \12\ Section 9(b)(2) discusses mandatory amendments to the fee 
schedule and Section 9(b)(3) discusses permissive amendments to the 
fee schedule. Both mandatory and permissive amendments are not 
subject to judicial review. 47 U.S.C. 159(b)(2) and (3).
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    6. The Commission calculates the fees by first determining the 
number of FTEs performing the regulatory activities specified in 
section 9(a), ``adjusted to take into account factors that are 
reasonably related to the benefits provided to the payor of the fee by 
the Commission's activities . . . .'' \13\ FTEs are categorized as 
``direct'' if they are performing regulatory activities in one of the 
``core'' bureaus, i.e., the Wireless Telecommunications Bureau, Media 
Bureau, Wireline Competition Bureau, and part of the International 
Bureau. All other FTEs are considered ``indirect.'' \14\ The total FTEs 
for each fee category is calculated by counting the number of direct 
FTEs in the core bureau that regulates that category, plus a 
proportional allocation of indirect FTEs. Next, the Commission 
allocates the total amount to be collected among the various regulatory 
fee categories. This allocation is based on the number of FTEs assigned 
to work in each regulatory fee category. Each regulatee within a fee 
category pays its proportionate share based on an objective measure, 
e.g., revenues, number of subscribers, or licenses.\15\
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    \13\ 47 U.S.C. 159(b)(1)(A). When section 9 was adopted, the 
total FTEs were to be calculated based on the number of FTEs in the 
Private Radio Bureau, Mass Media Bureau, and Common Carrier Bureau. 
(The names of these bureaus were subsequently changed.) Satellites, 
earth stations, and international bearer circuits were regulated 
through the Common Carrier Bureau before the International Bureau 
was created.
    \14\ As of September 2016, for regulatory fee purposes, 
excluding auctions-funded FTEs, the direct FTEs are Wireline Bureau 
(167); Media Bureau (141); Wireless Bureau (92); and International 
Bureau (24), for a total of 424 direct FTEs. The indirect FTEs, for 
regulatory fee purposes, non-auctions-funded, are from the 
International Bureau (81), Enforcement Bureau (237), Consumer & 
Governmental Affairs Bureau (148), Public Safety & Homeland Security 
Bureau (101), Chairman and Commissioners' offices (21), Office of 
the Managing Director (159), Office of General Counsel (77), Office 
of the Inspector General (43), Office of Communications Business 
Opportunities (9), Office of Engineering and Technology (78), Office 
of Legislative Affairs (11), Office of Strategic Planning and Policy 
Analysis (19), Office of Workplace Diversity (3), Office of Media 
Relations (16), and Office of Administrative Law Judges (4), 
totaling 1,007 indirect FTEs. The total direct and indirect FTEs 
number 1,431.
    \15\ See Procedures for Assessment and Collection of Regulatory 
Fees, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 27 FCC Rcd 8458, 8461-62, 
paras. 8-11 (2012) (FY 2012 NPRM); 77 FR 49749, 49752-54, August 17, 
2012.
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    7. As part of its annual review, the Commission seeks to improve 
its regulatory fee analysis.\16\ For example, in the FY 2013 Report and 
Order, the Commission updated FTE allocations to more accurately 
reflect the number of FTEs working on regulation and oversight of the 
regulatees in the various fee categories; \17\ reallocated some FTEs 
from the International Bureau as indirect; \18\ combined the UHF and 
VHF television stations into one regulatory fee category; \19\ and 
added Internet Protocol Television (IPTV) to the cable television fee 
category.\20\ In the FY 2014 Report and Order, the Commission adopted a 
new fee subcategory for toll free numbers in the Interstate 
Telecommunications Service Provider (ITSP) \21\ fee category; \22\ 
increased the de minimis threshold to $500 for annual regulatory fee 
payors; \23\ and eliminated several categories from the regulatory fee 
schedule.\24\ In the FY 2015 Report and Order, the Commission reduced 
the regulatory fee for submarine cable, terrestrial, and satellite 
international bearer circuits.\25\ The Commission also adopted a 
regulatory fee for DBS, as a subcategory of the cable television and 
IPTV fee category,\26\ and for toll-free numbers \27\ and reallocated 
four International Bureau FTEs from direct to indirect.\28\ In the FY 
2016 Report and Order, the Commission adjusted regulatory fees for 
radio and television

[[Page 44324]]

broadcasters, based on the type and class of service and on the 
population served; \29\ adopted an increase in the regulatory fee for 
DBS providers within the cable television and IPTV regulatory fee 
category; \30\ and adopted an across the board fee increase for the 
Commission's moving expenses.\31\ In this proceeding, the Commission 
continues to improve and reform the regulatory fee process.
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    \16\ See Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal 
Year 2008, MD Docket No. 08-65, Report and Order and Further Notice 
of Proposed Rulemaking, 24 FCC Rcd 6388 (2008) (FY 2008 Further 
Notice); 73 FR 50285, August 26, 2008.
    \17\ Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal 
Year 2013, Report and Order, 28 FCC Rcd 12351, 12354-58, paras. 10-
20 (2013) (FY 2013 Report and Order); 78 FR 52433, August 23, 2013. 
The Commission now updates the FTE allocations annually. This was 
recommended in a report issued by the Government Accountability 
Office (GAO) in 2012. See GAO ``Federal Communications Commission 
Regulatory Fee Process Needs to be Updated,'' GAO-12-686 (Aug. 2012) 
(GAO Report) at 36 (available at http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-12-686).
    \18\ FY 2013 Report and Order, 28 FCC Rcd at 12355-58, paras. 
13-20; 78 FR 52433.
    \19\ Id., 28 FCC Rcd at 12361-62, paras. 29-31; 78 FR 52433.
    \20\ Id., 28 FCC Rcd at 12362-63, paras. 32-33; 78 FR 52433.
    \21\ The ITSP category includes interexchange carriers (IXCs), 
incumbent local exchange carriers, toll resellers, and other IXC 
service providers.
    \22\ Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal 
Year 2014, Report and Order and Further Notice of Proposed 
Rulemaking, 29 FCC Rcd 10767, 10777-79, paras. 25-28 (2014) (FY 2014 
Report and Order); 79 FR 54190, September 11, 2014.
    \23\ FY 2014 Report and Order, 29 FCC Rcd at 10774-76, paras. 
18-21; 79 FR 54190.
    \24\ Id., 29 FCC Rcd at 10776-77, paras. 22-24; 79 FR 54190.
    \25\ Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal 
Year 2015, Report and Order and Further Notice of Proposed 
Rulemaking, 30 FCC Rcd 10268, 10273, para. 12 (2015) (FY 2015 Report 
and Order); 80 FR 55775, September 17, 2015.
    \26\ FY 2015 Report and Order, 30 FCC Rcd at 10276-77, paras. 
19-20; 80 FR 55775.
    \27\ Id., 30 FCC Rcd at 10271-72, para. 9; 80 FR 55775.
    \28\ Id., 30 FCC Rcd at 10278, para. 24; 80 FR 55775. The 
Commission also, in the FY 2015 NPRM and Report and Order, 
eliminated two fee categories. See Assessment and Collection of 
Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2015, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 
Report and Order, and Order, 30 FCC Rcd 5354, 5361-62, paras. 19-22 
(2015) (FY 2015 NPRM and Report and Order); 80 FR 43019, July 21, 
2015.
    \29\ Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal 
Year 2016, Report and Order, 31 FCC Rcd 10339, 10350-51, paras. 31-
33 (2016) (FY 2016 Report and Order); 81 FR 65926, September 26, 
2016.
    \30\ FY 2016 Report and Order, 31 FCC Rcd at 10347-350, paras. 
25-30; 81 FR 65926.
    \31\ Id., 31 FCC Rcd at 10341, para. 7; 81 FR 65926.
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    8. In our FY 2017 NPRM, we proposed to collect $356,710,992 in 
regulatory fees and included a detailed, proposed fee schedule. We 
received 17 comments and six reply comments.\32\
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    \32\ Commenters to the FY 2017 NPRM are listed in Table 2.
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IV. Report and Order

    9. In this FY 2017 Report and Order, we adopt a regulatory fee 
schedule for FY 2017, pursuant to section 9 of the Communications Act 
and the 2017 Consolidated Appropriations Act \33\ in order to collect 
$356,710,992 in regulatory fees.\34\ Of this amount, we project 
approximately $22.17 million (6.22 percent of the total FTE allocation) 
in fees from the International Bureau regulatees; \35\ $88.69 million 
(24.86 percent of the total FTE allocation) in fees from the Wireless 
Telecommunications Bureau regulatees; \36\ $115.58 million (32.40 
percent of the total FTE allocation) from Wireline Competition Bureau 
regulatees; \37\ and $130.27 million (36.52 percent of the total FTE 
allocation) from the Media Bureau regulatees.\38\ These regulatory fees 
are due in September 2017. The schedule of regulatory fees for FY 2017 
adopted here is listed in Table 4.
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    \33\ 47 U.S.C. 159. Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2017, 
Division E--Financial Services and General Government Appropriations 
Act, 2017, Title V--Independent Agencies, Public Law 115-31 (May 5, 
2017), available at https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/244/text.
    \34\ Section 9 regulatory fees are mandated by Congress and 
collected to recover the regulatory costs associated with the 
Commission's enforcement, policy and rulemaking, user information, 
and international activities. 47 U.S.C. 159(a).
    \35\ Includes satellites, earth stations, and international 
bearer circuits (submarine cable systems and satellite and 
terrestrial bearer circuits).
    \36\ Includes Commercial Mobile Radio Service (CMRS), CMRS 
messaging, Broadband Radio Service/Local Multipoint Distribution 
Service (BRS/LMDS), and multi-year wireless licensees.
    \37\ Includes ITSP and toll free numbers.
    \38\ Includes AM radio, FM radio, television (including low 
power and Class A), TV/FM translators and boosters, cable television 
and IPTV, DBS, and Cable Television Relaty Service (CARS) licenses.
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A. Allocating FTEs for Regulatory Fee Purposes

    10. Under section 9 of the Act, regulatory fees are to ``be derived 
by determining the full-time equivalent number of employees 
performing'' these activities, ``adjusted to take into account factors 
that are reasonably related to the benefits provided to the payor of 
the fee by the Commission's activities . . . '' \39\ As a general 
matter, we reasonably expect that the work of the FTEs in the core 
bureaus should remain focused on the industry segment regulated by each 
of those bureaus. The work of the FTEs in the indirect bureaus and 
offices benefits the Commission and the telecommunications industry and 
is not specifically focused on the regulatees and licensees of a core 
bureau. Given the significant implications of reassignment of FTEs in 
our fee calculation, we make changes to FTE classifications only after 
performing considerable analysis and finding the clearest case for 
reassignment.\40\
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    \39\ 47 U.S.C. 159(b)(1)(A).
    \40\ FY 2013 Report and Order, 28 FCC Rcd at 12357, para. 19; 78 
FR 52433. The Commission observed that the International Bureau was 
a ``singular case'' because the work of those FTEs ``primarily 
benefits licensees regulated by other bureaus.'' Id., 28 FCC Rcd at 
12355, para. 14; 78 FR 52433.
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    11. In the FY 2017 NPRM, we proposed to reallocate 38 FTEs in the 
Wireline Competition Bureau associated with Universal Service Fund work 
as indirect and to reallocate four FTEs from the Wireline Competition 
Bureau that work on wireless numbering issues to the Wireless 
Telecommunications Bureau due to the changes to the Universal Service 
regulatory landscape that no longer affect only ITSPs and the fact that 
approximately half the benefit of the work done by FTEs on numbering 
issues accrue to the CMRS industry.
1. FTEs Associated With the Universal Service Fund
    12. In the FY 2017 NPRM, the Commission explained that changes to 
the Universal Service Fund regulatory landscape require us to reexamine 
the treatment of Universal Service Fund FTEs as direct FTEs. There are 
currently approximately 51 FTEs in the Wireline Competition Bureau, 
including the bureau front office, working on Universal Service Fund 
issues, with 13 of those FTEs focused on the High-Cost program. 
Currently, there are approximately three FTEs in the Wireless 
Telecommunications Bureau, including the bureau front office, 
implementing the Mobility Fund, a universal service High-Cost support 
mechanism devoted exclusively to mobile services.\41\ These Wireline 
Competition Bureau and Wireless Telecommunications Bureau FTEs are 
considered direct FTEs for regulatory fee purposes. Other FTEs 
throughout the Commission working on universal service issues are 
indirect FTEs, including the FTEs working on universal service issues 
in the Enforcement Bureau, the Office of the Managing Director, the 
Office of the Inspector General, and the Office of the General Counsel.
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    \41\ See Connect America Fund, et al., Report and Order and 
Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 26 FCC Rcd 17663 (2011); 76 
FR 78384, December 16, 2011.
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    13. In the FY 2017 NPRM, we proposed to reallocate the 38 FTEs in 
the Wireline Competition Bureau assigned to work on the non-high-cost 
programs of the Universal Service Fund as indirect for regulatory fee 
purposes, for several reasons.\42\ The 38 FTE count is based on 
coordination between the Office of Managing Director and Wireline 
Competition Bureau staff which analyzed how many FTEs work on each of 
the USF programs.\43\ In doing so, we noted that contributions to the 
Universal Service Fund are required from service providers using any 
technology that has end-user interstate telecommunications.\44\ As we 
discussed in the FY 2017 NPRM, continuing changes in the universal 
service fund regulatory landscape requires us to reexamine the 
appropriateness of treating the FTEs working on universal service 
issues as Wireline Competition Bureau direct FTEs.\45\ Initially, 
universal service programs were focused on wireline services, but now 
wireless carriers, and more recently broadband providers, are involved 
in the E-Rate,\46\

[[Page 44325]]

Lifeline,\47\ and Rural Healthcare \48\ programs.
    In addition, three of the universal service fund programs--E-Rate, 
Lifeline, and Rural Healthcare--tie funding eligibility to the 
beneficiary, i.e., a school, a library, a low-income individual or 
family, or a rural healthcare provider, and not to Commission 
regulatees.\49\ Wireless carriers now serve a substantial, if not 
majority, of Lifeline subscribers.\50\ Also, satellite operators, Wi-Fi 
network installers, and fiber builders may all receive funding through 
the E-Rate and Rural Healthcare universal service programs.\51\ 
Similarly, multichannel video programming distributors (MVPDs), who 
also provide supported services, receive universal service funding 
through participation in both the E-rate and Rural Healthcare programs 
because they provide telecommunications and Internet access services 
that are eligible for support in those programs.\52\ And given that the 
applicants in these programs are not even regulatees--instead, they are 
the schools and libraries and healthcare providers--the bulk of the 
Commission's oversight of these programs (i.e., the costs incurred that 
create a need for regulatory fees) are not generated by regulatees. 
Indeed, seven of the ten E-Rate forms that make up the bulk of the 
Commission's oversight of the program are filed by schools and 
libraries, not service providers. Similarly, seven of the nine rural 
healthcare program forms are filed by healthcare providers, not service 
providers. In other words, ITSPs are not the sole or even majority 
contributors or beneficiaries of these three programs. Reallocating 
these Wireline Competition Bureau FTEs as indirect FTEs would be more 
consistent with how FTEs working on universal service issues are 
treated elsewhere in the Commission, e.g., similar to the 10 FTEs 
working on USF matters in the Enforcement Bureau, the 5 FTEs in the 
Office of the Managing Director, the 10 FTEs in the Office of the 
Inspector General, and the 5 FTEs in the Office of the General 
Counsel.\53\
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    \42\ FY 2017 NPRM, 32 FCC Rcd at 4529-4530, para. 10; 82 FR 
26019.
    \43\ The FCC Time and Attendance system does not provide a 
breakdown of USF work by technology or bureau.
    \44\ 47 CFR 54.706(a).
    \45\ FY 2017 NPRM, 32 FCC Rcd at 4529, para. 9; 82 FR 26019.
    \46\ ``The schools and libraries universal service support 
program, commonly known as the E-rate program, helps schools and 
libraries to obtain affordable broadband . . . . Eligible schools, 
school districts and libraries may apply individually or as part of 
a consortium [for] . . . category one services to a school or 
library (telecommunications, telecommunications services and 
Internet access), and category two services that deliver Internet 
access within schools and libraries (internal connections, basic 
maintenance of internal connections, and managed internal broadband 
services).'' See FCC Web site, ``E-Rate--Schools & Libraries USF 
Program,'' available at https://www.fcc.gov/general/e-rate-schools-libraries-usf-program#block-menu-block-4 (last visited July 17, 
2017).
    \47\ ``Since 1985, the Lifeline program has provided a discount 
on phone service for qualifying low-income consumers . . . . The 
Lifeline program is available to eligible low-income consumers in 
every state, territory, commonwealth, and on Tribal lands . . . . In 
. . . 2016 . . . the Commission included broadband as a support 
service in the Lifeline program.'' See FCC Web site, ``Lifeline 
Program for Low-Income Consumers,'' available at https://www.fcc.gov/general/lifeline-program-low-income-consumers#block-menu-block-4 (last visited July 17, 2017).
    \48\ ``The Rural Health Care Program, which includes the new 
Healthcare Connect Fund, provides funding to eligible health care 
providers (HCPs) for telecommunications and broadband services 
necessary for the provision of health care. The goal of the program 
is to improve the quality of health care available to patients in 
rural communities by ensuring that eligible HCPs have access to 
telecommunications and broadband services.'' See FCC Web site, 
``Rural Health Care Program,'' available at https://www.fcc.gov/general/rural-health-care-program#block-menu-block-4 (last visited 
July 17, 2017).
    \49\ FY 2017 NPRM, 32 FCC Rcd at 4530, para. 10; 82 FR 26019.
    \50\ Id.
    \51\ Id.
    \52\ See USAC Web site, 2017 E-Rate Eligible Services List, 
available at http://www.usac.org/sl/applicants/beforeyoubegin/eligible-services-list.aspx (last visited July 28, 2017); USAC Web 
site Rural Healthcare Eligible Services, available at http://www.usac.org/rhc/telecommunications/health-care-providers/step01/eligible-services.aspx (last visited July 28, 2017). See also 
Universal Service Administrative Company Third Quarter 2017 FCC 
Filings (E-rate and Rural Healthcare), available at http://www.usac.org/about/tools/fcc/filings/2017/q3.aspx (last visited July 
28, 2017).
    \53\ Id.
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    14. ITTA and Frontier support the proposal in the FY 2017 NPRM to 
reallocate 38 Wireline Competition Bureau FTEs as indirect, and CTIA 
argues that if the Commission reclassifies any of these FTEs, they 
should be reallocated as indirect.\54\ CenturyLink also agrees with 
this proposal and observes that the concern that the reallocation would 
impose a burden on broadcasters which do not participate in the 
universal service program is misplaced ``as there is no completely pure 
way to precisely allocate every Commission FTE.'' \55\ After 
consideration of the record on this issue and for the reasons discussed 
in the FY 2017 NPRM, i.e., that ITSPs are no longer the sole 
contributors or beneficiaries of the E-Rate, Lifeline, and Rural 
Healthcare programs and allocating these Wireline Competition Bureau 
FTEs as indirect FTEs would be more consistent with how FTEs working on 
universal service issues are treated elsewhere in the Commission, we 
adopt the proposal to reallocate 38 FTEs in the Wireline Competition 
Bureau assigned to work on the non-high-cost programs of the Universal 
Service Fund as indirect. The regulatory fee rates set forth in 
Appendix C reflect this reallocation of FTEs for regulatory fee 
purposes.
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    \54\ ITTA Comments at 5; Frontier Comments at 3; CTIA Reply 
Comments at 4-5.
    \55\ CenturyLink Comments at 4.
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    15. We disagree with SIA's argument that such a reallocation of 
FTEs from direct to indirect is ``premature'' because satellite 
operators do not yet benefit from the contributions of the FTEs working 
on universal service fund issues.\56\ The FTEs working on these 
universal service issues have already devoted substantial time to 
making sure that satellite operators are eligible to participate in 
these programs, such as by becoming ETCs or being eligible for funding 
under the Rural Healthcare program or E-Rate. Permitting satellite 
operators into the USF programs uses FTE resources at the beginning of 
a satellite operators' participation. And some satellite providers have 
begun to take advantage of that eligibility in, for example, the Rural 
Healthcare program. Thus, these FTEs are both overseeing satellite 
operators and benefiting satellite operators, making reallocation 
appropriate.
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    \56\ SIA Comments at 2-3; SIA Comments at 2 (observing that no 
satellite operator has yet been designated an eligible 
telecommunications carrier, or ETC, which is required for Lifeline 
funding).
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    16. ITTA and Frontier suggest that we also reallocate to the 
Wireless Telecommunications Bureau and/or Media Bureau direct FTEs 
working on universal service high cost issues.\57\ Frontier argues that 
we should reallocate FTEs working on High-Cost Fund issues as indirect 
FTEs because all universal service programs, including the High-Cost 
Fund, ``benefit the public and all members of the Internet ecosystem, 
not specifically or uniquely wireline companies.'' \58\ CTIA opposes 
the proposal to reallocate FTEs working on High-Cost issues, and 
observes that ITTA and Frontier have failed to show a clear case for 
reclassification of the Wireline Competition Bureau FTEs.\59\ We agree 
with CTIA that the case for reallocation has not been made at this 
time.
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    \57\ ITTA Comments at 6. CenturyLink also supports allocating 
four Wireline Competition Bureau FTEs as Wireless Telecommunications 
Bureau FTEs for regulatory fee purposes because ``wireless carriers 
now serve over 90% of Lifeline subscribers.'' CenturyLink Reply 
Comments at 4.
    \58\ Frontier Comments at 3-4. CenturyLink agrees with this 
proposal. See CenturyLink Reply Comments at 3-4.
    \59\ CTIA Reply Comments at 6.
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    17. Several parties also ask that we go farther. For example, ITTA 
argues that the Wireline Competition Bureau FTEs are ``no longer 
focused exclusively on ITSPs'' \60\ and the Commission ``must make 
adjustments to ensure that its regulatory fees reflect its actual costs 
by industry sector.'' \61\ Similarly, ITTA, Frontier, and CenturyLink 
also argue that we should combine CMRS into the ITSP category.\62\ We 
do not believe the case has been made for such large changes at this 
time, because (among

[[Page 44326]]

other things) advocates of such changes have not fully accounted for 
the substantial differences in regulatory oversight between different 
groups of regulatees nor the fact that allocating regulatory fees is 
not and cannot be an exact science. On the last point, it would be nigh 
impossible to determine the precise costs attributable to FTEs and the 
precise benefits flowing from Commission regulation to any one 
regulatee, let alone a particular cross-section of regulatees or even 
an entire industry--not to mention the complications associated with 
regulatees statutorily exempt from paying regulatory fees (such as 
governmental licensees) and with beneficiaries (such as schools and 
libraries) that are not regulatees, all of whom nonetheless create 
costs that must be recovered. As such the Commission has long taken an 
incrementalist approach, requiring substantial and specific evidence 
about regulatory burdens and benefits before making changes to the 
allocation of fees. And those seeking to change our allocations even 
further have not yet made the case for doing so.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \60\ ITTA Comments at 2.
    \61\ ITTA Comments at 3 (emphasis added).
    \62\ See ITTA Comments at 10-11; Frontier Comments at 6-7; 
CenturyLink Reply Comments at 4-5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    18. After reviewing the record, we conclude that our proposal in 
the FY 2017 NPRM to reallocate 38 FTEs in the Wireline Competition 
Bureau assigned to work on the non-high cost programs of the Universal 
Service Fund as indirect for regulatory fee purposes is warranted and 
consistent with section 9 of the Act. We therefore adopt the proposal 
in the FY 2017 NPRM. The regulatory fee rates set forth in Table 4 
reflect this reallocation of FTEs.
2. FTEs Associated With Numbering Issues
    19. In the FY 2017 NPRM, we estimated that seven to eight FTEs in 
the Wireline Competition Bureau work on numbering issues.\63\ We 
proposed to reallocate for regulatory fee purposes four of these direct 
FTEs from the Wireline Competition Bureau to the Wireless 
Telecommunications Bureau ``to take into account factors that are 
reasonably related to the benefits provided to the payor of the fee by 
the Commission's activities . . . .'' \64\ Specifically, we estimated 
approximately half of the benefit of the work of these FTEs accrue to 
Wireless Telecommunications Bureau regulatees.\65\ Commenters agree 
with our proposal to reallocate four of the Wireline Competition Bureau 
FTEs that work on numbering issues to the Wireless Telecommunications 
Bureau as direct FTEs for regulatory fee purposes.\66\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \63\ FY 2017 NPRM, 32 FCC Rcd at 4530, para. 13; 82 FR 26019.
    \64\ 47 U.S.C. 159(b)(1)(A).
    \65\ See Industry Analysis and Technology Division, Wireline 
Competition Bureau, FCC, Voice Telephone Services: Status as of 
December 31, 2015, at 2 Figure 1 (2016).
    \66\ ITTA Comments at 9-10; CenturyLink Comments at 5 & Reply 
Comments at 5; Frontier Comments at 5-6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    20. After reviewing the record, we conclude that reallocating four 
FTEs in the Wireline Competition Bureau assigned to work on numbering 
issues to the Wireless Telecommunications Bureau for regulatory fee 
purposes is warranted and consistent with section 9 of the Act. 
Reallocating four direct FTEs from the Wireline Competition Bureau to 
the Wireless Telecommunications Bureau will ``take into account factors 
that are reasonably related to the benefits provided to the payor of 
the fee by the Commission's activities'' \67\ because approximately 
half of the benefit of the work of these FTEs accrue to Wireless 
Telecommunications Bureau regulatees.\68\ We therefore adopt our 
proposal to reallocate for regulatory fee purposes four direct FTEs 
from the Wireline Competition Bureau to the Wireless Telecommunications 
Bureau. The regulatory fee rates set forth in Appendix C reflect this 
reallocation of FTEs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \67\ 47 U.S.C. 159(b)(1)(A).
    \68\ See Industry Analysis and Technology Division, Wireline 
Competition Bureau, FCC, Voice Telephone Services: Status as of 
December 31, 2015, at 2 Figure 1 (2016).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

B. Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS) Regulatory Fees

    21. 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. The two DBS 
providers, AT&T \69\ and DISH Network, are MVPDs.\70\ Following the 
2012 GAO Report, in which the GAO observed that an evaluation of Media 
Bureau FTEs was long overdue,\71\ the Commission concluded that the 
Media Bureau FTEs regulate the DBS industry together with the other 
MVPDs.\72\ Subsequently, the Commission adopted a regulatory fee for 
DBS as a subcategory in the cable television and IPTV category, of 12 
cents per year per subscriber.\73\ This regulatory fee subcategory was 
based on Media Bureau FTE activity involving regulation and oversight 
of all MVPDs, which included DBS providers.\74\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \69\ AT&T and DIRECTV merged in 2015. See Applications of AT&T 
and DIRECTV for Consent to Assign or Transfer Control of Licenses 
and Authorizations, Memorandum Opinion and Order, 30 FCC Rcd 9131 
(2015).
    \70\ MVPD is defined in section 602(13) of the Act, 47 U.S.C. 
522(13). DBS subscribers were 33.2 percent of all MVPD subscribers 
at the end of 2015. See Annual Assessment of the Status of 
Competition in the Market for the Delivery of Video Programming, 
Eighteenth Report, 32 FCC Rcd 568, 575, para. 19 (2017) (Eighteenth 
Competition Report) (citing SNL Kagan, U.S. Multichannel Industry 
Benchmarks).
    \71\ GAO Report at 17-20.
    \72\ FY 2015 NPRM, 30 FCC Rcd at 5368, para. 32; 80 FR 37206.
    \73\ FY 2015 Report and Order, 30 FCC Rcd at 10276-77, paras. 
19-20; 80 FR 55775.
    \74\ FY 2015 NPRM, 30 FCC Rcd at 5367-68, para. 31; 80 FR 37206.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    22. As the Commission discussed in the FY 2015 NPRM, the DBS 
providers were established as large MVPDs by 2015 and significant Media 
Bureau FTE resources were used in regulation and oversight of all 
MVPDs, including DBS.\75\ The Commission concluded there was no 
reasonable basis to continue to exclude DBS providers from sharing in 
the cost of MVPD oversight and regulation with cable television and 
IPTV. In lieu of directly including DBS providers in the cable 
television/IPTV category at the same regulatory fee rate, the 
Commission elected to phase in the new Media Bureau-based regulatory 
fee for DBS, starting at 12 cents per subscriber, per year. Since then, 
the Commission has increased the DBS regulatory fee each year, to bring 
it closer to the per-subscriber rate paid by cable television and IPTV. 
In the FY 2016 regulatory fee proceeding, the Commission increased the 
regulatory fee for DBS providers to 24 cents, plus an across-the-board 
increase of three cents for the Commission's moving expenses, for a 
total of 27 cents per subscriber, per year.\76\ In the FY 2017 NPRM, 
the Commission noted that the Media Bureau resources focused on MVPD 
proceedings (including DBS) supported continuing to bring the DBS rate 
closer to the cable television/IPTV per subscriber rate.\77\ At that 
time, we proposed a regulatory fee rate of 36 cents per subscriber per 
year, plus two cents due to the increase in the Commission's budget for 
moving expenses, for a total of 38 cents per subscriber per year for FY 
2017.\78\ As we discuss below, we are adopting the proposed rate of 38 
cents per subscriber, per year in this Report and Order, in our effort 
to bring the DBS rate closer to the cable television/IPTV per 
subscriber rate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \75\ Id., 30 FCC Rcd at 5368, para. 32; 80 FR 37206.
    \76\ FY 2016 Report and Order, 31 FCC Rcd at 10348-49, para. 26; 
81 FR 65926.
    \77\ FY 2017 NPRM, 32 FCC Rcd at 4531-32, paras. 15-17; 82 FR 
26019.
    \78\ FY 2017 NPRM, 32 FCC Rcd at 4532, para. 17; 82 FR 26019.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    23. We agree with the commenters representing the cable television

[[Page 44327]]

industry that the Media Bureau resources utilized by the DBS providers 
are similar to those used by the cable television and IPTV 
industry,\79\ and for this reason we have been phasing in the 
regulatory fee for DBS providers each year. Commenters representing the 
cable television industry observe that despite the Commission's prior 
commitment to ensuring ``an appropriate level of regulatory parity with 
cable television and IPTV'' the proposed rate is far below the 96 cents 
proposed rate for cable television and IPTV.\80\ These commenters argue 
that there is no justification for this disparity, due to the fact that 
DBS operators impose regulatory costs and receive benefits from the 
Media Bureau that affect all MVPDs; \81\ that the proposed fees impose 
competitive and technological disparities, favoring DBS over cable 
television and IPTV; \82\ and that there is no evidence in the record 
to support the disparity in fees.\83\ The Media Bureau FTEs regulate 
the DBS industry together with the other MVPDs and the burden that DBS 
imposes on Media Bureau FTEs is roughly the same. For example, since 
October 1, 2016, the Media Bureau has opened 17 proceedings that affect 
MVPDs; seven of those proceedings are focused on cable operators, six 
are focused on DBS, and four cover all MVPDs (with three of those also 
covering other media services like broadcasters). Thus, these 
regulatees--MVPDs--are a group that includes DBS. In order to continue 
to bring the DBS fee closer to the cable television/IPTV fee, we are 
adopting the proposed rate of 38 cents per subscriber, which still 
remains substantially below the cable television/IPTV fee we adopt 
today.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \79\ For example, as ACA observes, DBS providers have been 
actively involved in the Media Bureau's proceeding implementing the 
Satellite Television Extension and Localism Act Reauthorization Act 
of 2014 (STELAR) and in the market modification proceedings that 
STELAR directed the Commission to expand to satellite DBS carriage. 
The STELA Reauthorization Act of 2014 (STELAR), Pub. L. 113-200, 128 
Stat. 2059 (2014); Amendment to the Commission's Rules Concerning 
Market Modification, Implementation of Section 102 of the STELA 
Reauthorization Act of 2014, Report and Order, 30 FCC Rcd 10406 (80 
FR 59635, October 2, 2015) (adopting satellite television market 
modification rules). See, e.g., Gray Television Licensee, LLC, 
Petition for Modification of the Satellite Televisions Market for 
WSAW-TV, Wausau, Wisconsin, MB Docket No. 16-293, DirecTV, LLC 
Response to Petition for Special Relief (filed Oct. 6, 2016); 
Amendment to the Commission's Rules Concerning Market Modification, 
Implementation of Section 102 of the STELA Reauthorization Act of 
2014, MB Docket No. 15-71, DISH Network LLC Market Modification Pre-
Filing Coordination Letter for Monongalia County, West Virginia 
(filed May 23, 2017).
    AT&T and DISH have also been involved in the Commission's ATSC 
3.0 rulemaking. See, e.g., Authorizing Permissive Use of the ``Next 
Generation'' Broadcast Television Standard, GN Docket No. 16-142, 
Comments of DISH Network LLC (filed May 9, 2017); Reply Comments of 
AT&T (filed June 8, 2017). AT&T and DISH Network were also active 
participants in the Media Bureau's 2016 public notice proceeding. 
See, e.g., Media Bureau Seeks Comment on Joint Petition for 
Rulemaking of America's Public Television Stations, the AWARN 
Alliance, the Consumer Technology Association, and the National 
Association of Broadcasters Seeking to Authorize Permissive Use of 
the ``Next Generation TV'' Broadcast Television Standard, GN Docket 
No. 16-142, Comments of DISH Network, LLC (filed May 26, 2016); 
Comments of AT&T (filed May 26, 2016).
    \80\ ACA Comments at 2 (quoting FY 2017 NPRM, 32 FCC Rcd at 
4531, para. 15; 82 FR 26019); NCTA Comments at 3.
    \81\ ACA Comments at 3-6; NCTA Comments at 3-5.
    \82\ NCTA Comments at 5-7.
    \83\ NCTA Comments at 7-8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    24. We reject the argument raised by DISH and AT&T, the two DBS 
providers, who contend that a fee increase would ``harm DBS 
customers.'' \84\ We do not accept the DISH and AT&T unsupported 
contention that a regulatory fee increase of several cents per 
subscriber, per month would ``harm'' their customers, as such an 
increase is a negligible fraction of a monthly bill.\85\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \84\ DISH and AT&T Comments at 3.
    \85\ The current least expensive promotional rate for new DBS 
subscribers is approximately $50 per month for 12 months (not 
including taxes or leasing charges). Even if the regulatory fee were 
72 cents per subscriber per year, approximately what it would be at 
parity with cable television/IPTV, it would equal 0.12% of the 
lowest introductory monthly fee for DBS ($600 x .0012 = $0.72). See 
https://www.directv.com/DTVAPP/pepod/configure.jsp#package-section 
(last visited June 29, 2017); https://www.dish.com/programming/packages/ (last visited June 29, 2017). ACA observes that DISH's 
reported average revenue per unit was $86.79 per month and AT&T's 
was $118.00 per month. ACA Reply Comments at 2-3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    25. AT&T and DISH also argue that several recent proceedings 
involving MVPDs do not justify an increase in regulatory fees.\86\ We 
disagree. The examples of recent proceedings involving MVPDs illustrate 
that Media Bureau FTEs work on significant MVPD issues that include 
DBS. DBS, cable television, and IPTV all receive oversight and 
regulation as a result of the work of Media Bureau FTEs on MVPD issues. 
This regulatory fee is not based on specific recent proceedings, but 
that a significant number of Media Bureau FTEs work on MVPD issues that 
include DBS.\87\ We listed examples of several recent proceedings to 
illustrate that the Media Bureau is involved in numerous MVPD 
issues.\88\ The fee increase we adopt today is not based on particular 
Media Bureau proceedings, but is an effort to bring the regulatory fee 
closer to the cable television/IPTV per subscriber fee.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \86\ DISH and AT&T Comments at 4-5; AT&T Reply Comments at 6-7.
    \87\ FY 2015 Report and Order, 30 FCC Rcd at 5369, para. 33; 80 
FR 43019.
    \88\ See, e.g., Video Description: Implementation of the Twenty-
First Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010, 
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 31 FCC Rcd 2463 (81 FR 33642, May 27, 
2016); Expanding Consumers' Video Navigation Choices, Commercial 
Availability of Navigation Devices, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking 
and Memorandum Opinion and Order, 31 FCC Rcd 1544 (81 FR 14033, 
March 16, 2016); Promoting the Availability of Diverse and 
Independent Sources of Video Programming, Notice of Inquiry, 31 FCC 
Rcd 1610 (2016); Expansion of Online Public File Obligations to 
Cable and Satellite TV Operators and Broadcast and Satellite Radio 
Licensees, Report and Order, 31 FCC Rcd 526 (2016); Amendment to the 
Commission's Rules Concerning Market Modification, Implementation of 
Section 102 of the STELA Reauthorization Act of 2014, Report and 
Order, 30 FCC Rcd 10406 (2015).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    26. AT&T and DISH contend that there is no evidence that DBS 
providers ``usurped the work of such a significant amount of Media 
Bureau FTEs sufficient to justify this increase.'' \89\ The DBS 
commenters are misunderstanding the basis for including DBS in the 
cable television/IPTV regulatory fee.\90\ The Commission has never said 
that the DBS industry ``usurped the work'' of the Media Bureau staff. 
The regulatory fee is based on the fact that Media Bureau staff work on 
significant issues involving MVPDs, including DBS. The DBS regulatory 
fee is based on the Media Bureau's regulation and oversight of the MVPD 
industry (including DBS), not on a particular number of FTEs focused 
solely on DBS. The Commission has specifically rejected the argument 
that section 9 of the Act requires us to ``show that DBS and cable 
occupy a comparable number of FTEs.'' \91\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \89\ DISH and AT&T Comments at 5-6. We also do not agree with 
AT&T's argument that we have ignored the other regulatory fees paid 
by the DBS providers. AT&T Reply Comments at 7. The regulatory fee 
based on the Media Bureau FTEs is not related to the regulatory fee 
based on International Bureau FTEs. While there is no other industry 
in the same situation as DBS, we note that the cable television 
industry pays regulatory fees for CARs licenses.
    \90\ ACA observes, ``the DBS providers misconceive the nature of 
the Commission's fee setting exercise, as it is not required to 
calculate fee levels with scientific precision.'' See ACA Reply 
Comments at 6.
    \91\ FY 2015 Report and Order, 30 FCC Rcd at 5369, para. 33; 80 
FR 43019.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    27. Finally, AT&T and DISH contend that there is no legal basis to 
charge DBS providers the same regulatory fees as cable television and 
IPTV operators.\92\ We disagree. We recognize that DBS is not identical 
to cable television and IPTV. Services that are not technologically 
identical nevertheless warrant placement in the same regulatory fee 
category, e.g., ITSP includes a range of carriers that may not be 
regulated identically but must pay

[[Page 44328]]

fees on the same basis.\93\ When interconnected Voice over Internet 
Protocol (VoIP) providers were added to the ITSP category in a 
permitted amendment the Commission observed that ``the costs and 
benefits associated with our regulation of interconnected VoIP 
providers are not identical as those associated with regulating 
interstate telecommunications service and CMRS.'' \94\ Indeed, IPTV is 
not regulated in all the same ways as cable television, and yet the 
Commission requires them to pay fees on the same basis.\95\ We 
recognize that DBS is not identical to cable, but the Media Bureau FTEs 
work on MVPD issues that include DBS. Although DBS is not identical to 
cable television and IPTV, the services all receive oversight and 
regulation as a result of the work of Media Bureau FTEs on MVPD issues, 
and the burden imposed on the Commission is similar.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \92\ DISH and AT&T Comments at 7-8.
    \93\ ITSP, regulated by the Wireline Competition Bureau, 
includes interexchange carriers (IXCs), incumbent local exchange 
carriers (LECs), toll resellers, Voice over Internet Providers 
(VoIP), and other service providers, all of which involve different 
degrees of regulatory oversight.
    \94\ See Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal 
Year 2007, Report and Order and Further Notice of Proposed 
Rulemaking, 22 FCC Rcd 15712, 15719, para. 19 (2007) (FY 2007 Report 
and Order); 72 FR 45908, August 16, 2007.
    \95\ FY 2013 Report and Order, 28 FCC Rcd at 12362, para. 32 
(``IPTV providers should be subject to the same regulatory fee as 
cable providers.''); 78 FR 52433.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    28. After considering the comments filed in this proceeding, we 
conclude that moving the DBS rate is supported by the data and 
analysis, and therefore adopt a regulatory fee rate of 38 cents, per 
subscriber, per year for FY 2017.

C. Radio Broadcaster Regulatory Fees

    29. In the FY 2017 NPRM, the Commission proposed to revise the 
table for AM and FM broadcasters.\96\ The proposed table had revised 
ratios so that the difference between each tier would be proportional. 
We also sought comment on whether the regulatory fees should be reduced 
further for the AM and FM broadcasters in the two lowest tiers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \96\ FY 2017 NPRM, 32 FCC Rcd at 4533, para. 19; 82 FR 26019.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    30. We received two comments on this issue. CRC, an AM station 
licensee, contends that the proposed fees for AM stations are too 
high.\97\ CRC observes that small AM stations must compete against FM 
stations and other media and they generate significantly less revenue 
than FM stations.\98\ CRC argues that the economic disparities between 
AM and FM facilities should be reflected in the regulatory fee 
schedules, particularly in the top tiers where the disparity in 
revenues is much greater than in the smaller markets.\99\ Arso contends 
that the FY 2017 NPRM does not go far enough in alleviating the 
hardship imposed on small broadcasters and urges the Commission to 
adopt a fast track waiver process for stations in economically 
depressed areas, such as Puerto Rico.\100\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \97\ CRC Comments at 1.
    \98\ CRC Comments at 1.
    \99\ CRC Comments at 2.
    \100\ Arso Comments at 1-2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    31. We agree with the commenters that small independent 
broadcasters face hardship today. As the Commission explained in the FY 
2016 Report and Order, ``[e]xtending some relief to these small radio 
broadcasters may facilitate their continued ability to stay in business 
and serve their small and rural communities.'' \101\ After reviewing 
the record, and due to the economic hardship faced by many small rural 
independent radio stations, we are adopting a revised version of the 
proposed table in the FY 2017 NPRM and reducing the regulatory fees in 
the two lowest population tiers for AM and FM broadcasters from the 
amounts proposed. In FY 2018, we will again review the status of these 
small radio broadcast stations to see if further relief is warranted. 
Below is the table we adopt today:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \101\ FY 2016 Report and Order, 31 FCC Rcd at 10351, para. 33; 
81 FR 65926.

                                                     Table 1--FY 2017 Radio Station Regulatory Fees
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                          FY 2017 Radio Station Regulatory Fees
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                                           FM Classes A,   FM Classes B,
                    Population served                       AM Class A      AM Class B      AM Class C      AM Class D        B1 & C3     C, C0, C1 & C2
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<=25,000................................................            $895            $640            $555            $610            $980          $1,100
25,001-75,000...........................................           1,350             955             830             915           1,475           1,650
75,001-150,000..........................................           2,375           1,700           1,475           1,600           2,600           2,925
150,001-500,000.........................................           3,550           2,525           2,200           2,425           3,875           4,400
500,001-1,200,000.......................................           5,325           3,800           3,300           3,625           5,825           6,575
1,200,001-3,000,00......................................           7,975           5,700           4,950           5,425           8,750           9,875
3,000,001-6,000,00......................................          11,950           8,550           7,400           8,150          13,100          14,800
>6,000,000..............................................          17,950          12,825          11,100          12,225          19,650          22,225
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

D. Broadcast Television Satellite

    32. Broadcast television satellite stations pay a lower regulatory 
fee than standalone full service broadcast television stations, and 
some of these stations are designated as such pursuant to note 5 to 
Sec.  73.3555 of the Commission's rules.\102\ For purposes of 
regulatory fees, we historically have identified as satellite stations 
those so listed in the Media Bureau's Consolidated Data Base System 
(CDBS), the Television and Cable Factbook, or BIA/Kelsey MEDIA Access 
Pro.\103\ In the FY 2017 NPRM, the Commission sought comment on basing 
the categorization of television satellite stations for regulatory fee 
payments on authorization under note 5 of Sec.  73.3555 of the 
Commission's rules, and noted that the Television and Cable Factbook 
may identify some stations as satellite stations that are not listed in 
the Media Bureau's records.\104\ We received limited comments on the 
issue and do not have adequate support to change the methodology for 
determining which stations are satellites at this time. We recognize 
that regulatees rely on consistency of treatment. Therefore, for FY 
2017 regulatory fees we treat broadcast television satellite stations 
as satellite stations that are listed as such in CDBS, the 2017 
Television and Cable Factbook, or BIA/Kelsey MEDIA Access Pro, or paid 
regulatory fees as a satellite

[[Page 44329]]

station in FY 2016.\105\ In the future, we intend to continue examining 
the appropriate methodology for categorizing when a station should only 
be assessed regulatory fees at the satellite station level. In doing 
so, as with other fee reforms, the Commission will work to ensure that 
any proposed changes to our fee structure are equitable, administrable, 
and sustainable.\106\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \102\ FY 2017 NPRM, 31 FCC Rcd at 4534, para. 20; 82 FR 26019.
    \103\ Id., FY 2017 NPRM, 31 FCC Rcd at 4535, para. 21; 82 FR 
26019.
    \104\ Id., FY 2017 NPRM, 31 FCC Rcd at 4535, para. 20; 82 FR 
26019.
    \105\ For purposes of determining whether a licensee qualifies 
as a satellite station for regulatory fee purposes, it must be so 
characterized in one of these sources as of the date of the Report 
and Order.
    \106\ See FY 2013 NPRM, 28 FCC Rcd at 7798-7807, paras. 17-40; 
78 FR 34612.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

E. Submarine Cable Regulatory Fees

    33. The Coalition, a group of submarine cable operators, objects to 
the proposed FY 2017 regulatory fees for the submarine cable industry, 
observing that the total amount the Commission is collecting for FY 
2017 ($356,710,992) is less than the amount collected for FY 2016 
($384,012,497, of which $44,168,497 was to offset facilities reduction 
costs), yet the regulatory fee for the highest tier submarine cable 
system was $133,200 for FY 2016 and the rate proposed for FY 2017, for 
the highest tier, is $135,700.\107\ The Coalition states that the FY 
2017 NPRM does not adequately justify the proposed increase in fees for 
submarine cable systems.\108\ The Coalition argues that the FY 2016 
rate included a one-time facilities reduction charge and the FY 2017 
rate should be less than the FY 2016 rate because the number of payment 
units are the same.\109\ The Coalition contends that the Commission is 
subsidizing unrelated activities to the detriment of the submarine 
cable operators.\110\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \107\ Coalition Comments at 3.
    \108\ Coalition Comments at 3.
    \109\ Coalition Comments at 5-6.
    \110\ Coalition Comments at 8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    34. We disagree with the Coalition's argument. The increase in 
regulatory fee rates for the International Bureau regulatees is due to 
the reallocation of 38 Wireline Competition Bureau direct FTEs as 
indirect in FY 2017, as discussed above. Although the amount collected 
overall is less in FY 2017 than in FY 2016, the allocation percentage 
of regulatory fees for the International Bureau increased from 5.6 
percent in FY 2016 \111\ to 6.22 percent for FY 2017,\112\ due to the 
increase in indirect FTEs. We also note that the regulatory fees paid 
by the submarine cable operators cover, in addition to the services 
that the International Bureau provides to submarine cable operators, 
the services provided to common carriers using submarine cable 
circuits.\113\ The International Bureau provides many services on 
behalf of common carriers using submarine cable circuits, such as 
benchmarks enforcement,\114\ protection from anticompetitive actions by 
foreign carriers, section 310(b) foreign ownership rulings, 
international section 214 authorizations, and representation of U.S. 
interests at bilateral and multilateral negotiations and international 
organizations.\115\ After reviewing the record, including the comments 
from the submarine cable industry, we are adopting the fee proposed in 
the FY 2017 NPRM for submarine cable systems.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \111\ FY 2016 Report and Order, 31 FCC Rcd at 10347-350, para. 
6; 81 FR 65926.
    \112\ FY 2017 NPRM, 32 FCC Rcd at 4529, para. 8; 82 FR 26019.
    \113\ See FY 2015 Report and Order, 30 FCC Rcd 10273, para. 12; 
80 FR 55775.
    \114\ See, e.g., International Settlement Rates, IB Docket No. 
96-261, Report and Order, 12 FCC Rcd 19806 (62 FR 45758, August 29, 
1997), Report and Order on Reconsideration and Order Lifting Stay, 
14 FCC Rcd 9256 (64 FR 47699, September 1, 1999), aff'd sub nom. 
Cable & Wireless, 166 F.3d 1224.
    \115\ See FY 2015 Report and Order, 30 FCC Rcd 10273, para. 12; 
80 FR 55775.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

F. International Bearer Circuits

    35. In 2009,\116\ the Commission adopted a new methodology for 
calculating submarine cable international bearer circuits regulatory 
fees by: (i) Eliminating the distinction between common carriers and 
non-common carriers \117\ and (ii) assessing a flat per cable landing 
license fee \118\ for all submarine cable systems with higher fees for 
larger submarine cable systems and lower fees for smaller systems.\119\ 
The Commission concluded that the new methodology would be more 
equitable and would encourage better compliance with the regulatory fee 
requirements.\120\ The Commission did not revise the terrestrial and 
satellite IBC regulatory fee methodology at that time because of the 
``complexity of the legal, policy and equity issues involved.'' \121\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \116\ Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal 
Year 2008, Second Report and Order, 24 FCC Rcd 4208, 4214-16, paras. 
13-17 (2009) (Submarine Cable Order); 74 FR 22104, (May 12, 2009).
    \117\ Submarine Cable Order, 24 FCC Rcd at 4213, para. 9; 74 FR 
22104, 22106.
    \118\ The prior rule assessed regulatory fees based on the 
number of active circuits on the previous December 31.
    \119\ Submarine Cable Order, 24 FCC Rcd at 4214-16, paras. 13-
17; 74 FR 22104, 22107-8.
    \120\ Id., Submarine Cable Order, 24 FCC Rcd at 4208-4209, para. 
1; 74 FR 22104.
    \121\ Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal 
Year 2009, Report and Order, 24 FCC Rcd 10301, 10306-07, paras. 16-
17 (2009); 74 FR 40089.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    36. In the FY 2016 NPRM, the Commission revisited the disparate 
treatment of terrestrial and satellite IBCs vis-[agrave]-vis submarine 
IBCs,\122\ but subsequently decided that the record was insufficient to 
change the fee methodology.\123\ In the FY 2017 NPRM, the Commission 
again sought comment on how to update and improve the regulatory fee 
assessment for terrestrial and satellite IBCs. Specifically, the 
Commission sought comment on several issues raised by Level 3:\124\ 
Adopting a flat, per-provider fee, similar to the submarine cable 
regulatory fee methodology, based on capacity \125\ and including all 
terrestrial IBCs, i.e., both common carrier and non-common carrier, for 
regulatory fee purposes.\126\ We also sought comment on eliminating the 
IBC regulatory fee for satellite IBCs and whether we should continue to 
assess regulatory fees based on IBCs that were active as of December 31 
of the prior year.\127\
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    \122\ FY 2016 NPRM, 31 FCC Rcd at 5764-65, paras. 15-16; 81 FR 
35680.
    \123\ FY 2016 Report and Order, 31 FCC Rcd at 10343, para. 11; 
81 FR 65926. Level 3 had initially proposed the flat fee 
methodology, for common carrier and non-common carrier providers, 
assessed based on the total capacity in Gbps. See Level 3 Comments, 
filed in MD Docket No. 16-166 (filed June 23, 2016), at 3-5.
    \124\ Level 3 Comments, filed in MD Docket No. 16-166 (filed 
June 23, 2016).
    \125\ The submarine cable fee is based on capacity per system; 
the proposed terrestrial and satellite fee would be based on overall 
capacity, but not on a per system basis.
    \126\ FY 2017 NPRM, 32 FCC Rcd at 4536-38, paras. 23-27; 82 FR 
26019.
    \127\ 47 CFR 43.62(a)(1). Commenters support continuing to 
assess regulatory fees based on IBCs that were active as of December 
31 of the prior year and we see no reason to change this methodology 
at this time.
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1. Including Non-Common Carrier IBCs
    37. We agree with the commenters, Level 3 and AT&T, that a 
methodology for terrestrial and satellite IBC regulatory fees based on 
circuits should be consistent with the submarine cable methodology and 
include common carrier and non-common carrier terrestrial IBCs. Level 3 
explains that including non-common carrier IBCs will ``eliminate a 
major incentive and opportunity providers currently have to underreport 
the number of IBCs they have in service.'' \128\ As AT&T observes, such 
an approach treats all terrestrial IBC providers equitably and reduces 
fees by increasing the payment units.\129\ For these reasons, we find 
no reason to continue excluding non-common carrier terrestrial IBCs 
from regulatory fees and adopt our proposal to include both common 
carrier and non-common carrier terrestrial IBCs, consistent with

[[Page 44330]]

the submarine cable regulatory fee methodology.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \128\ Level 3 June 29, 2017 ex parte at 1.
    \129\ AT&T Comments at 2 & Reply Comments at 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    38. Adding non-common carrier terrestrial IBCs to the regulatory 
fee schedule is a permitted amendment, as defined in section 9(b)(3) of 
the Act,\130\ and pursuant to section 9(b)(4)(B),\131\ must be 
submitted to Congress at least 90 days before it will be effective. For 
that reason, this new fee will be included in the regulatory fee 
proceeding for FY 2018.
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    \130\ 47 U.S.C. 159(b)(3).
    \131\ 47 U.S.C. 159(b)(4)(B).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

2. Satellite IBCs
    39. In the FY 2017 NPRM, we sought comment on whether to eliminate 
the IBC regulatory fee for satellite providers of IBCs.\132\ SIA 
contends that the fee should be eliminated because it does not 
correspond with substantive work by the Commission and is overly 
burdensome for satellite operators to calculate.\133\ According to SIA, 
calculating the number of circuits takes at least ten hours for in-
house counsel and additional personnel in other departments are 
responsible for collecting data for this calculation.\134\ The flat fee 
methodology for terrestrial and satellite IBCs should significantly 
reduce any burden of collecting data described by SIA. After reviewing 
the record, we do not see any reason to eliminate this fee category. 
Instead, we are moving toward a more consistent regulatory fee 
methodology for all IBCs and a less burdensome process for all 
regulatees.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \132\ FY 2017 NPRM, 32 FCC Rcd at 4537-38, para. 26; 82 FR 
26019.
    \133\ SIA Comments at 4-5.
    \134\ SIA Comments at 5, note 18.
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3. Fee Based on Circuits as of December 31
    40. In the FY 2017 NPRM, we sought comment on whether to assess the 
number of active circuits on systems active as of December 31 of the 
prior year or assess fees on IBCs that were active at any point during 
the preceding calendar year.\135\ Level 3 and AT&T argue that the 
Commission should continue to assess regulatory fees based on IBCs that 
were active as of December 31 of the prior year because it is 
significantly less burdensome for carriers to identify circuits that 
are active at a fixed point in time as opposed to at any point during 
the preceding year.\136\ We agree that the burdens associated with 
requiring providers to count the number of active circuits at any point 
during the preceding year does not outweigh the benefits. Therefore, we 
will retain the current requirement of assessing fees on systems active 
as of December 31 of the prior year.
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    \135\ FY 2017 NPRM, 32 FCC Rcd at 4538, para. 26; 82 FR 26019.
    \136\ Level 3 Comments at 2; AT&T Reply Comments at 5-6.
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G. Increasing the De Minimis Threshold

    41. Under the Commission's current de minimis rule for regulatory 
fee payments, a regulatee is exempt from paying regulatory fees if the 
sum total of all of its regulatory fee liabilities for annual 
regulatory fees is $500 or less for the fiscal year.\137\ The 
Commission increased the de minimis threshold from $10 to $500 in the 
FY 2014 Report and Order.\138\ The higher threshold reflected the 
estimated costs of collecting an unpaid regulatory fee, i.e., at least 
$350 in direct costs. The Commission's estimate of approximately $350 
per unpaid fee excluded overhead or other costs involved in regulatory 
fee collection.\139\ In addition, the Commission observed that setting 
the de minimis threshold at $500 was unlikely to reduce fee collections 
to an amount below the full amount of the Commission's annual 
appropriation.\140\
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    \137\ FY 2014 Report and Order, 29 FCC Rcd at 10774-76, para. 
18-21; 79 FR 54190.
    \138\ Id.
    \139\ Id., FY 2014 Report and Order, 29 FCC Rcd at 10775, para. 
20 & n. 62; 79 FR 54190.
    \140\ Id.
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    42. In the FY 2014 regulatory fee proceeding, commenters had argued 
the threshold should be increased to $750 or $1,000.\141\ In response, 
the Commission adopted a new threshold of $500 for annual regulatory 
fee and committed to further monitor the de minimis threshold and 
consider whether to increase the threshold or revise on some other 
basis.\142\ In the FY 2017 NPRM, we sought comment on increasing the de 
minimis threshold to $1,000 to improve the cost effectiveness of the 
Commission's collection of regulatory fees.\143\ Commenters support an 
increase in the de minimis threshold.\144\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \141\ Id.
    \142\ Id., FY 2014 Report and Order, 29 FCC Rcd at 10775, para. 
20; 79 FR 54190.
    \143\ Id. (observing that many small entities ``are subject to 
little Commission oversight and regulation which serves to further 
exacerbate this inequity [of the administrative burden].'').
    \144\ ACA Comments at 7-10; CMA Comments at 4; EWA Comments at 
2; NAB Comments at 1-2; Romar Reply Comments at 2-3.
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    43. In general, we believe the Commission's operational costs 
associated with processing and collecting these smaller fees, outweigh 
the benefits of such payments. For example, payors between $500 and 
$1,000 account for less than one percent of all regulatory fee 
payments. And yet processing and collecting these fees generates a 
disproportionate amount of work for Commission staff. Specifically, the 
cost of researching, creating a bill to send to a non-payor, and 
completing all follow-up discussion and correspondence has increased 
since 2014's $350 estimate, and that does not even include the cost of 
overhead and administering the regulatory fee program.\145\ The 
Commission has found that smaller entities with regulatory fees that 
fall within this range are less likely to pay on a timely basis and 
consequently use more Commission resources for fee collection.\146\ 
Nonpayment by these small entities then often results in the escalation 
of the Commission's administrative costs and a disproportionate use of 
FTE resources. As such, the marginal benefit to Commission operations 
of assessing, billing, and collecting regulatory fees on regulatees 
that would owe less than $1,000 is minute. In addition, setting the 
threshold at $1,000 is unlikely to reduce fee collections to an amount 
below the full amount of the Commission's annual appropriation because 
the additional amount that would no longer be collected is relatively 
small. We conclude that raising the de minimis threshold to $1,000 is 
justified by reducing the Commission's cost in collection of regulatory 
fees, thus allowing a more efficient allocation of Commission 
resources.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \145\ Id.
    \146\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    44. We also sought comment on whether we should include multi-year 
wireless licenses in the de minimis threshold. EWA explains, and we 
agree, that it would be difficult to administer a de minimis threshold 
for multi-year licenses.\147\ ACA proposes that we adopt a de minimis 
threshold for small cable and IPTV operators of 1000 or fewer 
subscribers.\148\ After analyzing this issue we conclude that it would 
be administratively difficult to have both a per subscriber de minimis 
threshold and a $1000 de minimis threshold at the same time. Many cable 
operators also have CARS licenses and offer other services, such as 
VoIP, and it would be difficult to calculate if they exceed the de 
minimis threshold with two different thresholds.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \147\ EWA Comments at 2-4.
    \148\ ACA Comments at 9 (explaining that the small operators may 
also provide VoIP services and may not be de minimis under the $1000 
threshold proposed).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    45. Accordingly, the de minimis threshold we adopt today applies 
only to filers of annual regulatory fees for FY

[[Page 44331]]

2017 and not multi-year filings.\149\ This de minimis exemption from 
the payment of regulatory fees applies to the sum of all annual 
regulatory fee obligations that a regulatee has for all applicable fee 
categories; not to individual payments for each category separately. 
The Commission will implement the de minimis threshold of $1,000 
beginning immediately. The de minimis status is not a permanent 
exemption from regulatory fees. Rather, each regulatee will need to 
reevaluate annually to determine whether its total liability for annual 
regulatory fees falls at or below the threshold given any changes that 
the Commission may make in its regulatory fees from year to year.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \149\ See FY 2014 Report and Order, 29 FCC Rcd at 10775, para. 
21 (explaining how to calculate the regulatory fee total to 
determine if it is below the de minimis threshold); 79 FR 54190.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

V. Procedural Matters

A. Payment of Regulatory Fees

1. Checks Will Not Be Accepted for Payment of Annual Regulatory Fees
    46. Pursuant to an Office of Management and Budget (OMB) 
directive,\150\ the Commission is moving towards a paperless 
environment, extending to disbursement and collection of select federal 
government payments and receipts.\151\ In 2015, the Commission stopped 
accepting checks (including cashier's checks and money orders) and the 
accompanying hardcopy forms (e.g., Forms 159, 159-B, 159-E, 159-W) for 
the payment of regulatory fees.\152\ All regulatory fee payments must 
be made by online Automated Clearing House (ACH) payment, online credit 
card, or wire transfer. Any other form of payment (e.g., checks, 
cashier's checks, or money orders) will be rejected. For payments by 
wire, a Form 159-E should still be transmitted via fax so that the 
Commission can associate the wire payment with the correct regulatory 
fee information.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \150\ Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Memorandum M-10-06, 
Open Government Directive, Dec. 8, 2009; see also http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/06/13/executive-order-13576-delivering-efficient-effective-and-accountable-gov.
    \151\ See U.S. Department of the Treasury, Open Government Plan 
2.1, Sept. 2012.
    \152\ FY 2015 Report and Order, 30 FCC Rcd at 10282-83, para. 
35; 80 FR 55775.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

2. Credit Card Transaction Levels
    47. Since June 1, 2015, in accordance with U.S. Treasury 
Announcement No. A-2014-04 (July 2014), the amount that can be charged 
on a credit card for transactions with federal agencies has been 
limited to $24,999.99.\153\ Transactions greater than $24,999.99 will 
be rejected. This limit applies to single payments or bundled payments 
of more than one bill. Multiple transactions to a single agency in one 
day may be aggregated and treated as a single transaction subject to 
the $24,999.99 limit. Customers who wish to pay an amount greater than 
$24,999.99 should consider available electronic alternatives such as 
Visa or MasterCard debit cards, ACH debits from a bank account, and 
wire transfers. Each of these payment options is available after filing 
regulatory fee information in Fee Filer.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \153\ Customers who owe an amount on a bill, debt, or other 
obligation due to the federal government are prohibited from 
splitting the total amount due into multiple payments. Splitting an 
amount owed into several payment transactions violates the credit 
card network and Fiscal Service rules. An amount owed that exceeds 
the Fiscal Service maximum dollar amount, $24,999.99, may not be 
split into two or more payment transactions in the same day by using 
one or multiple cards. Also, an amount owed that exceeds the Fiscal 
Service maximum dollar amount may not be split into two or more 
transactions over multiple days by using one or more cards.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

3. Payment Methods
    48. During the fee season for collecting FY 2017 regulatory fees, 
regulatees can pay their fees by credit card through Pay.gov,\154\ ACH, 
debit card,\155\ or by wire transfer. Additional payment instructions 
are posted at http://transition.fcc.gov/fees/regfees.html. The 
receiving bank for all wire payments is the U.S. Treasury, New York, 
New York. When making a wire transfer, regulatees must fax a copy of 
their Fee Filer generated Form 159-E to the Federal Communications 
Commission at (202) 418-2843 at least one hour before initiating the 
wire transfer (but on the same business day) so as not to delay 
crediting their account. Regulatees should discuss arrangements 
(including bank closing schedules) with their bankers several days 
before they plan to make the wire transfer to allow sufficient time for 
the transfer to be initiated and completed before the deadline. 
Complete instructions for making wire payments are posted at http://transition.fcc.gov/fees/wiretran.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \154\ In accordance with U.S. Treasury Financial Manual 
Announcement No. A-2014-04 (July 2014), the amount that may be 
charged on a credit card for transactions with federal agencies has 
been reduced to $24,999.99.
    \155\ In accordance with U.S. Treasury Financial Manual 
Announcement No. A-2012-02, the maximum dollar-value limit for debit 
card transactions is eliminated. Only Visa and MasterCard branded 
debit cards are accepted by Pay.gov.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

4. De Minimis Regulatory Fees
    49. Regulatees whose total FY 2017 annual regulatory fee liability, 
including all categories of fees for which payment is due, is $1,000 or 
less are exempt from payment of FY 2017 regulatory fees. The de minimis 
threshold applies only to filers of annual regulatory fees (not 
regulatory fees paid through multi-year filings), and is not a 
permanent exemption. Regulatees will need to reevaluate their total fee 
liability each fiscal year to determine whether they meet the de 
minimis exemption.
5. Standard Fee Calculations and Payment Dates
    50. The Commission will accept fee payments made in advance of the 
window for the payment of regulatory fees. The responsibility for 
payment of fees by service category is as follows:
     Media Services: Regulatory fees must be paid for initial 
construction permits that were granted on or before October 1, 2016 for 
AM/FM radio stations, VHF/UHF full service television stations, and 
satellite television stations. Regulatory fees must be paid for all 
broadcast facility licenses granted on or before October 1, 2016.
     Wireline (Common Carrier) Services: Regulatory fees must 
be paid for authorizations that were granted on or before October 1, 
2016. In instances where a permit or license is transferred or assigned 
after October 1, 2016, responsibility for payment rests with the holder 
of the permit or license as of the fee due date. Audio bridging service 
providers are included in this category.\156\ For Responsible 
Organizations (RespOrgs) that manage Toll Free Numbers (TFN), 
regulatory fees should be paid on all working, assigned, and reserved 
toll free numbers, as well as toll free numbers that are in any other 
status as defined in Sec.  52.103 of the Commission's rules.\157\ The 
unit count should be based on toll free numbers managed by RespOrgs on 
or about December 31, 2016.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \156\ Audio bridging services are toll teleconferencing 
services.
    \157\ 47 CFR 52.103.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

     Wireless Services: CMRS cellular, mobile, and messaging 
services (fees based on number of subscribers or telephone number 
count): Regulatory fees must be paid for authorizations that were 
granted on or before October 1, 2016. The number of subscribers, units, 
or telephone numbers on December 31, 2016 will be used as the basis 
from which to calculate the fee payment. In instances where a permit or 
license is transferred or assigned after October 1, 2016, 
responsibility for payment rests with the holder of the permit or 
license as of the fee due date.

[[Page 44332]]

     Wireless Services, Multi-year fees: The first eight 
regulatory fee categories in our Schedule of Regulatory Fees in Table 4 
pay ``small multi-year wireless regulatory fees.'' Entities pay these 
regulatory fees in advance for the entire amount period covered by the 
five-year or ten-year terms of their initial licenses, and pay 
regulatory fees again only when the license is renewed or a new license 
is obtained. We include these fee categories in our rulemaking to 
publicize our estimates of the number of ``small multi-year wireless'' 
licenses that will be renewed or newly obtained in FY 2017.
     Multichannel Video Programming Distributor Services (cable 
television operators, CARS licensees, DBS, and IPTV): Regulatory fees 
must be paid for the number of basic cable television subscribers as of 
December 31, 2016.\158\ Regulatory fees also must be paid for CARS 
licenses that were granted on or before October 1, 2016. In instances 
where a permit or license is transferred or assigned after October 1, 
2016, responsibility for payment rests with the holder of the permit or 
license as of the fee due date. For providers of DBS service and IPTV-
based MVPDs, regulatory fees should be paid based on a subscriber count 
on or about December 31, 2016. In instances where a permit or license 
is transferred or assigned after October 31, 2016, responsibility for 
payment rests with the holder of the permit or license as of the due 
date.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \158\ Cable television system operators should compute their 
number of basic subscribers as follows: Number of single family 
dwellings + number of individual households in multiple dwelling 
unit (apartments, condominiums, mobile home parks, etc.) paying at 
the basic subscriber rate + bulk rate customers + courtesy and free 
service. Note: Bulk-Rate Customers = Total annual bulk-rate charge 
divided by basic annual subscription rate for individual households. 
Operators may base their count on ``a typical day in the last full 
week'' of December 2016, rather than on a count as of December 31, 
2016.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

     International Services: Regulatory fees must be paid for 
(1) earth stations and (2) geostationary orbit space stations and non-
geostationary orbit satellite systems that were licensed and 
operational on or before October 1, 2016. In instances where a permit 
or license is transferred or assigned after October 1, 2016, 
responsibility for payment rests with the holder of the permit or 
license as of the fee due date.
     International Services: (Submarine Cable Systems): 
Regulatory fees for submarine cable systems are to be paid on a per 
cable landing license basis based on circuit capacity as of December 
31, 2016. In instances where a license is transferred or assigned after 
October 1, 2016, responsibility for payment rests with the holder of 
the license as of the fee due date. For regulatory fee purposes, the 
allocation in FY 2017 will remain at 87.6 percent for submarine cable 
and 12.4 percent for satellite/terrestrial facilities.
     International Services: (Terrestrial and Satellite 
Services): Regulatory fees for Terrestrial and Satellite International 
Bearer Circuits are to be paid by facilities-based common carriers that 
have active (used or leased) international bearer circuits as of 
December 31, 2016 in any terrestrial or satellite transmission facility 
for the provision of service to an end user or resale carrier. When 
calculating the number of such active circuits, the facilities-based 
common carriers must include circuits used by themselves or their 
affiliates. In addition, non-common carrier satellite operators must 
pay a fee for each circuit they and their affiliates hold and each 
circuit sold or leased to any customer, other than an international 
common carrier authorized by the Commission to provide U.S. 
international common carrier services. For these purposes, ``active 
circuits'' include backup and redundant circuits as of December 31, 
2016. Whether circuits are used specifically for voice or data is not 
relevant for purposes of determining that they are active 
circuits.\159\ In instances where a permit or license is transferred or 
assigned after October 1, 2016, responsibility for payment rests with 
the holder of the permit or license as of the fee due date. For 
regulatory fee purposes, the allocation in FY 2017 will remain at 87.6 
percent for submarine cable and 12.4 percent for satellite/terrestrial 
facilities.\160\
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    \159\ We encourage terrestrial and satellite service providers 
to seek guidance from the International Bureau's Telecommunications 
and Analysis Division to verify their IBC reporting processes to 
ensure that their calculation methods comply with our rules.
    \160\ We remind facilities-based common carriers to review their 
reporting processes to ensure that they accurately calculate and 
report IBCs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

B. Commercial Mobile Radio Service (CMRS) Cellular and Mobile Services 
Assessments

    51. The Commission will compile data from the Numbering Resource 
Utilization Forecast (NRUF) report that is based on ``assigned'' 
telephone number (subscriber) counts that have been adjusted for 
porting to net Type 0 ports (``in'' and ``out'').\161\ This information 
of telephone numbers (subscriber count) will be posted on the 
Commission's electronic filing and payment system (Fee Filer) along 
with the carrier's Operating Company Numbers (OCNs).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \161\ See FY 2005 Report and Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 12264, paras. 
38-44; 70 FR 41967.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    52. A carrier wishing to revise its telephone number (subscriber) 
count can do so by accessing Fee Filer and follow the prompts to revise 
their telephone number counts. Any revisions to the telephone number 
counts should be accompanied by an explanation or supporting 
documentation.\162\ The Commission will then review the revised count 
and supporting documentation and either approve or disapprove the 
submission in Fee Filer. If the submission is disapproved, the 
Commission will contact the provider to afford the provider an 
opportunity to discuss its revised subscriber count and/or provide 
additional supporting documentation. If we receive no response from the 
provider, or we do not reverse our initial disapproval of the 
provider's revised count submission, the fee payment must be based on 
the number of subscribers listed initially in Fee Filer. Once the 
timeframe for revision has passed, the telephone number counts are 
final and are the basis upon which CMRS regulatory fees are to be paid. 
Providers can view their final telephone counts online in Fee Filer. A 
final CMRS assessment letter will not be mailed out.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \162\ In the supporting documentation, the provider will need to 
state a reason for the change, such as a purchase or sale of a 
subsidiary, the date of the transaction, and any other pertinent 
information that will help to justify a reason for the change.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    53. Because some carriers do not file the NRUF report, they may not 
see their telephone number counts in Fee Filer. In these instances, the 
carriers should compute their fee payment using the standard 
methodology that is currently in place for CMRS Wireless services 
(i.e., compute their telephone number counts as of December 31, 2016), 
and submit their fee payment accordingly. Whether a carrier reviews its 
telephone number counts in Fee Filer or not, the Commission reserves 
the right to audit the number of telephone numbers for which regulatory 
fees are paid. In the event that the Commission determines that the 
number of telephone numbers that are paid is inaccurate, the Commission 
will bill the carrier for the difference between what was paid and what 
should have been paid.

C. Enforcement

    54. To be considered timely, regulatory fee payments must be made 
electronically by the payment due date for regulatory fees. Section 
9(c) of the Act requires us to impose a late payment penalty of 25 
percent of the unpaid amount to be assessed on the

[[Page 44333]]

first day following the deadline for filing these fees.\163\ Failure to 
pay regulatory fees and/or any late penalty will subject regulatees to 
sanctions, including those set forth in Sec.  1.1910 of the 
Commission's rules,\164\ which generally requires the Commission to 
withhold action on ``applications, including on a petition for 
reconsideration or any application for review of a fee determination, 
or requests for authorization by any entity found to be delinquent in 
its debt to the Commission'' and in the DCIA.\165\ We also assess 
administrative processing charges on delinquent debts to recover 
additional costs incurred in processing and handling the debt pursuant 
to the DCIA and Sec.  1.1940(d) of the Commission's rules.\166\ These 
administrative processing charges will be assessed on any delinquent 
regulatory fee, in addition to the 25 percent late charge penalty. In 
the case of partial payments (underpayments) of regulatory fees, the 
payor will be given credit for the amount paid, but if it is later 
determined that the fee paid is incorrect or not timely paid, then the 
25 percent late charge penalty (and other charges and/or sanctions, as 
appropriate) will be assessed on the portion that is not paid in a 
timely manner.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \163\ 47 U.S.C. 159(c).
    \164\ See 47 CFR 1.1910.
    \165\ Delinquent debt owed to the Commission triggers the ``red 
light rule,'' which places a hold on the processing of pending 
applications, fee offsets, and pending disbursement payments. 47 CFR 
1.1910, 1.1911, 1.1912. In 2004, the Commission adopted rules 
implementing the requirements of the DCIA. See Amendment of Parts 0 
and 1 of the Commission's Rules, MD Docket No. 02-339, Report and 
Order, 19 FCC Rcd 6540 (69 FR 27843, May 17, 2004); 47 CFR part 1, 
subpart O, Collection of Claims Owed the United States.
    \166\ 47 CFR 1.1940(d).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    55. Pursuant to the ``red light rule,'' we will withhold action on 
any applications or other requests for benefits filed by anyone who is 
delinquent in any non-tax debts owed to the Commission (including 
regulatory fees) and will ultimately dismiss those applications or 
other requests if payment of the delinquent debt or other satisfactory 
arrangement for payment is not made.\167\ Failure to pay regulatory 
fees can also result in the initiation of a proceeding to revoke any 
and all authorizations held by the entity responsible for paying the 
delinquent fee(s).\168\ Pursuant to a pilot program, we have initiated 
procedures to transfer debt to the Centralized Receivables Service at 
the U.S. Treasury, as described below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \167\ See 47 CFR 1.1161(c), 1.1164(f)(5), and 1.1910.
    \168\ 47 U.S.C. 159.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

D. Transfers of Unpaid Debt to Centralized Receivables Service (CRS), 
U.S. Treasury

    56. Under section 9 of the Act, Commission rules, and federal debt 
collection laws, a licensee's regulatory fee is due on the first day of 
the fiscal year and payable at a date established in the Commission's 
annual regulatory fee Report and Order. In October 2015, the 
Commission, under revised procedures, began transferring unpaid 
regulatory fee receivables directly to the CRS at the U.S. Treasury 
rather than trying to collect the debt itself and then transferring the 
remaining unpaid debts to Treasury. Under revised procedures, the 
Commission can transfer delinquent debt to Treasury for further 
collection action within 120 days after the date of delinquency.\169\ 
However, regulatees will not likely see any substantial change in the 
current procedures of how past due debts are to be paid, except that 
the debts will be handled by CRS (U.S. Treasury) rather than by the 
Commission.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \169\ See 31 U.S.C. 3711(g); 31 CFR 285.12; 47 CFR 1.1917.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

E. Effective Date

    57. Providing a 30-day period after Federal Register publication 
before this Report and Order becomes effective as required by 5 U.S.C. 
553(d) will not allow sufficient time to collect the FY 2017 fees 
before FY 2017 ends on September 30, 2017. For this reason, pursuant to 
5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3), we find there is good cause to waive the 
requirements of section 553(d), and this Report and Order will become 
effective upon publication in the Federal Register. Because payments of 
the regulatory fees will not actually be due until late September, 
persons affected by this Report and Order will still have a reasonable 
period in which to make their payments and thereby comply with the 
rules established herein.

VI. Additional Tables

Table 2--Commenters--Initial Comments

------------------------------------------------------------------------
             Commenter                          Abbreviation
------------------------------------------------------------------------
American Cable Association........  ACA.
Arso Radio Corporation............  Arso.
AT&T Services, Inc................  AT&T.
CenturyLink, Inc..................  CenturyLink.
CRC Broadcasting Company, Inc.....  CRC.
Critical Messaging Association....  CMA.
DISH Network, L.L.C. and AT&T       DISH and AT&T.
 Services, Inc.
Enterprise Wireless Alliance......  EWA.
Frontier Communications             Frontier.
 Corporation.
ITTA--The Voice of America's        ITTA.
 Broadband Providers.
Level 3 Communications, LLC.......  Level 3.
National Association of             NAB.
 Broadcasters.
NCTA--The Internet and Television   NCTA.
 Association.
Quincy Media, Inc.................  QMI.
Ramar Communications, Inc.........  Ramar.
Satellite Industry Association....  SIA.
Submarine Cable Coalition.........  Coalition.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                       Commenters--Reply Comments
------------------------------------------------------------------------
American Cable Association........  ACA.
AT&T Services, Inc................  AT&T.
CenturyLink, Inc..................  CenturyLink.
CTIA[supreg]......................  CTIA.
Level 3 Communications, LLC.......  Level 3.

[[Page 44334]]

 
Romar Communications, Inc.........  Romar.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
     Commenter and date filed                   Abbreviation
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                            Ex Parte Filings
------------------------------------------------------------------------
American Cable Association (Aug.    ACA.
 30, 2017).
AT&T Services, Inc. (July 27,       AT&T.
 2017).
DISH Network, L.L.C. (Aug. 22,      DISH.
 2017).
Level 3 Communications, LLC (June   Level 3.
 29, July 24, 2017).
Ramar Communications, Inc. (July    Ramar.
 21, Aug. 15, 21, 22, 2017).
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Regulatory fees in the top seven fee categories are collected by 
the Commission in advance to cover the term of the license and are 
submitted at the time the application is filed.

Table 3--Calculation of FY 2017 Revenue Requirements and Pro-Rata Fees

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                       Pro-rated   Computed FY
                                                           FY 2017 payment                 FY 2016      FY 2017        2017     Rounded  FY    Expected
                      Fee category                              units           Yrs        revenue      revenue     regulatory   2017  Reg.    FY 2017
                                                                                           estimate   requirement      fee          fee        revenue
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PLMRS (Exclusive Use)...................................             1,300           10      625,000      325,000           25           25      325,000
PLMRS (Shared use)......................................            16,000           10    3,110,000    1,600,000           10           10    1,600,000
Microwave...............................................            11,800           10    3,125,000    2,950,000           25           25    2,950,000
Marine (Ship)...........................................             8,100           10    1,035,000    1,215,000           15           15    1,215,000
Aviation (Aircraft).....................................             4,200           10      470,000      420,000           10           10      420,000
Marine (Coast)..........................................               150           10      192,500       60,000           40           40       60,000
Aviation (Ground).......................................             1,100           10      220,000      220,000           20           20      220,000
AM Class A \4\..........................................                65            1      313,500      305,500        4,699        4,700      305,500
AM Class B \4\..........................................             1,523            1    3,875,875    3,807,500        2,488        2,500    3,807,500
AM Class C \4\..........................................               870            1    1,400,175    1,348,500        1,559        1,550    1,348,500
AM Class D \4\..........................................             1,492            1    4,587,900    4,476,000        3,004        3,000    4,476,000
FM Classes A, B1 & C3 \4\...............................             3,150            1    9,678,200    9,371,250        2,987        2,975    9,371,250
FM Classes B, C, C0, C1 & C2 \4\........................             3,114            1   11,849,725   11,521,800        3,703        3,700   11,521,800
AM Construction Permits \1\.............................                10            1        9,300        5,550          555          555        5,550
FM Construction Permits \1\.............................               113            1      192,425      110,740          980          980      110,740
Satellite TV............................................               126            1      224,000      217,350        1,722        1,725      217,350
Digital TV Markets 1-10.................................               139            1    8,433,825    8,305,250       59,748       59,750    8,305,250
Digital TV Markets 11-25................................               131            1    6,348,825    5,898,275       45,013       45,025    5,898,275
Digital TV Markets 26-50................................               181            1    5,525,025    5,439,050       30,049       30,050    5,439,050
Digital TV Markets 51-100...............................               285            1    4,301,600    4,289,250       14,976       14,975    4,267,875
Digital TV Remaining Markets............................               367            1    1,825,000    1,807,475        4,924        4,925    1,807,475
Digital TV Construction Permits\1\......................                 3            1       15,000       14,775        4,925        4,925       14,775
LPTV/Translators/Boosters/Class A TV....................             4,051            1    1,785,420    1,741,930          428          430    1,741,930
CARS Stations...........................................               230            1      220,875      215,050          935          935      215,050
Cable TV Systems, including IPTV........................        62,000,000            1   64,200,000   58,900,000        .9529          .95   58,900,000
Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS)........................        32,500,000            1    9,180,000   12,350,000        .3800          .38   12,350,000
Interstate Telecommunication Service Providers..........   $37,000,000,000            1  142,722,000  111,740,000      0.00302      0.00302  111,740,000
Toll Free Numbers.......................................        32,700,000            1    4,745,000    3,924,000       0.1174         0.12    3,924,000
CMRS Mobile Services (Cellular/Public Mobile)...........       393,000,000            1   73,200,000   82,530,000        0.210         0.21   82,530,000
CMRS Messag. Services...................................         2,100,000            1      184,000      168,000       0.0800        0.080      168,000
BRS \2\.................................................               870            1      645,250      558,050          800          800      696,000
LMDS....................................................               395            1      286,375      454,250          800          800      316,000
Per 64 kbps Int'l Bearer Circuits Terrestrial (Common) &        30,056,000            1      638,000      801,295        .0267          .03      901,680
 Satellite (Common & Non-Common)........................
Submarine Cable Providers (see chart in Appendix C) \3\.             41.19            1    5,486,242    5,660,765      137,437      137,425    5,660,261
Earth Stations..........................................             3,400            1    1,173,000    1,224,000          360          360    1,224,000
Space Stations (Geostationary)..........................                97            1   13,155,125   13,669,725      140,924      140,925   13,669,725
Space Stations (Non-Geostationary)......................                 7            1      911,700      947,450      135,343      135,350      947,450
****** Total Estimated Revenue to be Collected..........  ................  ...........  384,890,362  358,571,405  ...........  ...........  358,670,986
****** Total Revenue Requirement........................  ................  ...........  384,012,497  356,710,992  ...........  ...........  356,710,992
Difference..............................................  ................  ...........      877,865    1,860,413  ...........  ...........    1,959,994
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notes on Table 3
\1\ The AM and FM Construction Permit revenues and the Digital (VHF/UHF) Construction Permit revenues were adjusted, respectively, to set the regulatory
  fee to an amount no higher than the lowest licensed fee for that class of service. Reductions in the Digital (VHF/UHF) Construction Permit revenues,
  and in the AM and FM Construction Permit revenues, were offset by increases in the revenue totals for Digital television stations by market size, and
  in the AM and FM radio stations by class size and population served, respectively.
\2\ MDS/MMDS category was renamed Broadband Radio Service (BRS). See Amendment of Parts 1, 21, 73, 74 and 101 of the Commission's Rules to Facilitate
  the Provision of Fixed and Mobile Broadband Access, Educational and Other Advanced Services in the 2150-2162 and 2500-2690 MHz Bands, Report & Order
  and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 19 FCC Rcd 14165, 14169, para. 6 (69 FR 72048, December 10, 2004).
\3\ The chart at the end of Table 4 lists the submarine cable bearer circuit regulatory fees (common and non-common carrier basis) that resulted from
  the adoption of the Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2008, Report and Order and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 24
  FCC Rcd 6388 (73 FR 50285, August 26, 2008) and Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2008, Second Report and Order, 24 FCC Rcd
  4208 (74 FR 22104, May 12, 2009).
\4\ The fee amounts listed in the column entitled ``Rounded New FY 2017 Regulatory Fee'' constitute a weighted average broadcast regulatory fee by class
  of service. The actual FY 2017 regulatory fees for AM/FM radio station are listed on a grid located at the end of Table 4.


[[Page 44335]]

Table 4--FY 2017 Schedule of Regulatory Fees

    Regulatory fees in the top eight fee categories are collected by 
the Commission in advance to cover the term of the license and are 
submitted at the time the application is filed.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                              Annual
                      Fee category                        regulatory fee
                                                             (U.S. $s)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
PLMRS (per license) (Exclusive Use) (47 CFR part 90)....              25
Microwave (per license) (47 CFR part 101)...............              25
Marine (Ship) (per station) (47 CFR part 80)............              15
Marine (Coast) (per license) (47 CFR part 80)...........              40
Rural Radio (47 CFR part 22) (previously listed under                 10
 the Land Mobile category)..............................
PLMRS (Shared Use) (per license) (47 CFR part 90).......              10
Aviation (Aircraft) (per station) (47 CFR part 87)......              10
Aviation (Ground) (per license) (47 CFR part 87)........              20
CMRS Mobile/Cellular Services (per unit) (47 CFR parts               .21
 20, 22, 24, 27, 80 and 90).............................
CMRS Messaging Services (per unit) (47 CFR parts 20, 22,             .08
 24 and 90).............................................
Broadband Radio Service (formerly MMDS/MDS) (per                     800
 license) (47 CFR part 27)..............................
Local Multipoint Distribution Service (per call sign)                800
 (47 CFR part 101)......................................
AM Radio Construction Permits...........................             555
FM Radio Construction Permits...........................             980
Digital TV (47 CFR part 73) VHF and UHF Commercial:
    Markets 1-10........................................          59,750
    Markets 11-25.......................................          45,025
    Markets 26-50.......................................          30,050
    Markets 51-100......................................          14,975
    Remaining Markets...................................           4,925
    Construction Permits................................           4,925
Satellite Television Stations (All Markets).............           1,725
Low Power TV, Class A TV, TV/FM Translators & Boosters               430
 (47 CFR part 74).......................................
CARS (47 CFR part 78)...................................             935
Cable Television Systems (per subscriber) (47 CFR part               .95
 76), Including IPTV....................................
Direct Broadcast Service (DBS) (per subscriber) (as                  .38
 defined by section 602(13) of the Act).................
Interstate Telecommunication Service Providers (per               .00302
 revenue dollar)........................................
Toll Free (per toll free subscriber) (47 CFR 52.101(f)).             .12
Earth Stations (47 CFR part 25).........................             360
Space Stations (per operational station in geostationary         140,925
 orbit) (47 CFR part 25) also includes DBS Service (per
 operational station) (47 CFR part 100).................
Space Stations (per operational system in non-                   135,350
 geostationary orbit) (47 CFR part 25)..................
International Bearer Circuits--Terrestrial/Satellites                .03
 (per 64KB circuit).....................................
Submarine Cable Landing Licenses Fee (per cable system).       See Table
                                                                   Below
------------------------------------------------------------------------


                                                          FY 2017 Radio Station Regulatory Fees
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                                           FM Classes A,   FM Classes B,
                    Population served                       AM Class A      AM Class B      AM Class C      AM Class D        B1 & C3     C, C0, C1 & C2
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<=25,000................................................            $895            $640            $555            $610            $980          $1,100
25,001-75,000...........................................           1,350             955             830             915           1,475           1,650
75,001-150,000..........................................           2,375           1,700           1,475           1,600           2,600           2,925
150,001-500,000.........................................           3,550           2,525           2,200           2,425           3,875           4,400
500,001-1,200,000.......................................           5,325           3,800           3,300           3,625           5,825           6,575
1,200,001-3,000,00......................................           7,975           5,700           4,950           5,425           8,750           9,875
3,000,001-6,000,00......................................          11,950           8,550           7,400           8,150          13,100          14,800
>6,000,000..............................................          17,950          12,825          11,100          12,225          19,650          22,225
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


             International Bearer Circuits--Submarine Cable
------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Submarine cable systems (capacity as of December 31,
                          2016)                             Fee amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
< 2.5 Gbps..............................................          $8,600
2.5 Gbps or greater, but less than 5 Gbps...............          17,175
5 Gbps or greater, but less than 10 Gbps................          34,350
10 Gbps or greater, but less than 20 Gbps...............          68,725
20 Gbps or greater......................................         137,425
------------------------------------------------------------------------


[[Page 44336]]

Table 5--Sources of Payment Unit Estimates for FY 2017

    In order to calculate individual service fees for FY 2017, we 
adjusted FY 2016 payment units for each service to more accurately 
reflect expected FY 2017 payment liabilities. We obtained our updated 
estimates through a variety of means. For example, we used Commission 
licensee data bases, actual prior year payment records and industry and 
trade association projections when available. The databases we 
consulted include our Universal Licensing System (ULS), International 
Bureau Filing System (IBFS), Consolidated Database System (CDBS) and 
Cable Operations and Licensing System (COALS), as well as reports 
generated within the Commission such as the Wireless Telecommunications 
Bureau's Numbering Resource Utilization Forecast.
    We sought verification for these estimates from multiple sources 
and, in all cases, we compared FY 2017 estimates with actual FY 2016 
payment units to ensure that our revised estimates were reasonable. 
Where appropriate, we adjusted and/or rounded our final estimates to 
take into consideration the fact that certain variables that impact on 
the number of payment units cannot yet be estimated with sufficient 
accuracy. These include an unknown number of waivers and/or exemptions 
that may occur in FY 2017 and the fact that, in many services, the 
number of actual licensees or station operators fluctuates from time to 
time due to economic, technical, or other reasons. When we note, for 
example, that our estimated FY 2017 payment units are based on FY 2016 
actual payment units, it does not necessarily mean that our FY 2017 
projection is the same number as in FY 2016. We have either rounded the 
FY 2017 number or adjusted it slightly to account for these variables.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
         Fee category              Sources of payment unit estimates
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Land Mobile (All), Microwave,  Based on Wireless Telecommunications
 Marine (Ship & Coast),         Bureau (WTB) projections of new
 Aviation (Aircraft &           applications and renewals taking into
 Ground), Domestic Public       consideration existing Commission
 Fixed.                         licensee data bases. Aviation (Aircraft)
                                and Marine (Ship) estimates have been
                                adjusted to take into consideration the
                                licensing of portions of these services
                                on a voluntary basis.
CMRS Cellular/Mobile Services  Based on WTB projection reports, and FY
                                16 payment data.
CMRS Messaging Services......  Based on WTB reports, and FY 16 payment
                                data.
AM/FM Radio Stations.........  Based on CDBS data, adjusted for
                                exemptions, and actual FY 2016 payment
                                units.
Digital TV Stations..........  Based on CDBS data, adjusted for
(Combined VHF/UHF units).....   exemptions, and actual FY 2016 payment
                                units.
AM/FM/TV Construction Permits  Based on CDBS data, adjusted for
                                exemptions, and actual FY 2016 payment
                                units.
LPTV, Translators and          Based on CDBS data, adjusted for
 Boosters, Class A Television.  exemptions, and actual FY 2016 payment
                                units.
BRS (formerly MDS/MMDS)......  Based on WTB reports and actual FY 2016
LMDS.........................   payment units.
                               Based on WTB reports and actual FY 2016
                                payment units.
Cable Television Relay         Based on data from Media Bureau's COALS
 Service (CARS) Stations.       database and actual FY 2016 payment
                                units.
Cable Television System        Based on publicly available data sources
 Subscribers, Including IPTV    for estimated subscriber counts and
 Subscribers.                   actual FY 2016 payment units.
Interstate Telecommunication   Based on FCC Form 499-Q data for the four
 Service Providers.             quarters of calendar year 2016, the
                                Wireline Competition Bureau projected
                                the amount of calendar year 2016 revenue
                                that will be reported on 2017 FCC Form
                                499-A worksheets due in April, 2017.
Earth Stations...............  Based on International Bureau (``IB'')
                                licensing data and actual FY 2016
                                payment units.
Space Stations (GSOs & NGSOs)  Based on IB data reports and actual FY
                                2016 payment units.
International Bearer Circuits  Based on IB reports and submissions by
                                licensees, adjusted as necessary.
Submarine Cable Licenses.....  Based on IB license information.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Table 6--Factors, Measurements, and Calculations That Determine Station

Signal Contours and Associated Population Coverages

AM Stations
    For stations with nondirectional daytime antennas, the theoretical 
radiation was used at all azimuths. For stations with directional 
daytime antennas, specific information on each day tower, including 
field ratio, phase, spacing, and orientation was retrieved, as well as 
the theoretical pattern root-mean-square of the radiation in all 
directions in the horizontal plane (RMS) figure (milliVolt per meter 
(mV/m) @1 km) for the antenna system. The standard, or augmented 
standard if pertinent, horizontal plane radiation pattern was 
calculated using techniques and methods specified in Sec. Sec.  73.150 
and 73.152 of the Commission's rules. Radiation values were calculated 
for each of 360 radials around the transmitter site. Next, estimated 
soil conductivity data was retrieved from a database representing the 
information in FCC Figure R3. Using the calculated horizontal radiation 
values, and the retrieved soil conductivity data, the distance to the 
principal community (5 mV/m) contour was predicted for each of the 360 
radials. The resulting distance to principal community contours were 
used to form a geographical polygon. Population counting was 
accomplished by determining which 2010 block centroids were contained 
in the polygon. (A block centroid is the center point of a small area 
containing population as computed by the U.S. Census Bureau.) The sum 
of the population figures for all enclosed blocks represents the total 
population for the predicted principal community coverage area.
FM Stations
    The greater of the horizontal or vertical effective radiated power 
(ERP) (kW) and respective height above average terrain (HAAT) (m) 
combination was used. Where the antenna height above mean sea level 
(HAMSL) was available, it was used in lieu of the average HAAT figure 
to calculate specific HAAT figures for each of 360 radials under study. 
Any available directional pattern information was applied as well, to 
produce a radial-specific ERP figure. The HAAT and ERP figures were 
used in conjunction with the Field Strength (50-50) propagation curves 
specified in 47 CFR 73.313 to predict the distance to the principal 
community (70 dBu (decibel above 1 microVolt per meter) or 3.17 mV/m) 
contour for each of the 360 radials. The

[[Page 44337]]

resulting distance to principal community contours were used to form a 
geographical polygon. Population counting was accomplished by 
determining which 2010 block centroids were contained in the polygon. 
The sum of the population figures for all enclosed blocks represents 
the total population for the predicted principal community coverage 
area.

Table 7--FY 2016 Schedule of Regulatory Fees

    Regulatory fees in the top eight fee categories are collected by 
the Commission in advance to cover the term of the license and are 
submitted at the time the application is filed.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                              Annual
                      Fee Category                        regulatory fee
                                                             (U.S. $s)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
PLMRS (per license) (Exclusive Use) (47 CFR part 90)....              25
Microwave (per license) (47 CFR part 101)...............              25
Marine (Ship) (per station) (47 CFR part 80)............              15
Marine (Coast) (per license) (47 CFR part 80)...........              40
Rural Radio (47 CFR part 22) (previously listed under                 10
 the Land Mobile category)..............................
PLMRS (Shared Use) (per license) (47 CFR part 90).......              10
Aviation (Aircraft) (per station) (47 CFR part 87)......              10
Aviation (Ground) (per license) (47 CFR part 87)........              20
CMRS Mobile/Cellular Services (per unit) (47 CFR parts               .20
 20, 22, 24, 27, 80 and 90).............................
CMRS Messaging Services (per unit) (47 CFR parts 20, 22,             .08
 24 and 90).............................................
Broadband Radio Service (formerly MMDS/MDS) (per                     725
 license) (47 CFR part 27)..............................
Local Multipoint Distribution Service (per call sign)                725
 (47 CFR part 101)......................................
AM Radio Construction Permits...........................             620
FM Radio Construction Permits...........................           1,075
Digital TV (47 CFR part 73) VHF and UHF Commercial:
    Markets 1-10........................................          60,675
    Markets 11-25.......................................          45,675
    Markets 26-50.......................................          30,525
    Markets 51-100......................................          15,200
    Remaining Markets...................................           5,000
    Construction Permits................................           5,000
Satellite Television Stations (All Markets).............           1,750
Low Power TV, Class A TV, TV/FM Translators & Boosters               455
 (47 CFR part 74).......................................
CARS (47 CFR part 78)...................................             775
Cable Television Systems (per subscriber) (47 CFR part              1.00
 76), Including IPTV....................................
Direct Broadcast Service (DBS) (per subscriber) (as                  .27
 defined by section 602(13) of the Act).................
Interstate Telecommunication Service Providers (per               .00371
 revenue dollar)........................................
Toll Free (per toll free subscriber) (47 CFR 52.101(f)).             .13
Earth Stations (47 CFR part 25).........................             345
Space Stations (per operational station in geostationary         138,475
 orbit) (47 CFR part 25) also includes DBS Service (per
 operational station) (47 CFR part 100).................
Space Stations (per operational system in non-                   151,950
 geostationary orbit) (47 CFR part 25)..................
International Bearer Circuits--Terrestrial/Satellites                .02
 (per 64KB circuit).....................................
Submarine Cable Landing Licenses Fee (per cable system).       See Table
                                                                   Below
------------------------------------------------------------------------

FY 2016 Schedule of Regulatory Fees: (continued)

                                                          FY 2016 Radio Station Regulatory Fees
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                                           FM Classes A,   FM Classes B,
                    Population served                       AM Class A      AM Class B      AM Class C      AM Class D        B1 & C3     C, C0, C1 & C2
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<=25,000................................................            $990            $715            $620            $685          $1,075          $1,250
25,001-75,000...........................................          $1,475          $1,075            $925          $1,025          $1,625          $1,850
75,001-150,000..........................................          $2,200          $1,600          $1,375          $1,525          $2,400          $2,750
150,001-500,000.........................................          $3,300          $2,375          $2,075          $2,275          $3,600          $4,125
500,001-1,200,000.......................................          $5,500          $3,975          $3,450          $3,800          $6,000          $6,875
1,200,001-3,000,00......................................          $8,250          $5,950          $5,175          $5,700          $9,000         $10,300
3,000,001-6,000,00......................................         $11,000          $7,950          $6,900          $7,600         $12,000         $13,750
>6,000,000..............................................         $13,750          $9,950          $8,625          $9,500         $15,000         $17,175
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


[[Page 44338]]


                   FY 2016 Schedule of Regulatory Fees
             International Bearer Circuits--Submarine Cable
------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Submarine cable systems (capacity as of December 31,
                          2015)                             Fee amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
< 2.5 Gbps..............................................          $8,325
2.5 Gbps or greater, but less than 5 Gbps...............          16,650
5 Gbps or greater, but less than 10 Gbps................          33,300
10 Gbps or greater, but less than 20 Gbps...............          66,600
20 Gbps or greater......................................         133,200
------------------------------------------------------------------------

VII. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis

    58. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as 
amended (RFA),\170\ an Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) 
was included in the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking.\171\ The Commission 
sought written public comment on these proposals including comment on 
the IRFA. This Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) conforms to 
the IRFA.\172\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \170\ 5 U.S.C. 603. The RFA, 5 U.S.C. 601-612 has been amended 
by the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 
(SBREFA), Public Law Number 104-121, Title II, 110 Stat. 847 (1996).
    \171\ Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal 
Year 2017, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, MD Docket No. 17-134, 32 
FCC Rcd 4526 (2017) (FY 2017 NPRM); 80 FR 26019, June 6, 2017.
    \172\ 5 U.S.C. 604.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

A. Need for, and Objectives of, the Report and Order

    59. In this Report and Order, we conclude the Assessment and 
Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year (FY) 2017 proceeding to 
collect $356,710,992 in regulatory fees for FY 2017, pursuant to 
section 9 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended (Communications 
Act or Act).\173\ These regulatory fees will be due in September 2017. 
Under section 9 of the Communications Act, regulatory fees are mandated 
by Congress and collected to recover the regulatory costs associated 
with the Commission's enforcement, policy and rulemaking, user 
information, and international activities in an amount that can be 
reasonably expected to equal the amount of the Commission's annual 
appropriation.\174\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \173\ 47 U.S.C. 159.
    \174\ 47 U.S.C. 159(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    60. This FY 2017 Report and Order adopts a regulatory fee schedule 
that includes the following noteworthy changes from prior years: (1) A 
reallocation of 38 FTEs in the Wireline Competition Bureau from direct 
to indirect; (2) a reallocation of four FTEs from the Wireline 
Competition Bureau to the Wireless Telecommunications Bureau; (3) an 
updated regulatory fee for Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS) providers, 
a subcategory in the cable television and Internet Protocol Television 
(IPTV) category; (4) adjustments to the regulatory fees on radio and 
television broadcasters; (5) an increase in the de minimis threshold 
for annual regulatory fee payments from $500 to $1,000; and (6) the 
elimination of the distinction between non-common carrier and common 
carrier terrestrial International Bearer Circuits (IBCs).

B. Summary of the Significant Issues Raised by the Public Comments in 
Response to the IRFA

    61. None.

C. Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities to Which 
the Rules Will Apply

    62. The RFA directs agencies to provide a description of, and where 
feasible, an estimate of the number of small entities that may be 
affected by the proposed rules and policies, if adopted.\175\ The RFA 
generally defines the term ``small entity'' as having the same meaning 
as the terms ``small business,'' ``small organization,'' and ``small 
governmental jurisdiction.'' \176\ In addition, the term ``small 
business'' has the same meaning as the term ``small business concern'' 
under the Small Business Act.\177\ 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 additional criteria 
established by the SBA.\178\ Nationwide, there are a total of 
approximately 27.9 million small businesses, according to the SBA.\179\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \175\ 5 U.S.C. 603(b)(3).
    \176\ 5 U.S.C. 601(6).
    \177\ 5 U.S.C. 601(3) (incorporating by reference the definition 
of ``small-business concern'' in the Small Business Act, 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.''
    \178\ 15 U.S.C. 632.
    \179\ See SBA, Office of Advocacy, ``Frequently Asked 
Questions,'' https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/advocacy/SB-FAQ-2016_WEB.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    63. 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.'' \180\ 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.\181\ Census data for 
2012 shows that there were 3,117 firms that operated that year. Of this 
total, 3,083 operated with fewer than 1,000 employees.\182\ Thus, under 
this size standard, most firms in this industry can be considered 
small.
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    \180\ http://www.census.gov/cgi-bin/sssd/naics/naicsrch.
    \181\ See 13 CFR 120.201, NAICS code 517110.
    \182\ http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=ECN_2012_US_51SSSZ5&prodType=table.
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    64. Local Exchange Carriers (LECs). Neither the Commission nor the 
SBA has developed a size standard for small businesses specifically 
applicable to local exchange services. The closest applicable NAICS 
code category is Wired Telecommunications Carriers as defined in 
paragraph 6 of this FRFA. Under the applicable SBA size standard, such 
a business is small if it has 1,500

[[Page 44339]]

or fewer employees.\183\ According to Commission data, census data for 
2012 shows that there were 3,117 firms that operated that year. Of this 
total, 3,083 operated with fewer than 1,000 employees.\184\ The 
Commission therefore estimates that most providers of local exchange 
carrier service are small entities that may be affected by the rules 
adopted.
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    \183\ 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517110.
    \184\ http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=ECN_2012_US_51SSSZ5&prodType=table.
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    65. Incumbent LECs. Neither the Commission nor the SBA has 
developed a small business size standard specifically for incumbent 
local exchange services. The closest applicable NAICS code category is 
Wired Telecommunications Carriers as defined in paragraph 6 of this 
FRFA. Under that size standard, such a business is small if it has 
1,500 or fewer employees.\185\ According to Commission data, 3,117 
firms operated in that year. Of this total, 3,083 operated with fewer 
than 1,000 employees.\186\ Consequently, the Commission estimates that 
most providers of incumbent local exchange service are small businesses 
that may be affected by the rules and policies adopted. Three hundred 
and seven (307) Incumbent Local Exchange Carriers reported that they 
were incumbent local exchange service providers.\187\ Of this total, an 
estimated 1,006 have 1,500 or fewer employees.\188\
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    \185\ 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517110.
    \186\ http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=ECN_2012_US_51SSSZ5&prodType=table.
    \187\ See Trends in Telephone Service, Federal Communications 
Commission, Wireline Competition Bureau, Industry Analysis and 
Technology Division at Table 5.3 (September 2010) (Trends in 
Telephone Service).
    \188\ Id.
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    66. Competitive Local Exchange Carriers (Competitive LECs), 
Competitive Access Providers (CAPs), Shared-Tenant Service Providers, 
and Other Local Service Providers. Neither the Commission nor the SBA 
has developed a small business size standard specifically for these 
service providers. The appropriate NAICS code category is Wired 
Telecommunications Carriers, as defined in paragraph 6 of this FRFA. 
Under that size standard, such a business is small if it has 1,500 or 
fewer employees.\189\ U.S. Census data for 2012 indicate that 3,117 
firms operated during that year. Of that number, 3,083 operated with 
fewer than 1,000 employees.\190\ Based on this data, the Commission 
concludes that most Competitive LECS, CAPs, Shared-Tenant Service 
Providers, and Other Local Service Providers, are small entities. 
According to Commission data, 1,442 carriers reported that they were 
engaged in the provision of either competitive local exchange services 
or competitive access provider services.\191\ Of these 1,442 carriers, 
an estimated 1,256 have 1,500 or fewer employees.\192\ In addition, 17 
carriers have reported that they are Shared-Tenant Service Providers, 
and all 17 are estimated to have 1,500 or fewer employees.\193\ Also, 
72 carriers have reported that they are Other Local Service 
Providers.\194\ Of this total, 70 have 1,500 or fewer employees.\195\ 
Consequently, based on internally researched FCC data, the Commission 
estimates that most providers of competitive local exchange service, 
competitive access providers, Shared-Tenant Service Providers, and 
Other Local Service Providers are small entities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \189\ 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517110.
    \190\ http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=ECN_2012_US_51SSSZ5&prodType=table.
    \191\ See Trends in Telephone Service, at Table 5.3.
    \192\ Id.
    \193\ Id.
    \194\ Id.
    \195\ Id.
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    67. Interexchange Carriers (IXCs). Neither the Commission nor the 
SBA has developed a definition for Interexchange Carriers. The closest 
NAICS code category is Wired Telecommunications Carriers as defined in 
paragraph 6 of this FRFA. The applicable size standard under SBA rules 
is that such a business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer 
employees.\196\ U.S. Census data for 2012 indicates that 3,117 firms 
operated during that year. Of that number, 3,083 operated with fewer 
than 1,000 employees.\197\ According to internally developed Commission 
data, 359 companies reported that their primary telecommunications 
service activity was the provision of interexchange services.\198\ Of 
this total, an estimated 317 have 1,500 or fewer employees.\199\ 
Consequently, the Commission estimates that most interexchange service 
providers are small entities that may be affected by the rules adopted.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \196\ 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517110.
    \197\ http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=ECN_2012_US_51SSSZ5&prodType=table.
    \198\ See Trends in Telephone Service, at Table 5.3.
    \199\ Id.
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    68. Prepaid Calling Card Providers. Neither the Commission nor the 
SBA has developed a small business definition specifically for prepaid 
calling card providers. The most appropriate NAICS code-based category 
for defining prepaid calling card providers is Telecommunications 
Resellers. This industry comprises establishments engaged in purchasing 
access and network capacity from owners and operators of 
telecommunications networks and reselling wired and wireless 
telecommunications services (except satellite) to businesses and 
households. Establishments in this industry resell telecommunications; 
they do not operate transmission facilities and infrastructure. Mobile 
virtual networks operators (MVNOs) are included in this industry.\200\ 
Under the applicable SBA size standard, such a business is small if it 
has 1,500 or fewer employees.\201\ U.S. Census data for 2012 show that 
1,341 firms provided resale services during that year. Of that number, 
1,341 operated with fewer than 1,000 employees.\202\ Thus, under this 
category and the associated small business size standard, the majority 
of these prepaid calling card providers can be considered small 
entities. According to Commission data, 193 carriers have reported that 
they are engaged in the provision of prepaid calling cards.\203\ All 
193 carriers have 1,500 or fewer employees.\204\ Consequently, the 
Commission estimates that the majority of prepaid calling card 
providers are small entities that may be affected by the rules adopted.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \200\ http://www.census.gov/cgi-bin/ssd/naics/naicsrch.
    \201\ 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517911.
    \202\ http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=ECN_2012_US_51SSSZ5&prodType=table.
    \203\ See Trends in Telephone Service, at Table 5.3.
    \204\ Id.
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    69. Local Resellers. Neither the Commission nor the SBA has 
developed a small business size standard specifically for Local 
Resellers. The SBA has developed a small business size standard for the 
category of Telecommunications Resellers. Under that size standard, 
such a business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees.\205\ 
Census data for 2012 show that 1,341 firms provided resale services 
during that year. Of that number, 1,341 operated with fewer than 1,000 
employees.\206\ Under this category and the associated small business 
size standard, the majority of these local resellers can be considered 
small entities. According to Commission data, 213 carriers have 
reported that they are engaged in the provision of local resale

[[Page 44340]]

services.\207\ Of this total, an estimated 211 have 1,500 or fewer 
employees.\208\ Consequently, the Commission estimates that the 
majority of local resellers are small entities that may be affected by 
the rules adopted.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \205\ 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517911.
    \206\ http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=ECN_2012_US_51SSSZ5&prodType=table.
    \207\ See Trends in Telephone Service, at Table 5.3.
    \208\ Id.
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    70. Toll Resellers. The Commission has not developed a definition 
for Toll Resellers. The closest NAICS code Category is 
Telecommunications Resellers, and the SBA has developed a small 
business size standard for the category of Telecommunications 
Resellers.\209\ Under that size standard, such a business is small if 
it has 1,500 or fewer employees.\210\ Census data for 2012 show that 
1,341 firms provided resale services during that year. Of that number, 
1,341 operated with fewer than 1,000 employees.\211\ Thus, under this 
category and the associated small business size standard, the majority 
of these resellers can be considered small entities. According to 
Commission data, 881 carriers have reported that they are engaged in 
the provision of toll resale services.\212\ Of this total, an estimated 
857 have 1,500 or fewer employees.\213\ Consequently, the Commission 
estimates that the majority of toll resellers are small entities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \209\ 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517911.
    \210\ http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=ECN_2012_US_51SSSZ5&prodType=table.
    \211\ Id.
    \212\ Trends in Telephone Service, at Table 5.3.
    \213\ Id.
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    71. Other Toll Carriers. Neither the Commission nor the SBA has 
developed a definition for small businesses specifically applicable to 
Other Toll Carriers. This category includes toll carriers that do not 
fall within the categories of interexchange carriers, operator service 
providers, prepaid calling card providers, satellite service carriers, 
or toll resellers. The closest applicable NAICS code category is for 
Wired Telecommunications Carriers as defined in paragraph 6 of this 
FRFA. Under the applicable SBA size standard, such a business is small 
if it has 1,500 or fewer employees.\214\ Census data for 2012 shows 
that there were 3,117 firms that operated that year. Of this total, 
3,083 operated with fewer than 1,000 employees.\215\ Thus, under this 
category and the associated small business size standard, most Other 
Toll Carriers can be considered small. According to internally 
developed Commission data, 284 companies reported that their primary 
telecommunications service activity was the provision of other toll 
carriage.\216\ Of these, an estimated 279 have 1,500 or fewer 
employees.\217\ Consequently, the Commission estimates that most Other 
Toll Carriers are small entities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \214\ 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517110.
    \215\ http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=ECN_2012_US_51SSSZ5&prodType=table.
    \216\ Trends in Telephone Service, at Table 5.3.
    \217\ Id.
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    72. Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite). This 
industry comprises establishments engaged in operating and maintaining 
switching and transmission facilities to provide communications via the 
airwaves. Establishments in this industry have spectrum licenses and 
provide services using that spectrum, such as cellular services, paging 
services, wireless internet access, and wireless video services.\218\ 
The appropriate size standard under SBA rules is that such a business 
is small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. For this industry, Census 
data for 2012 show that there were 967 firms that operated for the 
entire year. Of this total, 955 firms had fewer than 1,000 employees. 
Thus, under this category and the associated size standard, the 
Commission estimates that the majority of wireless telecommunications 
carriers (except satellite) are small entities. Similarly, according to 
internally developed Commission data, 413 carriers reported that they 
were engaged in the provision of wireless telephony, including cellular 
service, Personal Communications Service (PCS), and Specialized Mobile 
Radio (SMR) services.\219\ Of this total, an estimated 261 have 1,500 
or fewer employees.\220\ Thus, using available data, we estimate that 
the majority of wireless firms can be considered small.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \218\ NAICS code 517210. See http://www.census.gov/cgi-bin/ssd/naics/naiscsrch.
    \219\ Trends in Telephone Service, at Table 5.3.
    \220\ Id.
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    73. Television Broadcasting. This Economic Census category 
``comprises establishments primarily engaged in broadcasting images 
together with sound. These establishments operate television 
broadcasting studios and facilities for the programming and 
transmission of programs to the public.'' \221\ 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 Television 
Broadcasting firms: those having $38.5 million or less in annual 
receipts.\222\ The 2012 Economic Census reports that 751 television 
broadcasting firms operated during that year. Of that number, 656 had 
annual receipts of less than $25 million per year. Based on that Census 
data we conclude that most firms that operate television stations are 
small. The Commission has estimated the number of licensed commercial 
television stations to be 1,383.\223\ In addition, according to 
Commission staff review of the BIA Advisory Services, LLC's Media 
Access Pro Television Database, on March 28, 2012, about 950 of an 
estimated 1,300 commercial television stations (or approximately 73 
percent) had revenues of $14 million or less.\224\ We therefore 
estimate that the majority of commercial television broadcasters are 
small entities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \221\ U.S. Census Bureau, 2012 NAICS code Economic Census 
Definitions, http://www.census.gov.cgi-bin/sssd/naics/naicsrch.
    \222\ 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 515120.
    \223\ See FCC News Release, ``Broadcast Station Totals as of 
March 31, 2017,'' April 11, 2017; https://apps.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-344256A1.pdf.
    \224\ We recognize that BIA's estimate differs slightly from the 
FCC total.
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    74. In assessing whether a business concern qualifies as small 
under the above definition, business (control) affiliations \225\ 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, an element of the 
definition of ``small business'' is that the 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 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 to that extent.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \225\ ``[Business concerns] are affiliates of each other when 
one concern controls or has the power to control the other or a 
third party or parties controls or has to power to control both.'' 
13 CFR 21.103(a)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    75. In addition, the Commission has estimated the number of 
licensed noncommercial educational television stations to be 394.\226\ 
These stations are non-profit, and therefore considered to be small 
entities.\227\ There are also 2,382 low power television stations, 
including

[[Page 44341]]

Class A stations.\228\ Given the nature of these services, we will 
presume that all LPTV licensees qualify as small entities under the 
above SBA small business size standard.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \226\ See FCC News Release, ``Broadcast Station Totals as of 
March 31, 2017,'' April 11, 2017; https://apps.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-344256A1.pdf.
    \227\ See generally 5 U.S.C. 601(4), (6).
    \228\ See FCC News Release, ``Broadcast Station Totals as of 
March 31, 2017,'' April 11, 2017; https://apps.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-344256A1.pdf.
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    76. Radio Stations. This Economic Census category ``comprises 
establishments primarily engaged in broadcasting aural programs by 
radio to the public. Programming may originate in their own studio, 
from an affiliated network, or from external sources.'' \229\ The SBA 
has established a small business size standard for this category, which 
is: Such firms having $38.5 million or less in annual receipts.\230\ 
Census data for 2012 show that 2,849 radio station firms operated 
during that year. Of that number, 2,806 operated with annual receipts 
of less than $25 million per year. \231\ According to Commission staff 
review of BIA Advisory Services, LLC's Media Access Pro Radio Database, 
on March 28, 2012, about 10,759 (97 percent) of 11,102 commercial radio 
stations had revenues of $38.5 million or less. Therefore, most such 
entities are small entities.
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    \229\ https://www.census.gov.cgi-bin/sssd/naics/naicsrch.
    \230\ 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 515112.
    \231\ http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=ECN_2012_US_51SSSZ5&prodType=table.
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    77. In assessing whether a business concern qualifies as small 
under the above size standard, business affiliations must be 
included.\232\ In addition, to be determined to be a ``small 
business,'' the entity may not be dominant in its field of 
operation.\233\ We note that it is difficult at times to assess these 
criteria in the context of media entities, and our estimate of small 
businesses may therefore be over-inclusive.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \232\ ``Concerns and entities are affiliates of each other when 
one controls or has the power to control the other, or a third party 
or parties controls or has the power to control both. It does not 
matter whether control is exercised, so long as the power to control 
exists.'' 13 CFR 121.103(a)(1) (an SBA regulation).
    \233\ 13 CFR 121.102(b) (an SBA regulation).
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    78. Cable Television 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.\234\ The SBA has established a size standard for this industry 
of $38.5 million or less. Census data for 2012 shows that there were 
367 firms that operated that year. Of this total, 319 operated with 
annual receipts of less than $25 million.\235\ Thus under this size 
standard, most firms offering cable and other program distribution 
services can be considered small and may be affected by rules adopted.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \234\ https://www.census.gov.cgi-bin/sssd/naics/naicsrch.
    \235\ http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=ECN_2012_US-51SSSZ5&prodType=Table.
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    79. Cable Companies and Systems. 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.\236\ Industry data 
indicate that there are currently 4,413 active cable systems in the 
United States.\237\ Of this total, all but ten cable operators 
nationwide are small under the 400,000-subscriber size standard.\238\ 
In addition, under the Commission's rate regulation rules, a ``small 
system'' is a cable system serving 15,000 or fewer subscribers.\239\ 
Current Commission records show 4,413 cable systems nationwide.\240\ 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.\241\ Thus, under this standard as well, we estimate that most 
cable systems are small entities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \236\ 47 CFR 76.901(e).
    \237\ See Eighteenth Competition Report, 32 FCC Rcd at 584, 
para. 39 (citing the Commission's Cable Operations and Licensing 
Systems (COALS) database).
    \238\ See https://www.snl.com/web/client?auth=inherit#industry/topCableMSOs (last visited July 18, 2017).
    \239\ 47 CFR 76.901(c)
    \240\ See footnote 2, supra.
    \241\ August 5, 2015 report from the Media Bureau based on its 
research in COALS. See www.fcc.gov/coals.
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    80. Cable System Operators (Telecom Act Standard). The 
Communications Act 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.'' \242\ There are approximately 53 million cable video 
subscribers in the United States today.\243\ 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.\244\ 
Based on available data, we find that all but nine incumbent cable 
operators are small entities under this size standard.\245\ 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.\246\ Although it seems certain 
that some of these cable system operators are affiliated with entities 
whose gross annual revenues exceed $250 million, 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.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \242\ 47 CFR 76.901(f) and notes ff. 1, 2, and 3.
    \243\ See NCTA Industry Data, Cable's Customer Base, available 
at https://www.ncta.com/industry-data (last visited July 6, 2017).
    \244\ 47 CFR 76.901(f) and notes ff. 1, 2, and 3.
    \245\ See https://www.snl.com/web/client?auth=inherit#industry/topCableMSOs (last visited July 18, 2018).
    \246\ The Commission does receive such information on a case-by-
case basis if a cable operator appeals a local franchise authority's 
finding that the operator does not qualify as a small cable operator 
pursuant to Sec.  76.901(f) of the Commission's rules. See 47 CFR 
76.901(f).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    81. 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

[[Page 44342]]

operate are included in this industry.\247\ The SBA determines that a 
wireline business is small if it has fewer than 1500 employees.\248\ 
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.\249\ Based on that data, we conclude that most 
wireline firms are small under the applicable standard. However, 
currently only two entities provide DBS service, AT&T and DISH Network. 
AT&T and DISH Network each report annual revenues that are in excess of 
the threshold for a small business. Accordingly, we conclude that DBS 
service is provided only by large firms.
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    \247\ http://www.census.gov/cgi-bin/sssd/naics/naicsrch.
    \248\ NAICS code 517110; 13 CFR 121.201.
    \249\ http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/tableservices.jasf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid+ECN_2012_US.51SSSZ4&prodType=table.
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    82. All Other Telecommunications. ``All Other Telecommunications'' 
is defined as follows: This U.S. industry is comprised of 
establishments that are primarily engaged in providing specialized 
telecommunications services, such as satellite tracking, communications 
telemetry, and radar station operation. This industry also includes 
establishments primarily engaged in providing satellite terminal 
stations and associated facilities connected with one or more 
terrestrial systems and capable of transmitting telecommunications to, 
and receiving telecommunications from, satellite systems. 
Establishments providing Internet services or voice over Internet 
protocol (VoIP) services via client-supplied telecommunications 
connections are also included in this industry.\250\ The SBA has 
developed a small business size standard for ``All Other 
Telecommunications,'' which consists of all such firms with gross 
annual receipts of $32.5 million or less.\251\ For this category, 
census data for 2012 show that there were 1,442 firms that operated for 
the entire year. Of these firms, a total of 1,400 had gross annual 
receipts of less than $25 million.\252\ Thus, most ``All Other 
Telecommunications'' firms potentially affected by the rules adopted 
can be considered small.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \250\ http://www.census.gov/cgi-bin/ssssd/naics/naicsrch.
    \251\ 13 CFR 121.201; NAICS code 517919.
    \252\ http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=ECN_2012_US_51SSSZ4&prodType=table.
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    83. RespOrgs. RespOrgs, i.e., Responsible Organizations, are 
entities chosen by toll-free subscribers to manage and administer the 
appropriate records in the toll-free Service Management System for the 
toll-free subscriber.\253\ Although RespOrgs are often wireline 
carriers, they can also include non-carrier entities. Therefore, in the 
definition herein of RespOrgs, two categories are presented, i.e., 
Carrier RespOrgs and Non-Carrier RespOrgs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \253\ See 47 CFR 52.101(b)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    84. Carrier RespOrgs. Neither the Commission, the U.S. Census, nor 
the SBA have developed a definition for Carrier RespOrgs. Accordingly, 
the Commission believes that the closest NAICS code-based definitional 
categories for Carrier RespOrgs are Wired Telecommunications Carriers 
\254\ and Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except satellite).\255\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \254\ 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517110
    \255\ 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517210.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    85. The U.S. Census Bureau defines Wired Telecommunications 
Carriers 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.\256\ 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.\257\ Census data for 2012 show that there were 3,117 Wired 
Telecommunications Carrier firms that operated for that entire year. Of 
that number, 3,083 operated with less than 1,000 employees.\258\ Based 
on that data, we conclude that most Carrier RespOrgs that operated with 
wireline-based technology are small.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \256\ http://www.census.gov/cgi-bin/sssd/naics.naicsrch.
    \257\ 13 CFR 120.201, NAICS code 517110.
    \258\ http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=ECN_2012_US_51SSSZ4&prodType=table.
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    86. The U.S. Census Bureau defines Wireless Telecommunications 
Carriers (except satellite) as establishments engaged in operating and 
maintaining switching and transmission facilities to provide 
communications via the airwaves, such as cellular services, paging 
services, wireless internet access, and wireless video services.\259\ 
The appropriate size standard under SBA rules is that such a business 
is small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees.\260\ Census data for 2012 
show that 967 Wireless Telecommunications Carriers operated in that 
year. Of that number, 955 operated with less than 1,000 employees.\261\ 
Based on that data, we conclude that most Carrier RespOrgs that 
operated with wireless-based technology are small.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \259\ http://www.census.gov/cgi-bin/sssd/naics.naicsrch.
    \260\ 13 CFR 120.201, NAICS code 517120.
    \261\ http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=ECN_2012_US_51SSSZ4&prodType=table.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    87. Non-Carrier RespOrgs. Neither the Commission, the Census, nor 
the SBA have developed a definition of Non-Carrier RespOrgs. 
Accordingly, the Commission believes that the closest NAICS code-based 
definitional categories for Non-Carrier RespOrgs are ``Other Services 
Related To Advertising'' \262\ and ``Other Management Consulting 
Services.'' \263\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \262\ 13 CFR 120.201, NAICS code 541890.
    \263\ 13 CFR 120.201, NAICS code 541618.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    88. The U.S. Census defines Other Services Related to Advertising 
as comprising establishments primarily engaged in providing advertising 
services (except advertising agency services, public relations agency 
services, media buying agency services, media representative services, 
display advertising services, direct mail advertising services, 
advertising material distribution services, and marketing consulting 
services.\264\ The SBA has established a size standard for this 
industry as annual receipts of $15 million dollars or less.\265\ Census 
data for 2012 show that 5,804 firms operated in this industry for the 
entire year. Of that number, 5,249 operated with annual receipts of 
less than $10 million.\266\ Based on that data we conclude that most 
Non-Carrier RespOrgs who provide TFN-related advertising services are 
small.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \264\ http://www.census.gov/cgi-bin/sssd/naics.naicsrch.
    \265\ 13 CFR 120.201, NAICS code 541890.
    \266\ http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=ECN_2012_US_51SSSZ4&prodType=table.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    89. The U.S. Census defines Other Management Consulting Services as 
establishments primarily engaged in providing management consulting 
services (except administrative and general management consulting; 
human resources consulting; marketing consulting; or process, physical 
distribution, and logistics consulting).

[[Page 44343]]

Establishments providing telecommunications or utilities management 
consulting services are included in this industry.\267\ The SBA has 
established a size standard for this industry of $15 million dollars or 
less.\268\ Census data for 2012 show that 3,683 firms operated in this 
industry for that entire year. Of that number, 3,632 operated with less 
than $10 million in annual receipts. \269\ Based on this data, we 
conclude that most non-carrier RespOrgs who provide TFN-related 
management consulting services are small.\270\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \267\ http://www.census.gov/cgi-bin/sssd/naics.naicsrch.
    \268\ 13 CFR 120.201, NAICS code 514618.
    \269\ http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=ECN_2012_US_51SSSZ4&prodType=table.
    \270\ The four NAICS code-based categories selected above to 
provide definitions for Carrier and Non-Carrier RespOrgs were 
selected because as a group they refer generically and 
comprehensively to all RespOrgs. Therefore, all RespOrgs, including 
those not identified specifically or individually, must comply with 
the rules adopted in the Regulatory Fees Report and Order associated 
with this Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    90. In addition to the data contained in the four (see above) U.S. 
Census NAICS code categories that provide definitions of what services 
and functions the Carrier and Non-Carrier RespOrgs provide, Somos, the 
trade association that monitors RespOrg activities, compiled data 
showing that as of July 1, 2016, there were 23 RespOrgs operational in 
Canada and 436 RespOrgs operational in the United States, for a total 
of 459 RespOrgs currently registered with Somos.\271\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \271\ Email from Jennifer Blanchard of SOMOS dated July 1, 2016.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

D. Description of Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping and Other 
Compliance Requirements

    91. This Report and Order does not adopt any new reporting, 
recordkeeping, or other compliance requirements.

E. Steps Taken To Minimize Significant Economic Impact on Small 
Entities, and Significant Alternatives Considered

    92. The RFA requires an agency to describe any significant 
alternatives that it has considered in reaching its 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.\272\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \272\ 5 U.S.C. 603(c)(1)-(c)(4).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    93. This Report and Order does not adopt any new reporting 
requirements. Therefore, no adverse economic impact on small entities 
will be sustained based on reporting requirements.
    94. In keeping with the requirements of the Regulatory Flexibility 
Act, we have considered certain alternative means of mitigating the 
effects of fee increases to a particular industry segment. For example, 
the Commission increased the de minimis threshold from $500 to $1,000, 
which will impact many small entities that pay regulatory fees. 
Historically, many of these small entities have been late in making 
their fee payments to the Commission by the due date. This increase in 
the de minimis threshold to $1,000 will relieve regulatees both 
financially and administratively. This Report and Order also adopts 
regulatory fees for the smaller market AM and FM broadcast radio 
stations at a lower amount than had been proposed. Finally, regulatees 
may also seek waivers or other relief on the basis of financial 
hardship. See 47 CFR 1.1166.

F. Federal Rules That May Duplicate, Overlap, or Conflict

    95. None.

VIII. Ordering Clauses

    96. Accordingly, it is ordered that, pursuant to sections 4(i) and 
(j), 9, and 303(r) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 
U.S.C. 154(i), 154(j), 159, and 303(r), this Report and Order is hereby 
adopted.
    97. It is further ordered that this Report and Order shall be 
effective upon publication in the Federal Register.
    98. It is further ordered that the Commission's Consumer & 
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 U.S. 
Small Business Administration.

List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 1

    Administrative practice and procedure, Civil rights, Claims, 
Communications common carriers, Cuba, Drug abuse, Environmental impact 
statements, Equal access to justice, Equal employment opportunity, 
Federal buildings and facilities, Government employees, Income taxes, 
Indemnity payments, Individuals with disabilities, Investigations, 
Lawyers, Metric system, Penalties, Radio, Reporting and recordkeeping 
requirements, Telecommunications, Television, Wages.

Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene H. Dortch,
Secretary.

Final Rules

    For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Federal 
Communications Commission amends 47 CFR part 1 as follows:

PART 1--PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE

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

    Authority: 47 U.S.C. 151, 154(i), 154(j), 155, 157, 160, 201, 
225, 227, 303, 309, 332, 1403, 1404, 1451, 1452, and 1455.

0
2. Section 1.1152 is revised to read as follows:


Sec.  1.1152  Schedule of annual regulatory fees for wireless radio 
services.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
          Exclusive use services (per license)            Fee amount \1\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Land Mobile (Above 470 MHz and 220 MHz Local, Base
 Station & SMRS) (47 CFR part 90).......................
    (a) New, Renew/Mod (FCC 601 & 159)..................          $25.00
    (b) New, Renew/Mod (Electronic Filing) (FCC 601 &              25.00
     159)...............................................
    (c) Renewal Only (FCC 601 & 159)....................           25.00
    (d) Renewal Only (Electronic Filing) (FCC 601 & 159)           25.00
220 MHz Nationwide:
    (a) New, Renew/Mod (FCC 601 & 159)..................           25.00
    (b) New, Renew/Mod (Electronic Filing) (FCC 601 &              25.00
     159)...............................................
    (c) Renewal Only (FCC 601 & 159)....................           25.00
    (d) Renewal Only (Electronic Filing) (FCC 601 & 159)           25.00

[[Page 44344]]

 
2. Microwave (47 CFR Pt. 101) (Private).................
    (a) New, Renew/Mod (FCC 601 & 159)..................           25.00
    (b) New, Renew/Mod (Electronic Filing) (FCC 601 &              25.00
     159)...............................................
    (c) Renewal Only (FCC 601 & 159)....................           25.00
    (d) Renewal Only (Electronic Filing) (FCC 601 & 159)           25.00
3. Shared Use Services Land Mobile (Frequencies Below
 470 MHz--except 220 MHz)...............................
    (a) New, Renew/Mod (FCC 601 & 159)..................           10.00
    (b) New, Renew/Mod (Electronic Filing) (FCC 601 &              10.00
     159)...............................................
    (c) Renewal Only (FCC 601 & 159)....................           10.00
    (d) Renewal Only (Electronic Filing) (FCC 601 & 159)           10.00
Rural Radio (Part 22):
    (a) New, Additional Facility, Major Renew/Mod                  10.00
     (Electronic Filing) (FCC 601 & 159)................
    (b) Renewal, Minor Renew/Mod (Electronic Filing)               10.00
     (FCC 601 & 159) Marine Coast.......................
Marine Coast (per license) (47 CFR part 80):
    (a) New Renewal/Mod (FCC 601 & 159).................           40.00
    (b) New, Renewal/Mod (Electronic Filing) (FCC 601 &            40.00
     159)...............................................
    (c) Renewal Only (FCC 601 & 159)....................           40.00
    (d) Renewal Only (Electronic Filing) (FCC 601 & 159)           40.00
Aviation Ground:
    (a) New, Renewal/Mod (FCC 601 & 159)................           20.00
    (b) New, Renewal/Mod (Electronic Filing) (FCC 601 &            20.00
     159)...............................................
    (c) Renewal Only (FCC 601 & 159)....................           20.00
    (d) Renewal Only (Electronic Only) (FCC 601 & 159)..           20.00
Marine Ship:
    (a) New, Renewal/Mod (FCC 605 & 159)................           15.00
    (b) New, Renewal/Mod (Electronic Filing) (FCC 605 &            15.00
     159)...............................................
    (c) Renewal Only (FCC 605 & 159)....................           15.00
    (d) Renewal Only (Electronic Filing) (FCC 605 & 159)           15.00
Aviation Aircraft:
    (a) New, Renew/Mod (FCC 605 & 159)..................           10.00
    (b) New, Renew/Mod (Electronic Filing) (FCC 605 &              10.00
     159)...............................................
    (c) Renewal Only (FCC 605 & 159)....................           10.00
    (d) Renewal Only (Electronic Filing) (FCC 605 & 159)           10.00
4. CMRS Cellular/Mobile Services (per unit) (FCC 159)...         \2\ .21
5. CMRS Messaging Services (per unit) (FCC 159).........         \3\ .08
6. Broadband Radio Service (formerly MMDS and MDS)......             800
7. Local Multipoint Distribution Service................             800
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Note that ``small fees'' are collected in advance for the entire
  license term. Therefore, the annual fee amount shown in this table
  that is a small fee (categories 1 through 5) must be multiplied by the
  10-year license term to arrive at the total amount of regulatory fees
  owed. Also, application fees may apply as detailed in Sec.   1.1102.
\2\ These are standard fees that are to be paid in accordance with Sec.
   1.1157(b).
\3\ These are standard fees that are to be paid in accordance with Sec.
   1.1157(b).


0
3. Section 1.1153 is revised to read as follows:


Sec.  1.1153  Schedule of annual regulatory fees and filing locations 
for mass media services.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
           Radio [AM and FM] (47 CFR part 73)               Fee amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. AM Class A:
    <=25,000 population.................................            $895
    25,001-75,000 population............................           1,350
    75,001-150,000 population...........................           2,375
    150,001-500,000 population..........................           3,550
    500,001-1,200,000 population........................           5,325
    1,200,001-3,000,000 population......................           7,975
    3,000,001-6,000,000 population......................          11,950
    >6,000,000 population...............................          17,950
2. AM Class B:
    <=25,000 population.................................             640
    25,001-75,000 population............................             955
    75,001-150,000 population...........................           1,700
    150,001-500,000 population..........................           2,525
    500,001-1,200,000 population........................           3,800
    1,200,001-3,000,000 population......................           5,700
    3,000,001-6,000,000 population......................           8,550
    >6,000,000 population...............................          12,825
3. AM Class C:
    <=25,000 population.................................             555
    25,001-75,000 population............................             830
    75,001-150,000 population...........................           1,475

[[Page 44345]]

 
    150,001-500,000 population..........................           2,200
    500,001-1,200,000 population........................           3,300
    1,200,001-3,000,000 population......................           4,950
    3,000,001-6,000,000 population......................           7,400
    >6,000,000 population...............................          11,100
4. AM Class D:
    <=25,000 population.................................             610
    25,001-75,000 population............................             915
    75,001-150,000 population...........................           1,600
    150,001-500,000 population..........................           2,425
    500,001-1,200,000 population........................           3,625
    1,200,001-3,000,000 population......................           5,425
    3,000,001-6,000,000 population......................           8,150
    >6,000,000 population...............................          12,225
5. AM Construction Permit                                            555
6. FM Classes A, B1 and C3:
    <=25,000 population.................................             980
    25,001-75,000 population............................           1,475
    75,001-150,000 population...........................           2,600
    150,001-500,000 population..........................           3,875
    500,001-1,200,000 population........................           5,825
    1,200,001-3,000,000 population......................           8,750
    3,000,001-6,000,000 population......................          13,100
    >6,000,000 population...............................          19,650
7. FM Classes B, C, C0, C1 and C2:
    <=25,000 population.................................           1,100
    25,001-75,000 population............................           1,650
    75,001-150,000 population...........................           2,925
    150,001-500,000 population..........................           4,400
    500,001-1,200,000 population........................           6,575
    1,200,001-3,000,000 population......................           9,875
    3,000,001-6,000,000 population......................          14,800
    >6,000,000 population...............................          22,225
8. FM Construction Permits..............................             980
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                           TV (47 CFR part 73)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Digital TV (UHF and VHF Commercial Stations):
    1. Markets 1 thru 10................................         $59,750
    2. Markets 11 thru 25...............................          45,025
    3. Markets 26 thru 50...............................          30,050
    4. Markets 51 thru 100..............................          14,975
    5. Remaining Markets................................           4,925
    6. Construction Permits.............................           4,925
Satellite UHF/VHF Commercial:
1. All Markets..........................................           1,725
Low Power TV, Class A TV, TV/FM Translator, & TV/FM                  430
 Booster (47 CFR part 74)...............................
------------------------------------------------------------------------


0
4. Section 1.1154 is revised to read as follows:


Sec.  1.1154  Schedule of annual regulatory charges for common carrier 
services.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
               Radio facilities                        Fee amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Microwave (Domestic Public Fixed)           $25.00.
 (Electronic Filing) (FCC Form 601 & 159).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                Carriers
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Interstate Telephone Service Providers      .00302.
 (per interstate and international end-user
 revenues (see FCC Form 499-A).
2. Toll Free Number Fee......................  .12 per Toll Free Number.
------------------------------------------------------------------------


0
5. Section 1.1155 is revised to read as follows:


Sec.  1.1155  Schedule of regulatory fees for cable television 
services.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       Fee amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Cable Television Relay Service............  $935.
2. Cable TV System, Including IPTV (per        .95.
 subscriber).

[[Page 44346]]

 
3. Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS)..........  .38 per subscriber.
------------------------------------------------------------------------


0
6. Section 1.1156 is revised to read as follows:


Sec.  1.1156  Schedule of regulatory fees for international services.

    (a) Geostationary Orbit (GSO) and Non-Geostationary Orbit (NGSO) 
Space Stations. Regulatory fees are to be paid for GSO and NGSO Space 
Stations that are licensed and operational as of October 1, 2016. The 
following schedule applies for the listed services:

------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Fee category                          Fee amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Space Stations (Geostationary Orbit).........  $140,925
Space Stations (Non-Geostationary Orbit).....  135,350
Earth Stations: Transmit/Receive & Transmit    360
 only (per authorization or registration).
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (b) International Terrestrial and Satellite. (1) Regulatory fees 
for International Bearer Circuits are to be paid by facilities-based 
common carriers that have active (used or leased) international bearer 
circuits as of December 31 of the prior year in any terrestrial or 
satellite transmission facility for the provision of service to an end 
user or resale carrier, which includes active circuits to themselves or 
to their affiliates. In addition, non-common carrier satellite 
operators must pay a fee for each circuit sold or leased to any 
customer, including themselves or their affiliates, other than an 
international common carrier authorized by the Commission to provide 
U.S. international common carrier services. ``Active circuits'' for 
these purposes include backup and redundant circuits. In addition, 
whether circuits are used specifically for voice or data is not 
relevant in determining that they are active circuits.
    (2) The fee amount, per active 64 KB circuit or equivalent will be 
determined for each fiscal year.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
   International Terrestrial and Satellite
      (capacity as of December 31, 2016)               Fee amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Terrestrial Common Carrier...................  $0.03 per 64 KB Circuit
Satellite Common Carrier.....................
Satellite Non-Common Carrier.................
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (c) Submarine cable. Regulatory fees for submarine cable systems 
will be paid annually, per cable landing license, for all submarine 
cable systems operating as of December 31 of the prior year. The fee 
amount will be determined by the Commission for each fiscal year.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Submarine Cable Systems (capacity as of Dec.
                  31, 2016)                            Fee amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
<2.5 Gbps....................................  $8,600
2.5 Gbps or greater, but less than 5 Gbps....  17,175
5 Gbps or greater, but less than 10 Gbps.....  34,350
10 Gbps or greater, but less than 20 Gbps....  68,725
20 Gbps or greater...........................  137,425
------------------------------------------------------------------------

[FR Doc. 2017-19386 Filed 9-21-17; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 6712-01-P



     44322              Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 183 / Friday, September 22, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

         Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.                        quasi-regulatory measures in the Texas                        § 52.2270    Identification of plan.
                                                                  SIP’’ is amended by adding three new                          *        *    *     *        *
     Subpart SS—Texas                                             entries at the end.                                                (e) * * *
     ■ 2. In § 52.2270(e) the table titled ‘‘EPA                    The additions read as follows:
     approved nonregulatory provisions and

                  EPA APPROVED NONREGULATORY PROVISIONS AND QUASI-REGULATORY MEASURES IN THE TEXAS SIP
                                                                                                                        State
                                                                    Applicable geographic or
                 Name of SIP provision                                                                                submittal/       EPA approval date          Comments
                                                                      non-attainment area                           effective date


              *                    *                              *                           *                            *                      *                     *
     Conditional approval of NOX RACT find-               Ellis County, TX .....................................          07/10/15    09/22/17, [Insert FR   TCEQ commitment
       ing for the Martin Marietta (formerly                                                                                            page number            letter of July 29,
       Texas Industries, Inc., or TXI) cement                                                                                           where document         2016.
       manufacturing plant under the 2008 8-                                                                                            begins].
       Hour ozone NAAQS.
     NOX RACT finding under the 2008 8-                   Collin, Dallas, Denton, Tarrant, Ellis,                         07/10/15    09/22/17, [Insert FR   DFW as Moderate
      Hour ozone NAAQS.                                     Johnson, Kaufman, Parker, Rockwall,                                         page number           and Serious.
                                                            and Wise Counties, TX.                                                      where document
                                                                                                                                        begins].
     NOX RACT finding of negative declara-                Collin, Dallas, Denton, Tarrant, Ellis,                         07/10/15    09/22/17, [Insert FR   DFW as Moderate
      tions for nitric acid and adipic acid op-             Johnson, Kaufman, Parker, Rockwall,                                         page number           and Serious.
      erations under the 2008 8-Hour ozone                  and Wise Counties, TX.                                                      where document
      NAAQS.                                                                                                                            begins].



     *       *      *       *      *                              17–134, adopted on September 1, 2017                          Business Paperwork Relief Act of 2002,
     [FR Doc. 2017–20131 Filed 9–21–17; 8:45 am]                  and released on September 5, 2017. The                        Public Law 107–198, see 44 U.S.C.
     BILLING CODE 6560–50–P                                       full text of this document is available for                   3506(c)(4).
                                                                  public inspection and copying during
                                                                                                                                C. Congressional Review Act.
                                                                  normal business hours in the FCC
     FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS                                       Reference Center (Room CY–A257), 445                            3. The Commission will send a copy
     COMMISSION                                                   12th Street SW., Washington, DC 20554,                        of the Report and Order to Congress and
                                                                  or by downloading the text from the                           the Government Accountability Office
     47 CFR Part 1                                                Commission’s Web site at http://                              pursuant to the Congressional Review
                                                                  transition.fcc.gov/Daily_Releases/Daily_                      Act, 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
     [MD Docket No. 17–134; FCC 17–111]
                                                                  Business/2017/db0906/FCC-17-                                  II. Introduction
     Assessment and Collection of                                 111A1.pdf.
                                                                                                                                   4. The Report and Order adopts a
     Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2017                         I. Administrative Matters                                     schedule of regulatory fees to assess and
     AGENCY:  Federal Communications                                                                                            collect $356,710,992 in regulatory fees
                                                                  A. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
     Commission.                                                                                                                for fiscal year (FY) 2017, pursuant to
                                                                    1. As required by the Regulatory                            section 9 of the Communications Act of
     ACTION: Final rule.
                                                                  Flexibility Act of 1980 (RFA),1 the                           1934, as amended (Communications Act
     SUMMARY:   In this document, the                             Commission has prepared a Final                               or Act) and the Commission’s FY 2017
     Commission revises its Schedule of                           Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA)                        Appropriation.2 The schedule of
     Regulatory Fees to recover an amount of                      relating to this Report and Order. The                        regulatory fees for FY 2017 adopted here
     $356,710,992 that Congress has required                      FRFA is located towards the end of this                       is listed in Table 4. These regulatory
     the Commission to collect for fiscal year                    document.                                                     fees are due in September 2017. The FY
     2017. Section 9 of the Communications                        B. Final Paperwork Reduction Act of                           2017 regulatory fees are based on the
     Act of 1934, as amended, provides for                        1995 Analysis                                                 proposals in the FY 2017 NPRM,3
     the annual assessment and collection of                                                                                    considered in light of the comments
     regulatory fees under sections 9(b)(2)                         2. This document does not contain                           received and Commission analysis.
     and 9(b)(3), respectively, for annual                        new or modified information collection
                                                                  requirements subject to the Paperwork                         III. Background
     ‘‘Mandatory Adjustments’’ and
     ‘‘Permitted Amendments’’ to the                              Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA), Public                              5. Congress adopted a regulatory fee
     Schedule of Regulatory Fees.                                 Law 104–13. In addition, therefore, it                        schedule in 1993 4 and authorized the
                                                                  does not contain any new or modified
     DATES: Effective September 22, 2017. To
                                                                  information collection burden for small                         2 47 U.S.C. 159. Consolidated Appropriations Act,
     avoid penalties and interest, regulatory                                                                                   2017, Division E—Financial Services and General
                                                                  business concerns with fewer than 25
     fees should be paid by the due date of                                                                                     Government Appropriations Act, 2017, Title V—
                                                                  employees, pursuant to the Small                              Independent Agencies, Public Law 115–31 (May 5,
     September 26, 2017.
                                                                                                                                2017), available at https://www.congress.gov/bill/
     FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:                               1 See 5 U.S.C. 603. The RFA, see 5 U.S.C. 601–              115th-congress/house-bill/244/text.
     Roland Helvajian, Office of Managing                         612, has been amended by the Small Business                     3 Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees

     Director at (202) 418–0444.                                  Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996                   for Fiscal Year 2017, Notice of Proposed
                                                                  (SBREFA), Public Law 104–121, Title II, 110 Stat.             Rulemaking, 32 FCC Rcd 4526 (FY 2017 NPRM); 82
     SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a                                                                                       FR 26019, June 6, 2017.
                                                                  847 (1996). The SBREFA was enacted as Title II of
     summary of the Commission’s Report                           the Contract with America Advancement Act of                    4 47 U.S.C. 159(g) (showing original fee schedule

     and Order, FCC 17–111, MD Docket No.                         1996 (CWAAA).                                                 prior to Commission amendment).



VerDate Sep<11>2014     16:02 Sep 21, 2017   Jkt 241001    PO 00000     Frm 00024      Fmt 4700    Sfmt 4700       E:\FR\FM\22SER1.SGM   22SER1


                      Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 183 / Friday, September 22, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                44323

     Commission to assess and collect                        specified in section 9(a), ‘‘adjusted to               fee categories; 17 reallocated some FTEs
     annual regulatory fees pursuant to the                  take into account factors that are                     from the International Bureau as
     schedule, as amended by the                             reasonably related to the benefits                     indirect; 18 combined the UHF and VHF
     Commission.5 The Commission                             provided to the payor of the fee by the                television stations into one regulatory
     annually reviews the regulatory fee                     Commission’s activities . . . .’’ 13 FTEs              fee category; 19 and added Internet
     schedule, proposes changes to the                       are categorized as ‘‘direct’’ if they are              Protocol Television (IPTV) to the cable
     schedule to reflect changes in the                      performing regulatory activities in one                television fee category.20 In the FY 2014
     amount of its appropriation, and                        of the ‘‘core’’ bureaus, i.e., the Wireless            Report and Order, the Commission
     proposes increases or decreases to the                  Telecommunications Bureau, Media                       adopted a new fee subcategory for toll
     schedule of regulatory fees.6 The                       Bureau, Wireline Competition Bureau,                   free numbers in the Interstate
     Commission makes changes to the                         and part of the International Bureau. All              Telecommunications Service Provider
     regulatory fee schedule ‘‘if the                        other FTEs are considered ‘‘indirect.’’ 14             (ITSP) 21 fee category; 22 increased the
     Commission determines that the                          The total FTEs for each fee category is                de minimis threshold to $500 for annual
     schedule requires amendment to                          calculated by counting the number of                   regulatory fee payors; 23 and eliminated
     comply with the requirements’’ 7 of                     direct FTEs in the core bureau that                    several categories from the regulatory
     section 9(b)(1)(A) of the Act.8 The                     regulates that category, plus a                        fee schedule.24 In the FY 2015 Report
     Commission may also add, delete, or                     proportional allocation of indirect FTEs.              and Order, the Commission reduced the
     reclassify services in the fee schedule to              Next, the Commission allocates the total               regulatory fee for submarine cable,
     reflect additions, deletions, or changes                amount to be collected among the                       terrestrial, and satellite international
     in the nature of its services ‘‘as a                    various regulatory fee categories. This                bearer circuits.25 The Commission also
     consequence of Commission rulemaking                    allocation is based on the number of                   adopted a regulatory fee for DBS, as a
     proceedings or changes in law.’’                        FTEs assigned to work in each                          subcategory of the cable television and
     Regulatory fees must also cover the                     regulatory fee category. Each regulatee                IPTV fee category,26 and for toll-free
     costs the Commission incurs in                          within a fee category pays its                         numbers 27 and reallocated four
     regulating entities that are statutorily                proportionate share based on an                        International Bureau FTEs from direct to
     exempt from paying regulatory fees,9                    objective measure, e.g., revenues,                     indirect.28 In the FY 2016 Report and
     entities whose regulatory fees are                      number of subscribers, or licenses.15                  Order, the Commission adjusted
     waived,10 and entities that provide                       7. As part of its annual review, the                 regulatory fees for radio and television
     nonregulated services. Thus, for each                   Commission seeks to improve its
     fiscal year, the Commission proposes a                  regulatory fee analysis.16 For example,                   17 Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees

     fee schedule in the annual Notice of                    in the FY 2013 Report and Order, the                   for Fiscal Year 2013, Report and Order, 28 FCC Rcd
                                                                                                                    12351, 12354–58, paras. 10–20 (2013) (FY 2013
     Proposed Rulemaking that reflects                       Commission updated FTE allocations to                  Report and Order); 78 FR 52433, August 23, 2013.
     changes in the amount appropriated for                  more accurately reflect the number of                  The Commission now updates the FTE allocations
     the performance of the Commission’s                     FTEs working on regulation and                         annually. This was recommended in a report issued
     regulatory activities, changes in the                   oversight of the regulatees in the various             by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) in
                                                                                                                    2012. See GAO ‘‘Federal Communications
     industries represented by the regulatory                                                                       Commission Regulatory Fee Process Needs to be
     fee payors, changes in FTE 11 levels, and                 13 47 U.S.C. 159(b)(1)(A). When section 9 was
                                                                                                                    Updated,’’ GAO–12–686 (Aug. 2012) (GAO Report)
     any other issues of relevance to the                    adopted, the total FTEs were to be calculated based    at 36 (available at http://www.gao.gov/products/
     proposed fee schedule.12 After                          on the number of FTEs in the Private Radio Bureau,     GAO-12-686).
                                                             Mass Media Bureau, and Common Carrier Bureau.             18 FY 2013 Report and Order, 28 FCC Rcd at
     reviewing the comments, the                             (The names of these bureaus were subsequently          12355–58, paras. 13–20; 78 FR 52433.
     Commission issues a Report and Order                    changed.) Satellites, earth stations, and                 19 Id., 28 FCC Rcd at 12361–62, paras. 29–31; 78
     adopting the fee schedule for the fiscal                international bearer circuits were regulated through   FR 52433.
     year and sets out the procedures for                    the Common Carrier Bureau before the International        20 Id., 28 FCC Rcd at 12362–63, paras. 32–33; 78
                                                             Bureau was created.                                    FR 52433.
     payment of fees.                                          14 As of September 2016, for regulatory fee
                                                                                                                       21 The ITSP category includes interexchange
        6. The Commission calculates the fees                purposes, excluding auctions-funded FTEs, the          carriers (IXCs), incumbent local exchange carriers,
     by first determining the number of FTEs                 direct FTEs are Wireline Bureau (167); Media           toll resellers, and other IXC service providers.
     performing the regulatory activities                    Bureau (141); Wireless Bureau (92); and                   22 Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees
                                                             International Bureau (24), for a total of 424 direct
                                                                                                                    for Fiscal Year 2014, Report and Order and Further
                                                             FTEs. The indirect FTEs, for regulatory fee
       5 47 U.S.C. 159.                                                                                             Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 29 FCC Rcd 10767,
                                                             purposes, non-auctions-funded, are from the
       6 47 U.S.C. 159(b)(1)(B).                                                                                    10777–79, paras. 25–28 (2014) (FY 2014 Report and
                                                             International Bureau (81), Enforcement Bureau
       7 47 U.S.C. 159(b)(2).                                                                                       Order); 79 FR 54190, September 11, 2014.
                                                             (237), Consumer & Governmental Affairs Bureau             23 FY 2014 Report and Order, 29 FCC Rcd at
       8 47 U.S.C. 159(b)(1)(A).
                                                             (148), Public Safety & Homeland Security Bureau
       9 Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees        (101), Chairman and Commissioners’ offices (21),       10774–76, paras. 18–21; 79 FR 54190.
                                                                                                                       24 Id., 29 FCC Rcd at 10776–77, paras. 22–24; 79
     for Fiscal Year 2004, Report and Order, 19 FCC Rcd      Office of the Managing Director (159), Office of
     11662, 11666, para 11 (FY 2004 Report and Order);       General Counsel (77), Office of the Inspector          FR 54190.
                                                                                                                       25 Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees
     69 FR 41028, July 7, 2004. For example,                 General (43), Office of Communications Business
     governmental and nonprofit entities are exempt          Opportunities (9), Office of Engineering and           for Fiscal Year 2015, Report and Order and Further
     from regulatory fees under section 9(h) of the Act.     Technology (78), Office of Legislative Affairs (11),   Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 30 FCC Rcd 10268,
     47 U.S.C. 159(h); 47 CFR 1.1162.                        Office of Strategic Planning and Policy Analysis       10273, para. 12 (2015) (FY 2015 Report and Order);
       10 47 CFR 1.1166.                                     (19), Office of Workplace Diversity (3), Office of     80 FR 55775, September 17, 2015.
       11 One FTE, a ‘‘Full Time Equivalent’’ or ‘‘Full      Media Relations (16), and Office of Administrative        26 FY 2015 Report and Order, 30 FCC Rcd at

     Time Employee,’’ is a unit of measure equal to the      Law Judges (4), totaling 1,007 indirect FTEs. The      10276–77, paras. 19–20; 80 FR 55775.
     work performed annually by a full-time person           total direct and indirect FTEs number 1,431.              27 Id., 30 FCC Rcd at 10271–72, para. 9; 80 FR

     (working a 40 hour workweek for a full year)              15 See Procedures for Assessment and Collection      55775.
     assigned to the particular job, and subject to agency   of Regulatory Fees, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking,        28 Id., 30 FCC Rcd at 10278, para. 24; 80 FR
     personnel staffing limitations established by the       27 FCC Rcd 8458, 8461–62, paras. 8–11 (2012) (FY       55775. The Commission also, in the FY 2015 NPRM
     U.S. Office of Management and Budget.                   2012 NPRM); 77 FR 49749, 49752–54, August 17,          and Report and Order, eliminated two fee
       12 Section 9(b)(2) discusses mandatory                2012.                                                  categories. See Assessment and Collection of
     amendments to the fee schedule and Section 9(b)(3)        16 See Assessment and Collection of Regulatory       Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2015, Notice of
     discusses permissive amendments to the fee              Fees for Fiscal Year 2008, MD Docket No. 08–65,        Proposed Rulemaking, Report and Order, and
     schedule. Both mandatory and permissive                 Report and Order and Further Notice of Proposed        Order, 30 FCC Rcd 5354, 5361–62, paras. 19–22
     amendments are not subject to judicial review. 47       Rulemaking, 24 FCC Rcd 6388 (2008) (FY 2008            (2015) (FY 2015 NPRM and Report and Order); 80
     U.S.C. 159(b)(2) and (3).                               Further Notice); 73 FR 50285, August 26, 2008.         FR 43019, July 21, 2015.



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     44324            Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 183 / Friday, September 22, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

     broadcasters, based on the type and                       regulatory fees are due in September                   Wireless Telecommunications Bureau,
     class of service and on the population                    2017. The schedule of regulatory fees for              including the bureau front office,
     served; 29 adopted an increase in the                     FY 2017 adopted here is listed in Table                implementing the Mobility Fund, a
     regulatory fee for DBS providers within                   4.                                                     universal service High-Cost support
     the cable television and IPTV regulatory                                                                         mechanism devoted exclusively to
                                                               A. Allocating FTEs for Regulatory Fee
     fee category; 30 and adopted an across                                                                           mobile services.41 These Wireline
     the board fee increase for the                            Purposes                                               Competition Bureau and Wireless
     Commission’s moving expenses.31 In                           10. Under section 9 of the Act,                     Telecommunications Bureau FTEs are
     this proceeding, the Commission                           regulatory fees are to ‘‘be derived by                 considered direct FTEs for regulatory
     continues to improve and reform the                       determining the full-time equivalent                   fee purposes. Other FTEs throughout the
     regulatory fee process.                                   number of employees performing’’ these                 Commission working on universal
       8. In our FY 2017 NPRM, we proposed                     activities, ‘‘adjusted to take into account            service issues are indirect FTEs,
     to collect $356,710,992 in regulatory                     factors that are reasonably related to the             including the FTEs working on
     fees and included a detailed, proposed                    benefits provided to the payor of the fee              universal service issues in the
     fee schedule. We received 17 comments                     by the Commission’s activities . . . ’’ 39             Enforcement Bureau, the Office of the
     and six reply comments.32                                 As a general matter, we reasonably                     Managing Director, the Office of the
                                                               expect that the work of the FTEs in the                Inspector General, and the Office of the
     IV. Report and Order
                                                               core bureaus should remain focused on                  General Counsel.
       9. In this FY 2017 Report and Order,                    the industry segment regulated by each                    13. In the FY 2017 NPRM, we
     we adopt a regulatory fee schedule for                    of those bureaus. The work of the FTEs                 proposed to reallocate the 38 FTEs in
     FY 2017, pursuant to section 9 of the                     in the indirect bureaus and offices                    the Wireline Competition Bureau
     Communications Act and the 2017                           benefits the Commission and the                        assigned to work on the non-high-cost
     Consolidated Appropriations Act 33 in                     telecommunications industry and is not                 programs of the Universal Service Fund
     order to collect $356,710,992 in                          specifically focused on the regulatees                 as indirect for regulatory fee purposes,
     regulatory fees.34 Of this amount, we                     and licensees of a core bureau. Given                  for several reasons.42 The 38 FTE count
     project approximately $22.17 million                      the significant implications of                        is based on coordination between the
     (6.22 percent of the total FTE allocation)                reassignment of FTEs in our fee                        Office of Managing Director and
     in fees from the International Bureau                     calculation, we make changes to FTE                    Wireline Competition Bureau staff
     regulatees; 35 $88.69 million (24.86                      classifications only after performing                  which analyzed how many FTEs work
     percent of the total FTE allocation) in                   considerable analysis and finding the                  on each of the USF programs.43 In doing
     fees from the Wireless                                    clearest case for reassignment.40                      so, we noted that contributions to the
     Telecommunications Bureau                                    11. In the FY 2017 NPRM, we                         Universal Service Fund are required
     regulatees; 36 $115.58 million (32.40                     proposed to reallocate 38 FTEs in the                  from service providers using any
     percent of the total FTE allocation) from                 Wireline Competition Bureau associated                 technology that has end-user interstate
     Wireline Competition Bureau                               with Universal Service Fund work as                    telecommunications.44 As we discussed
     regulatees; 37 and $130.27 million (36.52                 indirect and to reallocate four FTEs                   in the FY 2017 NPRM, continuing
     percent of the total FTE allocation) from                 from the Wireline Competition Bureau                   changes in the universal service fund
     the Media Bureau regulatees.38 These                      that work on wireless numbering issues                 regulatory landscape requires us to
        29 Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees
                                                               to the Wireless Telecommunications                     reexamine the appropriateness of
     for Fiscal Year 2016, Report and Order, 31 FCC Rcd
                                                               Bureau due to the changes to the                       treating the FTEs working on universal
     10339, 10350–51, paras. 31–33 (2016) (FY 2016             Universal Service regulatory landscape                 service issues as Wireline Competition
     Report and Order); 81 FR 65926, September 26,             that no longer affect only ITSPs and the               Bureau direct FTEs.45 Initially,
     2016.                                                     fact that approximately half the benefit               universal service programs were focused
        30 FY 2016 Report and Order, 31 FCC Rcd at
                                                               of the work done by FTEs on numbering                  on wireline services, but now wireless
     10347–350, paras. 25–30; 81 FR 65926.
        31 Id., 31 FCC Rcd at 10341, para. 7; 81 FR 65926.     issues accrue to the CMRS industry.                    carriers, and more recently broadband
        32 Commenters to the FY 2017 NPRM are listed
                                                               1. FTEs Associated With the Universal                  providers, are involved in the E-Rate,46
     in Table 2.
        33 47 U.S.C. 159. Consolidated Appropriations
                                                               Service Fund                                              41 See Connect America Fund, et al., Report and

     Act, 2017, Division E—Financial Services and                 12. In the FY 2017 NPRM, the                        Order and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking,
     General Government Appropriations Act, 2017,              Commission explained that changes to                   26 FCC Rcd 17663 (2011); 76 FR 78384, December
     Title V—Independent Agencies, Public Law 115–31                                                                  16, 2011.
     (May 5, 2017), available at https://                      the Universal Service Fund regulatory                     42 FY 2017 NPRM, 32 FCC Rcd at 4529–4530,
     www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/          landscape require us to reexamine the                  para. 10; 82 FR 26019.
     244/text.                                                 treatment of Universal Service Fund                       43 The FCC Time and Attendance system does not
        34 Section 9 regulatory fees are mandated by
                                                               FTEs as direct FTEs. There are currently               provide a breakdown of USF work by technology
     Congress and collected to recover the regulatory                                                                 or bureau.
     costs associated with the Commission’s
                                                               approximately 51 FTEs in the Wireline
                                                                                                                         44 47 CFR 54.706(a).
     enforcement, policy and rulemaking, user                  Competition Bureau, including the                         45 FY 2017 NPRM, 32 FCC Rcd at 4529, para. 9;
     information, and international activities. 47 U.S.C.      bureau front office, working on                        82 FR 26019.
     159(a).                                                   Universal Service Fund issues, with 13                    46 ‘‘The schools and libraries universal service
        35 Includes satellites, earth stations, and
                                                               of those FTEs focused on the High-Cost                 support program, commonly known as the E-rate
     international bearer circuits (submarine cable                                                                   program, helps schools and libraries to obtain
     systems and satellite and terrestrial bearer circuits).   program. Currently, there are
                                                                                                                      affordable broadband . . . . Eligible schools, school
        36 Includes Commercial Mobile Radio Service            approximately three FTEs in the                        districts and libraries may apply individually or as
     (CMRS), CMRS messaging, Broadband Radio                                                                          part of a consortium [for] . . . category one services
     Service/Local Multipoint Distribution Service (BRS/         39 47 U.S.C. 159(b)(1)(A).                           to a school or library (telecommunications,
     LMDS), and multi-year wireless licensees.                   40 FY 2013 Report and Order, 28 FCC Rcd at           telecommunications services and Internet access),
        37 Includes ITSP and toll free numbers.
                                                               12357, para. 19; 78 FR 52433. The Commission           and category two services that deliver Internet
        38 Includes AM radio, FM radio, television             observed that the International Bureau was a           access within schools and libraries (internal
     (including low power and Class A), TV/FM                  ‘‘singular case’’ because the work of those FTEs       connections, basic maintenance of internal
     translators and boosters, cable television and IPTV,      ‘‘primarily benefits licensees regulated by other      connections, and managed internal broadband
     DBS, and Cable Television Relaty Service (CARS)           bureaus.’’ Id., 28 FCC Rcd at 12355, para. 14; 78 FR   services).’’ See FCC Web site, ‘‘E-Rate—Schools &
     licenses.                                                 52433.                                                 Libraries USF Program,’’ available at https://



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                      Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 183 / Friday, September 22, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                              44325

     Lifeline,47 and Rural Healthcare 48                     create a need for regulatory fees) are not            issues.56 The FTEs working on these
     programs.                                               generated by regulatees. Indeed, seven                universal service issues have already
        In addition, three of the universal                  of the ten E-Rate forms that make up the              devoted substantial time to making sure
     service fund programs—E-Rate, Lifeline,                 bulk of the Commission’s oversight of                 that satellite operators are eligible to
     and Rural Healthcare—tie funding                        the program are filed by schools and                  participate in these programs, such as
     eligibility to the beneficiary, i.e., a                 libraries, not service providers.                     by becoming ETCs or being eligible for
     school, a library, a low-income                         Similarly, seven of the nine rural                    funding under the Rural Healthcare
     individual or family, or a rural                        healthcare program forms are filed by                 program or E-Rate. Permitting satellite
     healthcare provider, and not to                         healthcare providers, not service                     operators into the USF programs uses
     Commission regulatees.49 Wireless                       providers. In other words, ITSPs are not              FTE resources at the beginning of a
     carriers now serve a substantial, if not                the sole or even majority contributors or             satellite operators’ participation. And
     majority, of Lifeline subscribers.50 Also,              beneficiaries of these three programs.                some satellite providers have begun to
     satellite operators, Wi-Fi network                      Reallocating these Wireline Competition               take advantage of that eligibility in, for
     installers, and fiber builders may all                  Bureau FTEs as indirect FTEs would be                 example, the Rural Healthcare program.
     receive funding through the E-Rate and                  more consistent with how FTEs working                 Thus, these FTEs are both overseeing
     Rural Healthcare universal service                      on universal service issues are treated               satellite operators and benefiting
     programs.51 Similarly, multichannel                     elsewhere in the Commission, e.g.,                    satellite operators, making reallocation
     video programming distributors                          similar to the 10 FTEs working on USF                 appropriate.
     (MVPDs), who also provide supported                     matters in the Enforcement Bureau, the                   16. ITTA and Frontier suggest that we
     services, receive universal service                     5 FTEs in the Office of the Managing                  also reallocate to the Wireless
     funding through participation in both                   Director, the 10 FTEs in the Office of the            Telecommunications Bureau and/or
     the E-rate and Rural Healthcare                         Inspector General, and the 5 FTEs in the              Media Bureau direct FTEs working on
     programs because they provide                           Office of the General Counsel.53                      universal service high cost issues.57
     telecommunications and Internet access                                                                        Frontier argues that we should
     services that are eligible for support in                  14. ITTA and Frontier support the                  reallocate FTEs working on High-Cost
     those programs.52 And given that the                    proposal in the FY 2017 NPRM to                       Fund issues as indirect FTEs because all
     applicants in these programs are not                    reallocate 38 Wireline Competition                    universal service programs, including
     even regulatees—instead, they are the                   Bureau FTEs as indirect, and CTIA                     the High-Cost Fund, ‘‘benefit the public
     schools and libraries and healthcare                    argues that if the Commission                         and all members of the Internet
     providers—the bulk of the                               reclassifies any of these FTEs, they                  ecosystem, not specifically or uniquely
     Commission’s oversight of these                         should be reallocated as indirect.54                  wireline companies.’’ 58 CTIA opposes
     programs (i.e., the costs incurred that                 CenturyLink also agrees with this                     the proposal to reallocate FTEs working
                                                             proposal and observes that the concern                on High-Cost issues, and observes that
     www.fcc.gov/general/e-rate-schools-libraries-usf-       that the reallocation would impose a                  ITTA and Frontier have failed to show
     program#block-menu-block-4 (last visited July 17,       burden on broadcasters which do not                   a clear case for reclassification of the
     2017).                                                  participate in the universal service                  Wireline Competition Bureau FTEs.59
        47 ‘‘Since 1985, the Lifeline program has provided
                                                             program is misplaced ‘‘as there is no                 We agree with CTIA that the case for
     a discount on phone service for qualifying low-
     income consumers . . . . The Lifeline program is
                                                             completely pure way to precisely                      reallocation has not been made at this
     available to eligible low-income consumers in every     allocate every Commission FTE.’’ 55                   time.
     state, territory, commonwealth, and on Tribal lands     After consideration of the record on this                17. Several parties also ask that we go
     . . . . In . . . 2016 . . . the Commission included     issue and for the reasons discussed in
     broadband as a support service in the Lifeline                                                                farther. For example, ITTA argues that
     program.’’ See FCC Web site, ‘‘Lifeline Program for     the FY 2017 NPRM, i.e., that ITSPs are                the Wireline Competition Bureau FTEs
     Low-Income Consumers,’’ available at https://           no longer the sole contributors or                    are ‘‘no longer focused exclusively on
     www.fcc.gov/general/lifeline-program-low-income-        beneficiaries of the E-Rate, Lifeline, and            ITSPs’’ 60 and the Commission ‘‘must
     consumers#block-menu-block-4 (last visited July 17,     Rural Healthcare programs and
     2017).                                                                                                        make adjustments to ensure that its
        48 ‘‘The Rural Health Care Program, which            allocating these Wireline Competition                 regulatory fees reflect its actual costs by
     includes the new Healthcare Connect Fund,               Bureau FTEs as indirect FTEs would be                 industry sector.’’ 61 Similarly, ITTA,
     provides funding to eligible health care providers      more consistent with how FTEs working                 Frontier, and CenturyLink also argue
     (HCPs) for telecommunications and broadband             on universal service issues are treated
     services necessary for the provision of health care.
                                                                                                                   that we should combine CMRS into the
     The goal of the program is to improve the quality       elsewhere in the Commission, we adopt                 ITSP category.62 We do not believe the
     of health care available to patients in rural           the proposal to reallocate 38 FTEs in the             case has been made for such large
     communities by ensuring that eligible HCPs have         Wireline Competition Bureau assigned                  changes at this time, because (among
     access to telecommunications and broadband              to work on the non-high-cost programs
     services.’’ See FCC Web site, ‘‘Rural Health Care
     Program,’’ available at https://www.fcc.gov/general/    of the Universal Service Fund as                         56 SIA Comments at 2–3; SIA Comments at 2

     rural-health-care-program#block-menu-block-4 (last      indirect. The regulatory fee rates set                (observing that no satellite operator has yet been
     visited July 17, 2017).                                                                                       designated an eligible telecommunications carrier,
                                                             forth in Appendix C reflect this                      or ETC, which is required for Lifeline funding).
        49 FY 2017 NPRM, 32 FCC Rcd at 4530, para. 10;
                                                             reallocation of FTEs for regulatory fee                  57 ITTA Comments at 6. CenturyLink also
     82 FR 26019.
        50 Id.
                                                             purposes.                                             supports allocating four Wireline Competition
                                                                                                                   Bureau FTEs as Wireless Telecommunications
        51 Id.                                                  15. We disagree with SIA’s argument                Bureau FTEs for regulatory fee purposes because
        52 See USAC Web site, 2017 E-Rate Eligible
                                                             that such a reallocation of FTEs from                 ‘‘wireless carriers now serve over 90% of Lifeline
     Services List, available at http://www.usac.org/sl/     direct to indirect is ‘‘premature’’                   subscribers.’’ CenturyLink Reply Comments at 4.
     applicants/beforeyoubegin/eligible-services-
     list.aspx (last visited July 28, 2017); USAC Web site   because satellite operators do not yet                   58 Frontier Comments at 3–4. CenturyLink agrees

                                                             benefit from the contributions of the                 with this proposal. See CenturyLink Reply
     Rural Healthcare Eligible Services, available at
                                                                                                                   Comments at 3–4.
     http://www.usac.org/rhc/telecommunications/             FTEs working on universal service fund                   59 CTIA Reply Comments at 6.
     health-care-providers/step01/eligible-services.aspx
                                                                                                                      60 ITTA Comments at 2.
     (last visited July 28, 2017). See also Universal
                                                               53 Id.                                                 61 ITTA Comments at 3 (emphasis added).
     Service Administrative Company Third Quarter
                                                              54 ITTA Comments at 5; Frontier Comments at 3;          62 See ITTA Comments at 10–11; Frontier
     2017 FCC Filings (E-rate and Rural Healthcare),
     available at http://www.usac.org/about/tools/fcc/       CTIA Reply Comments at 4–5.                           Comments at 6–7; CenturyLink Reply Comments at
     filings/2017/q3.aspx (last visited July 28, 2017).       55 CenturyLink Comments at 4.                        4–5.



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     44326            Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 183 / Friday, September 22, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

     other things) advocates of such changes                 our proposal to reallocate four of the                Subsequently, the Commission adopted
     have not fully accounted for the                        Wireline Competition Bureau FTEs that                 a regulatory fee for DBS as a subcategory
     substantial differences in regulatory                   work on numbering issues to the                       in the cable television and IPTV
     oversight between different groups of                   Wireless Telecommunications Bureau as                 category, of 12 cents per year per
     regulatees nor the fact that allocating                 direct FTEs for regulatory fee                        subscriber.73 This regulatory fee
     regulatory fees is not and cannot be an                 purposes.66                                           subcategory was based on Media Bureau
     exact science. On the last point, it                       20. After reviewing the record, we                 FTE activity involving regulation and
     would be nigh impossible to determine                   conclude that reallocating four FTEs in               oversight of all MVPDs, which included
     the precise costs attributable to FTEs                  the Wireline Competition Bureau                       DBS providers.74
     and the precise benefits flowing from                   assigned to work on numbering issues to                  22. As the Commission discussed in
     Commission regulation to any one                        the Wireless Telecommunications                       the FY 2015 NPRM, the DBS providers
     regulatee, let alone a particular cross-                Bureau for regulatory fee purposes is                 were established as large MVPDs by
     section of regulatees or even an entire                 warranted and consistent with section 9               2015 and significant Media Bureau FTE
     industry—not to mention the                             of the Act. Reallocating four direct FTEs             resources were used in regulation and
     complications associated with                           from the Wireline Competition Bureau                  oversight of all MVPDs, including
     regulatees statutorily exempt from                      to the Wireless Telecommunications                    DBS.75 The Commission concluded
     paying regulatory fees (such as                         Bureau will ‘‘take into account factors               there was no reasonable basis to
     governmental licensees) and with                        that are reasonably related to the                    continue to exclude DBS providers from
     beneficiaries (such as schools and                      benefits provided to the payor of the fee             sharing in the cost of MVPD oversight
     libraries) that are not regulatees, all of              by the Commission’s activities’’ 67                   and regulation with cable television and
     whom nonetheless create costs that                      because approximately half of the                     IPTV. In lieu of directly including DBS
     must be recovered. As such the                          benefit of the work of these FTEs accrue              providers in the cable television/IPTV
     Commission has long taken an                            to Wireless Telecommunications Bureau                 category at the same regulatory fee rate,
     incrementalist approach, requiring                      regulatees.68 We therefore adopt our                  the Commission elected to phase in the
     substantial and specific evidence about                 proposal to reallocate for regulatory fee             new Media Bureau-based regulatory fee
     regulatory burdens and benefits before                  purposes four direct FTEs from the                    for DBS, starting at 12 cents per
     making changes to the allocation of fees.               Wireline Competition Bureau to the                    subscriber, per year. Since then, the
     And those seeking to change our                         Wireless Telecommunications Bureau.                   Commission has increased the DBS
     allocations even further have not yet                   The regulatory fee rates set forth in                 regulatory fee each year, to bring it
     made the case for doing so.                             Appendix C reflect this reallocation of               closer to the per-subscriber rate paid by
        18. After reviewing the record, we                   FTEs.                                                 cable television and IPTV. In the FY
     conclude that our proposal in the FY                                                                          2016 regulatory fee proceeding, the
                                                             B. Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS)
     2017 NPRM to reallocate 38 FTEs in the                                                                        Commission increased the regulatory fee
                                                             Regulatory Fees
     Wireline Competition Bureau assigned                                                                          for DBS providers to 24 cents, plus an
     to work on the non-high cost programs                     21. DBS service is a nationally                     across-the-board increase of three cents
     of the Universal Service Fund as                        distributed subscription service that                 for the Commission’s moving expenses,
     indirect for regulatory fee purposes is                 delivers video and audio programming                  for a total of 27 cents per subscriber, per
     warranted and consistent with section 9                 via satellite to a small parabolic dish               year.76 In the FY 2017 NPRM, the
     of the Act. We therefore adopt the                      antenna at the subscriber’s location. The             Commission noted that the Media
     proposal in the FY 2017 NPRM. The                       two DBS providers, AT&T 69 and DISH                   Bureau resources focused on MVPD
     regulatory fee rates set forth in Table 4               Network, are MVPDs.70 Following the                   proceedings (including DBS) supported
     reflect this reallocation of FTEs.                      2012 GAO Report, in which the GAO                     continuing to bring the DBS rate closer
                                                             observed that an evaluation of Media                  to the cable television/IPTV per
     2. FTEs Associated With Numbering
                                                             Bureau FTEs was long overdue,71 the                   subscriber rate.77 At that time, we
     Issues
                                                             Commission concluded that the Media                   proposed a regulatory fee rate of 36
        19. In the FY 2017 NPRM, we                          Bureau FTEs regulate the DBS industry                 cents per subscriber per year, plus two
     estimated that seven to eight FTEs in the               together with the other MVPDs.72                      cents due to the increase in the
     Wireline Competition Bureau work on
                                                                                                                   Commission’s budget for moving
     numbering issues.63 We proposed to                        66 ITTA Comments at 9–10; CenturyLink

     reallocate for regulatory fee purposes                  Comments at 5 & Reply Comments at 5; Frontier
                                                                                                                   expenses, for a total of 38 cents per
     four of these direct FTEs from the                      Comments at 5–6.                                      subscriber per year for FY 2017.78 As we
     Wireline Competition Bureau to the
                                                               67 47 U.S.C. 159(b)(1)(A).                          discuss below, we are adopting the
     Wireless Telecommunications Bureau
                                                               68 See Industry Analysis and Technology             proposed rate of 38 cents per subscriber,
                                                             Division, Wireline Competition Bureau, FCC, Voice     per year in this Report and Order, in our
     ‘‘to take into account factors that are                 Telephone Services: Status as of December 31,
     reasonably related to the benefits                      2015, at 2 Figure 1 (2016).
                                                                                                                   effort to bring the DBS rate closer to the
     provided to the payor of the fee by the                   69 AT&T and DIRECTV merged in 2015. See             cable television/IPTV per subscriber
     Commission’s activities . . . .’’ 64                    Applications of AT&T and DIRECTV for Consent to       rate.
                                                             Assign or Transfer Control of Licenses and               23. We agree with the commenters
     Specifically, we estimated                              Authorizations, Memorandum Opinion and Order,         representing the cable television
     approximately half of the benefit of the                30 FCC Rcd 9131 (2015).
     work of these FTEs accrue to Wireless                     70 MVPD is defined in section 602(13) of the Act,
                                                                                                                     73 FY 2015 Report and Order, 30 FCC Rcd at
     Telecommunications Bureau                               47 U.S.C. 522(13). DBS subscribers were 33.2
                                                             percent of all MVPD subscribers at the end of 2015.   10276–77, paras. 19–20; 80 FR 55775.
     regulatees.65 Commenters agree with                     See Annual Assessment of the Status of
                                                                                                                     74 FY 2015 NPRM, 30 FCC Rcd at 5367–68, para.

                                                             Competition in the Market for the Delivery of Video   31; 80 FR 37206.
       63 FY 2017 NPRM, 32 FCC Rcd at 4530, para. 13;                                                                75 Id., 30 FCC Rcd at 5368, para. 32; 80 FR 37206.
                                                             Programming, Eighteenth Report, 32 FCC Rcd 568,
     82 FR 26019.                                            575, para. 19 (2017) (Eighteenth Competition            76 FY 2016 Report and Order, 31 FCC Rcd at
       64 47 U.S.C. 159(b)(1)(A).                            Report) (citing SNL Kagan, U.S. Multichannel          10348–49, para. 26; 81 FR 65926.
       65 See Industry Analysis and Technology               Industry Benchmarks).                                   77 FY 2017 NPRM, 32 FCC Rcd at 4531–32, paras.
                                                               71 GAO Report at 17–20.                             15–17; 82 FR 26019.
     Division, Wireline Competition Bureau, FCC, Voice
     Telephone Services: Status as of December 31,             72 FY 2015 NPRM, 30 FCC Rcd at 5368, para. 32;        78 FY 2017 NPRM, 32 FCC Rcd at 4532, para. 17;

     2015, at 2 Figure 1 (2016).                             80 FR 37206.                                          82 FR 26019.



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                      Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 183 / Friday, September 22, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                  44327

     industry that the Media Bureau                          with the other MVPDs and the burden                    increase we adopt today is not based on
     resources utilized by the DBS providers                 that DBS imposes on Media Bureau                       particular Media Bureau proceedings,
     are similar to those used by the cable                  FTEs is roughly the same. For example,                 but is an effort to bring the regulatory
     television and IPTV industry,79 and for                 since October 1, 2016, the Media Bureau                fee closer to the cable television/IPTV
     this reason we have been phasing in the                 has opened 17 proceedings that affect                  per subscriber fee.
     regulatory fee for DBS providers each                   MVPDs; seven of those proceedings are                     26. AT&T and DISH contend that
     year. Commenters representing the cable                 focused on cable operators, six are                    there is no evidence that DBS providers
     television industry observe that despite                focused on DBS, and four cover all                     ‘‘usurped the work of such a significant
     the Commission’s prior commitment to                    MVPDs (with three of those also                        amount of Media Bureau FTEs sufficient
     ensuring ‘‘an appropriate level of                      covering other media services like                     to justify this increase.’’ 89 The DBS
     regulatory parity with cable television                 broadcasters). Thus, these regulatees—                 commenters are misunderstanding the
     and IPTV’’ the proposed rate is far                     MVPDs—are a group that includes DBS.                   basis for including DBS in the cable
     below the 96 cents proposed rate for                    In order to continue to bring the DBS fee              television/IPTV regulatory fee.90 The
     cable television and IPTV.80 These                      closer to the cable television/IPTV fee,               Commission has never said that the DBS
     commenters argue that there is no                       we are adopting the proposed rate of 38                industry ‘‘usurped the work’’ of the
     justification for this disparity, due to the            cents per subscriber, which still remains              Media Bureau staff. The regulatory fee is
     fact that DBS operators impose                          substantially below the cable television/              based on the fact that Media Bureau
     regulatory costs and receive benefits                   IPTV fee we adopt today.                               staff work on significant issues
     from the Media Bureau that affect all                      24. We reject the argument raised by                involving MVPDs, including DBS. The
     MVPDs; 81 that the proposed fees                        DISH and AT&T, the two DBS                             DBS regulatory fee is based on the
     impose competitive and technological                    providers, who contend that a fee                      Media Bureau’s regulation and oversight
     disparities, favoring DBS over cable                    increase would ‘‘harm DBS                              of the MVPD industry (including DBS),
     television and IPTV; 82 and that there is               customers.’’ 84 We do not accept the                   not on a particular number of FTEs
     no evidence in the record to support the                DISH and AT&T unsupported                              focused solely on DBS. The Commission
     disparity in fees.83 The Media Bureau                   contention that a regulatory fee increase              has specifically rejected the argument
     FTEs regulate the DBS industry together                 of several cents per subscriber, per                   that section 9 of the Act requires us to
                                                             month would ‘‘harm’’ their customers,                  ‘‘show that DBS and cable occupy a
        79 For example, as ACA observes, DBS providers       as such an increase is a negligible                    comparable number of FTEs.’’ 91
     have been actively involved in the Media Bureau’s       fraction of a monthly bill.85
     proceeding implementing the Satellite Television                                                                  27. Finally, AT&T and DISH contend
                                                                25. AT&T and DISH also argue that
     Extension and Localism Act Reauthorization Act of                                                              that there is no legal basis to charge DBS
     2014 (STELAR) and in the market modification            several recent proceedings involving
                                                             MVPDs do not justify an increase in                    providers the same regulatory fees as
     proceedings that STELAR directed the Commission
     to expand to satellite DBS carriage. The STELA          regulatory fees.86 We disagree. The                    cable television and IPTV operators.92
     Reauthorization Act of 2014 (STELAR), Pub. L.           examples of recent proceedings                         We disagree. We recognize that DBS is
     113–200, 128 Stat. 2059 (2014); Amendment to the
                                                             involving MVPDs illustrate that Media                  not identical to cable television and
     Commission’s Rules Concerning Market                                                                           IPTV. Services that are not
     Modification, Implementation of Section 102 of the      Bureau FTEs work on significant MVPD
     STELA Reauthorization Act of 2014, Report and           issues that include DBS. DBS, cable                    technologically identical nevertheless
     Order, 30 FCC Rcd 10406 (80 FR 59635, October 2,        television, and IPTV all receive                       warrant placement in the same
     2015) (adopting satellite television market
                                                             oversight and regulation as a result of                regulatory fee category, e.g., ITSP
     modification rules). See, e.g., Gray Television                                                                includes a range of carriers that may not
     Licensee, LLC, Petition for Modification of the         the work of Media Bureau FTEs on
     Satellite Televisions Market for WSAW–TV,               MVPD issues. This regulatory fee is not                be regulated identically but must pay
     Wausau, Wisconsin, MB Docket No. 16–293,                based on specific recent proceedings,
     DirecTV, LLC Response to Petition for Special                                                                  27, 2016); Expanding Consumers’ Video Navigation
     Relief (filed Oct. 6, 2016); Amendment to the
                                                             but that a significant number of Media
                                                                                                                    Choices, Commercial Availability of Navigation
     Commission’s Rules Concerning Market                    Bureau FTEs work on MVPD issues that                   Devices, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking and
     Modification, Implementation of Section 102 of the      include DBS.87 We listed examples of                   Memorandum Opinion and Order, 31 FCC Rcd 1544
     STELA Reauthorization Act of 2014, MB Docket No.        several recent proceedings to illustrate               (81 FR 14033, March 16, 2016); Promoting the
     15–71, DISH Network LLC Market Modification Pre-                                                               Availability of Diverse and Independent Sources of
     Filing Coordination Letter for Monongalia County,
                                                             that the Media Bureau is involved in
                                                                                                                    Video Programming, Notice of Inquiry, 31 FCC Rcd
     West Virginia (filed May 23, 2017).                     numerous MVPD issues.88 The fee                        1610 (2016); Expansion of Online Public File
        AT&T and DISH have also been involved in the                                                                Obligations to Cable and Satellite TV Operators and
     Commission’s ATSC 3.0 rulemaking. See, e.g.,              84 DISH  and AT&T Comments at 3.                     Broadcast and Satellite Radio Licensees, Report and
     Authorizing Permissive Use of the ‘‘Next                  85 The  current least expensive promotional rate     Order, 31 FCC Rcd 526 (2016); Amendment to the
     Generation’’ Broadcast Television Standard, GN          for new DBS subscribers is approximately $50 per       Commission’s Rules Concerning Market
     Docket No. 16–142, Comments of DISH Network             month for 12 months (not including taxes or leasing    Modification, Implementation of Section 102 of the
     LLC (filed May 9, 2017); Reply Comments of AT&T         charges). Even if the regulatory fee were 72 cents     STELA Reauthorization Act of 2014, Report and
     (filed June 8, 2017). AT&T and DISH Network were        per subscriber per year, approximately what it         Order, 30 FCC Rcd 10406 (2015).
     also active participants in the Media Bureau’s 2016     would be at parity with cable television/IPTV, it         89 DISH and AT&T Comments at 5–6. We also do
     public notice proceeding. See, e.g., Media Bureau       would equal 0.12% of the lowest introductory           not agree with AT&T’s argument that we have
     Seeks Comment on Joint Petition for Rulemaking of       monthly fee for DBS ($600 × .0012 = $0.72). See        ignored the other regulatory fees paid by the DBS
     America’s Public Television Stations, the AWARN         https://www.directv.com/DTVAPP/pepod/                  providers. AT&T Reply Comments at 7. The
     Alliance, the Consumer Technology Association,          configure.jsp#package-section (last visited June 29,   regulatory fee based on the Media Bureau FTEs is
     and the National Association of Broadcasters            2017); https://www.dish.com/programming/               not related to the regulatory fee based on
     Seeking to Authorize Permissive Use of the ‘‘Next       packages/ (last visited June 29, 2017). ACA            International Bureau FTEs. While there is no other
     Generation TV’’ Broadcast Television Standard, GN       observes that DISH’s reported average revenue per      industry in the same situation as DBS, we note that
     Docket No. 16–142, Comments of DISH Network,            unit was $86.79 per month and AT&T’s was               the cable television industry pays regulatory fees for
     LLC (filed May 26, 2016); Comments of AT&T (filed       $118.00 per month. ACA Reply Comments at 2–3.          CARs licenses.
     May 26, 2016).                                            86 DISH and AT&T Comments at 4–5; AT&T Reply            90 ACA observes, ‘‘the DBS providers misconceive
        80 ACA Comments at 2 (quoting FY 2017 NPRM,
                                                             Comments at 6–7.                                       the nature of the Commission’s fee setting exercise,
     32 FCC Rcd at 4531, para. 15; 82 FR 26019); NCTA          87 FY 2015 Report and Order, 30 FCC Rcd at 5369,     as it is not required to calculate fee levels with
     Comments at 3.                                          para. 33; 80 FR 43019.                                 scientific precision.’’ See ACA Reply Comments at
        81 ACA Comments at 3–6; NCTA Comments at 3–            88 See, e.g., Video Description: Implementation of   6.
     5.                                                      the Twenty-First Century Communications and               91 FY 2015 Report and Order, 30 FCC Rcd at 5369,
        82 NCTA Comments at 5–7.                                                                                    para. 33; 80 FR 43019.
                                                             Video Accessibility Act of 2010, Notice of Proposed
        83 NCTA Comments at 7–8.                             Rulemaking, 31 FCC Rcd 2463 (81 FR 33642, May             92 DISH and AT&T Comments at 7–8.




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     44328                Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 183 / Friday, September 22, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

     fees on the same basis.93 When                                     adopt a regulatory fee rate of 38 cents,                enough in alleviating the hardship
     interconnected Voice over Internet                                 per subscriber, per year for FY 2017.                   imposed on small broadcasters and
     Protocol (VoIP) providers were added to                                                                                    urges the Commission to adopt a fast
                                                                        C. Radio Broadcaster Regulatory Fees
     the ITSP category in a permitted                                                                                           track waiver process for stations in
     amendment the Commission observed                                     29. In the FY 2017 NPRM, the                         economically depressed areas, such as
     that ‘‘the costs and benefits associated                           Commission proposed to revise the table                 Puerto Rico.100
                                                                        for AM and FM broadcasters.96 The
     with our regulation of interconnected                                                                                         31. We agree with the commenters
                                                                        proposed table had revised ratios so that
     VoIP providers are not identical as those                                                                                  that small independent broadcasters
                                                                        the difference between each tier would
     associated with regulating interstate                              be proportional. We also sought                         face hardship today. As the Commission
     telecommunications service and                                     comment on whether the regulatory fees                  explained in the FY 2016 Report and
     CMRS.’’ 94 Indeed, IPTV is not regulated                           should be reduced further for the AM                    Order, ‘‘[e]xtending some relief to these
     in all the same ways as cable television,                          and FM broadcasters in the two lowest                   small radio broadcasters may facilitate
     and yet the Commission requires them                               tiers.                                                  their continued ability to stay in
     to pay fees on the same basis.95 We                                   30. We received two comments on                      business and serve their small and rural
     recognize that DBS is not identical to                             this issue. CRC, an AM station licensee,                communities.’’ 101 After reviewing the
     cable, but the Media Bureau FTEs work                              contends that the proposed fees for AM                  record, and due to the economic
     on MVPD issues that include DBS.                                   stations are too high.97 CRC observes                   hardship faced by many small rural
     Although DBS is not identical to cable                             that small AM stations must compete                     independent radio stations, we are
     television and IPTV, the services all                              against FM stations and other media and                 adopting a revised version of the
     receive oversight and regulation as a                              they generate significantly less revenue                proposed table in the FY 2017 NPRM
     result of the work of Media Bureau FTEs                            than FM stations.98 CRC argues that the                 and reducing the regulatory fees in the
     on MVPD issues, and the burden                                     economic disparities between AM and                     two lowest population tiers for AM and
     imposed on the Commission is similar.                              FM facilities should be reflected in the                FM broadcasters from the amounts
                                                                        regulatory fee schedules, particularly in               proposed. In FY 2018, we will again
        28. After considering the comments                              the top tiers where the disparity in                    review the status of these small radio
     filed in this proceeding, we conclude                              revenues is much greater than in the                    broadcast stations to see if further relief
     that moving the DBS rate is supported                              smaller markets.99 Arso contends that                   is warranted. Below is the table we
     by the data and analysis, and therefore                            the FY 2017 NPRM does not go far                        adopt today:

                                                             TABLE 1—FY 2017 RADIO STATION REGULATORY FEES
                                                                              FY 2017 Radio Station Regulatory Fees

                                                                                                                                                                   FM Classes
                                                                     AM Class              AM Class          AM Class           AM Class         FM Classes
                     Population served                                                                                                                             B, C, C0, C1
                                                                        A                     B                 C                  D             A, B1 & C3            & C2

     <=25,000 ..................................................             $895                $640                 $555             $610               $980             $1,100
     25,001–75,000 .........................................                1,350                 955                  830              915              1,475              1,650
     75,001–150,000 .......................................                 2,375               1,700                1,475            1,600              2,600              2,925
     150,001–500,000 .....................................                  3,550               2,525                2,200            2,425              3,875              4,400
     500,001–1,200,000 ..................................                   5,325               3,800                3,300            3,625              5,825              6,575
     1,200,001–3,000,00 .................................                   7,975               5,700                4,950            5,425              8,750              9,875
     3,000,001–6,000,00 .................................                  11,950               8,550                7,400            8,150             13,100             14,800
     >6,000,000 ...............................................            17,950              12,825               11,100           12,225             19,650             22,225



     D. Broadcast Television Satellite                                  the Television and Cable Factbook, or                   not have adequate support to change the
                                                                        BIA/Kelsey MEDIA Access Pro.103 In the                  methodology for determining which
        32. Broadcast television satellite                              FY 2017 NPRM, the Commission sought                     stations are satellites at this time. We
     stations pay a lower regulatory fee than                           comment on basing the categorization of                 recognize that regulatees rely on
     standalone full service broadcast                                  television satellite stations for                       consistency of treatment. Therefore, for
     television stations, and some of these                             regulatory fee payments on                              FY 2017 regulatory fees we treat
     stations are designated as such pursuant                           authorization under note 5 of § 73.3555                 broadcast television satellite stations as
     to note 5 to § 73.3555 of the                                      of the Commission’s rules, and noted                    satellite stations that are listed as such
     Commission’s rules.102 For purposes of                             that the Television and Cable Factbook                  in CDBS, the 2017 Television and Cable
     regulatory fees, we historically have                              may identify some stations as satellite
                                                                                                                                Factbook, or BIA/Kelsey MEDIA Access
     identified as satellite stations those so                          stations that are not listed in the Media
                                                                                                                                Pro, or paid regulatory fees as a satellite
     listed in the Media Bureau’s                                       Bureau’s records.104 We received
     Consolidated Data Base System (CDBS),                              limited comments on the issue and do
       93 ITSP, regulated by the Wireline Competition                   Rcd 15712, 15719, para. 19 (2007) (FY 2007 Report         99 CRC   Comments at 2.
     Bureau, includes interexchange carriers (IXCs),                    and Order); 72 FR 45908, August 16, 2007.                 100 Arso  Comments at 1–2.
     incumbent local exchange carriers (LECs), toll                       95 FY 2013 Report and Order, 28 FCC Rcd at              101 FY 2016 Report and Order, 31 FCC Rcd at

     resellers, Voice over Internet Providers (VoIP), and               12362, para. 32 (‘‘IPTV providers should be subject     10351, para. 33; 81 FR 65926.
     other service providers, all of which involve                      to the same regulatory fee as cable providers.’’); 78     102 FY 2017 NPRM, 31 FCC Rcd at 4534, para. 20;

     different degrees of regulatory oversight.                         FR 52433.                                               82 FR 26019.
                                                                          96 FY 2017 NPRM, 32 FCC Rcd at 4533, para. 19;          103 Id., FY 2017 NPRM, 31 FCC Rcd at 4535, para.
       94 See Assessment and Collection of Regulatory
                                                                        82 FR 26019.                                            21; 82 FR 26019.
     Fees for Fiscal Year 2007, Report and Order and                      97 CRC Comments at 1.                                   104 Id., FY 2017 NPRM, 31 FCC Rcd at 4535, para.
     Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 22 FCC
                                                                          98 CRC Comments at 1.                                 20; 82 FR 26019.



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                       Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 183 / Friday, September 22, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                   44329

     station in FY 2016.105 In the future, we                   International Bureau provides to                      treatment of terrestrial and satellite IBCs
     intend to continue examining the                           submarine cable operators, the services               vis-à-vis submarine IBCs,122 but
     appropriate methodology for                                provided to common carriers using                     subsequently decided that the record
     categorizing when a station should only                    submarine cable circuits.113 The                      was insufficient to change the fee
     be assessed regulatory fees at the                         International Bureau provides many                    methodology.123 In the FY 2017 NPRM,
     satellite station level. In doing so, as                   services on behalf of common carriers                 the Commission again sought comment
     with other fee reforms, the Commission                     using submarine cable circuits, such as               on how to update and improve the
     will work to ensure that any proposed                      benchmarks enforcement,114 protection                 regulatory fee assessment for terrestrial
     changes to our fee structure are                           from anticompetitive actions by foreign               and satellite IBCs. Specifically, the
     equitable, administrable, and                              carriers, section 310(b) foreign                      Commission sought comment on several
     sustainable.106                                            ownership rulings, international section              issues raised by Level 3:124 Adopting a
                                                                214 authorizations, and representation                flat, per-provider fee, similar to the
     E. Submarine Cable Regulatory Fees
                                                                of U.S. interests at bilateral and                    submarine cable regulatory fee
        33. The Coalition, a group of                           multilateral negotiations and                         methodology, based on capacity 125 and
     submarine cable operators, objects to the                  international organizations.115 After                 including all terrestrial IBCs, i.e., both
     proposed FY 2017 regulatory fees for the                   reviewing the record, including the                   common carrier and non-common
     submarine cable industry, observing                        comments from the submarine cable                     carrier, for regulatory fee purposes.126
     that the total amount the Commission is                    industry, we are adopting the fee                     We also sought comment on eliminating
     collecting for FY 2017 ($356,710,992) is                   proposed in the FY 2017 NPRM for                      the IBC regulatory fee for satellite IBCs
     less than the amount collected for FY                      submarine cable systems.                              and whether we should continue to
     2016 ($384,012,497, of which                                                                                     assess regulatory fees based on IBCs that
     $44,168,497 was to offset facilities                       F. International Bearer Circuits                      were active as of December 31 of the
     reduction costs), yet the regulatory fee                      35. In 2009,116 the Commission                     prior year.127
     for the highest tier submarine cable                       adopted a new methodology for
     system was $133,200 for FY 2016 and                                                                              1. Including Non-Common Carrier IBCs
                                                                calculating submarine cable
     the rate proposed for FY 2017, for the                     international bearer circuits regulatory                 37. We agree with the commenters,
     highest tier, is $135,700.107 The                          fees by: (i) Eliminating the distinction              Level 3 and AT&T, that a methodology
     Coalition states that the FY 2017 NPRM                     between common carriers and non-                      for terrestrial and satellite IBC
     does not adequately justify the proposed                   common carriers 117 and (ii) assessing a              regulatory fees based on circuits should
     increase in fees for submarine cable                       flat per cable landing license fee 118 for            be consistent with the submarine cable
     systems.108 The Coalition argues that                      all submarine cable systems with higher               methodology and include common
     the FY 2016 rate included a one-time                       fees for larger submarine cable systems               carrier and non-common carrier
     facilities reduction charge and the FY                     and lower fees for smaller systems.119                terrestrial IBCs. Level 3 explains that
     2017 rate should be less than the FY                       The Commission concluded that the                     including non-common carrier IBCs will
     2016 rate because the number of                            new methodology would be more                         ‘‘eliminate a major incentive and
     payment units are the same.109 The                         equitable and would encourage better                  opportunity providers currently have to
     Coalition contends that the Commission                     compliance with the regulatory fee                    underreport the number of IBCs they
     is subsidizing unrelated activities to the                 requirements.120 The Commission did                   have in service.’’ 128 As AT&T observes,
     detriment of the submarine cable                           not revise the terrestrial and satellite              such an approach treats all terrestrial
     operators.110                                              IBC regulatory fee methodology at that                IBC providers equitably and reduces
        34. We disagree with the Coalition’s                    time because of the ‘‘complexity of the               fees by increasing the payment units.129
     argument. The increase in regulatory fee                   legal, policy and equity issues                       For these reasons, we find no reason to
     rates for the International Bureau                         involved.’’ 121                                       continue excluding non-common carrier
     regulatees is due to the reallocation of                      36. In the FY 2016 NPRM, the                       terrestrial IBCs from regulatory fees and
     38 Wireline Competition Bureau direct                      Commission revisited the disparate                    adopt our proposal to include both
     FTEs as indirect in FY 2017, as                                                                                  common carrier and non-common
     discussed above. Although the amount                         113 See FY 2015 Report and Order, 30 FCC Rcd        carrier terrestrial IBCs, consistent with
     collected overall is less in FY 2017 than                  10273, para. 12; 80 FR 55775.
     in FY 2016, the allocation percentage of                     114 See, e.g., International Settlement Rates, IB      122 FY 2016 NPRM, 31 FCC Rcd at 5764–65, paras.

     regulatory fees for the International                      Docket No. 96–261, Report and Order, 12 FCC Rcd       15–16; 81 FR 35680.
                                                                19806 (62 FR 45758, August 29, 1997), Report and         123 FY 2016 Report and Order, 31 FCC Rcd at
     Bureau increased from 5.6 percent in FY                    Order on Reconsideration and Order Lifting Stay,      10343, para. 11; 81 FR 65926. Level 3 had initially
     2016 111 to 6.22 percent for FY 2017,112                   14 FCC Rcd 9256 (64 FR 47699, September 1, 1999),     proposed the flat fee methodology, for common
     due to the increase in indirect FTEs. We                   aff’d sub nom. Cable & Wireless, 166 F.3d 1224.       carrier and non-common carrier providers, assessed
     also note that the regulatory fees paid by                   115 See FY 2015 Report and Order, 30 FCC Rcd        based on the total capacity in Gbps. See Level 3
     the submarine cable operators cover, in                    10273, para. 12; 80 FR 55775.                         Comments, filed in MD Docket No. 16–166 (filed
                                                                  116 Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees    June 23, 2016), at 3–5.
     addition to the services that the
                                                                for Fiscal Year 2008, Second Report and Order, 24        124 Level 3 Comments, filed in MD Docket No.

                                                                FCC Rcd 4208, 4214–16, paras. 13–17 (2009)            16–166 (filed June 23, 2016).
        105 For purposes of determining whether a
                                                                (Submarine Cable Order); 74 FR 22104, (May 12,           125 The submarine cable fee is based on capacity
     licensee qualifies as a satellite station for regulatory   2009).                                                per system; the proposed terrestrial and satellite fee
     fee purposes, it must be so characterized in one of          117 Submarine Cable Order, 24 FCC Rcd at 4213,      would be based on overall capacity, but not on a
     these sources as of the date of the Report and Order.      para. 9; 74 FR 22104, 22106.                          per system basis.
        106 See FY 2013 NPRM, 28 FCC Rcd at 7798–7807,
                                                                  118 The prior rule assessed regulatory fees based      126 FY 2017 NPRM, 32 FCC Rcd at 4536–38, paras.
     paras. 17–40; 78 FR 34612.                                 on the number of active circuits on the previous      23–27; 82 FR 26019.
        107 Coalition Comments at 3.
                                                                December 31.                                             127 47 CFR 43.62(a)(1). Commenters support
        108 Coalition Comments at 3.                              119 Submarine Cable Order, 24 FCC Rcd at 4214–      continuing to assess regulatory fees based on IBCs
        109 Coalition Comments at 5–6.
                                                                16, paras. 13–17; 74 FR 22104, 22107–8.               that were active as of December 31 of the prior year
        110 Coalition Comments at 8.                              120 Id., Submarine Cable Order, 24 FCC Rcd at       and we see no reason to change this methodology
        111 FY 2016 Report and Order, 31 FCC Rcd at             4208–4209, para. 1; 74 FR 22104.                      at this time.
     10347–350, para. 6; 81 FR 65926.                             121 Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees       128 Level 3 June 29, 2017 ex parte at 1.
        112 FY 2017 NPRM, 32 FCC Rcd at 4529, para. 8;          for Fiscal Year 2009, Report and Order, 24 FCC Rcd       129 AT&T Comments at 2 & Reply Comments at

     82 FR 26019.                                               10301, 10306–07, paras. 16–17 (2009); 74 FR 40089.    1.



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     44330            Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 183 / Friday, September 22, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

     the submarine cable regulatory fee                      circuits at any point during the                       of all regulatory fee payments. And yet
     methodology.                                            preceding year does not outweigh the                   processing and collecting these fees
       38. Adding non-common carrier                         benefits. Therefore, we will retain the                generates a disproportionate amount of
     terrestrial IBCs to the regulatory fee                  current requirement of assessing fees on               work for Commission staff. Specifically,
     schedule is a permitted amendment, as                   systems active as of December 31 of the                the cost of researching, creating a bill to
     defined in section 9(b)(3) of the Act,130               prior year.                                            send to a non-payor, and completing all
     and pursuant to section 9(b)(4)(B),131                                                                         follow-up discussion and
     must be submitted to Congress at least                  G. Increasing the De Minimis Threshold
                                                                                                                    correspondence has increased since
     90 days before it will be effective. For                   41. Under the Commission’s current                  2014’s $350 estimate, and that does not
     that reason, this new fee will be                       de minimis rule for regulatory fee                     even include the cost of overhead and
     included in the regulatory fee                          payments, a regulatee is exempt from                   administering the regulatory fee
     proceeding for FY 2018.                                 paying regulatory fees if the sum total of             program.145 The Commission has found
                                                             all of its regulatory fee liabilities for              that smaller entities with regulatory fees
     2. Satellite IBCs                                       annual regulatory fees is $500 or less for             that fall within this range are less likely
        39. In the FY 2017 NPRM, we sought                   the fiscal year.137 The Commission                     to pay on a timely basis and
     comment on whether to eliminate the                     increased the de minimis threshold                     consequently use more Commission
     IBC regulatory fee for satellite providers              from $10 to $500 in the FY 2014 Report                 resources for fee collection.146
     of IBCs.132 SIA contends that the fee                   and Order.138 The higher threshold                     Nonpayment by these small entities
     should be eliminated because it does                    reflected the estimated costs of                       then often results in the escalation of
     not correspond with substantive work                    collecting an unpaid regulatory fee, i.e.,             the Commission’s administrative costs
     by the Commission and is overly                         at least $350 in direct costs. The                     and a disproportionate use of FTE
     burdensome for satellite operators to                   Commission’s estimate of approximately                 resources. As such, the marginal benefit
     calculate.133 According to SIA,                         $350 per unpaid fee excluded overhead                  to Commission operations of assessing,
     calculating the number of circuits takes                or other costs involved in regulatory fee              billing, and collecting regulatory fees on
     at least ten hours for in-house counsel                 collection.139 In addition, the                        regulatees that would owe less than
     and additional personnel in other                       Commission observed that setting the de                $1,000 is minute. In addition, setting the
     departments are responsible for                         minimis threshold at $500 was unlikely                 threshold at $1,000 is unlikely to reduce
     collecting data for this calculation.134                to reduce fee collections to an amount                 fee collections to an amount below the
     The flat fee methodology for terrestrial                below the full amount of the                           full amount of the Commission’s annual
     and satellite IBCs should significantly                 Commission’s annual appropriation.140                  appropriation because the additional
     reduce any burden of collecting data                       42. In the FY 2014 regulatory fee                   amount that would no longer be
     described by SIA. After reviewing the                   proceeding, commenters had argued the                  collected is relatively small. We
     record, we do not see any reason to                     threshold should be increased to $750                  conclude that raising the de minimis
     eliminate this fee category. Instead, we                or $1,000.141 In response, the                         threshold to $1,000 is justified by
     are moving toward a more consistent                     Commission adopted a new threshold of                  reducing the Commission’s cost in
     regulatory fee methodology for all IBCs                 $500 for annual regulatory fee and                     collection of regulatory fees, thus
     and a less burdensome process for all                   committed to further monitor the de                    allowing a more efficient allocation of
     regulatees.                                             minimis threshold and consider                         Commission resources.
                                                             whether to increase the threshold or                      44. We also sought comment on
     3. Fee Based on Circuits as of December
                                                             revise on some other basis.142 In the FY               whether we should include multi-year
     31
                                                             2017 NPRM, we sought comment on                        wireless licenses in the de minimis
        40. In the FY 2017 NPRM, we sought                   increasing the de minimis threshold to                 threshold. EWA explains, and we agree,
     comment on whether to assess the                        $1,000 to improve the cost effectiveness               that it would be difficult to administer
     number of active circuits on systems                    of the Commission’s collection of                      a de minimis threshold for multi-year
     active as of December 31 of the prior                   regulatory fees.143 Commenters support                 licenses.147 ACA proposes that we adopt
     year or assess fees on IBCs that were                   an increase in the de minimis
     active at any point during the preceding                                                                       a de minimis threshold for small cable
                                                             threshold.144                                          and IPTV operators of 1000 or fewer
     calendar year.135 Level 3 and AT&T                         43. In general, we believe the                      subscribers.148 After analyzing this issue
     argue that the Commission should                        Commission’s operational costs
     continue to assess regulatory fees based                                                                       we conclude that it would be
                                                             associated with processing and
     on IBCs that were active as of December                                                                        administratively difficult to have both a
                                                             collecting these smaller fees, outweigh
     31 of the prior year because it is                                                                             per subscriber de minimis threshold and
                                                             the benefits of such payments. For
     significantly less burdensome for                                                                              a $1000 de minimis threshold at the
                                                             example, payors between $500 and
     carriers to identify circuits that are                                                                         same time. Many cable operators also
                                                             $1,000 account for less than one percent
     active at a fixed point in time as                                                                             have CARS licenses and offer other
     opposed to at any point during the                         137 FY 2014 Report and Order, 29 FCC Rcd at
                                                                                                                    services, such as VoIP, and it would be
     preceding year.136 We agree that the                    10774–76, para. 18–21; 79 FR 54190.                    difficult to calculate if they exceed the
                                                                138 Id.                                             de minimis threshold with two different
     burdens associated with requiring
                                                                139 Id., FY 2014 Report and Order, 29 FCC Rcd       thresholds.
     providers to count the number of active                 at 10775, para. 20 & n. 62; 79 FR 54190.                  45. Accordingly, the de minimis
                                                                140 Id.
       130 47 U.S.C. 159(b)(3).
                                                                                                                    threshold we adopt today applies only
                                                                141 Id.
       131 47 U.S.C. 159(b)(4)(B).                              142 Id., FY 2014 Report and Order, 29 FCC Rcd
                                                                                                                    to filers of annual regulatory fees for FY
       132 FY 2017 NPRM, 32 FCC Rcd at 4537–38, para.
                                                             at 10775, para. 20; 79 FR 54190.
     26; 82 FR 26019.                                           143 Id. (observing that many small entities ‘‘are     145 Id.
       133 SIA Comments at 4–5.                                                                                       146 Id.
                                                             subject to little Commission oversight and
       134 SIA Comments at 5, note 18.
                                                             regulation which serves to further exacerbate this       147 EWA  Comments at 2–4.
       135 FY 2017 NPRM, 32 FCC Rcd at 4538, para. 26;       inequity [of the administrative burden].’’).             148 ACA  Comments at 9 (explaining that the small
     82 FR 26019.                                               144 ACA Comments at 7–10; CMA Comments at 4;        operators may also provide VoIP services and may
       136 Level 3 Comments at 2; AT&T Reply                 EWA Comments at 2; NAB Comments at 1–2;                not be de minimis under the $1000 threshold
     Comments at 5–6.                                        Romar Reply Comments at 2–3.                           proposed).



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                      Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 183 / Friday, September 22, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                 44331

     2017 and not multi-year filings.149 This                Transactions greater than $24,999.99                    all categories of fees for which payment
     de minimis exemption from the                           will be rejected. This limit applies to                 is due, is $1,000 or less are exempt from
     payment of regulatory fees applies to the               single payments or bundled payments of                  payment of FY 2017 regulatory fees. The
     sum of all annual regulatory fee                        more than one bill. Multiple                            de minimis threshold applies only to
     obligations that a regulatee has for all                transactions to a single agency in one                  filers of annual regulatory fees (not
     applicable fee categories; not to                       day may be aggregated and treated as a                  regulatory fees paid through multi-year
     individual payments for each category                   single transaction subject to the                       filings), and is not a permanent
     separately. The Commission will                         $24,999.99 limit. Customers who wish                    exemption. Regulatees will need to
     implement the de minimis threshold of                   to pay an amount greater than                           reevaluate their total fee liability each
     $1,000 beginning immediately. The de                    $24,999.99 should consider available                    fiscal year to determine whether they
     minimis status is not a permanent                       electronic alternatives such as Visa or                 meet the de minimis exemption.
     exemption from regulatory fees. Rather,                 MasterCard debit cards, ACH debits
     each regulatee will need to reevaluate                  from a bank account, and wire transfers.                5. Standard Fee Calculations and
     annually to determine whether its total                 Each of these payment options is                        Payment Dates
     liability for annual regulatory fees falls              available after filing regulatory fee                      50. The Commission will accept fee
     at or below the threshold given any                     information in Fee Filer.                               payments made in advance of the
     changes that the Commission may make                                                                            window for the payment of regulatory
                                                             3. Payment Methods
     in its regulatory fees from year to year.                                                                       fees. The responsibility for payment of
                                                                48. During the fee season for                        fees by service category is as follows:
     V. Procedural Matters                                   collecting FY 2017 regulatory fees,                        • Media Services: Regulatory fees
     A. Payment of Regulatory Fees                           regulatees can pay their fees by credit                 must be paid for initial construction
                                                             card through Pay.gov,154 ACH, debit                     permits that were granted on or before
     1. Checks Will Not Be Accepted for                      card,155 or by wire transfer. Additional                October 1, 2016 for AM/FM radio
     Payment of Annual Regulatory Fees                       payment instructions are posted at                      stations, VHF/UHF full service
        46. Pursuant to an Office of                         http://transition.fcc.gov/fees/                         television stations, and satellite
     Management and Budget (OMB)                             regfees.html. The receiving bank for all                television stations. Regulatory fees must
     directive,150 the Commission is moving                  wire payments is the U.S. Treasury,                     be paid for all broadcast facility licenses
     towards a paperless environment,                        New York, New York. When making a                       granted on or before October 1, 2016.
     extending to disbursement and                           wire transfer, regulatees must fax a copy                  • Wireline (Common Carrier)
     collection of select federal government                 of their Fee Filer generated Form 159–                  Services: Regulatory fees must be paid
     payments and receipts.151 In 2015, the                  E to the Federal Communications                         for authorizations that were granted on
     Commission stopped accepting checks                     Commission at (202) 418–2843 at least                   or before October 1, 2016. In instances
     (including cashier’s checks and money                   one hour before initiating the wire                     where a permit or license is transferred
     orders) and the accompanying hardcopy                   transfer (but on the same business day)                 or assigned after October 1, 2016,
     forms (e.g., Forms 159, 159–B, 159–E,                   so as not to delay crediting their                      responsibility for payment rests with the
     159–W) for the payment of regulatory                    account. Regulatees should discuss                      holder of the permit or license as of the
     fees.152 All regulatory fee payments                    arrangements (including bank closing                    fee due date. Audio bridging service
     must be made by online Automated                        schedules) with their bankers several                   providers are included in this
     Clearing House (ACH) payment, online                    days before they plan to make the wire                  category.156 For Responsible
     credit card, or wire transfer. Any other                transfer to allow sufficient time for the               Organizations (RespOrgs) that manage
     form of payment (e.g., checks, cashier’s                transfer to be initiated and completed                  Toll Free Numbers (TFN), regulatory
     checks, or money orders) will be                        before the deadline. Complete                           fees should be paid on all working,
     rejected. For payments by wire, a Form                  instructions for making wire payments                   assigned, and reserved toll free
     159–E should still be transmitted via fax               are posted at http://transition.fcc.gov/                numbers, as well as toll free numbers
     so that the Commission can associate                    fees/wiretran.html.                                     that are in any other status as defined
     the wire payment with the correct                                                                               in § 52.103 of the Commission’s
     regulatory fee information.                             4. De Minimis Regulatory Fees
                                                                                                                     rules.157 The unit count should be based
     2. Credit Card Transaction Levels                          49. Regulatees whose total FY 2017                   on toll free numbers managed by
                                                             annual regulatory fee liability, including              RespOrgs on or about December 31,
        47. Since June 1, 2015, in accordance
                                                                                                                     2016.
     with U.S. Treasury Announcement No.                     are prohibited from splitting the total amount due         • Wireless Services: CMRS cellular,
     A–2014–04 (July 2014), the amount that                  into multiple payments. Splitting an amount owed
                                                                                                                     mobile, and messaging services (fees
     can be charged on a credit card for                     into several payment transactions violates the credit
                                                                                                                     based on number of subscribers or
     transactions with federal agencies has                  card network and Fiscal Service rules. An amount
                                                             owed that exceeds the Fiscal Service maximum            telephone number count): Regulatory
     been limited to $24,999.99.153                          dollar amount, $24,999.99, may not be split into        fees must be paid for authorizations that
                                                             two or more payment transactions in the same day
        149 See FY 2014 Report and Order, 29 FCC Rcd         by using one or multiple cards. Also, an amount
                                                                                                                     were granted on or before October 1,
     at 10775, para. 21 (explaining how to calculate the     owed that exceeds the Fiscal Service maximum            2016. The number of subscribers, units,
     regulatory fee total to determine if it is below the    dollar amount may not be split into two or more         or telephone numbers on December 31,
     de minimis threshold); 79 FR 54190.                     transactions over multiple days by using one or         2016 will be used as the basis from
        150 Office of Management and Budget (OMB)            more cards.
                                                                                                                     which to calculate the fee payment. In
     Memorandum M–10–06, Open Government                        154 In accordance with U.S. Treasury Financial

     Directive, Dec. 8, 2009; see also http://               Manual Announcement No. A–2014–04 (July 2014),          instances where a permit or license is
     www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/06/13/         the amount that may be charged on a credit card         transferred or assigned after October 1,
     executive-order-13576-delivering-efficient-effective-   for transactions with federal agencies has been         2016, responsibility for payment rests
     and-accountable-gov.                                    reduced to $24,999.99.
        151 See U.S. Department of the Treasury, Open
                                                                                                                     with the holder of the permit or license
                                                                155 In accordance with U.S. Treasury Financial
     Government Plan 2.1, Sept. 2012.                        Manual Announcement No. A–2012–02, the
                                                                                                                     as of the fee due date.
        152 FY 2015 Report and Order, 30 FCC Rcd at
                                                             maximum dollar-value limit for debit card
     10282–83, para. 35; 80 FR 55775.                                                                                   156 Audio bridging services are toll
                                                             transactions is eliminated. Only Visa and
        153 Customers who owe an amount on a bill, debt,     MasterCard branded debit cards are accepted by          teleconferencing services.
     or other obligation due to the federal government       Pay.gov.                                                   157 47 CFR 52.103.




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     44332            Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 183 / Friday, September 22, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

        • Wireless Services, Multi-year fees:                2016, responsibility for payment rests                  payment system (Fee Filer) along with
     The first eight regulatory fee categories               with the holder of the license as of the                the carrier’s Operating Company
     in our Schedule of Regulatory Fees in                   fee due date. For regulatory fee                        Numbers (OCNs).
     Table 4 pay ‘‘small multi-year wireless                 purposes, the allocation in FY 2017 will                   52. A carrier wishing to revise its
     regulatory fees.’’ Entities pay these                   remain at 87.6 percent for submarine                    telephone number (subscriber) count
     regulatory fees in advance for the entire               cable and 12.4 percent for satellite/                   can do so by accessing Fee Filer and
     amount period covered by the five-year                  terrestrial facilities.                                 follow the prompts to revise their
     or ten-year terms of their initial licenses,               • International Services: (Terrestrial               telephone number counts. Any revisions
     and pay regulatory fees again only when                 and Satellite Services): Regulatory fees                to the telephone number counts should
     the license is renewed or a new license                 for Terrestrial and Satellite International             be accompanied by an explanation or
     is obtained. We include these fee                       Bearer Circuits are to be paid by                       supporting documentation.162 The
     categories in our rulemaking to                         facilities-based common carriers that                   Commission will then review the
     publicize our estimates of the number of                have active (used or leased)                            revised count and supporting
     ‘‘small multi-year wireless’’ licenses                  international bearer circuits as of                     documentation and either approve or
     that will be renewed or newly obtained                  December 31, 2016 in any terrestrial or                 disapprove the submission in Fee Filer.
     in FY 2017.                                             satellite transmission facility for the                 If the submission is disapproved, the
        • Multichannel Video Programming                     provision of service to an end user or                  Commission will contact the provider to
     Distributor Services (cable television                  resale carrier. When calculating the                    afford the provider an opportunity to
     operators, CARS licensees, DBS, and                     number of such active circuits, the                     discuss its revised subscriber count and/
     IPTV): Regulatory fees must be paid for                 facilities-based common carriers must                   or provide additional supporting
     the number of basic cable television                    include circuits used by themselves or                  documentation. If we receive no
     subscribers as of December 31, 2016.158                 their affiliates. In addition, non-                     response from the provider, or we do
     Regulatory fees also must be paid for                   common carrier satellite operators must                 not reverse our initial disapproval of the
     CARS licenses that were granted on or                   pay a fee for each circuit they and their               provider’s revised count submission, the
     before October 1, 2016. In instances                    affiliates hold and each circuit sold or                fee payment must be based on the
     where a permit or license is transferred                leased to any customer, other than an                   number of subscribers listed initially in
     or assigned after October 1, 2016,                      international common carrier                            Fee Filer. Once the timeframe for
     responsibility for payment rests with the               authorized by the Commission to                         revision has passed, the telephone
     holder of the permit or license as of the               provide U.S. international common                       number counts are final and are the
     fee due date. For providers of DBS                      carrier services. For these purposes,                   basis upon which CMRS regulatory fees
     service and IPTV-based MVPDs,                           ‘‘active circuits’’ include backup and                  are to be paid. Providers can view their
     regulatory fees should be paid based on                 redundant circuits as of December 31,                   final telephone counts online in Fee
     a subscriber count on or about                          2016. Whether circuits are used                         Filer. A final CMRS assessment letter
     December 31, 2016. In instances where                   specifically for voice or data is not                   will not be mailed out.
     a permit or license is transferred or                   relevant for purposes of determining                       53. Because some carriers do not file
     assigned after October 31, 2016,                        that they are active circuits.159 In                    the NRUF report, they may not see their
     responsibility for payment rests with the               instances where a permit or license is                  telephone number counts in Fee Filer.
     holder of the permit or license as of the               transferred or assigned after October 1,                In these instances, the carriers should
     due date.                                               2016, responsibility for payment rests                  compute their fee payment using the
        • International Services: Regulatory                 with the holder of the permit or license                standard methodology that is currently
     fees must be paid for (1) earth stations                as of the fee due date. For regulatory fee              in place for CMRS Wireless services
     and (2) geostationary orbit space                       purposes, the allocation in FY 2017 will                (i.e., compute their telephone number
     stations and non-geostationary orbit                    remain at 87.6 percent for submarine                    counts as of December 31, 2016), and
     satellite systems that were licensed and                cable and 12.4 percent for satellite/                   submit their fee payment accordingly.
     operational on or before October 1,                     terrestrial facilities.160                              Whether a carrier reviews its telephone
     2016. In instances where a permit or                                                                            number counts in Fee Filer or not, the
                                                             B. Commercial Mobile Radio Service                      Commission reserves the right to audit
     license is transferred or assigned after                (CMRS) Cellular and Mobile Services
     October 1, 2016, responsibility for                                                                             the number of telephone numbers for
                                                             Assessments                                             which regulatory fees are paid. In the
     payment rests with the holder of the
                                                                51. The Commission will compile                      event that the Commission determines
     permit or license as of the fee due date.
        • International Services: (Submarine                 data from the Numbering Resource                        that the number of telephone numbers
     Cable Systems): Regulatory fees for                     Utilization Forecast (NRUF) report that                 that are paid is inaccurate, the
     submarine cable systems are to be paid                  is based on ‘‘assigned’’ telephone                      Commission will bill the carrier for the
     on a per cable landing license basis                    number (subscriber) counts that have                    difference between what was paid and
     based on circuit capacity as of December                been adjusted for porting to net Type 0                 what should have been paid.
     31, 2016. In instances where a license is               ports (‘‘in’’ and ‘‘out’’).161 This
                                                             information of telephone numbers                        C. Enforcement
     transferred or assigned after October 1,
                                                             (subscriber count) will be posted on the                  54. To be considered timely,
       158 Cable television system operators should
                                                             Commission’s electronic filing and                      regulatory fee payments must be made
     compute their number of basic subscribers as                                                                    electronically by the payment due date
     follows: Number of single family dwellings +               159 We encourage terrestrial and satellite service   for regulatory fees. Section 9(c) of the
     number of individual households in multiple             providers to seek guidance from the International       Act requires us to impose a late
     dwelling unit (apartments, condominiums, mobile         Bureau’s Telecommunications and Analysis
                                                             Division to verify their IBC reporting processes to
                                                                                                                     payment penalty of 25 percent of the
     home parks, etc.) paying at the basic subscriber rate
     + bulk rate customers + courtesy and free service.      ensure that their calculation methods comply with       unpaid amount to be assessed on the
     Note: Bulk-Rate Customers = Total annual bulk-rate      our rules.
                                                                160 We remind facilities-based common carriers to
     charge divided by basic annual subscription rate for                                                               162 In the supporting documentation, the provider

     individual households. Operators may base their         review their reporting processes to ensure that they    will need to state a reason for the change, such as
     count on ‘‘a typical day in the last full week’’ of     accurately calculate and report IBCs.                   a purchase or sale of a subsidiary, the date of the
     December 2016, rather than on a count as of                161 See FY 2005 Report and Order, 20 FCC Rcd         transaction, and any other pertinent information
     December 31, 2016.                                      at 12264, paras. 38–44; 70 FR 41967.                    that will help to justify a reason for the change.



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                            Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 183 / Friday, September 22, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                                                          44333

     first day following the deadline for                                         applications or other requests for                                           the Commission can transfer delinquent
     filing these fees.163 Failure to pay                                         benefits filed by anyone who is                                              debt to Treasury for further collection
     regulatory fees and/or any late penalty                                      delinquent in any non-tax debts owed to                                      action within 120 days after the date of
     will subject regulatees to sanctions,                                        the Commission (including regulatory                                         delinquency.169 However, regulatees
     including those set forth in § 1.1910 of                                     fees) and will ultimately dismiss those                                      will not likely see any substantial
     the Commission’s rules,164 which                                             applications or other requests if                                            change in the current procedures of how
     generally requires the Commission to                                         payment of the delinquent debt or other                                      past due debts are to be paid, except
     withhold action on ‘‘applications,                                           satisfactory arrangement for payment is                                      that the debts will be handled by CRS
     including on a petition for                                                  not made.167 Failure to pay regulatory                                       (U.S. Treasury) rather than by the
     reconsideration or any application for                                       fees can also result in the initiation of                                    Commission.
     review of a fee determination, or                                            a proceeding to revoke any and all
     requests for authorization by any entity                                     authorizations held by the entity                                            E. Effective Date
     found to be delinquent in its debt to the                                    responsible for paying the delinquent
                                                                                                                                                                  57. Providing a 30-day period after
     Commission’’ and in the DCIA.165 We                                          fee(s).168 Pursuant to a pilot program,
                                                                                                                                                               Federal Register publication before this
     also assess administrative processing                                        we have initiated procedures to transfer
     charges on delinquent debts to recover                                       debt to the Centralized Receivables                                          Report and Order becomes effective as
     additional costs incurred in processing                                      Service at the U.S. Treasury, as                                             required by 5 U.S.C. 553(d) will not
     and handling the debt pursuant to the                                        described below.                                                             allow sufficient time to collect the FY
     DCIA and § 1.1940(d) of the                                                                                                                               2017 fees before FY 2017 ends on
                                                                                  D. Transfers of Unpaid Debt to                                               September 30, 2017. For this reason,
     Commission’s rules.166 These
                                                                                  Centralized Receivables Service (CRS),                                       pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3), we find
     administrative processing charges will
                                                                                  U.S. Treasury                                                                there is good cause to waive the
     be assessed on any delinquent
     regulatory fee, in addition to the 25                                           56. Under section 9 of the Act,                                           requirements of section 553(d), and this
     percent late charge penalty. In the case                                     Commission rules, and federal debt                                           Report and Order will become effective
     of partial payments (underpayments) of                                       collection laws, a licensee’s regulatory                                     upon publication in the Federal
     regulatory fees, the payor will be given                                     fee is due on the first day of the fiscal                                    Register. Because payments of the
     credit for the amount paid, but if it is                                     year and payable at a date established in                                    regulatory fees will not actually be due
     later determined that the fee paid is                                        the Commission’s annual regulatory fee                                       until late September, persons affected
     incorrect or not timely paid, then the 25                                    Report and Order. In October 2015, the                                       by this Report and Order will still have
     percent late charge penalty (and other                                       Commission, under revised procedures,                                        a reasonable period in which to make
     charges and/or sanctions, as                                                 began transferring unpaid regulatory fee                                     their payments and thereby comply
     appropriate) will be assessed on the                                         receivables directly to the CRS at the                                       with the rules established herein.
     portion that is not paid in a timely                                         U.S. Treasury rather than trying to                                          VI. Additional Tables
     manner.                                                                      collect the debt itself and then
        55. Pursuant to the ‘‘red light rule,’’                                   transferring the remaining unpaid debts                                      Table 2—Commenters—Initial
     we will withhold action on any                                               to Treasury. Under revised procedures,                                       Comments

                                                                                     Commenter                                                                                                     Abbreviation

     American Cable Association ...........................................................................................................................................                 ACA.
     Arso Radio Corporation ..................................................................................................................................................              Arso.
     AT&T Services, Inc. ........................................................................................................................................................           AT&T.
     CenturyLink, Inc. .............................................................................................................................................................        CenturyLink.
     CRC Broadcasting Company, Inc ..................................................................................................................................                       CRC.
     Critical Messaging Association .......................................................................................................................................                 CMA.
     DISH Network, L.L.C. and AT&T Services, Inc ..............................................................................................................                             DISH and AT&T.
     Enterprise Wireless Alliance ...........................................................................................................................................               EWA.
     Frontier Communications Corporation ............................................................................................................................                       Frontier.
     ITTA—The Voice of America’s Broadband Providers ....................................................................................................                                   ITTA.
     Level 3 Communications, LLC .......................................................................................................................................                    Level 3.
     National Association of Broadcasters .............................................................................................................................                     NAB.
     NCTA—The Internet and Television Association ...........................................................................................................                               NCTA.
     Quincy Media, Inc. ..........................................................................................................................................................          QMI.
     Ramar Communications, Inc. .........................................................................................................................................                   Ramar.
     Satellite Industry Association ..........................................................................................................................................              SIA.
     Submarine Cable Coalition .............................................................................................................................................                Coalition.

                                                                                           Commenters—Reply Comments

     American Cable Association ...........................................................................................................................................                 ACA.
     AT&T Services, Inc. ........................................................................................................................................................           AT&T.
     CenturyLink, Inc. .............................................................................................................................................................        CenturyLink.
     CTIA® ..............................................................................................................................................................................   CTIA.
     Level 3 Communications, LLC .......................................................................................................................................                    Level 3.

       163 47  U.S.C. 159(c).                                                     1.1910, 1.1911, 1.1912. In 2004, the Commission                                 166 47CFR 1.1940(d).
       164 See  47 CFR 1.1910.                                                    adopted rules implementing the requirements of the                              167 See47 CFR 1.1161(c), 1.1164(f)(5), and 1.1910.
        165 Delinquent debt owed to the Commission                                DCIA. See Amendment of Parts 0 and 1 of the                                    168 47 U.S.C. 159.
                                                                                  Commission’s Rules, MD Docket No. 02–339, Report
     triggers the ‘‘red light rule,’’ which places a hold on                      and Order, 19 FCC Rcd 6540 (69 FR 27843, May 17,
                                                                                                                                                                 169 See 31 U.S.C. 3711(g); 31 CFR 285.12; 47 CFR

     the processing of pending applications, fee offsets,                         2004); 47 CFR part 1, subpart O, Collection of                               1.1917.
     and pending disbursement payments. 47 CFR                                    Claims Owed the United States.



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     44334                     Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 183 / Friday, September 22, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                                                                               Commenter                                                                                                        Abbreviation

     Romar Communications, Inc. .........................................................................................................................................                          Romar.

                                                                                  Commenter and date filed                                                                                                      Abbreviation

                                                                                                                     Ex Parte Filings

     American Cable Association (Aug. 30, 2017) ................................................................................................................                                   ACA.
     AT&T Services, Inc. (July 27, 2017) ..............................................................................................................................                            AT&T.
     DISH Network, L.L.C. (Aug. 22, 2017) ...........................................................................................................................                              DISH.
     Level 3 Communications, LLC (June 29, July 24, 2017) ...............................................................................................                                          Level 3.
     Ramar Communications, Inc. (July 21, Aug. 15, 21, 22, 2017) .....................................................................................                                             Ramar.



       Regulatory fees in the top seven fee                                               term of the license and are submitted at                                    Table 3—Calculation of FY 2017
     categories are collected by the                                                      the time the application is filed.                                          Revenue Requirements and Pro-Rata
     Commission in advance to cover the                                                                                                                               Fees
                                                                                                                                                                    Pro-rated       Computed
                                                                                                                                                      FY 2016                                               Rounded               Expected
                                                                                                   FY 2017                                                           FY 2017         FY 2017
                                      Fee category                                                                                   Yrs              revenue                                               FY 2017               FY 2017
                                                                                                 payment units                                                     revenue re-      regulatory
                                                                                                                                                      estimate                                              Reg. fee              revenue
                                                                                                                                                                    quirement          fee

     PLMRS (Exclusive Use) ....................................................                           1,300                              10          625,000       325,000                 25                      25            325,000
     PLMRS (Shared use) ........................................................                         16,000                              10        3,110,000     1,600,000                 10                      10          1,600,000
     Microwave .........................................................................                 11,800                              10        3,125,000     2,950,000                 25                      25          2,950,000
     Marine (Ship) .....................................................................                  8,100                              10        1,035,000     1,215,000                 15                      15          1,215,000
     Aviation (Aircraft) ...............................................................                  4,200                              10          470,000       420,000                 10                      10            420,000
     Marine (Coast) ..................................................................                      150                              10          192,500        60,000                 40                      40             60,000
     Aviation (Ground) ..............................................................                     1,100                              10          220,000       220,000                 20                      20            220,000
     AM Class A 4 .....................................................................                      65                               1          313,500       305,500              4,699                  4,700             305,500
     AM Class B 4 .....................................................................                   1,523                               1        3,875,875     3,807,500              2,488                 2,500            3,807,500
     AM Class C 4 .....................................................................                     870                               1        1,400,175     1,348,500             1,559                   1,550           1,348,500
     AM Class D 4 .....................................................................                   1,492                               1        4,587,900     4,476,000              3,004                 3,000            4,476,000
     FM Classes A, B1 & C3 4 .................................................                            3,150                               1        9,678,200     9,371,250              2,987                 2,975            9,371,250
     FM Classes B, C, C0, C1 & C2 4 ......................................                                3,114                               1       11,849,725    11,521,800             3,703                  3,700           11,521,800
     AM Construction Permits 1 ................................................                              10                               1            9,300         5,550                555                    555               5,550
     FM Construction Permits 1 ................................................                             113                               1          192,425       110,740                980                    980             110,740
     Satellite TV ........................................................................                  126                               1          224,000       217,350             1,722                  1,725              217,350
     Digital TV Markets 1–10 ...................................................                            139                               1        8,433,825     8,305,250            59,748                 59,750            8,305,250
     Digital TV Markets 11–25 .................................................                             131                               1        6,348,825     5,898,275            45,013                 45,025            5,898,275
     Digital TV Markets 26–50 .................................................                             181                               1        5,525,025     5,439,050            30,049                 30,050            5,439,050
     Digital TV Markets 51–100 ...............................................                              285                               1        4,301,600     4,289,250            14,976                 14,975            4,267,875
     Digital TV Remaining Markets ..........................................                                367                               1        1,825,000     1,807,475             4,924                  4,925            1,807,475
     Digital TV Construction Permits1 ......................................                                  3                               1           15,000        14,775              4,925                 4,925               14,775
     LPTV/Translators/Boosters/Class A TV ............................                                    4,051                               1        1,785,420     1,741,930                428                    430           1,741,930
     CARS Stations ..................................................................                       230                               1          220,875       215,050                935                    935             215,050
     Cable TV Systems, including IPTV ...................................                            62,000,000                               1       64,200,000    58,900,000             .9529                      .95         58,900,000
     Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS) .......................................                        32,500,000                               1        9,180,000    12,350,000              .3800                     .38         12,350,000
     Interstate Telecommunication Service Providers .............                               $37,000,000,000                               1      142,722,000   111,740,000           0.00302                0.00302          111,740,000
     Toll Free Numbers ............................................................                  32,700,000                               1        4,745,000     3,924,000            0.1174                    0.12           3,924,000
     CMRS Mobile Services (Cellular/Public Mobile) ...............                                  393,000,000                               1       73,200,000    82,530,000              0.210                   0.21          82,530,000
     CMRS Messag. Services ..................................................                         2,100,000                               1          184,000       168,000            0.0800                   0.080             168,000
     BRS 2 .................................................................................                870                               1          645,250       558,050                800                    800             696,000
     LMDS ................................................................................                  395                               1          286,375       454,250                800                    800             316,000
     Per 64 kbps Int’l Bearer Circuits Terrestrial (Common) &
        Satellite (Common & Non-Common) .............................                                    30,056,000                             1        638,000       801,295                .0267                      .03         901,680
     Submarine Cable Providers (see chart in Appendix C) 3                                                        41.19                         1      5,486,242     5,660,765            137,437                137,425           5,660,261
     Earth Stations ....................................................................                          3,400                         1      1,173,000     1,224,000                   360                    360        1,224,000
     Space Stations (Geostationary) ........................................                                           97                       1     13,155,125    13,669,725            140,924                140,925          13,669,725
     Space Stations (Non-Geostationary) ................................                                                 7                      1        911,700       947,450            135,343                135,350             947,450
     ****** Total Estimated Revenue to be Collected ..............                             ............................   ....................   384,890,362   358,571,405     ....................   ....................   358,670,986
     ****** Total Revenue Requirement ...................................                      ............................   ....................   384,012,497   356,710,992     ....................   ....................   356,710,992
     Difference ..........................................................................     ............................   ....................       877,865     1,860,413     ....................   ....................     1,959,994
       Notes on Table 3
       1 The AM and FM Construction Permit revenues and the Digital (VHF/UHF) Construction Permit revenues were adjusted, respectively, to set the regulatory fee to
     an amount no higher than the lowest licensed fee for that class of service. Reductions in the Digital (VHF/UHF) Construction Permit revenues, and in the AM and FM
     Construction Permit revenues, were offset by increases in the revenue totals for Digital television stations by market size, and in the AM and FM radio stations by
     class size and population served, respectively.
       2 MDS/MMDS category was renamed Broadband Radio Service (BRS). See Amendment of Parts 1, 21, 73, 74 and 101 of the Commission’s Rules to Facilitate the
     Provision of Fixed and Mobile Broadband Access, Educational and Other Advanced Services in the 2150–2162 and 2500–2690 MHz Bands, Report & Order and Fur-
     ther Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 19 FCC Rcd 14165, 14169, para. 6 (69 FR 72048, December 10, 2004).
       3 The chart at the end of Table 4 lists the submarine cable bearer circuit regulatory fees (common and non-common carrier basis) that resulted from the adoption of
     the Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2008, Report and Order and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 24 FCC Rcd 6388 (73 FR
     50285, August 26, 2008) and Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2008, Second Report and Order, 24 FCC Rcd 4208 (74 FR 22104, May
     12, 2009).
       4 The fee amounts listed in the column entitled ‘‘Rounded New FY 2017 Regulatory Fee’’ constitute a weighted average broadcast regulatory fee by class of serv-
     ice. The actual FY 2017 regulatory fees for AM/FM radio station are listed on a grid located at the end of Table 4.




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                            Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 183 / Friday, September 22, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                                                               44335

     Table 4—FY 2017 Schedule of                                                 Commission in advance to cover the
     Regulatory Fees                                                             term of the license and are submitted at
       Regulatory fees in the top eight fee                                      the time the application is filed.
     categories are collected by the

                                                                                                                                                                                                                 Annual
                                                                                             Fee category                                                                                                     regulatory fee
                                                                                                                                                                                                                (U.S. $s)

     PLMRS (per license) (Exclusive Use) (47 CFR part 90) ....................................................................................................................                                            25
     Microwave (per license) (47 CFR part 101) ........................................................................................................................................                                   25
     Marine (Ship) (per station) (47 CFR part 80) ......................................................................................................................................                                  15
     Marine (Coast) (per license) (47 CFR part 80) ...................................................................................................................................                                    40
     Rural Radio (47 CFR part 22) (previously listed under the Land Mobile category) ...........................................................................                                                          10
     PLMRS (Shared Use) (per license) (47 CFR part 90) ........................................................................................................................                                           10
     Aviation (Aircraft) (per station) (47 CFR part 87) ................................................................................................................................                                  10
     Aviation (Ground) (per license) (47 CFR part 87) ...............................................................................................................................                                     20
     CMRS Mobile/Cellular Services (per unit) (47 CFR parts 20, 22, 24, 27, 80 and 90) .......................................................................                                                           .21
     CMRS Messaging Services (per unit) (47 CFR parts 20, 22, 24 and 90) ..........................................................................................                                                      .08
     Broadband Radio Service (formerly MMDS/MDS) (per license) (47 CFR part 27) ............................................................................                                                            800
     Local Multipoint Distribution Service (per call sign) (47 CFR part 101) .............................................................................................                                              800
     AM Radio Construction Permits ..........................................................................................................................................................                           555
     FM Radio Construction Permits ..........................................................................................................................................................                           980
     Digital TV (47 CFR part 73) VHF and UHF Commercial:
           Markets 1–10 ................................................................................................................................................................................             59,750
           Markets 11–25 ..............................................................................................................................................................................              45,025
           Markets 26–50 ..............................................................................................................................................................................              30,050
           Markets 51–100 ............................................................................................................................................................................               14,975
           Remaining Markets .......................................................................................................................................................................                   4,925
           Construction Permits ....................................................................................................................................................................                   4,925
     Satellite Television Stations (All Markets) ...........................................................................................................................................                           1,725
     Low Power TV, Class A TV, TV/FM Translators & Boosters (47 CFR part 74) .................................................................................                                                           430
     CARS (47 CFR part 78) ......................................................................................................................................................................                        935
     Cable Television Systems (per subscriber) (47 CFR part 76), Including IPTV ..................................................................................                                                        .95
     Direct Broadcast Service (DBS) (per subscriber) (as defined by section 602(13) of the Act) ...........................................................                                                               .38
     Interstate Telecommunication Service Providers (per revenue dollar) ...............................................................................................                                             .00302
     Toll Free (per toll free subscriber) (47 CFR 52.101(f)) .......................................................................................................................                                      .12
     Earth Stations (47 CFR part 25) .........................................................................................................................................................                           360
     Space Stations (per operational station in geostationary orbit) (47 CFR part 25) also includes DBS Service (per operational sta-
        tion) (47 CFR part 100) ....................................................................................................................................................................                140,925
     Space Stations (per operational system in non-geostationary orbit) (47 CFR part 25) .....................................................................                                                      135,350
     International Bearer Circuits—Terrestrial/Satellites (per 64KB circuit) ...............................................................................................                                             .03
     Submarine Cable Landing Licenses Fee (per cable system) .............................................................................................................                                        See Table
                                                                                                                                                                                                                      Below


                                                                           FY 2017 RADIO STATION REGULATORY FEES
                                                                                                                                                                                                              FM Classes
                            Population                                                                                                                                                FM Classes
                                                                           AM Class A                AM Class B                 AM Class C                 AM Class D                                         B, C, C0, C1
                             served                                                                                                                                                   A, B1 & C3                  & C2

     <=25,000 ..................................................                       $895                       $640                      $555                       $610                       $980               $1,100
     25,001–75,000 .........................................                          1,350                        955                       830                        915                      1,475                1,650
     75,001–150,000 .......................................                           2,375                      1,700                     1,475                      1,600                      2,600                2,925
     150,001–500,000 .....................................                            3,550                      2,525                     2,200                      2,425                      3,875                4,400
     500,001–1,200,000 ..................................                             5,325                      3,800                     3,300                      3,625                      5,825                6,575
     1,200,001–3,000,00 .................................                             7,975                      5,700                     4,950                      5,425                      8,750                9,875
     3,000,001–6,000,00 .................................                            11,950                      8,550                     7,400                      8,150                     13,100               14,800
     >6,000,000 ...............................................                      17,950                     12,825                    11,100                     12,225                     19,650               22,225


                                                                  INTERNATIONAL BEARER CIRCUITS—SUBMARINE CABLE
                                                                                 Submarine cable systems                                                                                                      Fee amount
                                                                            (capacity as of December 31, 2016)

     < 2.5 Gbps ...........................................................................................................................................................................................          $8,600
     2.5 Gbps or greater, but less than 5 Gbps .........................................................................................................................................                             17,175
     5 Gbps or greater, but less than 10 Gbps ..........................................................................................................................................                             34,350
     10 Gbps or greater, but less than 20 Gbps ........................................................................................................................................                              68,725
     20 Gbps or greater ..............................................................................................................................................................................              137,425




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     44336                 Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 183 / Friday, September 22, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

     Table 5—Sources of Payment Unit                                           System (CDBS) and Cable Operations                  payment units cannot yet be estimated
     Estimates for FY 2017                                                     and Licensing System (COALS), as well               with sufficient accuracy. These include
                                                                               as reports generated within the                     an unknown number of waivers and/or
       In order to calculate individual                                        Commission such as the Wireless                     exemptions that may occur in FY 2017
     service fees for FY 2017, we adjusted FY                                  Telecommunications Bureau’s                         and the fact that, in many services, the
     2016 payment units for each service to                                    Numbering Resource Utilization                      number of actual licensees or station
     more accurately reflect expected FY                                       Forecast.                                           operators fluctuates from time to time
     2017 payment liabilities. We obtained                                        We sought verification for these                 due to economic, technical, or other
     our updated estimates through a variety                                   estimates from multiple sources and, in             reasons. When we note, for example,
     of means. For example, we used                                            all cases, we compared FY 2017                      that our estimated FY 2017 payment
     Commission licensee data bases, actual                                    estimates with actual FY 2016 payment               units are based on FY 2016 actual
     prior year payment records and industry                                   units to ensure that our revised                    payment units, it does not necessarily
     and trade association projections when                                    estimates were reasonable. Where                    mean that our FY 2017 projection is the
     available. The databases we consulted                                     appropriate, we adjusted and/or                     same number as in FY 2016. We have
     include our Universal Licensing System                                    rounded our final estimates to take into            either rounded the FY 2017 number or
     (ULS), International Bureau Filing                                        consideration the fact that certain                 adjusted it slightly to account for these
     System (IBFS), Consolidated Database                                      variables that impact on the number of              variables.

                              Fee category                                                                      Sources of payment unit estimates

     Land Mobile (All), Microwave, Marine (Ship &                               Based on Wireless Telecommunications Bureau (WTB) projections of new applications and re-
       Coast), Aviation (Aircraft & Ground), Domes-                               newals taking into consideration existing Commission licensee data bases. Aviation (Aircraft)
       tic Public Fixed.                                                          and Marine (Ship) estimates have been adjusted to take into consideration the licensing of
                                                                                  portions of these services on a voluntary basis.
     CMRS Cellular/Mobile Services .........................                    Based on WTB projection reports, and FY 16 payment data.
     CMRS Messaging Services ................................                   Based on WTB reports, and FY 16 payment data.
     AM/FM Radio Stations ........................................              Based on CDBS data, adjusted for exemptions, and actual FY 2016 payment units.
     Digital TV Stations ..............................................         Based on CDBS data, adjusted for exemptions, and actual FY 2016 payment units.
     (Combined VHF/UHF units) ................................
     AM/FM/TV Construction Permits ........................                     Based on CDBS data, adjusted for exemptions, and actual FY 2016 payment units.
     LPTV, Translators and Boosters, Class A Tele-                              Based on CDBS data, adjusted for exemptions, and actual FY 2016 payment units.
        vision.
     BRS (formerly MDS/MMDS) ...............................                    Based on WTB reports and actual FY 2016 payment units.
     LMDS ..................................................................    Based on WTB reports and actual FY 2016 payment units.
     Cable Television Relay Service (CARS) Sta-                                 Based on data from Media Bureau’s COALS database and actual FY 2016 payment units.
        tions.
     Cable Television System Subscribers, Including                             Based on publicly available data sources for estimated subscriber counts and actual FY 2016
        IPTV Subscribers.                                                         payment units.
     Interstate Telecommunication Service Providers                             Based on FCC Form 499–Q data for the four quarters of calendar year 2016, the Wireline
                                                                                  Competition Bureau projected the amount of calendar year 2016 revenue that will be re-
                                                                                  ported on 2017 FCC Form 499–A worksheets due in April, 2017.
     Earth Stations .....................................................       Based on International Bureau (‘‘IB’’) licensing data and actual FY 2016 payment units.
     Space Stations (GSOs & NGSOs) .....................                        Based on IB data reports and actual FY 2016 payment units.
     International Bearer Circuits ...............................              Based on IB reports and submissions by licensees, adjusted as necessary.
     Submarine Cable Licenses .................................                 Based on IB license information.



     Table 6—Factors, Measurements, and                                        Radiation values were calculated for                for the predicted principal community
     Calculations That Determine Station                                       each of 360 radials around the                      coverage area.
     Signal Contours and Associated                                            transmitter site. Next, estimated soil              FM Stations
     Population Coverages                                                      conductivity data was retrieved from a
                                                                               database representing the information in               The greater of the horizontal or
     AM Stations                                                               FCC Figure R3. Using the calculated                 vertical effective radiated power (ERP)
                                                                                                                                   (kW) and respective height above
        For stations with nondirectional                                       horizontal radiation values, and the
                                                                                                                                   average terrain (HAAT) (m) combination
     daytime antennas, the theoretical                                         retrieved soil conductivity data, the
                                                                                                                                   was used. Where the antenna height
     radiation was used at all azimuths. For                                   distance to the principal community (5              above mean sea level (HAMSL) was
     stations with directional daytime                                         mV/m) contour was predicted for each                available, it was used in lieu of the
     antennas, specific information on each                                    of the 360 radials. The resulting                   average HAAT figure to calculate
     day tower, including field ratio, phase,                                  distance to principal community                     specific HAAT figures for each of 360
     spacing, and orientation was retrieved,                                   contours were used to form a                        radials under study. Any available
     as well as the theoretical pattern root-                                  geographical polygon. Population                    directional pattern information was
     mean-square of the radiation in all                                       counting was accomplished by                        applied as well, to produce a radial-
     directions in the horizontal plane (RMS)                                  determining which 2010 block centroids              specific ERP figure. The HAAT and ERP
     figure (milliVolt per meter (mV/m) @1                                     were contained in the polygon. (A block             figures were used in conjunction with
     km) for the antenna system. The                                           centroid is the center point of a small             the Field Strength (50–50) propagation
     standard, or augmented standard if                                        area containing population as computed              curves specified in 47 CFR 73.313 to
     pertinent, horizontal plane radiation                                     by the U.S. Census Bureau.) The sum of              predict the distance to the principal
     pattern was calculated using techniques                                   the population figures for all enclosed             community (70 dBu (decibel above 1
     and methods specified in §§ 73.150 and                                    blocks represents the total population              microVolt per meter) or 3.17 mV/m)
     73.152 of the Commission’s rules.                                                                                             contour for each of the 360 radials. The


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                            Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 183 / Friday, September 22, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                                                            44337

     resulting distance to principal                                           blocks represents the total population                                      Table 7—FY 2016 Schedule of
     community contours were used to form                                      for the predicted principal community                                       Regulatory Fees
     a geographical polygon. Population                                        coverage area.                                                                Regulatory fees in the top eight fee
     counting was accomplished by                                                                                                                          categories are collected by the
     determining which 2010 block centroids                                                                                                                Commission in advance to cover the
     were contained in the polygon. The sum                                                                                                                term of the license and are submitted at
     of the population figures for all enclosed                                                                                                            the time the application is filed.

                                                                                                                                                                                                              Annual
                                                                                            Fee Category                                                                                                   regulatory fee
                                                                                                                                                                                                             (U.S. $s)

     PLMRS (per license) (Exclusive Use) (47 CFR part 90) ....................................................................................................................                                        25
     Microwave (per license) (47 CFR part 101) ........................................................................................................................................                               25
     Marine (Ship) (per station) (47 CFR part 80) ......................................................................................................................................                              15
     Marine (Coast) (per license) (47 CFR part 80) ...................................................................................................................................                                40
     Rural Radio (47 CFR part 22) (previously listed under the Land Mobile category) ...........................................................................                                                      10
     PLMRS (Shared Use) (per license) (47 CFR part 90) ........................................................................................................................                                       10
     Aviation (Aircraft) (per station) (47 CFR part 87) ................................................................................................................................                              10
     Aviation (Ground) (per license) (47 CFR part 87) ...............................................................................................................................                                 20
     CMRS Mobile/Cellular Services (per unit) (47 CFR parts 20, 22, 24, 27, 80 and 90) .......................................................................                                                       .20
     CMRS Messaging Services (per unit) (47 CFR parts 20, 22, 24 and 90) ..........................................................................................                                                  .08
     Broadband Radio Service (formerly MMDS/MDS) (per license) (47 CFR part 27) ............................................................................                                                         725
     Local Multipoint Distribution Service (per call sign) (47 CFR part 101) .............................................................................................                                           725
     AM Radio Construction Permits ..........................................................................................................................................................                        620
     FM Radio Construction Permits ..........................................................................................................................................................                      1,075
     Digital TV (47 CFR part 73) VHF and UHF Commercial:
           Markets 1–10 ................................................................................................................................................................................          60,675
           Markets 11–25 ..............................................................................................................................................................................           45,675
           Markets 26–50 ..............................................................................................................................................................................           30,525
           Markets 51–100 ............................................................................................................................................................................            15,200
           Remaining Markets .......................................................................................................................................................................                5,000
           Construction Permits ....................................................................................................................................................................                5,000
     Satellite Television Stations (All Markets) ...........................................................................................................................................                        1,750
     Low Power TV, Class A TV, TV/FM Translators & Boosters (47 CFR part 74) .................................................................................                                                        455
     CARS (47 CFR part 78) ......................................................................................................................................................................                     775
     Cable Television Systems (per subscriber) (47 CFR part 76), Including IPTV ..................................................................................                                                   1.00
     Direct Broadcast Service (DBS) (per subscriber) (as defined by section 602(13) of the Act) ...........................................................                                                            .27
     Interstate Telecommunication Service Providers (per revenue dollar) ...............................................................................................                                          .00371
     Toll Free (per toll free subscriber) (47 CFR 52.101(f)) .......................................................................................................................                                   .13
     Earth Stations (47 CFR part 25) .........................................................................................................................................................                        345
     Space Stations (per operational station in geostationary orbit) (47 CFR part 25) also includes DBS Service (per operational sta-
        tion) (47 CFR part 100) ....................................................................................................................................................................             138,475
     Space Stations (per operational system in non-geostationary orbit) (47 CFR part 25) .....................................................................                                                   151,950
     International Bearer Circuits—Terrestrial/Satellites (per 64KB circuit) ...............................................................................................                                          .02
     Submarine Cable Landing Licenses Fee (per cable system) .............................................................................................................                                     See Table
                                                                                                                                                                                                                   Below



     FY 2016 Schedule of Regulatory Fees:
     (continued)

                                                                          FY 2016 RADIO STATION REGULATORY FEES
                                                                                                                                                                                                           FM Classes
                            Population                                                                                                                                             FM Classes
                                                                          AM Class A                AM Class B                AM Class C                 AM Class D                                        B, C, C0, C1
                             served                                                                                                                                                A, B1 & C3                  & C2

     <=25,000 ..................................................                     $990                       $715                      $620                       $685                   $1,075                $1,250
     25,001–75,000 .........................................                       $1,475                     $1,075                      $925                     $1,025                   $1,625                $1,850
     75,001–150,000 .......................................                        $2,200                     $1,600                    $1,375                     $1,525                   $2,400                $2,750
     150,001–500,000 .....................................                         $3,300                     $2,375                    $2,075                     $2,275                   $3,600                $4,125
     500,001–1,200,000 ..................................                          $5,500                     $3,975                    $3,450                     $3,800                   $6,000                $6,875
     1,200,001–3,000,00 .................................                          $8,250                     $5,950                    $5,175                     $5,700                   $9,000               $10,300
     3,000,001–6,000,00 .................................                         $11,000                     $7,950                    $6,900                     $7,600                  $12,000               $13,750
     >6,000,000 ...............................................                   $13,750                     $9,950                    $8,625                     $9,500                  $15,000               $17,175




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     44338                  Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 183 / Friday, September 22, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                                                             FY 2016 SCHEDULE OF REGULATORY FEES
                                                                                International Bearer Circuits—Submarine Cable

                                                                                 Submarine cable systems                                                                                                      Fee amount
                                                                            (capacity as of December 31, 2015)

     < 2.5 Gbps ...........................................................................................................................................................................................        $8,325
     2.5 Gbps or greater, but less than 5 Gbps .........................................................................................................................................                           16,650
     5 Gbps or greater, but less than 10 Gbps ..........................................................................................................................................                           33,300
     10 Gbps or greater, but less than 20 Gbps ........................................................................................................................................                            66,600
     20 Gbps or greater ..............................................................................................................................................................................            133,200



     VII. Final Regulatory Flexibility                                           Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS)                                            million small businesses, according to
     Analysis                                                                    providers, a subcategory in the cable                                       the SBA.179
       58. As required by the Regulatory                                         television and Internet Protocol                                               63. Wired Telecommunications
     Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended                                         Television (IPTV) category; (4)                                             Carriers. The U.S. Census Bureau
     (RFA),170 an Initial Regulatory                                             adjustments to the regulatory fees on                                       defines this industry as ‘‘establishments
     Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) was                                             radio and television broadcasters; (5) an                                   primarily engaged in operating and/or
     included in the Notice of Proposed                                          increase in the de minimis threshold for                                    providing access to transmission
     Rulemaking.171 The Commission sought                                        annual regulatory fee payments from                                         facilities and infrastructure that they
     written public comment on these                                             $500 to $1,000; and (6) the elimination                                     own and/or lease for the transmission of
     proposals including comment on the                                          of the distinction between non-common                                       voice, data, text, sound, and video using
     IRFA. This Final Regulatory Flexibility                                     carrier and common carrier terrestrial                                      wired communications networks.
     Analysis (FRFA) conforms to the                                                                                                                         Transmission facilities may be based on
                                                                                 International Bearer Circuits (IBCs).
     IRFA.172                                                                                                                                                a single technology or a combination of
                                                                                 B. Summary of the Significant Issues                                        technologies. Establishments in this
     A. Need for, and Objectives of, the                                         Raised by the Public Comments in                                            industry use the wired
     Report and Order                                                            Response to the IRFA                                                        telecommunications network facilities
       59. In this Report and Order, we                                                                                                                      that they operate to provide a variety of
     conclude the Assessment and Collection                                          61. None.                                                               services, such as wired telephony
     of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year (FY)                                     C. Description and Estimate of the                                          services, including VoIP services, wired
     2017 proceeding to collect $356,710,992                                                                                                                 (cable) audio and video programming
                                                                                 Number of Small Entities to Which the
     in regulatory fees for FY 2017, pursuant                                                                                                                distribution, and wired broadband
                                                                                 Rules Will Apply
     to section 9 of the Communications Act                                                                                                                  internet services. By exception,
     of 1934, as amended (Communications                                            62. The RFA directs agencies to                                          establishments providing satellite
     Act or Act).173 These regulatory fees                                       provide a description of, and where                                         television distribution services using
     will be due in September 2017. Under                                        feasible, an estimate of the number of                                      facilities and infrastructure that they
     section 9 of the Communications Act,                                        small entities that may be affected by                                      operate are included in this
     regulatory fees are mandated by                                             the proposed rules and policies, if                                         industry.’’ 180 The SBA has developed a
     Congress and collected to recover the                                                                                                                   small business size standard for Wired
                                                                                 adopted.175 The RFA generally defines
     regulatory costs associated with the                                                                                                                    Telecommunications Carriers, which
                                                                                 the term ‘‘small entity’’ as having the
     Commission’s enforcement, policy and                                                                                                                    consists of all such companies having
     rulemaking, user information, and                                           same meaning as the terms ‘‘small
                                                                                                                                                             1,500 or fewer employees.181 Census
     international activities in an amount                                       business,’’ ‘‘small organization,’’ and
                                                                                                                                                             data for 2012 shows that there were
     that can be reasonably expected to equal                                    ‘‘small governmental jurisdiction.’’ 176
                                                                                                                                                             3,117 firms that operated that year. Of
     the amount of the Commission’s annual                                       In addition, the term ‘‘small business’’
                                                                                                                                                             this total, 3,083 operated with fewer
     appropriation.174                                                           has the same meaning as the term                                            than 1,000 employees.182 Thus, under
        60. This FY 2017 Report and Order                                        ‘‘small business concern’’ under the                                        this size standard, most firms in this
     adopts a regulatory fee schedule that                                       Small Business Act.177 A ‘‘small                                            industry can be considered small.
     includes the following noteworthy                                           business concern’’ is one which: (1) Is                                        64. Local Exchange Carriers (LECs).
     changes from prior years: (1) A                                             independently owned and operated; (2)                                       Neither the Commission nor the SBA
     reallocation of 38 FTEs in the Wireline                                     is not dominant in its field of operation;                                  has developed a size standard for small
     Competition Bureau from direct to                                           and (3) satisfies any additional criteria                                   businesses specifically applicable to
     indirect; (2) a reallocation of four FTEs                                   established by the SBA.178 Nationwide,                                      local exchange services. The closest
     from the Wireline Competition Bureau                                        there are a total of approximately 27.9                                     applicable NAICS code category is
     to the Wireless Telecommunications                                                                                                                      Wired Telecommunications Carriers as
     Bureau; (3) an updated regulatory fee for                                      175 5U.S.C. 603(b)(3).                                                   defined in paragraph 6 of this FRFA.
                                                                                    176 5U.S.C. 601(6).                                                      Under the applicable SBA size standard,
       170 5 U.S.C. 603. The RFA, 5 U.S.C. 601–612 has                             177 5 U.S.C. 601(3) (incorporating by reference the
     been amended by the Small Business Regulatory
                                                                                                                                                             such a business is small if it has 1,500
                                                                                 definition of ‘‘small-business concern’’ in the Small
     Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (SBREFA), Public                           Business Act, 15 U.S.C. 632). Pursuant to 5 U.S.C.
                                                                                                                                                               179 See SBA, Office of Advocacy, ‘‘Frequently
     Law Number 104–121, Title II, 110 Stat. 847 (1996).                         601(3), the statutory definition of a small business
       171 Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees
                                                                                 applies ‘‘unless an agency, after consultation with                         Asked Questions,’’ https://www.sba.gov/sites/
     for Fiscal Year 2017, Notice of Proposed                                    the Office of Advocacy of the Small Business                                default/files/advocacy/SB-FAQ-2016_WEB.pdf.
     Rulemaking, MD Docket No. 17–134, 32 FCC Rcd                                Administration and after opportunity for public                               180 http://www.census.gov/cgi-bin/sssd/naics/

     4526 (2017) (FY 2017 NPRM); 80 FR 26019, June 6,                            comment, establishes one or more definitions of                             naicsrch.
     2017.                                                                       such term which are appropriate to the activities of                          181 See 13 CFR 120.201, NAICS code 517110.
       172 5 U.S.C. 604.
                                                                                 the agency and publishes such definition(s) in the                            182 http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/
       173 47 U.S.C. 159.                                                        Federal Register.’’                                                         tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=
       174 47 U.S.C. 159(a).                                                       178 15 U.S.C. 632.                                                        ECN_2012_US_51SSSZ5&prodType=table.



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                       Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 183 / Friday, September 22, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                   44339

     or fewer employees.183 According to                      the Commission concludes that most                       providers is Telecommunications
     Commission data, census data for 2012                    Competitive LECS, CAPs, Shared-                          Resellers. This industry comprises
     shows that there were 3,117 firms that                   Tenant Service Providers, and Other                      establishments engaged in purchasing
     operated that year. Of this total, 3,083                 Local Service Providers, are small                       access and network capacity from
     operated with fewer than 1,000                           entities. According to Commission data,                  owners and operators of
     employees.184 The Commission                             1,442 carriers reported that they were                   telecommunications networks and
     therefore estimates that most providers                  engaged in the provision of either                       reselling wired and wireless
     of local exchange carrier service are                    competitive local exchange services or                   telecommunications services (except
     small entities that may be affected by                   competitive access provider services.191                 satellite) to businesses and households.
     the rules adopted.                                       Of these 1,442 carriers, an estimated                    Establishments in this industry resell
        65. Incumbent LECs. Neither the                       1,256 have 1,500 or fewer employees.192                  telecommunications; they do not
     Commission nor the SBA has developed                     In addition, 17 carriers have reported                   operate transmission facilities and
     a small business size standard                           that they are Shared-Tenant Service                      infrastructure. Mobile virtual networks
     specifically for incumbent local                         Providers, and all 17 are estimated to                   operators (MVNOs) are included in this
     exchange services. The closest                           have 1,500 or fewer employees.193 Also,                  industry.200 Under the applicable SBA
     applicable NAICS code category is                        72 carriers have reported that they are                  size standard, such a business is small
     Wired Telecommunications Carriers as                     Other Local Service Providers.194 Of this                if it has 1,500 or fewer employees.201
     defined in paragraph 6 of this FRFA.                     total, 70 have 1,500 or fewer                            U.S. Census data for 2012 show that
     Under that size standard, such a                         employees.195 Consequently, based on                     1,341 firms provided resale services
     business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer               internally researched FCC data, the                      during that year. Of that number, 1,341
     employees.185 According to                               Commission estimates that most                           operated with fewer than 1,000
     Commission data, 3,117 firms operated                    providers of competitive local exchange
                                                                                                                       employees.202 Thus, under this category
     in that year. Of this total, 3,083 operated              service, competitive access providers,
     with fewer than 1,000 employees.186                                                                               and the associated small business size
                                                              Shared-Tenant Service Providers, and
     Consequently, the Commission                                                                                      standard, the majority of these prepaid
                                                              Other Local Service Providers are small
     estimates that most providers of                                                                                  calling card providers can be considered
                                                              entities.
     incumbent local exchange service are                        67. Interexchange Carriers (IXCs).                    small entities. According to Commission
     small businesses that may be affected by                 Neither the Commission nor the SBA                       data, 193 carriers have reported that
     the rules and policies adopted. Three                    has developed a definition for                           they are engaged in the provision of
     hundred and seven (307) Incumbent                        Interexchange Carriers. The closest                      prepaid calling cards.203 All 193 carriers
     Local Exchange Carriers reported that                    NAICS code category is Wired                             have 1,500 or fewer employees.204
     they were incumbent local exchange                       Telecommunications Carriers as defined                   Consequently, the Commission
     service providers.187 Of this total, an                  in paragraph 6 of this FRFA. The                         estimates that the majority of prepaid
     estimated 1,006 have 1,500 or fewer                      applicable size standard under SBA                       calling card providers are small entities
     employees.188                                            rules is that such a business is small if                that may be affected by the rules
        66. Competitive Local Exchange                        it has 1,500 or fewer employees.196 U.S.                 adopted.
     Carriers (Competitive LECs),                             Census data for 2012 indicates that                         69. Local Resellers. Neither the
     Competitive Access Providers (CAPs),                     3,117 firms operated during that year.                   Commission nor the SBA has developed
     Shared-Tenant Service Providers, and                     Of that number, 3,083 operated with                      a small business size standard
     Other Local Service Providers. Neither                   fewer than 1,000 employees.197                           specifically for Local Resellers. The SBA
     the Commission nor the SBA has                           According to internally developed                        has developed a small business size
     developed a small business size                          Commission data, 359 companies                           standard for the category of
     standard specifically for these service                  reported that their primary                              Telecommunications Resellers. Under
     providers. The appropriate NAICS code                    telecommunications service activity was                  that size standard, such a business is
     category is Wired Telecommunications                     the provision of interexchange                           small if it has 1,500 or fewer
     Carriers, as defined in paragraph 6 of                   services.198 Of this total, an estimated                 employees.205 Census data for 2012
     this FRFA. Under that size standard,                     317 have 1,500 or fewer employees.199                    show that 1,341 firms provided resale
     such a business is small if it has 1,500                 Consequently, the Commission                             services during that year. Of that
     or fewer employees.189 U.S. Census data                  estimates that most interexchange                        number, 1,341 operated with fewer than
     for 2012 indicate that 3,117 firms                       service providers are small entities that                1,000 employees.206 Under this category
     operated during that year. Of that                       may be affected by the rules adopted.                    and the associated small business size
     number, 3,083 operated with fewer than                      68. Prepaid Calling Card Providers.                   standard, the majority of these local
     1,000 employees.190 Based on this data,                  Neither the Commission nor the SBA                       resellers can be considered small
                                                              has developed a small business                           entities. According to Commission data,
       183 13   CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517110.               definition specifically for prepaid                      213 carriers have reported that they are
       184 http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/table

     services/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=ECN_
                                                              calling card providers. The most                         engaged in the provision of local resale
     2012_US_51SSSZ5&prodType=table.                          appropriate NAICS code-based category
       185 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517110.                 for defining prepaid calling card                          200 http://www.census.gov/cgi-bin/ssd/naics/
       186 http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/table
                                                                                                                       naicsrch.
     services/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=ECN_              191 See   Trends in Telephone Service, at Table 5.3.     201 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517911.
     2012_US_51SSSZ5&prodType=table.                            192 Id.
                                                                                                                         202 http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/
       187 See Trends in Telephone Service, Federal
                                                                193 Id.
     Communications Commission, Wireline                                                                               tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?
                                                                194 Id.
     Competition Bureau, Industry Analysis and                                                                         pid=ECN_2012_US_51SSSZ5&prodType=table.
                                                                195 Id.                                                  203 See Trends in Telephone Service, at Table 5.3.
     Technology Division at Table 5.3 (September 2010)
                                                                196 13    CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517110.
     (Trends in Telephone Service).                                                                                      204 Id.
       188 Id.                                                  197 http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/table             205 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517911.
       189 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517110.                 services/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=ECN_              206 http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/
       190 http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/                2012_US_51SSSZ5&prodType=table.                          tableservices/jsf/pages/
                                                                198 See Trends in Telephone Service, at Table 5.3.
     tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=                                                                    productview.xhtml?pid=ECN_2012_US_51SSSZ5&
     ECN_2012_US_51SSSZ5&prodType=table.                        199 Id.                                                prodType=table.



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     44340              Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 183 / Friday, September 22, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

     services.207 Of this total, an estimated                  primary telecommunications service                     for Television Broadcasting firms: those
     211 have 1,500 or fewer employees.208                     activity was the provision of other toll               having $38.5 million or less in annual
     Consequently, the Commission                              carriage.216 Of these, an estimated 279                receipts.222 The 2012 Economic Census
     estimates that the majority of local                      have 1,500 or fewer employees.217                      reports that 751 television broadcasting
     resellers are small entities that may be                  Consequently, the Commission                           firms operated during that year. Of that
     affected by the rules adopted.                            estimates that most Other Toll Carriers                number, 656 had annual receipts of less
        70. Toll Resellers. The Commission                     are small entities.                                    than $25 million per year. Based on that
     has not developed a definition for Toll                      72. Wireless Telecommunications                     Census data we conclude that most
     Resellers. The closest NAICS code                         Carriers (except Satellite). This industry             firms that operate television stations are
     Category is Telecommunications                            comprises establishments engaged in                    small. The Commission has estimated
     Resellers, and the SBA has developed a                    operating and maintaining switching                    the number of licensed commercial
     small business size standard for the                      and transmission facilities to provide                 television stations to be 1,383.223 In
     category of Telecommunications                            communications via the airwaves.                       addition, according to Commission staff
     Resellers.209 Under that size standard,                   Establishments in this industry have                   review of the BIA Advisory Services,
     such a business is small if it has 1,500                  spectrum licenses and provide services                 LLC’s Media Access Pro Television
     or fewer employees.210 Census data for                    using that spectrum, such as cellular                  Database, on March 28, 2012, about 950
     2012 show that 1,341 firms provided                       services, paging services, wireless                    of an estimated 1,300 commercial
     resale services during that year. Of that                 internet access, and wireless video                    television stations (or approximately 73
     number, 1,341 operated with fewer than                    services.218 The appropriate size                      percent) had revenues of $14 million or
     1,000 employees.211 Thus, under this                      standard under SBA rules is that such                  less.224 We therefore estimate that the
     category and the associated small                         a business is small if it has 1,500 or                 majority of commercial television
     business size standard, the majority of                   fewer employees. For this industry,                    broadcasters are small entities.
     these resellers can be considered small                   Census data for 2012 show that there
     entities. According to Commission data,                   were 967 firms that operated for the                      74. In assessing whether a business
     881 carriers have reported that they are                  entire year. Of this total, 955 firms had              concern qualifies as small under the
     engaged in the provision of toll resale                   fewer than 1,000 employees. Thus,                      above definition, business (control)
     services.212 Of this total, an estimated                  under this category and the associated                 affiliations 225 must be included. Our
     857 have 1,500 or fewer employees.213                     size standard, the Commission estimates                estimate, therefore, likely overstates the
     Consequently, the Commission                              that the majority of wireless                          number of small entities that might be
     estimates that the majority of toll                       telecommunications carriers (except                    affected by our action, because the
     resellers are small entities.                             satellite) are small entities. Similarly,              revenue figure on which it is based does
        71. Other Toll Carriers. Neither the                   according to internally developed                      not include or aggregate revenues from
     Commission nor the SBA has developed                      Commission data, 413 carriers reported                 affiliated companies. In addition, an
     a definition for small businesses                         that they were engaged in the provision                element of the definition of ‘‘small
     specifically applicable to Other Toll                     of wireless telephony, including cellular              business’’ is that the entity not be
     Carriers. This category includes toll                     service, Personal Communications                       dominant in its field of operation. We
     carriers that do not fall within the                      Service (PCS), and Specialized Mobile                  are unable at this time to define or
     categories of interexchange carriers,                     Radio (SMR) services.219 Of this total,                quantify the criteria that would
     operator service providers, prepaid                       an estimated 261 have 1,500 or fewer                   establish whether a specific television
     calling card providers, satellite service                 employees.220 Thus, using available                    station is dominant in its field of
     carriers, or toll resellers. The closest                  data, we estimate that the majority of                 operation. Accordingly, the estimate of
     applicable NAICS code category is for                     wireless firms can be considered small.                small businesses to which rules may
     Wired Telecommunications Carriers as                         73. Television Broadcasting. This                   apply does not exclude any television
     defined in paragraph 6 of this FRFA.                      Economic Census category ‘‘comprises                   station from the definition of a small
     Under the applicable SBA size standard,                   establishments primarily engaged in                    business on this basis and is therefore
     such a business is small if it has 1,500                  broadcasting images together with                      possibly over-inclusive to that extent.
     or fewer employees.214 Census data for                    sound. These establishments operate                       75. In addition, the Commission has
                                                               television broadcasting studios and                    estimated the number of licensed
     2012 shows that there were 3,117 firms
                                                               facilities for the programming and                     noncommercial educational television
     that operated that year. Of this total,
                                                               transmission of programs to the                        stations to be 394.226 These stations are
     3,083 operated with fewer than 1,000
                                                               public.’’ 221 These establishments also                non-profit, and therefore considered to
     employees.215 Thus, under this category
                                                               produce or transmit visual programming                 be small entities.227 There are also 2,382
     and the associated small business size
                                                               to affiliated broadcast television                     low power television stations, including
     standard, most Other Toll Carriers can
                                                               stations, which in turn broadcast the
     be considered small. According to
                                                               programs to the public on a
     internally developed Commission data,                                                                              222 13   CFR 121.201, NAICS code 515120.
                                                               predetermined schedule. Programming
     284 companies reported that their                                                                                  223 See   FCC News Release, ‘‘Broadcast Station
                                                               may originate in their own studio, from                Totals as of March 31, 2017,’’ April 11, 2017;
       207 See   Trends in Telephone Service, at Table 5.3.
                                                               an affiliated network, or from external                https://apps.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/
       208 Id.                                                 sources. The SBA has created the                       DOC-344256A1.pdf.
                                                                                                                         224 We recognize that BIA’s estimate differs
       209 13    CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517911.               following small business size standard
                                                                                                                      slightly from the FCC total.
       210 http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/
                                                                                                                         225 ‘‘[Business concerns] are affiliates of each
     tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?                  216 Trends   in Telephone Service, at Table 5.3.     other when one concern controls or has the power
     pid=ECN_2012_US_51SSSZ5&prodType=table.                     217 Id.
                                                                                                                      to control the other or a third party or parties
       211 Id.                                                   218 NAICS code 517210. See http://
                                                                                                                      controls or has to power to control both.’’ 13 CFR
       212 Trends in Telephone Service, at Table 5.3.          www.census.gov/cgi-bin/ssd/naics/naiscsrch.            21.103(a)(1).
       213 Id.                                                   219 Trends in Telephone Service, at Table 5.3.          226 See FCC News Release, ‘‘Broadcast Station
       214 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517110.                    220 Id.                                              Totals as of March 31, 2017,’’ April 11, 2017;
       215 http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/                   221 U.S. Census Bureau, 2012 NAICS code              https://apps.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/
     tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?                Economic Census Definitions, http://                   DOC-344256A1.pdf.
     pid=ECN_2012_US_51SSSZ5&prodType=table.                   www.census.gov.cgi-bin/sssd/naics/naicsrch.               227 See generally 5 U.S.C. 601(4), (6).




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                      Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 183 / Friday, September 22, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                  44341

     Class A stations.228 Given the nature of                 programming material is usually                       States today.243 Accordingly, an
     these services, we will presume that all                 delivered to a third party, such as cable             operator serving fewer than 524,037
     LPTV licensees qualify as small entities                 systems or direct-to-home satellite                   subscribers shall be deemed a small
     under the above SBA small business                       systems, for transmission to viewers.234              operator if its annual revenues, when
     size standard.                                           The SBA has established a size standard               combined with the total annual
        76. Radio Stations. This Economic                     for this industry of $38.5 million or less.           revenues of all its affiliates, do not
     Census category ‘‘comprises                              Census data for 2012 shows that there                 exceed $250 million in the aggregate.244
     establishments primarily engaged in                      were 367 firms that operated that year.               Based on available data, we find that all
     broadcasting aural programs by radio to                  Of this total, 319 operated with annual               but nine incumbent cable operators are
     the public. Programming may originate                    receipts of less than $25 million.235                 small entities under this size
     in their own studio, from an affiliated                  Thus under this size standard, most                   standard.245 We note that the
     network, or from external sources.’’ 229                 firms offering cable and other program                Commission neither requests nor
     The SBA has established a small                          distribution services can be considered               collects information on whether cable
     business size standard for this category,                small and may be affected by rules                    system operators are affiliated with
     which is: Such firms having $38.5                        adopted.                                              entities whose gross annual revenues
     million or less in annual receipts.230                      79. Cable Companies and Systems.                   exceed $250 million.246 Although it
     Census data for 2012 show that 2,849                     The Commission has developed its own                  seems certain that some of these cable
     radio station firms operated during that                 small business size standards for the                 system operators are affiliated with
     year. Of that number, 2,806 operated                     purpose of cable rate regulation. Under               entities whose gross annual revenues
     with annual receipts of less than $25                    the Commission’s rules, a ‘‘small cable               exceed $250 million, we are unable at
     million per year. 231 According to                       company’’ is one serving 400,000 or                   this time to estimate with greater
     Commission staff review of BIA                           fewer subscribers nationwide.236                      precision the number of cable system
     Advisory Services, LLC’s Media Access                    Industry data indicate that there are                 operators that would qualify as small
     Pro Radio Database, on March 28, 2012,                   currently 4,413 active cable systems in               cable operators under the definition in
     about 10,759 (97 percent) of 11,102                      the United States.237 Of this total, all but          the Communications Act.
     commercial radio stations had revenues                   ten cable operators nationwide are small
                                                                                                                       81. Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS)
     of $38.5 million or less. Therefore, most                under the 400,000-subscriber size
                                                                                                                    Service. DBS Service is a nationally
     such entities are small entities.                        standard.238 In addition, under the
        77. In assessing whether a business                                                                         distributed subscription service that
                                                              Commission’s rate regulation rules, a
     concern qualifies as small under the                     ‘‘small system’’ is a cable system serving            delivers video and audio programming
     above size standard, business                            15,000 or fewer subscribers.239 Current               via satellite to a small parabolic dish
     affiliations must be included.232 In                     Commission records show 4,413 cable                   antenna at the subscriber’s location.
     addition, to be determined to be a                       systems nationwide.240 Of this total,                 DBS is now included in SBA’s
     ‘‘small business,’’ the entity may not be                3,900 cable systems have fewer than                   economic census category ‘‘Wired
     dominant in its field of operation.233 We                15,000 subscribers, and 700 systems                   Telecommunications Carriers.’’ The
     note that it is difficult at times to assess             have 15,000 or more subscribers, based                Wired Telecommunications Carriers
     these criteria in the context of media                   on the same records.241 Thus, under this              industry comprises establishments
     entities, and our estimate of small                      standard as well, we estimate that most               primarily engaged in operating and/or
     businesses may therefore be over-                        cable systems are small entities.                     providing access to transmission
     inclusive.                                                  80. Cable System Operators (Telecom                facilities and infrastructure that they
        78. Cable Television and Other                        Act Standard). The Communications                     own and/or lease for the transmission of
     Subscription Programming. This                           Act also contains a size standard for                 voice, data, text, sound, and video using
     industry comprises establishments                        small cable system operators, which is                wired telecommunications networks.
     primarily engaged in operating studios                   ‘‘a cable operator that, directly or                  Transmission facilities may be based on
     and facilities for the broadcasting of                   through an affiliate, serves in the                   a single technology or combination of
     programs on a subscription or fee basis.                 aggregate fewer than 1 percent of all                 technologies. Establishments in this
     The broadcast programming is typically                   subscribers in the United States and is               industry use the wired
     narrowcast in nature (e.g., limited                      not affiliated with any entity or entities            telecommunications network facilities
     format, such as news, sports, education,                 whose gross annual revenues in the                    that they operate to provide a variety of
     or youth-oriented). These                                aggregate exceed $250,000,000.’’ 242                  services, such as wired telephony
     establishments produce programming in                    There are approximately 53 million                    services, including VoIP services, wired
     their own facilities or acquire                          cable video subscribers in the United                 (cable) audio and video programming
     programming from external sources. The                                                                         distribution; and wired broadband
                                                                234 https://www.census.gov.cgi-bin/sssd/naics/      internet services. By exception,
       228 See FCC News Release, ‘‘Broadcast Station          naicsrch.                                             establishments providing satellite
                                                                235 http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/table
     Totals as of March 31, 2017,’’ April 11, 2017;                                                                 television distribution services using
     https://apps.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/           services/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=ECN_
     DOC-344256A1.pdf.                                        2012_US–51SSSZ5&prodType=Table.                       facilities and infrastructure that they
       229 https://www.census.gov.cgi-bin/sssd/naics/           236 47 CFR 76.901(e).

     naicsrch.                                                  237 See Eighteenth Competition Report, 32 FCC          243 See NCTA Industry Data, Cable’s Customer
       230 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 515112.                 Rcd at 584, para. 39 (citing the Commission’s Cable   Base, available at https://www.ncta.com/industry-
       231 http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/table           Operations and Licensing Systems (COALS)              data (last visited July 6, 2017).
     services/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=ECN_            database).                                               244 47 CFR 76.901(f) and notes ff. 1, 2, and 3.
                                                                238 See https://www.snl.com/web/client?auth=
     2012_US_51SSSZ5&prodType=table.                                                                                   245 See https://www.snl.com/web/client?auth=
       232 ‘‘Concerns and entities are affiliates of each     inherit#industry/topCableMSOs (last visited July      inherit#industry/topCableMSOs (last visited July
     other when one controls or has the power to control      18, 2017).                                            18, 2018).
                                                                239 47 CFR 76.901(c)
     the other, or a third party or parties controls or has                                                            246 The Commission does receive such
                                                                240 See footnote 2, supra.
     the power to control both. It does not matter                                                                  information on a case-by-case basis if a cable
     whether control is exercised, so long as the power         241 August 5, 2015 report from the Media Bureau
                                                                                                                    operator appeals a local franchise authority’s
     to control exists.’’ 13 CFR 121.103(a)(1) (an SBA        based on its research in COALS. See www.fcc.gov/      finding that the operator does not qualify as a small
     regulation).                                             coals.                                                cable operator pursuant to § 76.901(f) of the
       233 13 CFR 121.102(b) (an SBA regulation).               242 47 CFR 76.901(f) and notes ff. 1, 2, and 3.     Commission’s rules. See 47 CFR 76.901(f).



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     44342            Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 183 / Friday, September 22, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

     operate are included in this industry.247               records in the toll-free Service                      airwaves, such as cellular services,
     The SBA determines that a wireline                      Management System for the toll-free                   paging services, wireless internet access,
     business is small if it has fewer than                  subscriber.253 Although RespOrgs are                  and wireless video services.259 The
     1500 employees.248 Census data for                      often wireline carriers, they can also                appropriate size standard under SBA
     2012 indicate that 3,117 wireline                       include non-carrier entities. Therefore,              rules is that such a business is small if
     companies were operational during that                  in the definition herein of RespOrgs,                 it has 1,500 or fewer employees.260
     year. Of that number, 3,083 operated                    two categories are presented, i.e., Carrier           Census data for 2012 show that 967
     with fewer than 1,000 employees.249                     RespOrgs and Non-Carrier RespOrgs.                    Wireless Telecommunications Carriers
     Based on that data, we conclude that                       84. Carrier RespOrgs. Neither the                  operated in that year. Of that number,
     most wireline firms are small under the                 Commission, the U.S. Census, nor the                  955 operated with less than 1,000
     applicable standard. However, currently                 SBA have developed a definition for                   employees.261 Based on that data, we
     only two entities provide DBS service,                  Carrier RespOrgs. Accordingly, the                    conclude that most Carrier RespOrgs
     AT&T and DISH Network. AT&T and                         Commission believes that the closest                  that operated with wireless-based
     DISH Network each report annual                         NAICS code-based definitional                         technology are small.
     revenues that are in excess of the                      categories for Carrier RespOrgs are                      87. Non-Carrier RespOrgs. Neither the
     threshold for a small business.                         Wired Telecommunications Carriers 254                 Commission, the Census, nor the SBA
     Accordingly, we conclude that DBS                       and Wireless Telecommunications                       have developed a definition of Non-
     service is provided only by large firms.                Carriers (except satellite).255                       Carrier RespOrgs. Accordingly, the
        82. All Other Telecommunications.                       85. The U.S. Census Bureau defines                 Commission believes that the closest
     ‘‘All Other Telecommunications’’ is                     Wired Telecommunications Carriers as                  NAICS code-based definitional
     defined as follows: This U.S. industry is               establishments primarily engaged in                   categories for Non-Carrier RespOrgs are
     comprised of establishments that are                    operating and/or providing access to                  ‘‘Other Services Related To
     primarily engaged in providing                          transmission facilities and infrastructure            Advertising’’ 262 and ‘‘Other
     specialized telecommunications                          that they own and/or lease for the                    Management Consulting Services.’’ 263
     services, such as satellite tracking,                   transmission of voice, data, text, sound,                88. The U.S. Census defines Other
     communications telemetry, and radar                     and video using wired communications                  Services Related to Advertising as
     station operation. This industry also                   networks. Transmission facilities may                 comprising establishments primarily
     includes establishments primarily                       be based on a single technology or a                  engaged in providing advertising
     engaged in providing satellite terminal                 combination of technologies.                          services (except advertising agency
     stations and associated facilities                      Establishments in this industry use the               services, public relations agency
     connected with one or more terrestrial                  wired telecommunications network                      services, media buying agency services,
     systems and capable of transmitting                     facilities that they operate to provide a             media representative services, display
     telecommunications to, and receiving                    variety of services, such as wired                    advertising services, direct mail
     telecommunications from, satellite                      telephony services, including VoIP                    advertising services, advertising
     systems. Establishments providing                       services, wired (cable) audio and video               material distribution services, and
     Internet services or voice over Internet                programming distribution, and wired                   marketing consulting services.264 The
     protocol (VoIP) services via client-                    broadband internet services. By                       SBA has established a size standard for
     supplied telecommunications                             exception, establishments providing                   this industry as annual receipts of $15
     connections are also included in this                   satellite television distribution services            million dollars or less.265 Census data
     industry.250 The SBA has developed a                    using facilities and infrastructure that              for 2012 show that 5,804 firms operated
     small business size standard for ‘‘All                  they operate are included in this                     in this industry for the entire year. Of
     Other Telecommunications,’’ which                       industry.256 The SBA has developed a                  that number, 5,249 operated with
     consists of all such firms with gross                   small business size standard for Wired                annual receipts of less than $10
     annual receipts of $32.5 million or                     Telecommunications Carriers, which                    million.266 Based on that data we
     less.251 For this category, census data for             consists of all such companies having                 conclude that most Non-Carrier
     2012 show that there were 1,442 firms                   1,500 or fewer employees.257 Census                   RespOrgs who provide TFN-related
     that operated for the entire year. Of                   data for 2012 show that there were 3,117              advertising services are small.
     these firms, a total of 1,400 had gross                 Wired Telecommunications Carrier                         89. The U.S. Census defines Other
     annual receipts of less than $25                        firms that operated for that entire year.             Management Consulting Services as
     million.252 Thus, most ‘‘All Other                      Of that number, 3,083 operated with                   establishments primarily engaged in
     Telecommunications’’ firms potentially                  less than 1,000 employees.258 Based on                providing management consulting
     affected by the rules adopted can be                    that data, we conclude that most Carrier              services (except administrative and
     considered small.                                       RespOrgs that operated with wireline-                 general management consulting; human
        83. RespOrgs. RespOrgs, i.e.,                        based technology are small.                           resources consulting; marketing
     Responsible Organizations, are entities                    86. The U.S. Census Bureau defines                 consulting; or process, physical
     chosen by toll-free subscribers to                      Wireless Telecommunications Carriers                  distribution, and logistics consulting).
     manage and administer the appropriate                   (except satellite) as establishments
                                                                                                                     259 http://www.census.gov/cgi-bin/sssd/
                                                             engaged in operating and maintaining
                                                                                                                   naics.naicsrch.
       247 http://www.census.gov/cgi-bin/sssd/naics/
                                                             switching and transmission facilities to                260 13 CFR 120.201, NAICS code 517120.
     naicsrch.                                               provide communications via the
       248 NAICS code 517110; 13 CFR 121.201.                                                                        261 http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/

       249 http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/                                                                     tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?
                                                               253 See 47 CFR 52.101(b)                            pid=ECN_2012_US_51SSSZ4&prodType=table.
     tableservices.jasf/pages/productview.xhtml?
                                                               254 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517110                 262 13 CFR 120.201, NAICS code 541890.
     pid+ECN_2012_US.51SSSZ4&prodType=table.
       250 http://www.census.gov/cgi-bin/ssssd/naics/          255 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517210.                263 13 CFR 120.201, NAICS code 541618.
                                                               256 http://www.census.gov/cgi-bin/sssd/               264 http://www.census.gov/cgi-bin/sssd/
     naicsrch.
       251 13 CFR 121.201; NAICS code 517919.                naics.naicsrch.                                       naics.naicsrch.
       252 http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/                 257 13 CFR 120.201, NAICS code 517110.                265 13 CFR 120.201, NAICS code 541890.

     tableservices/jsf/pages/                                  258 http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/               266 http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/

     productview.xhtml?pid=ECN_2012_US_51SSSZ4&              tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?            tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?
     prodType=table.                                         pid=ECN_2012_US_51SSSZ4&prodType=table.               pid=ECN_2012_US_51SSSZ4&prodType=table.



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                          Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 183 / Friday, September 22, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                                             44343

     Establishments providing                                            consolidation, or simplification of                                    98. It is further ordered that the
     telecommunications or utilities                                     compliance or reporting requirements                                 Commission’s Consumer &
     management consulting services are                                  under the rule for small entities; (3) the                           Governmental Affairs Bureau, Reference
     included in this industry.267 The SBA                               use of performance, rather than design,                              Information Center, shall send a copy of
     has established a size standard for this                            standards; and (4) an exemption from                                 this Report and Order, including the
     industry of $15 million dollars or                                  coverage of the rule, or any part thereof,                           Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, to
     less.268 Census data for 2012 show that                             for small entities.272                                               the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
     3,683 firms operated in this industry for                             93. This Report and Order does not                                 U.S. Small Business Administration.
     that entire year. Of that number, 3,632                             adopt any new reporting requirements.
     operated with less than $10 million in                              Therefore, no adverse economic impact                                List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 1
     annual receipts. 269 Based on this data,                            on small entities will be sustained based
                                                                                                                                                Administrative practice and
     we conclude that most non-carrier                                   on reporting requirements.
                                                                           94. In keeping with the requirements                               procedure, Civil rights, Claims,
     RespOrgs who provide TFN-related                                                                                                         Communications common carriers,
     management consulting services are                                  of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, we
                                                                         have considered certain alternative                                  Cuba, Drug abuse, Environmental
     small.270                                                                                                                                impact statements, Equal access to
        90. In addition to the data contained                            means of mitigating the effects of fee
                                                                         increases to a particular industry                                   justice, Equal employment opportunity,
     in the four (see above) U.S. Census                                                                                                      Federal buildings and facilities,
     NAICS code categories that provide                                  segment. For example, the Commission
                                                                         increased the de minimis threshold                                   Government employees, Income taxes,
     definitions of what services and                                                                                                         Indemnity payments, Individuals with
     functions the Carrier and Non-Carrier                               from $500 to $1,000, which will impact
                                                                         many small entities that pay regulatory                              disabilities, Investigations, Lawyers,
     RespOrgs provide, Somos, the trade                                                                                                       Metric system, Penalties, Radio,
     association that monitors RespOrg                                   fees. Historically, many of these small
                                                                         entities have been late in making their                              Reporting and recordkeeping
     activities, compiled data showing that                                                                                                   requirements, Telecommunications,
     as of July 1, 2016, there were 23                                   fee payments to the Commission by the
                                                                         due date. This increase in the de                                    Television, Wages.
     RespOrgs operational in Canada and 436
                                                                         minimis threshold to $1,000 will relieve                             Federal Communications Commission.
     RespOrgs operational in the United
                                                                         regulatees both financially and
     States, for a total of 459 RespOrgs                                                                                                      Marlene H. Dortch,
                                                                         administratively. This Report and Order
     currently registered with Somos.271                                                                                                      Secretary.
                                                                         also adopts regulatory fees for the
     D. Description of Projected Reporting,                              smaller market AM and FM broadcast                                   Final Rules
     Recordkeeping and Other Compliance                                  radio stations at a lower amount than
     Requirements                                                        had been proposed. Finally, regulatees                                 For the reasons discussed in the
                                                                         may also seek waivers or other relief on                             preamble, the Federal Communications
       91. This Report and Order does not
                                                                         the basis of financial hardship. See 47                              Commission amends 47 CFR part 1 as
     adopt any new reporting, recordkeeping,
                                                                         CFR 1.1166.                                                          follows:
     or other compliance requirements.
                                                                         F. Federal Rules That May Duplicate,                                 PART 1—PRACTICE AND
     E. Steps Taken To Minimize Significant                              Overlap, or Conflict
     Economic Impact on Small Entities, and                                                                                                   PROCEDURE
     Significant Alternatives Considered                                   95. None.
        92. The RFA requires an agency to                                VIII. Ordering Clauses                                               ■ 1. The authority citation for part 1
     describe any significant alternatives that                                                                                               continues to read as follows:
                                                                           96. Accordingly, it is ordered that,
     it has considered in reaching its                                   pursuant to sections 4(i) and (j), 9, and                              Authority: 47 U.S.C. 151, 154(i), 154(j),
     approach, which may include the                                     303(r) of the Communications Act of                                  155, 157, 160, 201, 225, 227, 303, 309, 332,
     following four alternatives, among                                  1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 154(i),                                  1403, 1404, 1451, 1452, and 1455.
     others: (1) The establishment of                                    154(j), 159, and 303(r), this Report and                             ■ 2. Section 1.1152 is revised to read as
     differing compliance or reporting                                   Order is hereby adopted.                                             follows:
     requirements or timetables that take into                             97. It is further ordered that this
     account the resources available to small                            Report and Order shall be effective upon                             § 1.1152 Schedule of annual regulatory
     entities; (2) the clarification,                                    publication in the Federal Register.                                 fees for wireless radio services.

                                                                              Exclusive use services                                                                                      Fee amount 1
                                                                                   (per license)

     1. Land Mobile (Above 470 MHz and 220 MHz Local, Base Station & SMRS) (47 CFR part 90).
         (a) New, Renew/Mod (FCC 601 & 159) .......................................................................................................................................             $25.00
         (b) New, Renew/Mod (Electronic Filing) (FCC 601 & 159) .........................................................................................................                        25.00
         (c) Renewal Only (FCC 601 & 159) .............................................................................................................................................          25.00
         (d) Renewal Only (Electronic Filing) (FCC 601 & 159) ...............................................................................................................                    25.00
     220 MHz Nationwide:
         (a) New, Renew/Mod (FCC 601 & 159) .......................................................................................................................................              25.00
         (b) New, Renew/Mod (Electronic Filing) (FCC 601 & 159) .........................................................................................................                        25.00
         (c) Renewal Only (FCC 601 & 159) .............................................................................................................................................          25.00
         (d) Renewal Only (Electronic Filing) (FCC 601 & 159) ...............................................................................................................                    25.00

       267 http://www.census.gov/cgi-bin/sssd/                              270 The four NAICS code-based categories                          must comply with the rules adopted in the
     naics.naicsrch.                                                     selected above to provide definitions for Carrier and                Regulatory Fees Report and Order associated with
       268 13 CFR 120.201, NAICS code 514618.                            Non-Carrier RespOrgs were selected because as a                      this Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis.
       269 http://factfinder.census.gov/faces/                           group they refer generically and comprehensively to                    271 Email from Jennifer Blanchard of SOMOS

     tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?                          all RespOrgs. Therefore, all RespOrgs, including                     dated July 1, 2016.
     pid=ECN_2012_US_51SSSZ4&prodType=table.                             those not identified specifically or individually,                     272 5 U.S.C. 603(c)(1)–(c)(4).




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     44344                 Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 183 / Friday, September 22, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                                                                   Exclusive use services                                                                                             Fee amount 1
                                                                                        (per license)

     2. Microwave (47 CFR Pt. 101) (Private).
         (a) New, Renew/Mod (FCC 601 & 159) .......................................................................................................................................                          25.00
         (b) New, Renew/Mod (Electronic Filing) (FCC 601 & 159) .........................................................................................................                                    25.00
         (c) Renewal Only (FCC 601 & 159) .............................................................................................................................................                      25.00
         (d) Renewal Only (Electronic Filing) (FCC 601 & 159) ...............................................................................................................                                25.00
     3. Shared Use Services Land Mobile (Frequencies Below 470 MHz—except 220 MHz).
         (a) New, Renew/Mod (FCC 601 & 159) .......................................................................................................................................                          10.00
         (b) New, Renew/Mod (Electronic Filing) (FCC 601 & 159) .........................................................................................................                                    10.00
         (c) Renewal Only (FCC 601 & 159) .............................................................................................................................................                      10.00
         (d) Renewal Only (Electronic Filing) (FCC 601 & 159) ...............................................................................................................                                10.00
     Rural Radio (Part 22):
         (a) New, Additional Facility, Major Renew/Mod (Electronic Filing) (FCC 601 & 159) .................................................................                                                 10.00
         (b) Renewal, Minor Renew/Mod (Electronic Filing) (FCC 601 & 159) Marine Coast ..................................................................                                                    10.00
     Marine Coast (per license) (47 CFR part 80):
         (a) New Renewal/Mod (FCC 601 & 159) .....................................................................................................................................                           40.00
         (b) New, Renewal/Mod (Electronic Filing) (FCC 601 & 159) .......................................................................................................                                    40.00
         (c) Renewal Only (FCC 601 & 159) .............................................................................................................................................                      40.00
         (d) Renewal Only (Electronic Filing) (FCC 601 & 159) ...............................................................................................................                                40.00
     Aviation Ground:
         (a) New, Renewal/Mod (FCC 601 & 159) ....................................................................................................................................                           20.00
         (b) New, Renewal/Mod (Electronic Filing) (FCC 601 & 159) .......................................................................................................                                    20.00
         (c) Renewal Only (FCC 601 & 159) .............................................................................................................................................                      20.00
         (d) Renewal Only (Electronic Only) (FCC 601 & 159) .................................................................................................................                                20.00
     Marine Ship:
         (a) New, Renewal/Mod (FCC 605 & 159) ....................................................................................................................................                           15.00
         (b) New, Renewal/Mod (Electronic Filing) (FCC 605 & 159) .......................................................................................................                                    15.00
         (c) Renewal Only (FCC 605 & 159) .............................................................................................................................................                      15.00
         (d) Renewal Only (Electronic Filing) (FCC 605 & 159) ...............................................................................................................                                15.00
     Aviation Aircraft:
         (a) New, Renew/Mod (FCC 605 & 159) .......................................................................................................................................                          10.00
         (b) New, Renew/Mod (Electronic Filing) (FCC 605 & 159) .........................................................................................................                                    10.00
         (c) Renewal Only (FCC 605 & 159) .............................................................................................................................................                      10.00
         (d) Renewal Only (Electronic Filing) (FCC 605 & 159) ...............................................................................................................                                10.00
     4. CMRS Cellular/Mobile Services (per unit) (FCC 159) ....................................................................................................................                               2 .21

     5. CMRS Messaging Services (per unit) (FCC 159) ...........................................................................................................................                              3 .08

     6. Broadband Radio Service (formerly MMDS and MDS) ..................................................................................................................                                     800
     7. Local Multipoint Distribution Service ...............................................................................................................................................                  800
        1 Note that ‘‘small fees’’ are collected in advance for the entire license term. Therefore, the annual fee amount shown in this table that is a
     small fee (categories 1 through 5) must be multiplied by the 10-year license term to arrive at the total amount of regulatory fees owed. Also, ap-
     plication fees may apply as detailed in § 1.1102.
        2 These are standard fees that are to be paid in accordance with § 1.1157(b).
        3 These are standard fees that are to be paid in accordance with § 1.1157(b).




     ■ 3. Section 1.1153 is revised to read as                                § 1.1153 Schedule of annual regulatory
     follows:                                                                 fees and filing locations for mass media
                                                                              services.

                                                                                     Radio [AM and FM]                                                                                                Fee amount
                                                                                      (47 CFR part 73)

     1. AM Class A:
         ≤25,000 population .......................................................................................................................................................................          $895
         25,001–75,000 population ............................................................................................................................................................               1,350
         75,001–150,000 population ..........................................................................................................................................................                2,375
         150,001–500,000 population ........................................................................................................................................................                 3,550
         500,001–1,200,000 population .....................................................................................................................................................                  5,325
         1,200,001–3,000,000 population ..................................................................................................................................................                   7,975
         3,000,001–6,000,000 population ..................................................................................................................................................                  11,950
         >6,000,000 population ..................................................................................................................................................................           17,950
     2. AM Class B:
         ≤25,000 population .......................................................................................................................................................................            640
         25,001–75,000 population ............................................................................................................................................................                 955
         75,001–150,000 population ..........................................................................................................................................................                1,700
         150,001–500,000 population ........................................................................................................................................................                 2,525
         500,001–1,200,000 population .....................................................................................................................................................                  3,800
         1,200,001–3,000,000 population ..................................................................................................................................................                   5,700
         3,000,001–6,000,000 population ..................................................................................................................................................                   8,550
         >6,000,000 population ..................................................................................................................................................................           12,825
     3. AM Class C:
         ≤25,000 population .......................................................................................................................................................................            555
         25,001–75,000 population ............................................................................................................................................................                 830
         75,001–150,000 population ..........................................................................................................................................................                1,475



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                            Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 183 / Friday, September 22, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                                                               44345

                                                                                        Radio [AM and FM]                                                                                                      Fee amount
                                                                                         (47 CFR part 73)

           150,001–500,000 population ........................................................................................................................................................                       2,200
           500,001–1,200,000 population .....................................................................................................................................................                        3,300
           1,200,001–3,000,000 population ..................................................................................................................................................                         4,950
           3,000,001–6,000,000 population ..................................................................................................................................................                         7,400
           >6,000,000 population ..................................................................................................................................................................                 11,100
     4.   AM Class D:
           ≤25,000 population .......................................................................................................................................................................                  610
           25,001–75,000 population ............................................................................................................................................................                       915
           75,001–150,000 population ..........................................................................................................................................................                      1,600
           150,001–500,000 population ........................................................................................................................................................                       2,425
           500,001–1,200,000 population .....................................................................................................................................................                        3,625
           1,200,001–3,000,000 population ..................................................................................................................................................                         5,425
           3,000,001–6,000,000 population ..................................................................................................................................................                         8,150
           >6,000,000 population ..................................................................................................................................................................                 12,225
     5.   AM Construction Permit                                                                                                                                                                                       555
     6.   FM Classes A, B1 and C3:
           ≤25,000 population .......................................................................................................................................................................                  980
           25,001–75,000 population ............................................................................................................................................................                     1,475
           75,001–150,000 population ..........................................................................................................................................................                      2,600
           150,001–500,000 population ........................................................................................................................................................                       3,875
           500,001–1,200,000 population .....................................................................................................................................................                        5,825
           1,200,001–3,000,000 population ..................................................................................................................................................                         8,750
           3,000,001–6,000,000 population ..................................................................................................................................................                        13,100
           >6,000,000 population ..................................................................................................................................................................                 19,650
     7.   FM Classes B, C, C0, C1 and C2:
           ≤25,000 population .......................................................................................................................................................................                1,100
           25,001–75,000 population ............................................................................................................................................................                     1,650
           75,001–150,000 population ..........................................................................................................................................................                      2,925
           150,001–500,000 population ........................................................................................................................................................                       4,400
           500,001–1,200,000 population .....................................................................................................................................................                        6,575
           1,200,001–3,000,000 population ..................................................................................................................................................                         9,875
           3,000,001–6,000,000 population ..................................................................................................................................................                        14,800
           >6,000,000 population ..................................................................................................................................................................                 22,225
     8.   FM Construction Permits .................................................................................................................................................................                    980

                                                                                                     TV (47 CFR part 73)

     Digital TV (UHF and VHF Commercial Stations):
          1. Markets 1 thru 10 .....................................................................................................................................................................               $59,750
          2. Markets 11 thru 25 ...................................................................................................................................................................                 45,025
          3. Markets 26 thru 50 ...................................................................................................................................................................                 30,050
          4. Markets 51 thru 100 .................................................................................................................................................................                  14,975
          5. Remaining Markets ..................................................................................................................................................................                    4,925
          6. Construction Permits ................................................................................................................................................................                   4,925
     Satellite UHF/VHF Commercial:
     1. All Markets .......................................................................................................................................................................................          1,725
     Low Power TV, Class A TV, TV/FM Translator, & TV/FM Booster (47 CFR part 74) .......................................................................                                                              430



     ■ 4. Section 1.1154 is revised to read as                                   § 1.1154 Schedule of annual regulatory
     follows:                                                                    charges for common carrier services.

                                                                                          Radio facilities                                                                                                    Fee amount

     1. Microwave (Domestic Public Fixed) (Electronic Filing) (FCC Form 601 & 159) .......................................................................                                               $25.00.

                                                                                                              Carriers

     1. Interstate Telephone Service Providers (per interstate and international end-user revenues (see FCC Form 499–A) ...........                                                                      .00302.
     2. Toll Free Number Fee ................................................................................................................................................................            .12 per Toll Free
                                                                                                                                                                                                           Number.



     ■ 5. Section 1.1155 is revised to read as                                   § 1.1155 Schedule of regulatory fees for
     follows:                                                                    cable television services.

                                                                                                                                                                                                              Fee amount

     1. Cable Television Relay Service .................................................................................................................................................                 $935.
     2. Cable TV System, Including IPTV (per subscriber) ...................................................................................................................                             .95.




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     44346                  Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 183 / Friday, September 22, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                                                                                                                                                                                            Fee amount

     3. Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS) ................................................................................................................................................                .38 per sub-
                                                                                                                                                                                                           scriber.



     ■ 6. Section 1.1156 is revised to read as                                   § 1.1156 Schedule of regulatory fees for                                    for GSO and NGSO Space Stations that
     follows:                                                                    international services.                                                     are licensed and operational as of
                                                                                   (a) Geostationary Orbit (GSO) and                                         October 1, 2016. The following schedule
                                                                                 Non-Geostationary Orbit (NGSO) Space                                        applies for the listed services:
                                                                                 Stations. Regulatory fees are to be paid

                                                                                           Fee category                                                                                                     Fee amount

     Space Stations (Geostationary Orbit) ............................................................................................................................................                   $140,925
     Space Stations (Non-Geostationary Orbit) ....................................................................................................................................                       135,350
     Earth Stations: Transmit/Receive & Transmit only (per authorization or registration) ..................................................................                                             360



       (b) International Terrestrial and                                         includes active circuits to themselves or                                   these purposes include backup and
     Satellite. (1) Regulatory fees for                                          to their affiliates. In addition, non-                                      redundant circuits. In addition, whether
     International Bearer Circuits are to be                                     common carrier satellite operators must                                     circuits are used specifically for voice or
     paid by facilities-based common carriers                                    pay a fee for each circuit sold or leased                                   data is not relevant in determining that
     that have active (used or leased)                                           to any customer, including themselves                                       they are active circuits.
     international bearer circuits as of                                         or their affiliates, other than an
                                                                                                                                                               (2) The fee amount, per active 64 KB
     December 31 of the prior year in any                                        international common carrier
                                                                                                                                                             circuit or equivalent will be determined
     terrestrial or satellite transmission                                       authorized by the Commission to
     facility for the provision of service to an                                 provide U.S. international common                                           for each fiscal year.
     end user or resale carrier, which                                           carrier services. ‘‘Active circuits’’ for

                                                                         International Terrestrial and Satellite                                                                                            Fee amount
                                                                         (capacity as of December 31, 2016)

     Terrestrial Common Carrier ...........................................................................................................................................................              $0.03 per 64 KB
     Satellite Common Carrier                                                                                                                                                                              Circuit
     Satellite Non-Common Carrier



       (c) Submarine cable. Regulatory fees                                      for all submarine cable systems                                             year. The fee amount will be determined
     for submarine cable systems will be                                         operating as of December 31 of the prior                                    by the Commission for each fiscal year.
     paid annually, per cable landing license,

                                                                                Submarine Cable Systems                                                                                                     Fee amount
                                                                              (capacity as of Dec. 31, 2016)

     <2.5 Gbps .......................................................................................................................................................................................   $8,600
     2.5 Gbps or greater, but less than 5 Gbps ....................................................................................................................................                      17,175
     5 Gbps or greater, but less than 10 Gbps .....................................................................................................................................                      34,350
     10 Gbps or greater, but less than 20 Gbps ...................................................................................................................................                       68,725
     20 Gbps or greater .........................................................................................................................................................................        137,425



     [FR Doc. 2017–19386 Filed 9–21–17; 8:45 am]
     BILLING CODE 6712–01–P




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Document Created: 2017-09-22 01:52:50
Document Modified: 2017-09-22 01:52:50
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 22, 2017. To avoid penalties and interest, regulatory fees should be paid by the due date of September 26, 2017.
ContactRoland Helvajian, Office of Managing Director at (202) 418-0444.
FR Citation82 FR 44322 
CFR AssociatedAdministrative Practice and Procedure; Civil Rights; Claims; Communications Common Carriers; Cuba; Drug Abuse; Environmental Impact Statements; Equal Access to Justice; Equal Employment Opportunity; Federal Buildings and Facilities; Government Employees; Income Taxes; Indemnity Payments; Individuals with Disabilities; Investigations; Lawyers; Metric System; Penalties; Radio; Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements; Telecommunications; Television and Wages

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