83_FR_738 83 FR 733 - 2014 Quadrennial Regulatory Review

83 FR 733 - 2014 Quadrennial Regulatory Review

FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION

Federal Register Volume 83, Issue 5 (January 8, 2018)

Page Range733-757
FR Document2017-28329

In this document, an Order on Reconsideration repeals and modifies several of the Commission's broadcast ownership rules. Specifically, this document repeals the Newspaper/Broadcast Cross- Ownership Rule, the Radio/Television Cross-Ownership Rule, and the attribution rule for television joint sales agreements. This document also revises the Local Television Ownership Rule to eliminate the Eight-Voices Test and to modify the Top-Four Prohibition to better reflect the competitive conditions in local markets. This document provides a favorable presumption for waiver of the Local Radio Ownership Rule's market definitions as to transactions in certain embedded markets. Lastly, this document rejects requests to change the definition of Shared Service Agreements (SSAs) and the requirement that commercial television stations disclose SSAs by placing the agreements in each station's online public inspection file. In addition, the document finds that the record supports adoption of an incubator program to promote ownership diversity. The Order on Reconsideration grants in part and denies in part the Petitions for Reconsideration filed separately by the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB), Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc. (Nexstar), and Connoisseur Media LLC (Connoisseur).

Federal Register, Volume 83 Issue 5 (Monday, January 8, 2018)
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 5 (Monday, January 8, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 733-757]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2017-28329]


-----------------------------------------------------------------------

FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION

47 CFR Part 73

[MB Docket Nos. 14-50, 09-182, 07-294, 04-256, and 17-289; FCC 17-156]


2014 Quadrennial Regulatory Review

AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.

ACTION: Final rule.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

SUMMARY: In this document, an Order on Reconsideration repeals and 
modifies several of the Commission's broadcast ownership rules. 
Specifically, this document repeals the Newspaper/Broadcast Cross-
Ownership Rule, the Radio/Television Cross-Ownership Rule, and the 
attribution rule for television joint sales agreements. This document 
also revises the Local Television Ownership Rule to eliminate the 
Eight-Voices Test and to modify the

[[Page 734]]

Top-Four Prohibition to better reflect the competitive conditions in 
local markets. This document provides a favorable presumption for 
waiver of the Local Radio Ownership Rule's market definitions as to 
transactions in certain embedded markets. Lastly, this document rejects 
requests to change the definition of Shared Service Agreements (SSAs) 
and the requirement that commercial television stations disclose SSAs 
by placing the agreements in each station's online public inspection 
file. In addition, the document finds that the record supports adoption 
of an incubator program to promote ownership diversity. The Order on 
Reconsideration grants in part and denies in part the Petitions for 
Reconsideration filed separately by the National Association of 
Broadcasters (NAB), Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc. (Nexstar), and 
Connoisseur Media LLC (Connoisseur).

DATES: Effective February 7, 2018 except for the amendment to Sec.  
73.3613, which contains information collection requirements that are 
not effective until approved by the Office of Management and Budget 
(OMB). The Commission will publish a document in the Federal Register 
announcing the effective date of these changes.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Benjamin Arden, Industry Analysis 
Division, Media Bureau, FCC, (202) 418-2605. For additional information 
concerning the PRA information collection requirements contained in the 
Second Report and Order, contact Cathy Williams at (202) 418-2918, or 
via the internet at [email protected].

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Commission's Order 
on Reconsideration, in MB Docket Nos. 14-50, 09-182, 07-294, 04-256, 
and 17-289; FCC 17-156, was adopted on November 16, 2017, and released 
on November 20, 2017. The complete text of this document is available 
electronically via the search function on the FCC's Electronic Document 
Management System (EDOCS) web page at https://apps.fcc.gov/edocs_public/. The complete document is available for inspection and 
copying during normal business hours in the FCC Reference Information 
Center, 445 12th Street SW, Room CY-A257, Washington, DC 20554. To 
request materials in accessible formats for people with disabilities 
(Braille, large print, electronic files, audio format), send an email 
to [email protected] or call the FCC's Consumer and Governmental Affairs 
Bureau at (202) 418-0530 (voice), (202) 418-0432 (TTY).

Synopsis

I. Introduction

    1. In this Order on Reconsideration (Order), the Commission grants 
in part and denies in part, as set forth in this Order, various 
petitions for reconsideration of the Second Report and Order (81 FR 
76220, Nov. 1, 2016, FCC 16-107, rel. Aug. 25, 2016). Specifically, the 
Commission (1) eliminates the Newspaper/Broadcast Cross-Ownership Rule; 
(2) eliminates the Radio/Television Cross-Ownership Rule; (3) revises 
the Local Television Ownership Rule to eliminate the Eight-Voices Test 
and to modify the Top-Four Prohibition to better reflect the 
competitive conditions in local markets; (4) declines to modify the 
market definitions relied on in the Local Radio Ownership Rule, but 
provides a presumption for certain embedded market transactions; (5) 
eliminates the attribution rule for television joint sales agreements 
(JSAs); and (6) retains the disclosure requirement for shared service 
agreements (SSAs) involving commercial television stations. In 
addition, the Commission finds that the present record supports 
adoption of an incubator program to promote ownership diversity; 
however, the structure and implementation of such a program requires 
further exploration.

II. Background

    2. Congress requires the Commission to review its broadcast 
ownership rules every four years to determine whether they are 
necessary in the public interest as the result of competition and to 
repeal or modify any regulation the Commission determines to be no 
longer in the public interest. On August 10, 2016, the Commission 
adopted the Second Report and Order (released on August 25, 2016) to 
resolve both the 2010 and 2014 quadrennial review proceedings, as well 
as to address various issues related to the attribution of television 
JSAs, diversity initiatives, and SSAs.
    3. The Second Report and Order largely retained the existing 
broadcast ownership rules, reinstated the previously vacated Television 
JSA Attribution Rule, and adopted a definition of SSAs and a disclosure 
requirement for SSAs involving commercial television stations. The 
Commission also committed to explore various diversity-related 
proposals in the record, while declining to adopt other proposals, 
including an incubator program. Several parties sought reconsideration 
of various aspects of the Second Report and Order. NAB petitioned the 
Commission to reconsider its decisions regarding the Local Television 
Ownership Rule, television JSA attribution, SSA disclosure, the 
Newspaper/Broadcast Cross-Ownership Rule, the Radio/Television Cross-
Ownership Rule, and the rejection of NAB's proposal to create an 
incubator program to encourage diversity. On January 24, 2017, the 
Office of Communication, Inc. of the United Church of Christ (UCC), the 
Media Alliance, the National Organization for Women Foundation, the 
Communications Workers of America, the Newspaper Guild, the National 
Association of Broadcast Employees and Technicians, Common Cause, the 
Benton Foundation, Media Council Hawai'i, the Prometheus Radio Project, 
and the Media Mobilizing Project (UCC et al.) filed a motion to strike 
and dismiss the NAB Petition on the grounds that the petition 
improperly evades the strict 25-page limit on reconsideration petitions 
by using a prohibited, undersized font for footnotes and inserting a 
substantial portion of its argument into those footnotes in violation 
of 47 CFR 1.49(a). The motion also alleges that NAB's summary was well 
over twice the permissible length, and improperly contains additional 
arguments in violation of 47 CFR 1.49(c). In reply, NAB states that it 
did not intend to evade any Commission rules and offers to refile if 
the Commission is concerned about UCC et al.'s allegations. In 
addition, NAB cites precedent that the Commission has considered 
previously the merits of an application for review well in excess of 
the 25-page limit and notes that parties adverse to NAB have pleadings 
in the proceeding that violate 47 CFR 1.49 but have been considered on 
the merits by the Commission. The Commission denies UCC et al.'s 
motion. The Commission finds that, to the extent that NAB's pleading 
does not precisely conform to 47 CFR 1.49, no party has been 
prejudiced, and the public interest is best served by considering NAB's 
arguments. The Commission reminds parties, however, to be mindful of 
the requirements of Sec.  1.49.
    4. Nexstar also challenged the Local Television Ownership Rule and 
the attribution of television JSAs, while Connoisseur challenged an 
aspect of the Local Radio Ownership Rule related to embedded markets.

III. Media Ownership Rules

A. Newspaper/Broadcast Cross-Ownership Rule

1. Introduction
    5. Upon reconsideration, the Commission repeals the Newspaper/

[[Page 735]]

Broadcast Cross-Ownership (NBCO) Rule in its entirety. The Commission's 
decision to repeal the rule means that all newspapers (print or 
digital) now will be allowed to combine with television and radio 
stations within the same local market, subject to the remaining 
broadcast ownership rules and any other applicable laws, including 
antitrust laws. The Commission finds that prohibiting newspaper/
broadcast combinations is no longer necessary to serve the goal of 
promoting viewpoint diversity in light of the multiplicity of sources 
of news and information in the current media marketplace and the 
diminished voice of daily print newspapers. Whatever the limited 
benefits for viewpoint diversity of retaining the rule, in today's 
competitive media environment, they are outweighed by the costs of 
preventing traditional news providers from pursuing cross-ownership 
investment opportunities to provide news and information in a manner 
that is likely to ensure a more informed electorate. As such, the NBCO 
Rule no longer serves the public interest and must be repealed pursuant 
to Section 202(h).
2. Background
    6. In the Second Report and Order, the Commission affirmed its 
previous findings that an absolute ban was overly restrictive, but 
concluded that some newspaper/broadcast cross-ownership restrictions 
continued to be necessary to promote viewpoint diversity. It retained 
the general prohibition on common ownership of a broadcast station and 
a daily print newspaper in the same local market, but adopted minor 
changes to the rule to accomplish what the Commission called a modest 
loosening of the absolute ban. The Commission: (1) modified the 
geographic scope of the rule to update its analog parameters and to 
reflect more accurately the markets that newspapers and broadcasters 
actually serve; (2) adopted an explicit exception for failed and 
failing broadcast stations and newspapers; and (3) created a case-by-
case waiver standard whereby the Commission would grant relief from the 
rule if the applicants showed that a proposed merger would not unduly 
harm viewpoint diversity in the market. The Commission declined to 
eliminate the newspaper/radio cross-ownership restriction from the NBCO 
Rule after finding that, despite its earlier tentative conclusion that 
radio stations typically are not primary outlets for local news, radio 
stations nonetheless provide a meaningful amount of local news and 
information such that lifting the restriction could harm viewpoint 
diversity. In addition, the Commission explained that, although the 
rule may benefit ownership diversity incidentally, the agency's purpose 
in retaining the rule was not to promote minority or female ownership. 
NAB petitioned the Commission to reconsider its retention of the NBCO 
Rule.
3. Discussion
    7. The Commission finds that the NBCO Rule must be repealed because 
it is not necessary to promote the Commission's policy goals of 
viewpoint diversity, localism, and competition, and therefore does not 
serve the public interest. Because the Commission is repealing the NBCO 
Rule on other grounds, it is unnecessary to address arguments that the 
rule should be repealed on competition grounds. Similarly, it is 
unnecessary to reach arguments that ownership does not influence 
viewpoint because the Commission is eliminating the rule on the ground 
that, even if ownership might influence viewpoint in certain 
circumstances, the NBCO Rule is not necessary to foster viewpoint 
diversity (nor to promote localism or competition). The parties that 
support reconsideration of the NBCO Rule argue that the modifications 
adopted in the Second Report and Order were insufficient and that the 
rule is obsolete and should be eliminated. The Commission agrees. The 
Commission affirms its longstanding determination that the rule does 
not advance localism and competition goals, and finds that it is no 
longer necessary to promote viewpoint diversity, the rule's only 
remaining policy justification. Although elimination of the rule could 
theoretically diminish viewpoint diversity to a limited extent due to 
the loss of an independent voice as a result of any newspaper/broadcast 
combination, the Commission finds that this impact will be mitigated by 
the multiplicity of alternative sources of local news and information 
available in the marketplace and the overall financial decline of 
newspapers. In addition, the Commission finds that this concern is 
outweighed by the countervailing benefits to consumers that can result 
from newspaper/broadcast combinations. Finally, based on the 
Commission's review of the record, the Commission finds that 
eliminating the rule will have no material effect on minority and 
female broadcast ownership. Accordingly, the Commission grants the 
request that it eliminate the NBCO Rule.
    8. The Marketplace Has Changed Dramatically. On reconsideration, 
the Commission finds that its decision to retain the NBCO Rule failed 
to acknowledge the current realities of the media marketplace. In 1975, 
the broadcast industry was still relatively young, but it had found its 
footing, owing in part to the role that newspaper/broadcast cross-
ownership had played in its success. Supporters of common ownership 
claimed that joint ownership of newspapers and broadcast stations made 
possible the early development of FM and TV service even though these 
pioneering stations often had to be operated at a loss. In adopting the 
cross-ownership rule, the Commission acknowledged the pioneering role 
of newspapers in the broadcast medium but found that common ownership 
with newspapers was no longer a critical factor for broadcaster 
success. The Commission observed that, on the whole, the broadcast 
industry had matured to the point that new entrants could be expected 
to have an interest in pursuing station ownership. It concluded that 
the special reason for encouraging newspaper ownership, even at the 
cost of a lessened diversity, was no longer generally operative in the 
way it once was. The Commission understood its obligation to give 
recognition to the changes which have taken place and see to it that 
its rules adequately reflect the situation as it is, not was.
    9. That same obligation now requires the Commission to eliminate 
the NBCO Rule. Not only have the means of accessing content changed 
dramatically, but the media marketplace has seen an explosion in the 
number and variety of sources of local news and information since the 
Commission adopted the NBCO Rule in 1975. Opponents of the rule point 
to this increase and argue that the NBCO Rule has become obsolete as a 
result.
    10. From the 6,197 full-power radio stations and 851 full-power 
television stations that existed in the late 1960s, the Commission's 
latest broadcast totals place the number of full-power radio stations 
at 15,512 and full-power television stations at 1,775. Contrary to the 
Commission's conclusion in the Second Report and Order, the fact that 
the number of full-power broadcast stations has more than doubled 
represents a significant increase that should be considered when 
evaluating the continued necessity of the NBCO Rule. It was improper 
for the Commission to dismiss data submitted by Bonneville 
International Corp. and The Scranton Times, L.P., demonstrating a 
substantial increase in

[[Page 736]]

the number of broadcast services simply because it represented a 
nationwide increase which may have been spread unevenly across 
individual local markets without citing any evidence to support this 
notion. In addition, the Commission should have taken into account the 
number of low-power broadcast stations, which, as of June 2017, 
includes 417 Class A television stations; 1,968 low-power television 
(LPTV) stations; and 1,966 low-power FM (LPFM) stations--none of which 
services existed when the rule was adopted. This situation is a stark 
contrast to the state of affairs in 1975, when the changed 
circumstances in the broadcasting industry that prompted adoption of 
the NBCO Rule included a trend in which the number of channels open for 
new licensing had diminished substantially.
    11. Equally, if not more significantly, NAB cites evidence of the 
growing prevalence of independent digital-only news outlets with no 
print or broadcast affiliation, many with a local or hyperlocal focus. 
Thirteen years ago, the Third Circuit agreed with the Commission that 
the record suggested that cable and the internet contribute to 
viewpoint diversity; the panel members simply disagreed about the 
degree and importance of this trend at that time. Since then, however, 
the picture has changed significantly. Even the U.S. Supreme Court 
recently recognized the importance of the internet and social media as 
sources of news and information for many Americans. As this trend 
continues to gain momentum and new voices proliferate, the dominance of 
traditional news outlets diminishes. Although the record contains some 
evidence that local television stations and newspapers may still be 
consumers' primary sources of local news and information, the 
Commission finds that it improperly discounted the role of non-
traditional news outlets, including internet and digital-only, in the 
local media marketplace.
    12. The Commission concluded in the Second Report and Order that 
online outlets do not serve as a substitute for newspapers and 
broadcasters providing local news and information. As noted below, this 
conclusion does not appear to reflect the record evidence as to how the 
internet has transformed the American people's consumption of news and 
information, the direction of current trends in this regard, and in 
particular how those trends have affected younger adults. At a minimum, 
the record reflects studies that reject the premise that people have a 
primary or single source for most of their local news and information. 
Rather, the picture revealed by the data is that of a richer and more 
nuanced ecosystem of community news and information than researchers 
have previously identified, in which Americans turn to a wide range of 
platforms to get local news and information. Thus, the contributions of 
such outlets cannot be dismissed out of hand as the existence of these 
non-traditional news outlets nevertheless results in greater access to 
independent information sources in local markets. Furthermore, the 
Commission failed to acknowledge adequately evidence in the record 
demonstrating the emergence of online outlets that offer local content 
and have no affiliation with traditional broadcast or print sources.
    13. Numerous studies cited in the record establish the emergence 
and growth of alternative sources of local news and information, 
including digital-only local news outlets as well as other online 
sources of local news and information. For example, according to a 2014 
Pew Research study, out of 438 digital news sites examined, more than 
half had a local focus, with the typical outlet described as focused on 
coverage of local or even neighborhood-level news. Even by 2011, a Pew 
study confirmed that while newspapers remain popular sources for some 
such information, 69 percent of those surveyed said that if their local 
newspaper no longer existed, it would not have a major impact on their 
ability to keep up with information and news about their community. By 
2016, Pew reported that just 20 percent of U.S. adults often get news 
from print newspapers, with even steeper declines in particular 
demographics--only 5 percent of those aged 18 through 29, and only 10 
percent of those aged 30 through 49. According to the earlier Pew 
study, for the 79 percent of Americans who are online, the internet is 
the first or second most important source for 15 of the 16 local topics 
examined. Nearly half of adults (47 percent) use mobile devices to get 
local news and information, and for none of Pew's topics did more than 
6 percent of respondents say they depended on the website of a legacy 
news organization. Among adults under age 40, the web ranks first or 
ties for first for 12 of the 16 local topics asked about. Furthermore, 
in the Second Report and Order, the Commission too readily dismissed 
cable news programming as primarily targeted to a wide geographic 
audience, without considering that most of the major cable operators 
carry locally-focused cable news networks in parts of their footprint.
    14. On reconsideration, the Commission finds that the record 
clearly demonstrates that the wealth of additional information sources 
available in the media marketplace today, apart from traditional 
newspapers and broadcasters, strongly supports repealing the NBCO Rule. 
These dramatic and ongoing changes in the media industry negate 
concerns that repealing the NBCO Rule will harm viewpoint diversity. 
The Commission does not perceive a need for the rule in light of the 
current trends toward greater consumer reliance on these alternative 
sources of local news and information. The Commission's failure to 
account properly for the multiplicity of news and information sources 
available in the current media marketplace factored heavily in its 
unjustified retention of the NBCO Rule.
    15. The Decline of the Newspaper Industry Has Diminished its Voice. 
In addition, restrictions on common ownership of daily print newspapers 
and broadcast stations are no longer justified to protect viewpoint 
diversity as the strength of daily print newspapers has declined 
significantly since 1975. In the Second Report and Order, the 
Commission failed to credit properly the evidence in the record 
regarding the challenges facing the newspaper industry and the 
resulting effects on the ability of print newspapers to serve their 
readers. Rather than merely modifying the rule's waiver standard and 
adjusting its carve-outs, the Commission should have acknowledged the 
diminution of newspapers' voices and concluded that the time has come 
to eliminate the rule altogether.
    16. In light of the long decline of the newspaper industry, the 
loss of an independent daily newspaper voice in a community will have a 
much smaller impact on viewpoint diversity than would have been the 
case in 1975. In addition, as discussed below, repeal of the NBCO Rule 
will permit newspaper/broadcast combinations that can strengthen local 
voices and thus enable the combined outlets to better serve their 
communities.
    17. The NBCO Rule Prevents Combinations that Could Benefit 
Localism. The Commission repeatedly has recognized that the NBCO Rule 
does not promote localism and actually may hinder it by preventing 
local news outlets from achieving efficiencies by combining resources 
needed to gather, report, and disseminate local news and information. 
The Commission nevertheless retained newspaper/broadcast cross-
ownership restrictions in order to promote its goal of viewpoint

[[Page 737]]

diversity. Because the NBCO Rule is no longer necessary to foster 
viewpoint diversity, and the rule can be repealed without harming the 
public interest, the potential benefits to localism arising from common 
ownership finally can accrue. The Commission expects that eliminating 
the NBCO Rule will allow both broadcasters and newspapers to seek out 
new sources of investment and operational expertise, increasing the 
quantity and quality of local news and information they provide in 
their local markets.
    18. There is ample evidence in the record that eliminating the rule 
will help facilitate such investment and enable both broadcasters and 
newspapers to better serve the public. For example, Cox Media Group, 
LLC (Cox) asserts that collaboration and cost-sharing between its 
television station and its newspaper in Dayton, Ohio, helped them be 
the first to report on what became a national story about the failures 
of the Veterans Administration to provide adequate medical services. In 
addition, Cox previously provided several examples showing how the 
combination of resources across its commonly owned newspaper, 
television, and radio properties in both Dayton and Atlanta, Georgia, 
allowed them to report on breaking news stories more quickly and 
accurately and to also provide more thorough coverage of events, such 
as political elections, that involve numerous interviews and in-depth 
issue reporting. Cox asserts that the common ownership of multiple 
outlets has enabled its media properties ``to vastly improve service at 
a time when the economics of the newspaper and broadcast business would 
seem to dictate the opposite.'' In addition, the News Media Alliance 
(NMA) provided numerous examples of the benefits to local programming 
involving cross-owned media outlets in various markets. For example, a 
cross-owned newspaper/television combination in Phoenix combined 
resources to report on stories such as the shooting of Congresswoman 
Gabrielle Giffords and 18 others in Tucson, the Yarnell Hill fire that 
killed 19 firefighters and destroyed more than 100 homes, and a massive 
dust storm. In South Bend, Indiana, a commonly owned local newspaper, 
television station, and two radio stations regularly worked together on 
issues of local significance, such as uncovering harmful substances in 
drinking water, hosting town-hall meetings for political candidates and 
local officials, sending a reporter to Iraq, commemorating the 150th 
anniversary of the local Studebaker factory, providing weather 
information, and covering Notre Dame sports. NMA also cited prior 
Commission studies for the proposition that, on average, a cross-owned 
television station produces more local news and more coverage of local 
and state political candidates than comparable non-cross-owned 
television stations. NMA pointed to the finding in one Commission study 
that cross-owned television stations, on average, air 50 percent more 
local news than non-cross-owned stations. The Commission's Media 
Ownership Study 4 also found that the total amount of local news aired 
by all television stations in the market may be negatively correlated 
with newspaper/broadcast cross-ownership. As noted in the FNPRM (79 FR 
29010, May 20, 2014, FCC 14-28, rel. Apr. 14, 2014), however, the study 
authors cautioned that this finding was imprecisely measured and not 
statistically different from zero. An earlier Commission study cited by 
NMA found that cross-owned television stations aired between seven to 
ten percent more local news, which still represents a meaningful 
increase in the average amount of local news aired on cross-owned 
television stations. This study also found that cross-owned television 
stations, on average, provide roughly 25 percent more coverage of local 
and state politics. The Commission has acknowledged that prior 
Commission studies have found that cross-owned radio stations are more 
likely to air news and public affairs programming and are four to five 
times more likely to have a news format than a non-cross-owned station. 
Comments in this proceeding bear that out, providing anecdotal 
evidence, such as that offered by Morris Communications, which 
explained that its radio stations in Topeka, Kansas, and in Amarillo, 
Texas, were able to invest more heavily in local news production and in 
news staff because of their cross-ownership with the local newspaper. 
As the Commission discussed in the Second Report and Order, the record 
contains support for the proposition that newspaper/broadcast 
combinations can promote localism by creating efficiencies through the 
sharing of expertise, resources, and capital that can lead to a higher 
quantity and quality of local news programming. The Commission has long 
accepted that proposition, but it concluded in its previous decisions 
that some restrictions remained necessary to promote viewpoint 
diversity. The Commission concludes now that the potential public 
interest benefits of permitting newspaper/broadcast combinations 
outweigh the minimal loss of viewpoint diversity that may result from 
eliminating the rule. With the elimination of the NBCO Rule these 
localism benefits can finally begin to materialize.
    19. In light of the well-documented and continuing struggles of the 
newspaper industry, the efficiencies produced by newspaper/broadcast 
combinations are more important than ever. A report in February 2017 
examining the health of small newspapers was cautiously optimistic 
about the future of publications with a community or hyperlocal focus 
but acknowledged that their battle for survival will not be easy and 
will require new approaches and strategies that take advantage of their 
niche position. Removing the regulatory obstacle of this outdated rule 
will help financially troubled newspapers carry on their important 
work. While the Commission recognizes that cost-savings gained from 
common ownership will not necessarily be invested in the production of 
local news, by allowing newspapers and broadcasters to collaborate and 
combine resources, the Commission's action in this Order creates new 
opportunities for local broadcasters and newspapers to better serve the 
local news and information needs of their communities.
    20. The NBCO Rule Must be Eliminated. The Commission's decision to 
repeal the rule reflects the situation as it currently is, not as it 
was more than 40 years ago. Whereas the Commission determined in 1975 
that newspaper/broadcast combinations were no longer necessary to 
support the growth of the broadcast industry and that the interest in 
viewpoint diversity required separate ownership of newspapers and 
broadcast licenses, the Commission now determines that this restriction 
is no longer necessary to promote viewpoint diversity and can 
potentially harm localism, and that removing the restriction best 
serves the public interest.
    21. Indeed, even to the extent that eliminating the rule would 
permit transactions that would reduce the number of outlets for news 
and information in local markets, the markets will continue to have far 
more voices than when the rule was enacted. The modern media 
marketplace abounds with new, non-traditional voices, the number of 
local broadcasters has increased dramatically, and the strength of 
local newspapers relative to other media has diminished as a result of 
the difficulties facing the industry and the rise of new voices. And 
the Commission expects the number of

[[Page 738]]

voices to continue to grow, as the internet, in particular, has lowered 
the barriers to entry and provided a publicly accessible platform for 
individuals and organizations to serve the news and information needs 
of their local communities. Furthermore, eliminating the NBCO Rule will 
permit efficient combinations that will allow broadcasters and 
newspapers to combine resources and enable them to better serve their 
local communities. On balance, therefore, the Commission concludes that 
retaining the rule does not serve the public interest.
    22. The Commission consistently has recognized that changing 
circumstances in the marketplace warrant a retreat from a total ban; 
accordingly, the Commission has attempted to impose various limits on 
the rule through the years. The Commission's overall direction has been 
toward a growing acknowledgment that the rule is not always necessary 
to promote viewpoint diversity and should be modified to reflect 
changes in the marketplace. The Commission's action in this Order is 
simply the logical extension of this acknowledgment in response to the 
radically altered media marketplace.
    23. As noted in the 2002 Biennial Review Order (68 FR 46286, Aug. 
5, 2003, FCC 03-127, rel. July 2, 2003), the Commission must consider 
the impact of [its] rules on the strength of media outlets, 
particularly those that are primary sources of local news and 
information, as well as on the number of independently owned outlets. 
Maximizing the number of independent voices does not further diversity 
if those voices lack the resources to create and publish news and 
public information. In Prometheus Radio Project v. FCC, 373 F.3d 372 
(3d Cir. 2004) (Prometheus I), the court affirmed the Commission's 
finding in the 2002 Biennial Review Order that the NBCO Rule was 
overbroad and should be relaxed. In the 2006 Quadrennial Review Order 
(73 FR 9481, Feb. 21, 2008, FCC 07-216, rel. Feb. 2008), the Commission 
took into consideration the imperiled state of the newspaper industry, 
recounting statistics and data showing that the shrinking newspaper 
industry had suffered circulation declines, staff layoffs, shuttered 
news bureaus, flat advertising revenues, rising operating costs, and 
falling stock prices. These hardships influenced the Commission's 
finding that the existing ban on newspaper/broadcast combinations 
continued to be overly restrictive.
    24. The newspaper industry had not recovered when the Commission 
began its 2010/2014 ownership review and, indeed, the hardships 
continued to mount. In its 2010 NOI (75 FR 33227, June 11, 2010, FCC 
10-92, rel. May 25, 2010), the Commission described newspapers' 
declining circulation and advertising revenues and asked whether 
relaxing the rule would help newspapers to survive. In the FNPRM, the 
Commission expressed concern for the future of newspapers but disagreed 
with the suggestion that the NBCO Rule should be repealed or relaxed on 
that basis alone. The Commission was reluctant to jeopardize viewpoint 
diversity in local markets in response to assertions that the rule 
limited opportunities for traditional media owners to expand their 
revenues. Now, however, the Commission concludes that the continuance 
of the NBCO Rule is not necessary or appropriate to preserve or promote 
viewpoint diversity under Section 202(h). The Commission anticipates 
that both newspapers and broadcasters will benefit from the rule's 
repeal, as will, ultimately, the public, as discussed above.
    25. The Commission recognized in the FNPRM that the NBCO Rule does 
not promote viewpoint diversity when a newspaper is in financial 
distress, and the FNPRM proposed an exception to the rule for failed 
and failing merger applicants. In the Second Report and Order, the 
Commission adopted that exception and explained that allowing such 
mergers is not likely to harm viewpoint diversity. In addition, the 
Commission incorporated into the rule a case-by-case waiver standard 
for markets of all sizes to account for merger situations that do not 
pose an undue risk to viewpoint diversity.
    26. On reconsideration, the Commission finds that its modifications 
to the NBCO Rule in the Second Report and Order were inadequate. Given 
the current state of the newspaper industry, it might very well be too 
late to save a newspaper that would qualify as failed or failing under 
the exception adopted in the Second Report and Order. The Commission's 
goal should be to keep local voices strong, not to maintain artificial 
barriers that prevent efficient combinations and then wait until 
newspapers reach a failed or failing state before providing regulatory 
relief. In addition, the Commission's case-by-case waiver standard was 
wholly insufficient because the Commission failed to provide any 
meaningful guidance on how it would evaluate each waiver request. An 
exception or a waiver standard may be appropriate when a rule is sound 
and exceptional circumstances exist, but such mechanisms do not redeem 
an unsound rule, as the Commission finds this one to be.
    27. In addition, the modified rule inexplicably left in place a 
definition of daily newspaper that is outdated and illogical in that it 
applies only to newspapers printed at least four days a week. The 
distinction between print newspapers and digital outlets has become 
blurred as some newspapers reduce the number of days a week they 
publish in print and rely more heavily on their online distribution. 
Indeed, many publishers today continuously update the content of the 
online versions of their newspapers as they compete with bloggers and 
social media that rapidly produce and update their own content. 
Applying the NBCO Rule to newspapers only if they are printed in 
hardcopy at least four days per week ignores the reality that what 
defines a newspaper has changed and that many consumers access the 
paper's news and information over the internet throughout the day. A 
newspaper's influence should no longer be measured by how many mornings 
a week it is delivered to the doorstep. Doing so would exacerbate the 
perverse incentive for a newspaper seeking to combine with a 
broadcaster to reduce its print editions in order to avoid triggering 
the rule. Given the current media marketplace and the way consumers 
access content, the rule's reliance on a newspaper's printing schedule 
makes no sense.
    28. As the modified rule adopted in the Second Report and Order is 
not necessary to promote the public interest, the Commission cannot 
retain it consistent with Section 202(h). the Commission emphasizes 
that the rule's repeal in no way reflects a lessening of the importance 
of viewpoint diversity as a Commission policy goal. Rather, the 
Commission concludes that the rule is no longer necessary to promote 
viewpoint diversity.
    29. The Commission finds also that the NBCO Rule should be 
eliminated rather than relaxed. The Commission's previous attempts to 
relax the rule demonstrate the difficulty in designing an approach that 
works effectively for the range of market circumstances across the 
country. Paradoxically, previous attempts at relaxing the rule arguably 
threatened the greatest harm in small markets where cross-ownership may 
be needed most to sustain local news outlets. The record does not 
provide an adequate basis for distinguishing areas where application of 
the rule could serve the public interest from those where it would not. 
There was significant opposition to the modified rule proposed by the 
Commission in this proceeding, and only one commenter proposed a

[[Page 739]]

detailed alternative approach, and the Commission explained why it 
declined to adopt it. Thus, the record does not support a narrowed 
restriction. Moreover, as discussed above, the Commission finds that it 
would be outdated and illogical to adopt a rule based on the 
distinction between print newspapers and digital outlets. Indeed, any 
modified rule that continues to single out newspapers of any kind 
cannot be sustained.
    30. In light of the significantly expanded media marketplace and 
the overall state of the newspaper industry, and the Commission's 
conclusion that the rule is not necessary to promote viewpoint 
diversity, competition, or localism, and may hinder localism, the 
Commission concludes that immediate repeal is required by Section 
202(h) and will permit combinations that would benefit consumers. The 
Commission's decision will enable all broadcasters and newspapers to 
attract new investment in order to preserve and expand their local news 
output.
    31. In addition, though the Commission finds that the entire NBCO 
Rule must be eliminated, the Commission finds that the record provides 
an additional and independent justification for eliminating the 
restriction on newspaper/radio combinations. Opponents of this aspect 
of the rule argue that evidence in the record does not provide adequate 
support for the Commission's conclusion that radio is a sufficiently 
meaningful source of local news and public interest programming such 
that allowing newspaper/radio combinations could harm viewpoint 
diversity. The Commission agrees. As discussed in the following 
section, the Commission is eliminating the Radio/Television Cross-
Ownership Rule based on its finding that the diminished contributions 
of local broadcast radio stations to viewpoint diversity, together with 
increasing contributions from new media outlets and the public interest 
benefits of radio/television combinations, no longer justify continued 
radio/television cross-ownership regulation. For the same reasons 
relating to viewpoint diversity contributions of radio and the 
proliferation of alternative media voices, as well as the 
countervailing public interest benefits of newspaper/radio 
combinations, the Commission concludes that the restriction on 
newspaper/radio combinations is not in the public interest and must be 
eliminated pursuant to Section 202(h).
    32. Minority and Female Ownership. The Commission finds that 
repealing the NBCO Rule will not have a material impact on minority and 
female ownership. After seeking public comment on this topic a number 
of times, the Commission expressed its view that the rule does not 
promote or protect minority and female ownership. Not only have past 
debates on this issue not persuaded the Commission that the ban on 
newspaper/broadcast combinations is necessary to protect or promote 
minority and female ownership, no arguments were made in this 
reconsideration proceeding that would lead the Commission to conclude 
otherwise. On the contrary, two organizations representing minority 
media owners seek relief from the rule's restrictions. Their comments 
directly refute arguments in the record that repealing the rule will 
harm small broadcasters, including minority and women broadcasters, 
because they are at a competitive disadvantage compared to large media 
outlets. As the Commission contemplated in the FNPRM, merging with a 
newspaper could boost the ability of a small broadcaster to compete 
more effectively in the market and to improve its local news offerings. 
The Commission's action in this Order will provide the flexibility to 
do just that.
    33. The Commission agrees with comments stating that lifting the 
ban on newspaper/radio combinations is unlikely to have a significant 
effect on minority and female ownership in the radio market given that 
the thousands of radio stations across the country offer plenty of 
purchasing opportunities for minorities and women and at lower cost 
than most other forms of traditional media. In addition, the Commission 
does not anticipate that lifting the ban on newspaper/television 
combinations will lead to a meaningful decrease in the number of 
minority-owned television stations. Some groups previously expressed 
concern that minority-owned television stations would be targeted for 
acquisition if the ban were relaxed to favor waiver requests for 
certain newspaper/television combinations with stations ranked below 
the top four television stations in a market--a category that includes 
many minority-owned stations. Removing the ban across-the-board will 
ensure that no artificial incentives are created, and the record 
provides no evidence that minority- and female-owned stations will be 
singled out for acquisition, as some commenters have speculated. To the 
contrary, record evidence demonstrates that previous relaxations of 
other ownership rules have not resulted in an overall decline in 
minority and female ownership of broadcast stations, and the Commission 
sees no evidence to suggest that eliminating the NBCO Rule will produce 
a different result and precipitate such a decline. Ultimately, given 
the state of the newspaper industry, the Commission expects that 
broadcasters may be better positioned to be the buyer, rather than the 
seller, in most transactions that flow from the rule's repeal. 
Furthermore, submissions in the record suggest that some minority media 
owners may be poised to pursue cross-ownership acquisition and 
investment opportunities. Therefore, eliminating the rule potentially 
could increase minority ownership of newspapers and broadcast stations.
    34. In addition, the Commission rejects assertions that Prometheus 
III prevents the Commission from repealing or modifying any of its 
broadcast ownership rules on reconsideration. Contrary to such 
assertions, the Third Circuit's holding in Prometheus III does not 
require the Commission to adopt a socially disadvantaged business (SDB) 
definition before it can revise or repeal any rules; rather, the court 
simply required the Commission to complete its analysis of whether to 
adopt such a definition. The Commission completed that required 
analysis in the Second Report and Order and declined to adopt an SDB 
standard.
    35. Finally, in the Second Report and Order, the Commission stated 
that the revised NBCO Rule it adopted would help promote ownership 
diversity. The Commission's comment, however, did not indicate a belief 
that the rule would promote minority and female ownership specifically, 
but rather that the rule would promote ownership diversity generally by 
requiring the separation of newspaper and broadcast station ownership. 
Moreover, the Commission made it clear that promoting viewpoint 
diversity, as opposed to preserving or promoting minority and female 
ownership, was the purpose of its revised rule. The record does not 
suggest that restricting common ownership of newspapers and broadcast 
stations promotes minority and female ownership of broadcast stations, 
and there is evidence in the record that tends to support the contrary. 
Thus, fostering minority and female ownership does not provide a basis 
to retain the rule.

B. Radio/Television Cross-Ownership Rule

1. Introduction
    36. The Commission grants the request for reconsideration of the 
Commission's decision in the Second Report and Order to retain the 
Radio/

[[Page 740]]

Television Cross-Ownership Rule. Ownership of television and radio 
stations will continue to be limited by the Local Television and Local 
Radio Ownership Rules.
2. Background
    37. In the Second Report and Order, the Commission retained the 
Radio/Television Cross-Ownership Rule with only minor technical 
modifications, finding that the rule remained necessary to promote 
viewpoint diversity. Despite its prior tentative conclusion to the 
contrary, the Commission concluded that the Radio/Television Cross-
Ownership Rule remains necessary given that radio stations and 
television stations both contribute in meaningful ways to promote 
viewpoint diversity in local markets. The Commission further claimed 
that the rule continues to play an independent role in serving the 
public interest separate and apart from the Local Radio and Local 
Television Ownership Rules, which are designed primarily to promote 
competition. In its petition for reconsideration, NAB asserts that the 
decision in the Second Report and Order to retain the Radio/Television 
Cross-Ownership Rule (with only minor technical modifications) was 
arbitrary and capricious and contrary to Section 202(h) of the 1996 
Act.
3. Discussion
    38. On reconsideration, the Commission eliminates the Radio/
Television Cross-Ownership Rule, concluding that it is no longer 
necessary to promote viewpoint diversity in local markets. The 
Commission concludes that the Commission erred in finding in the Second 
Report and Order that broadcast radio stations contribute to viewpoint 
diversity to a degree that justifies retention of the rule, 
particularly in light of other local media outlets that contribute to 
viewpoint diversity. The Commission also concludes that, given that the 
rule already permits a significant degree of common ownership, it is 
doing very little to promote viewpoint diversity and its elimination 
therefore will have a negligible effect. The record in this proceeding 
gives no cause to disturb the long-standing conclusion that the rule is 
not necessary to promote localism. However, elimination of the rule is 
likely to have a negligible impact in most markets, so any impact on 
localism--positive or negative--will be similarly negligible. Finally, 
the Commission finds that elimination of the rule is not likely to have 
a negative impact on minority and female ownership.
    39. Contrary to the Commission's findings in the Second Report and 
Order, as discussed below, the Commission finds that broadcast radio 
stations' contributions to viewpoint diversity in local markets no 
longer justify retention of the Radio/Television Cross-Ownership Rule. 
The Commission tentatively concluded in the NPRM (77 FR 2867, Jan. 19, 
2012, FCC 11-186, rel. Dec. 22, 2011) that the rule was no longer 
necessary to promote viewpoint diversity. It then sought further 
comment on that tentative conclusion in the FNPRM. The Commission's 
approach in the NPRM and FNPRM was based on an already robust record--
which was strengthened by comments filed in response to the FNPRM--
demonstrating that local radio stations are not primary sources of 
viewpoint diversity in local markets and that alternative media outlets 
are a growing and important source of viewpoint diversity. The 
Commission, however, reversed itself in the Second Report and Order, 
concluding that the rule should be retained. In doing so, the 
Commission largely relied on limited evidence, much of it anecdotal or 
immaterial, to conclude that radio contributes to viewpoint diversity 
in local markets to a degree sufficient to justify retention of the 
rule. For example, the comments cited by the Commission primarily 
discussed format selection, music programming, and national news 
content, all of which are aspects of radio programming that do not 
inform the Commission's viewpoint diversity analysis.
    40. The Commission also discussed broadcast radio's contributions 
to viewpoint diversity in the NBCO rule section of the Second Report 
and Order. That discussion was equally unpersuasive. The Commission 
failed to demonstrate that broadcast radio stations are significant 
independent sources of local news, relied on statistics that failed to 
distinguish between local and national news content, referenced 
examples of broadcast content on low-power stations, and relied heavily 
on only a handful of anecdotes regarding broadcast radio's 
contributions to viewpoint diversity. The rule does not apply to low-
power stations, and their contribution to diversity is unaffected by 
the decision to retain or repeal the radio-television cross-ownership 
rule. All of these flaws undermine the broad finding that broadcast 
radio stations contribute to viewpoint diversity to an extent that 
continues to justify cross-ownership regulation.
    41. NAB argues that the Commission failed to justify its departure 
from its position in the NPRM and FNPRM that radio stations make only 
limited contributions to local viewpoint diversity. The Commission 
agrees and find that the Commission's conclusion in the Second Report 
and Order that radio contributes to local viewpoint diversity in 
meaningful ways, such that it justified retention of the rule--a clear 
departure from its earlier, well-supported position--was not supported 
by the record. The Commission has long maintained that broadcast radio 
stations are not a primary source of viewpoint diversity in local 
markets. While the record indicates that broadcast radio stations may 
contribute to viewpoint diversity in local markets to a certain degree, 
the Commission finds that, in the current media marketplace, these 
contributions no longer justify restrictions on television/radio cross-
ownership.
    42. For example, the Commission itself acknowledged that consumers' 
reliance on radio for some local news and information has declined 
significantly over time--falling from 54 percent to 34 percent over the 
last two decades--as has the number of all-news commercial radio 
stations--down to 30 stations from (the already low) 50 stations in the 
mid-1980s out of over 11,000 commercial radio stations. Moreover, the 
overwhelming majority of programming on news-talk stations is 
nationally syndicated, rather than locally produced. Comments in the 
record, which the Second Report and Order did not address or dispute, 
support these findings. A Gallup poll found that only six percent of 
Americans turn to radio as their main news source, and a Pew study 
found that the percentage of Americans reporting that they got any news 
from radio on the previous day dropped from more than 50 percent in 
1990 to 33 percent in 2012 (consistent with earlier findings cited by 
the Commission). Only five percent cite radio as a main source for 
political and arts and cultural information, four percent for crime 
updates, and three percent or less for information on various other 
topics. A 2013 Pew study confirmed the overall trend, finding that news 
programming had been relegated to an even smaller corner of the 
listening landscape. Even within this smaller universe, a substantial 
segment consists of National Public Radio (NPR)-affiliated 
noncommercial broadcast radio stations, which are not subject to the 
broadcast ownership limits. At present, NPR has over 900 member 
stations in the U.S. As discussed above, the attempt in the Second 
Report and Order to overcome

[[Page 741]]

the record in this proceeding of radio's relatively minor contribution 
as a source of local news and the Commission's historical recognition 
of radio's reduced role in promoting viewpoint diversity is 
unpersuasive. The record supports far better the Commission's tentative 
conclusions in the NPRM and FNPRM regarding radio's limited 
contributions to viewpoint diversity in local markets.
    43. In addition, the Commission finds that, as NAB contends, the 
Commission's decision to retain the rule did not properly acknowledge 
the realities of the digital media marketplace, in which consumers now 
have access to a multitude of information sources that contribute to 
viewpoint diversity in local markets. In the Second Report and Order, 
the Commission found that platforms such as the internet or cable do 
not contribute significantly to viewpoint diversity in local markets 
and therefore do not meaningfully protect against the potential loss of 
viewpoint diversity that would result from increased radio/television 
cross-ownership. The Commission disagrees with arguments that the 
Commission properly found that cable and satellite programming do not 
meaningfully contribute to coverage of local issues and that 
information available online usually originates from traditional media 
sources. The Commission finds instead that the Commission erred in 
discounting the role that non-traditional sources play in the local 
media marketplace and that the contributions of such outlets result in 
greater access to independent information sources in local markets. In 
particular, evidence in the record clearly demonstrates the emergence 
of online outlets--including many unaffiliated with broadcast or print 
sources--that now offer local news and information. And as discussed 
above, the Commission finds that it failed to properly credit the local 
news offerings of cable operators. Even if cable and online outlets are 
not yet primary sources of local news and information programming, 
their contributions cannot be overlooked. While the Commission relied 
on a handful of anecdotes to overcome its earlier, compelling findings 
regarding broadcast radio's limited contributions to local news and 
information programming, it refused to give appropriate consideration 
to more persuasive evidence of the increasing contributions of non-
traditional media--a trend the Commission had previously noted, and 
which has continued.
    44. The decline of radio's role in providing local news and 
information, together with the rise of online sources, marks a change 
from the circumstances the Commission faced when it upheld the rule in 
the 2006 Quadrennial Review Order. Accordingly, the Commission finds 
that contributions to viewpoint diversity from platforms such as the 
internet and cable, while not primary sources of viewpoint diversity in 
local markets, help mitigate any potential loss of viewpoint diversity 
that might result from limited increases in radio/television cross-
ownership.
    45. Importantly, the Commission does not mean to suggest that 
broadcast radio stations make no contribution to viewpoint diversity in 
local markets--they do. In order to continue to justify the radio/
television cross-ownership limits under Section 202(h), however, the 
Commission is compelled to consider these contributions in the context 
of the broader marketplace as it exists today, in which broadcast 
television, print, cable, and online sources all contribute to 
viewpoint diversity. Broadcast radio's contributions notwithstanding, 
the wide selection of sources now available renders the Radio/
Television Cross-Ownership Rule obsolete in today's vibrant media 
marketplace.
    46. Moreover, the Commission finds that because the rule already 
permits significant cross-ownership in local markets, eliminating it 
will have only a minimal impact on common ownership, as parties will 
continue to be constrained by the applicable ownership limits in the 
Local Television and Local Radio Ownership Rules. For example, pursuant 
to the Radio/Television Cross-Ownership Rule, in the largest markets, 
entities are permitted to own, in combination, either two television 
stations and six radio stations or one television station and seven 
radio stations. The Local Radio Ownership Rule permits an entity to own 
a maximum of eight radio stations in a single market. Therefore, in the 
largest markets, absent the Radio/Television Cross-Ownership Rule, an 
entity approaching the limits of the existing cap will be permitted to 
acquire only one additional radio station and remain in compliance with 
the Local Radio Ownership Rule. Likewise, an entity with one television 
station already could acquire only one additional station in these 
large markets under the Local Television Ownership Rule. Thus, the 
effect of eliminating the radio/television cross-ownership rule will be 
small and, as discussed above, mitigated by contributions to viewpoint 
diversity from other media outlets. In addition, the local ownership 
limits for television and radio, while intended primarily to promote 
competition, will continue to prevent an undue concentration of 
broadcast facilities, thereby preserving opportunities for diverse 
local ownership, and are therefore adequate to serve the goals the 
Radio/Television Cross-Ownership Rule was intended to promote.
    47. In light of its limited benefits, the Commission finds that the 
Radio/Television Cross-Ownership Rule no longer strikes an appropriate 
balance between the protection of viewpoint diversity and the potential 
public interest benefits that could result from the efficiencies gained 
by common ownership of radio and television stations in a local market, 
efficiencies that the Commission has previously recognized. For 
example, NAB cites numerous Commission studies that found that radio/
television cross-ownership produces public interest benefits, including 
increased news and public affairs programming. The Tribune Company also 
provides examples of how its co-owned radio/television combinations 
have been able to improve outreach to their local community and work 
collaboratively to improve coverage of issues of local concern. The 
current rule prevents localism benefits from accruing more broadly, 
without providing meaningful offsetting benefits to viewpoint 
diversity. As such, the Commission can no longer justify retention of 
the Radio/Television Cross-Ownership Rule under Section 202(h). In 
light of the significant common ownership already allowed under the 
rule, it is not appropriate to modify and retain the rule, which the 
Commission has found is no longer in the public interest under Section 
202(h). Indeed, the record demonstrates that there is no policy 
justification--competition, localism, or viewpoint diversity--upon 
which to base such a revised rule. Because the Commission is 
eliminating the Radio/Television Cross-Ownership Rule on the grounds 
discussed herein, it is not necessary to reach alternative arguments 
involving the impact of ownership on viewpoint diversity.
    48. Minority and Female Ownership. Lastly, consistent with the 
Commission's preliminary view in the FNPRM, the Commission finds that 
the record fails to demonstrate that eliminating the Radio/Television 
Cross-Ownership Rule is likely to harm minority and female ownership. 
While broadcast radio remains an important entry point into media 
ownership, eliminating this rule will not result in significant 
additional consolidation because of the constraints of the Local Radio 
Ownership Rule. Furthermore, there is no evidence that any additional

[[Page 742]]

common ownership that would be permitted as a result of eliminating the 
Radio/Television Cross-Ownership Rule would disproportionately or 
negatively impact minority- and female-owned stations. Indeed, the 
analyses within the contexts of the Local Television Ownership Rule and 
the Local Radio Ownership Rule suggest that previous relaxations of 
those rules have not resulted in reduced levels of minority and female 
ownership. The Commission finds that the record provides no information 
to suggest that eliminating the Radio/Television Cross-Ownership Rule 
will have a different impact on minority and female ownership. The 
Commission disagrees with the general assertion by UCC et al. that the 
Commission cannot modify any of its media ownership rules without 
further study of the impact on minority and female ownership.
    49. In the Second Report and Order, the Commission found that 
although the rule could help promote opportunities for diversity in 
broadcast television and radio ownership, it was not being retained for 
the purpose of preserving or creating specific amounts of minority and 
female ownership. The Commission's comment, however, did not indicate a 
belief that the rule would promote minority and female ownership 
specifically, but rather that the rule would promote ownership 
diversity generally by requiring the separation of radio and television 
broadcasters. The Commission cannot justify retaining the rule under 
Section 202(h) based on the unsubstantiated hope that the rule will 
promote minority and female ownership.

C. Local Television Ownership Rule

1. Introduction
    50. Upon reconsideration, the Commission finds that the Local 
Television Ownership Rule adopted in the Second Report and Order is not 
supported by the record and must be modified.
2. Background
    51. The Second Report and Order effectively retained the existing 
Local Television Ownership Rule (with only a minor technical 
modification of the contour overlap provision to reflect the transition 
to digital broadcasting), finding that the rule remained necessary to 
promote competition. Despite a record replete with evidence of the 
significant changes in the video marketplace, the Commission's decision 
left in place ownership restrictions originally implemented in 1999. 
Under the rule adopted in the Second Report and Order, an entity may 
own up to two television stations in the same market if: (1) the 
digital noise limited service contours (NLSCs) of the stations (as 
determined by section 73.622(e) of the Commission's rules) do not 
overlap; or (2) at least one of the stations is not ranked among the 
top-four stations in the market and at least eight independently owned 
television stations would remain in the market following the 
combination. NAB and Nexstar filed petitions for reconsideration of the 
Local Television Ownership Rule, specifically challenging the Top-Four 
Prohibition and the Eight-Voices Test.
3. Discussion
    52. On reconsideration, the Commission adopts a revised Local 
Television Ownership Rule, finding that the rule adopted in the Second 
Report and Order is no longer necessary in the public interest as a 
result of competition. The Commission's revised rule reflects its 
assessment of both the current video marketplace and the continued 
importance of broadcast television stations in their local markets. 
Specifically, the Commission finds that the Eight-Voices Test is not 
supported by the record and must be eliminated. In addition, the 
Commission modifies the Top-Four Prohibition by incorporating a new 
case-by-case review process to address evidence in the record that the 
prohibition may be unwarranted in certain circumstances. The Commission 
finds that these modifications to the Local Television Ownership Rule 
are not likely to have a negative impact on minority and female 
ownership.
    53. The Commission rejects the argument that reconsideration is 
inappropriate because petitioners rely on arguments that have been 
fully considered and rejected by the Commission within the same 
proceeding. Neither the Communications Act nor the Commission's rules 
preclude granting petitions for reconsideration that fail to rely on 
new arguments. Likewise, the Commission rejects UCC's claim that 
reconsideration is not warranted unless petitioners present new 
evidence. UCC's reliance on section 1.429(b) of the Commission's rules 
is misplaced, as this section does not require petitioners to support 
their claims of Commission error with new evidence. Commission 
precedent establishes that reconsideration is generally appropriate 
where the petitioner shows either a material error or omission in the 
original order or raises additional facts not known or not existing 
until after the petitioner's last opportunity to respond. Even if a 
petition is repetitious, the Commission can, in its discretion, 
consider it. While the petitioners repeat some arguments made earlier 
in this proceeding, they nonetheless provide valid grounds for the 
Commission to reconsider its previous action. As discussed below, the 
Commission finds that the petitioners have identified material errors 
in the Second Report and Order warranting reconsideration of certain 
aspects of the Local Television Ownership Rule.
    54. Market. The Commission finds that its decision in the Second 
Report and Order to adopt a rule focused on promoting competition among 
broadcast television stations in local television viewing markets was 
appropriate given the record compiled in this proceeding. The 
Commission concluded in the Second Report and Order that non-broadcast 
video offerings still do not serve as meaningful substitutes for local 
broadcast television and that competition within a local market 
motivates a broadcast television station to invest in better 
programming and to provide programming tailored to the needs and 
interests of the local community in order to gain market share. NAB and 
Nexstar urge the Commission to expand the market definition to include 
non-broadcast video alternatives, such as online and multichannel video 
programming distributors (MVPD) video programming sources. While the 
video marketplace has changed substantially since the current 
television ownership limits were adopted in 1999 and since the last 
Commission review of these rules concluded in 2008, broadcast 
television stations still play a unique and important role in their 
local communities. As such, the Commission believes that, on the 
current record, a rule focused on preserving competition among local 
broadcast television stations is still warranted. Thus, the Commission 
does not include other types of video programming providers within the 
market to which the restriction applies. The Commission emphasizes, 
however, that this conclusion could change in a future proceeding with 
a different record.
    55. The Commission's finding does not mean, however, that changes 
outside the local broadcast television market should not factor into 
the Commission's assessment of the rule under Section 202(h) or that 
the Commission is free to retain its existing rule without any 
adjustments that take into account marketplace changes. Indeed, 
television broadcasters' important role makes it critical for the

[[Page 743]]

Commission to ensure that its rules do not unnecessarily restrict their 
ability to serve their local markets in the face of ever-growing video 
programming options. Consumers are increasingly accessing video 
programming delivered via MVPDs, the internet, and mobile devices. 
Moreover, the online video distributor (OVD) industry--which includes 
entities such as Netflix and Hulu--continues to grow and evolve. In 
addition to providing on-demand access to vast content libraries, many 
OVDs are now offering original programming and/or live television 
offerings similar to traditional MVPD offerings. The Second Report and 
Order acknowledged the popularity of these services but failed to 
properly account for this in its analysis. Accordingly, the Commission 
reconsidered the Local Television Ownership Rule and adopt common sense 
modifications that will help local television broadcasters achieve 
economies of scale and improve their ability to serve their local 
markets in the face of an evolving video marketplace.
    56. Eight-Voices Test. Upon reconsideration, the Commission finds 
that the Eight-Voices Test is unsupported by the record or reasoned 
analysis and is no longer necessary in the public interest. 
Accordingly, the Commission grants the NAB Petition and the Nexstar 
Petition with respect to this issue.
    57. Despite the fact that the Commission has spent years seeking 
comment regarding the local ownership rule, the record lacks evidence 
sufficient to support the Commission's decision to retain the Eight-
Voices Test. In the Second Report and Order, the Commission asserted 
that competition among stations affiliated with the Big Four networks 
(often the top-four rated broadcast stations in a local market) and at 
least four independent competitors unaffiliated with a Big Four network 
motivates all of the stations in a market to improve their programming, 
including providing additional local news and public interest 
programming. Yet the Commission did not provide or cite any evidence to 
support this argument, even though the Eight-Voices Test has been 
around since 1999 (more than enough time to observe whether the Eight-
Voices Test has been having the expected impact in local markets).
    58. The Commission also failed to explain adequately why the number 
of independent television stations must be equal to the number of top-
performing stations in a market. The Commission stated that a 
significant gap in audience share persists between the top-four rated 
stations in a market and the remaining stations in most markets, but it 
offered no justification for the notion that the dominance of four top-
performing stations must be balanced by an equal number of independent, 
lower-performing stations. The Commission provided no precedent, record 
evidence, or economic theory to support this notion. Moreover, a 
significant gap in audience share between the top-four stations and the 
other stations in a market could also logically justify permitting the 
common ownership of non-top-four stations to form a stronger competitor 
to the top-four stations and thus promote competition, even if fewer 
than eight independent voices remain.
    59. Instead, the Commission's primary justification for retaining 
the Eight-Voices Test apparently stems from the historical use of the 
number eight as the proper number of voices when the rule was revised 
in 1999 to permit duopoly ownership in certain circumstances. Notably, 
that decision relied on viewpoint diversity grounds to determine the 
appropriate numerical limit. The Commission subsequently determined 
that the rule was no longer necessary to promote viewpoint diversity 
and instead relied on competition to support its adoption of the exact 
same voices limit in the 2006 Quadrennial Review Order. The Commission, 
however, offered no empirical evidence to support this line drawing in 
the 2006 Quadrennial Review Order as necessary to preserve competition, 
and as discussed above, the Commission finds that the rationale set 
forth in the Second Report and Order was flawed. Although the 
Commission's decision to retain the Eight-Voices Test in the 2006 
Quadrennial Review Order was upheld in Prometheus Radio Project v. FCC, 
652 F.3d 431 (3d Cir. 2011) (Prometheus II), the Commission is 
obligated under Section 202(h) to justify its broadcast ownership rules 
based on the existing record and in light of current marketplace 
realities. On reconsideration, the Commission finds no record support 
for retaining the Eight-Voices Test and concludes that retaining it 
does not serve the public interest. Further, as discussed below, the 
Eight-Voices Test prevents the realization of public interest benefits. 
Accordingly, it must be eliminated.
    60. The record fails to support the adoption of a different voice 
test, e.g., six voices, despite specific requests for comment on 
alternative voice tests in this proceeding. One commenter argued for 
lowering the voice count in general, and another proposed changing the 
test to four voices--a proposal the Commission rejects because such a 
restriction would be redundant given its decision, as discussed below, 
to retain the Top-Four Prohibition. Another commenter argued that the 
Eight-Voices Test should be eliminated and not replaced with an 
alternative test. No other commenters offered support for a different 
voice test. The Commission finds no justification for relying on an 
arbitrary voice count to promote competition and concludes that the 
public interest is better served by the revised rule the Commission 
adopts in this Order, which will allow combinations that will help 
lower-rated stations better serve their viewers while preserving the 
restriction that an entity may not own two top-four rated stations in a 
market unless it can demonstrate that such a combination will serve the 
public interest and in no event will allow common ownership of more 
than two stations in a market, subject to the contour overlap 
provision. The Commission finds that this is a more effective way to 
promote competition and still avoid harms associated with significant 
concentration in local markets than an arbitrary remaining voices test.
    61. The Commission not only failed to provide a reasoned basis for 
retaining the Eight-Voices Test; it also ignored evidence in the record 
demonstrating that the Eight-Voices Test lacks any economic support, is 
inconsistent with the realities of the television marketplace, and 
prevents combinations that would likely produce significant public 
interest benefits. Indeed, no commenter has produced evidence of any 
other industry where the government employs an eight-competitor test. 
In multiple instances, the Commission acknowledged the potential public 
interest benefits of common ownership, which potentially allow a local 
broadcast station to invest more resources in news or other public 
interest programming that meets the needs of its local community. The 
Commission finds that the Eight-Voices Test denies the public interest 
benefits produced by common ownership without any evidence of 
countervailing benefits to competition from preserving the requirement. 
Furthermore, these markets--including many small and mid-sized markets 
that have less advertising revenue to fund local programming--are the 
places where the efficiencies of common ownership can often yield the 
greatest benefits. The Commission's action in repealing the Eight-
Voices Test will enable local television broadcasters to realize these 
benefits and better serve their local markets. In particular, the 
record suggests that local news programming is

[[Page 744]]

typically one of the largest operational costs for broadcasters; 
accordingly, stations may find that common ownership enables them to 
provide more high-quality local programming, especially in revenue-
scarce small and mid-sized markets. After the draft order in this 
proceeding was publicly released, DISH Network L.L.C. (DISH) submitted 
an economic study based on viewer ratings data applicable to existing 
combinations of local television stations as compared with ratings data 
from independently owned stations in DMAs deemed comparable to the DMAs 
served by commonly owned stations. DISH claims that the study shows 
that common ownership of local television stations does not produce 
increased ratings for local programming; therefore, common ownership 
does not produce higher-quality local programming. DISH provides no 
reason it could not have submitted this study earlier in response to 
broadcasters' claims that relaxation of the rule would lead to more 
locally responsive and higher quality programming. Thus, it is 
inexcusably late. 47 CFR 1.429(b), (f). Moreover, the study suffers 
from significant methodological issues and fails to provide a 
sufficient basis upon which to draw any conclusions. For example, the 
study employs a simplistic analysis covering a small sample size and 
the results are highly dependent on the selection of data points, such 
as control DMAs, viewing period, and time slot. Furthermore, the 
analysis fails to address issues of statistical significance regarding 
viewership, and the cross-sectional analysis fails to account for other 
variables that may influence viewership in different markets or 
otherwise address the cases in the filing for which viewership is 
higher in duopoly markets. Ultimately, the study does not undermine the 
Commission's finding that efficiencies gained through common ownership 
can allow broadcasters to invest more resources in producing more and 
higher-quality locally responsive programming.
    62. Top-Four Prohibition. In contrast to the Eight-Voices Test, the 
Commission finds that its decision in the Second Report and Order to 
treat combinations of two top-four stations differently from other 
combinations is supported in the record. The Commission therefore 
denies the NAB Petition and the Nexstar Petition to the extent each 
requested complete elimination of the Top-Four Prohibition. As 
discussed below, however, the Commission finds that modification of the 
Top-Four Prohibition to include a case-by-case analysis is appropriate 
in order to address instances in which the application of the Top-Four 
Prohibition may not be warranted based on the circumstances in a 
particular market or with respect to a particular transaction. This 
hybrid approach will allow for a more refined application of the Local 
Television Ownership Rule that will help facilitate the public interest 
benefits associated with common ownership in local markets.
    63. The ratings data in the record generally supported the 
Commission's line drawing, and the potential harms associated with top-
four combinations find support in the record. The Commission has 
repeatedly concluded that the Top-Four Prohibition is necessary to 
promote competition in the local television marketplace. As the 
Commission has consistently found, there is generally a significant 
cushion of audience share percentage points that separates the top four 
stations from the fifth-ranked stations. In the Second Report and 
Order, the Commission found that this pattern has not changed. Thus, 
top-four combinations would generally result in a single firm's 
obtaining a significantly larger market share than other stations and 
reduced incentives for commonly owned local stations to compete for 
programming, advertising, and audience shares. The Commission also 
finds that the data were sufficiently recent and uncontradicted by any 
newer ratings data in the record, such that it was appropriate for the 
Commission to rely on the data in reaching its decision. The Commission 
considered alternative arguments and data in the record and ultimately 
found that the Top-Four Prohibition, last endorsed in the 2006 
Quadrennial Review Order, continued to be supported. In arguing that 
the Top-Four Prohibition should be eliminated, NAB notes that evidence 
in the record demonstrated that the concerns that the Top-Four 
Prohibition is intended to address may not be present in many markets. 
NAB also provides additional information demonstrating that some 
markets do not have a gap between the ratings of the fourth- and fifth-
ranked stations or that the gap is larger between second- and third-
ranked stations in some markets. The Commission has long conceded that 
the justification for the Top-Four Prohibition does not apply in all 
markets. Thus, the rule may prohibit combinations that do not present 
public interest harms or that offer potential public interest benefits 
that outweigh any potential harms. To this extent, the bright-line 
prohibition is over-inclusive. On reconsideration, the Commission 
believes that it is appropriate to modify the rule to allow for more 
flexibility.
    64. In particular, the Commission takes steps to mitigate the 
potentially detrimental impacts of applying the Top-Four Prohibition in 
certain circumstances. In the Second Report and Order, the Commission 
conceded the potential public interest benefits from allowing 
additional common ownership, yet found that the harms associated with 
top-four combinations exceeded these benefits. This logic no doubt 
holds when the rationale for adopting the Top-Four Prohibition applies, 
though the benefits could exceed the harms in certain circumstances 
based on an evaluation of the characteristics of a particular market or 
a particular transaction.
    65. Instead of relying solely on the bright-line application of the 
Top-Four Prohibition, the Commission is adopting a hybrid approach that 
will allow applicants to request a case-by-case examination of a 
proposed combination that would otherwise be prohibited by the Top-Four 
Prohibition. Under a hybrid approach, a rule includes both bright-line 
provisions and a case-by-case element to allow for consideration of 
market-specific factors. Such an approach provides certainty and 
flexibility when determining whether a particular transaction should be 
granted. Though no party commented on this issue, the Commission finds 
that the record supports its approach. As discussed in this Order, 
special scrutiny of combinations of two top-four rated stations is 
still supported by the record, though the record also demonstrates a 
need for flexibility in addressing circumstances in which application 
of the Top-Four Prohibition may not be appropriate due to the 
particular circumstances in a local market. The hybrid approach is well 
suited for such circumstances. Such an approach will help mitigate the 
potential drawbacks associated with strict application of the Top-Four 
Prohibition, while still preserving the ease and efficiency of applying 
the rule. This revised rule will continue to promote robust competition 
in local markets while also facilitating transactions, in appropriate 
circumstances, that will allow broadcast stations to achieve economies 
of scale and better serve their local viewers.
    66. As the Commission has just discussed, the record demonstrates 
the need for flexibility in the application of the Top-Four 
Prohibition. Given the variations in local markets and specific 
transactions, however, the Commission does not believe that applicants 
would be well served by a rigid set of criteria for its case-by-case 
analysis. The record

[[Page 745]]

does, however, suggest the types of information that applicants could 
provide to help establish that application of the Top-Four Prohibition 
is not in the public interest because the reduction in competition is 
minimal and is outweighed by public interest benefits. Such information 
regarding the impacts on competition in the local market could include 
(but is not limited to): (1) Ratings share data of the stations 
proposed to be combined compared with other stations in the market; (2) 
revenue share data of the stations proposed to be combined compared 
with other stations in the market, including advertising (on-air and 
digital) and retransmission consent fees; (3) market characteristics, 
such as population and the number and types of broadcast television 
stations serving the market (including any strong competitors outside 
the top-four rated broadcast television stations); (4) the likely 
effects on programming meeting the needs and interests of the 
community; and (5) any other circumstances impacting the market, 
particularly any disparities primarily impacting small and mid-sized 
markets. Applicants are encouraged to provide data over a substantial 
period (e.g., the past three years, similar to the requirement in the 
failing/failed station waiver test) to strengthen their request and to 
help avoid circumvention of the Top-Four Prohibition based on anomalous 
data over a short period of time or manipulation of program offerings 
prior to the proposed transaction. In the end, applicants must 
demonstrate that the benefits of the proposed transaction would 
outweigh the harms, and the Commission will undertake a careful review 
of such showings in light of the record with respect to each such 
application.
    67. The Commission disagrees with the contention that affording 
licensees a case-by-case opportunity to seek approval of top-four 
combinations cannot be squared with the bright-line rule adopted in the 
Commission's 2014 Retransmission Consent Report and Order (79 FR 28615, 
May 19, 2014, FCC 14-29, rel. Mar. 31, 2014). There, the Commission 
concluded that the potential competitive harms arising from joint 
negotiation of retransmission consent by non-commonly owned stations 
outweighed the potential benefits and determined that a bright-line 
prohibition would be more administratively efficient than case-by-case 
review because it would provide the bargaining parties with advance 
notice of the appropriate process for such negotiation. Here, however, 
the result of the Commission's case-by-case review of proposed top-four 
combinations will provide bargaining parties with advance notice of 
whether joint retransmission consent negotiations for the two stations 
in question will be allowed. Moreover, common ownership of two top-four 
stations implicates a broader range of potential benefits and harms 
than a narrow agreement between two top-four stations to jointly 
negotiate retransmission consent so there is no inherent inconsistency 
between adopting a bright-line rule in the latter case and a case-by-
case review in the former case. Additionally, the Commission rejects 
the contention that adopting a case-by-case review is inconsistent with 
the statute. To the extent that the existing Top-Four Prohibition is 
overbroad given the current state of competition, as the Commission 
concludes here, then the existing prohibition, absent modification, is 
not necessary in the public interest as a result of competition and 
should be modified. Moreover, in adopting this approach, the Commission 
declines to adopt specific criteria related to the issue of 
retransmission consent, as recently advocated by some commenters. 
Instead, as discussed in this Order, the Commission believes that the 
case-by-case review process will allow parties to advance any relevant 
concerns--including concerns related to retransmission consent issues--
in the context of a specific proposed transaction if such issues are 
relevant to the particular market, stations, or transaction.
    68. Similarly, the Commission rejects the recommendation of 
Independent Television Group (ITG) that the Commission adopt a 
presumption in favor of top-four combinations in small and mid-sized 
markets. ITG provides no evidence sufficient to support such a 
presumption. ITG simply relies on NAB's assertion in its 2014 comments 
that in some markets, there may have been significant disparities in 
audience share among some of the top-four rated stations. The case-by-
case analysis is not weighted in favor of transactions in any 
particular market, and applicants in small and mid-sized markets will 
be able to provide market-specific evidence supporting their requests.
    69. Gray Television, Inc. proposes that, at least in smaller 
markets, two stations be permitted to combine ownership if one of the 
stations has not produced a local newscast in the previous two years. 
The Commission finds, however, that market characteristics and the 
state of local programming, including local news offerings, are better 
considered in its case-by-case analysis at this time. The Commission 
anticipates that any transactions processed under this case-by-case 
approach will help inform any consideration of specific criteria that 
could be included in any future revision of the Local Television 
Ownership Rule, which will be reviewed again in the forthcoming 2018 
Quadrennial Review proceeding.
    70. Minority and Female Ownership. The Commission finds that the 
modifications adopted to the Local Television Ownership Rule are not 
likely to harm minority and female ownership. As noted in the Second 
Report and Order, data in the record demonstrate that relaxation of the 
Local Television Ownership Rule in 1999 did not have a negative impact 
on overall minority ownership levels. In this lengthy proceeding, no 
party has presented contrary evidence or a compelling argument 
demonstrating why relaxing this rule will have a different impact. 
Indeed, consistent with the Second Report and Order, the Commission 
finds that the record does not support a causal connection between 
modifications to the Local Television Ownership Rule and minority and 
female ownership levels.
    71. In the Second Report and Order, the Commission stated that 
ensuring the presence of independently owned broadcast television 
stations in the local market indirectly increases the likelihood of a 
variety of viewpoints and preserving ownership opportunities for new 
entrants. The Commission's comment, however, did not indicate a belief 
that the rule would promote minority and female ownership specifically, 
but rather that the rule would promote ownership diversity generally by 
limiting common ownership of broadcast television stations. This 
statement will continue to be true with respect to the revised rule 
that the Commission adopts in this Order. Under Section 202(h), 
however, the Commission cannot continue to subject broadcast television 
licensees to aspects of the Local Television Ownership Rule that can no 
longer be justified based on the unsubstantiated hope that these 
restrictions will promote minority and female ownership. In addition, 
the Commission disagrees with the general assertion by UCC et al. that 
the Commission cannot modify any of its media ownership rules without 
further study of the impact on minority and female ownership. The 
Commission also disagrees with assertions by the Multicultural Media, 
Telecom and internet Council and the National Association of Black 
Owned

[[Page 746]]

Broadcasters that the rules can be retained based on promoting news 
coverage of specific issues.
    72. Incentive Auction. The Commission reiterates that it remains 
premature to analyze the implications of the incentive auction on the 
Local Television Ownership Rule. Contrary to the position of certain 
parties, the Commission cannot--and did not in the Second Report and 
Order--use the auction as an excuse for delaying action and refusing to 
fulfill its obligations under Section 202(h). While the Commission 
finds fault in its prior decision to retain the existing television 
ownership restrictions without modification, the incentive auction was 
not a factor in that decision. Instead, the Commission properly found 
that it could not delay a decision on its rules because of the auction 
nor could it adopt changes to its rules based on speculation as to the 
final results of the auction. The Commission agrees with its prior 
finding. Section 202(h) compels the Commission to act on the record 
before it and determine whether to retain, repeal, or modify the Local 
Television Ownership Rule based on the realities of the current 
marketplace, which the Commission has done. Though the auction has 
finished, it is still too soon to evaluate its impacts on the 
television marketplace. While there is still time for stations to 
change their post-auction channel sharing elections, the initial 
results of the auction suggest that the auction may not have a 
significant impact in the context of the Local Television Ownership 
Rule, as the overwhelming majority of commercial, full-power winning 
bidders have elected to channel share once they surrender their 
spectrum. The Commission will continue to monitor these elections as 
part of its continuing efforts to assess the impact of the auction on 
the television marketplace. As noted in the Second Report and Order, 
the Commission will evaluate the broadcast marketplace post-auction and 
expects that these issues will be considered in the forthcoming 2018 
Quadrennial Review proceeding.

D. Local Radio Ownership Rule

1. Introduction
    73. The Commission denies in part and grants in part Connoisseur's 
petition for reconsideration of the Commission's decision in the Second 
Report and Order to retain the current methodology for determining 
compliance with the Local Radio Ownership Rule in markets containing 
embedded markets (i.e., smaller markets, as defined by Nielsen Audio, 
that are included in a larger parent market). The Commission grants 
Connoisseur's petition to the extent it seeks a presumption that would 
apply its two-prong test for waiver requests involving existing parent 
markets with multiple embedded markets pending further consideration of 
this issue in the 2018 Quadrennial Review proceeding.
2. Background
    74. Connoisseur seeks reconsideration of the decision in the Second 
Report and Order to retain the existing methodology for embedded 
markets and asks the Commission to adopt a new two-pronged test for a 
station owner that seeks to own stations licensed to home counties 
(i.e., the county in which the station's community of license is 
geographically located) in different embedded markets within a single 
parent market. Consistent with the Commission's current methodology, 
under the first part of Connoisseur's proposed test, a station owner 
would be required to comply with the numerical ownership limits using 
the Nielsen Audio Metro methodology in each embedded market. Under the 
second part, however, the station owner would be required to comply 
with the ownership limits using a contour-overlap methodology in lieu 
of the Commission's current parent market analysis. Connoisseur argues 
that, as a result of the Commission's existing methodology, a 
broadcaster which owns stations in one embedded market may be precluded 
from owning stations in another embedded market, despite the lack of 
competitive overlap between those markets.
3. Discussion
    75. The Commission denies in part and grants in part Connoisseur's 
petition for reconsideration. First, the Commission finds that its 
decision to not adopt a blanket change to the current methodology was 
supported by a reasoned explanation. Second, the Commission finds that 
its decision to adopt a contour-overlap methodology for the Puerto Rico 
market is not at odds with the approach the Commission took regarding 
embedded markets. Finally, the Commission grants Connoisseur's 
alternative request to adopt a presumptive waiver approach for existing 
parent markets with multiple embedded markets.
    76. The Commission finds that it provided a reasoned explanation 
for its decision in the Second Report and Order to not adopt a blanket 
change to the current embedded market methodology. Connoisseur argues 
that the Commission acted arbitrarily in deciding to retain the current 
methodology. In particular, Connoisseur maintains that counting 
stations from multiple embedded markets for purposes of calculating 
compliance with the numerical limits in the parent market is 
unreasonable because stations in embedded markets do not compete in any 
meaningful way with stations in other embedded markets or stations in 
the central city of the parent market. The Commission noted in the 
Second Report and Order, it has long relied on Nielsen Audio's market 
analysis, as reported by BIA, which lists all the stations that are 
deemed to compete in a given market (often referred to as above-the-
line stations), as the basis for multiple ownership calculations for 
embedded and parent markets. The Commission found that the Nielsen-
defined markets are the primary means by which broadcasters and 
advertisers place a value on advertising sold by stations listed as 
participating in the market. Nielsen Audio's market definitions are 
recognized as the industry standard and provide for consistency and 
ease of application in comparison to other possible methods for 
defining local radio markets. The inclusion of an embedded market 
station as an above-the-line station in a parent market therefore has 
long been thought to reflect a determination by Nielsen Audio that, 
absent other information, the station competes in that market. The 
Commission notes that its continued reliance on Nielsen Audio market 
definitions for purposes of applying the Local Radio Ownership Rule 
provides an important level of certainty to radio licensees in all 
markets, including those in embedded markets, and overcomes 
disadvantages associated with the contour-overlap approach. Although 
Nielsen has historically defined what stations compete in a market 
based on geographical market boundaries, and the Commission's rules 
have relied on these determinations in determining compliance with its 
ownership caps, Connoisseur's Oct. 30, 2017 ex parte letter raises 
issues related to embedded markets that should be further explored in 
greater detail in the 2018 Quadrennial Review proceeding. However, the 
arguments in the ex parte letter support adoption of a presumptive 
waiver approach for transactions involving existing parent markets with 
multiple embedded markets.
    77. The Commission also finds that its decision in the Second 
Report and Order to adopt a contour-overlap methodology for the Puerto 
Rico market is not inconsistent with the approach to

[[Page 747]]

embedded markets. Connoisseur argues that parent markets containing 
multiple embedded markets are analogous to the Puerto Rico market where 
mountainous topography, as opposed to a central city, separates smaller 
centers of economic activity within the larger parent market. 
Accordingly, Connoisseur asserts that the contour-overlap methodology 
the Commission applies to the Puerto Rico market likewise should be 
applied in the context of embedded markets in lieu of the Commission's 
current parent market analysis. The Commission finds that differences 
between the Puerto Rico market and a parent market that includes 
embedded markets make the comparison between the two circumstances 
inappropriate. As one example, the core location of a station's 
listenership has the potential to shift geographically over time in a 
parent/embedded market scenario in a way that would be unlikely, or 
even impossible, where, as in Puerto Rico, the physical terrain 
prevents a station from reaching other geographic areas. Indeed, the 
Commission has long stated that the Puerto Rico market is unique, even 
as compared to other large metro areas. The Commission has a long 
history--dating back to 2003--of applying the contour-overlap 
methodology to Puerto Rico on a case-by-case basis due to the unique 
characteristics of that market. The Commission therefore finds that its 
decision to retain the existing methodology for embedded markets is not 
undermined by its decision to adopt a contour-overlap methodology in 
Puerto Rico.
    78. For these reasons, the Commission continues to find that, 
rather than adopting Connoisseur's proposal for an across-the-board 
change to the Commission's embedded market methodology, entertaining a 
market-specific waiver is the appropriate approach at this time. In the 
Second Report and Order, the Commission acknowledged Connoisseur's 
concerns with respect to the particular characteristics of the current 
New York market and indicated its willingness to entertain a waiver 
specific to that market, a willingness the Commission reiterates in 
this Order. Ultimately, the issue continues to appear narrow in scope--
largely specific to a small number of parties' concerns with at most 
two markets. The circumstances Connoisseur describes could apply 
currently to, at most, two markets--New York City and Washington, DC. 
The Commission notes, however, that embedded market designations are 
subject to change, with the potential for embedded markets to be 
created, modified, or eliminated in the future. For instance, in 
addition to New York and Washington, DC, Connoisseur previously had 
identified San Francisco as an example of a parent market with two 
embedded markets. One of those embedded markets, however, is no longer 
rated by Nielsen. Accordingly, the San Francisco market now includes 
only one embedded market and is therefore no longer relevant to the 
issues discussed in Connoisseur's petition, which pertain solely to 
parent markets containing multiple embedded markets. As such, the 
potential impact of a proposed transaction involving embedded market 
stations may vary based on the specific markets, stations, and 
ownership interests involved.
    79. Accordingly, the Commission finds Connoisseur's argument 
regarding a presumptive waiver approach to be persuasive. While a 
bright-line rule codifying Connoisseur's preferred approach to embedded 
markets would no doubt provide greater certainty, as discussed in this 
Order, the Commission does not believe that such an approach is 
supported by the record at this time. Instead, the Commission intends 
to fully examine its existing methodology regarding embedded market 
transactions in the forthcoming 2018 Quadrennial Review proceeding. 
Pending the outcome of this review, however, the Commission adopts a 
presumption in favor of applying Connoisseur's two-prong test proposed 
on reconsideration to waiver requests involving existing parent markets 
with multiple embedded markets (i.e., New York and Washington, DC). The 
Commission finds that there is sufficient evidence on the record to 
support a presumption that a waiver of the Local Radio Ownership Rule 
as to stations in these markets serves the public interest if the 
transaction at issue satisfies the two-prong test. Pursuant to section 
310(d) of the Communications Act, the Commission must make a public 
interest determination with respect to any future applications based on 
the entire record with respect to that application. Throughout the 
proceeding, Connoisseur has provided information demonstrating that, 
due to the particular circumstances in these markets, applying the 
existing market methodology may not be warranted. These showings 
provide the Commission with sufficient confidence that transactions 
consistent with this presumption likely will not unduly impact 
competition in these markets, subject to the Commission's review under 
section 310(d). The Commission finds, however, that it is appropriate 
to limit the presumption to these markets (New York and Washington, 
DC), pending review in the 2018 Quadrennial Review proceeding, to avoid 
any potential manipulation of embedded markets in other Nielsen Audio 
markets.
    80. Adoption of this presumption will give Connoisseur--and other 
parties--sufficient confidence with which to assess possible future 
actions. Further, the Commission anticipates that any such transactions 
will help inform its subsequent review of the Local Radio Ownership 
Rule--and, in particular, the treatment of embedded market 
transactions.

E. Television JSA Attribution

1. Introduction
    81. On reconsideration, the Commission finds that it erred in its 
decision to adopt the Television JSA Attribution Rule and eliminates 
the Television JSA Attribution Rule. The petitioners also argue that 
the attribution decision must be reversed on the grounds that (1) the 
decision had the effect of tightening the media ownership rules, and 
that the Commission failed to properly analyze the impact of the 
attribution decision as required under Section 202(h) of the 1996 
Telecommunications Act; and (2) the decision was inconsistent with the 
Commission's repeal of the wireless attributable material relationship 
(AMR) rule. Because the Commission is reversing its decision to adopt 
the Television JSA Attribution Rule on other grounds, it does not need 
to reach these arguments.
2. Background
    82. The Commission first considered whether to attribute television 
JSAs in 1999. It declined to do so, finding that JSAs did not convey a 
sufficient degree of influence or control over station programming or 
core operations to warrant attribution and that JSAs helped produce 
public interest benefits. The Commission sought additional comment on 
this conclusion in a 2004 notice of proposed rulemaking after 
attributing radio JSAs in the 2002 Biennial Review Order. Then in 2014, 
nearly a decade after initially seeking comment on the issue, the 
Commission changed course and adopted the Television JSA Attribution 
Rule, despite a lack of evidence suggesting that its prior 
determination that television JSAs do not convey sufficient influence 
or control to warrant attribution was wrong. Specifically, the rule 
established that JSAs that involve the sale of more than 15 percent of 
the weekly advertising time of a station (brokered

[[Page 748]]

station) by another in-market station (brokering station) are 
attributable under the Commission's ownership rules. As a result, the 
brokering station was deemed to have an attributable interest in the 
brokered station, and the brokered station would count toward the 
brokering station's permissible ownership totals.
    83. In the Second Report and Order, the Commission concluded that 
the Local Television Ownership Rule (with a minor modification) still 
served the public interest and it re-adopted the Television JSA 
Attribution Rule based on the same rationale articulated in the Report 
and Order (79 FR 28996, May 20, 2014, FCC 14-28, rel. Apr. 15, 2014). 
By their Petitions, NAB and Nexstar now seek reconsideration of the 
decision to re-adopt the Television JSA Attribution Rule, arguing that 
the Commission, in adopting the rule, ignored the evidence before it 
and reached a decision unsupported by the record.
3. Discussion
    84. The Commission finds that Petitioners provide valid reasons to 
reconsider the Commission's decision to adopt the Television JSA 
Attribution Rule. The Commission's attribution analysis was deficient 
and failed to adequately consider the record, which does not support 
the Commission's conclusion that television JSAs confer on the 
brokering station a sufficient degree of influence or control over the 
core operating functions of the brokered station to warrant 
attribution. In addition, the record contains ample evidence of the 
public interest benefits that these JSAs provide. Even if the 
Commission had correctly determined that television JSAs involving more 
than 15 percent of the brokered station's weekly advertising time 
confer sufficient influence to warrant attribution, the Commission 
concludes that the potential benefits of television JSAs outweigh the 
public interest in attributing such JSAs. Accordingly, the Commission 
grants the NAB Petition and the Nexstar Petition with respect to this 
issue. As a result of the Commission's decision, 47 CFR 73.3613(d)(2) 
and the notes to 47 CFR 73.3555 will be amended to reflect the fact 
that television JSAs are no longer attributable. Additionally, various 
Commission rules will need to be revised to reflect the other rule 
changes and decisions adopted in this Order, as set forth in the final 
rules. The Commission directs the Media Bureau to make all form 
modifications and to take any other steps necessary to implement all 
the rule changes and other relevant decisions adopted in this Order. 
Though television JSAs will no longer be attributable as a result of 
the amount of advertising time brokered, the Commission reminds 
licensees that they must retain ultimate control over their programming 
and core operations so as to avoid the potential for an unauthorized 
transfer of control or the existence of an undisclosed or unauthorized 
real party in interest.
    85. The Commission failed to demonstrate that television JSAs 
confer a sufficient degree of influence or control so as to be 
considered an attributable ownership interest under the Commission's 
ownership rules. While the Commission pointed out that the attribution 
analysis traditionally seeks to identify interests that provide the 
holder with the incentive and ability to influence or control the 
programming or other core operational decisions of the licensees--an 
inquiry that often relies on the Commission's predictive judgement--the 
Commission may not ignore the record or the realities of the 
marketplace when making this determination.
    86. Here, the Commission's theory of attribution--a reversal of its 
earlier decision that television JSAs should not be attributable--was 
belied by its own extensive experience reviewing and approving 
television JSAs. Between 2008 and the decision to attribute television 
JSAs in 2014, the Commission's Media Bureau reviewed and approved 85 
television JSAs in the context of transaction reviews. Given the 
Commission's extensive history reviewing specific television JSAs, it 
is telling that the record was devoid of any evidence that any JSA 
allowed a brokering station to influence even a single programming 
decision of a brokered station.
    87. As Nexstar points out, the Commission's only citation in 
support of the theory that television JSAs might provide some measure 
of influence or control was inapposite. In Ackerley Group, Inc., 17 FCC 
Rcd 10828 (2002), the Commission found that a combination of 
agreements, which included a flat-fee television JSA, were 
substantively equivalent to an attributable local marketing agreement 
(LMA). Yet the Commission's attribution analysis in the Report and 
Order relied solely on the sale of advertising time and not a 
combination of other agreements that may justify attribution under the 
Commission's rules and precedent. As such, this isolated incident 
failed to provide support for the Commission's theory of attribution.
    88. The Commission attempted to sidestep the lack of evidence to 
support its theory of attribution by relying on the decision in the 
2002 Biennial Review Order to attribute radio JSAs. The Commission now 
agrees with Nexstar that this reliance was not appropriate. First, the 
Commission failed to explain why differences in fee structure 
(typically fixed fees for radio JSAs versus a percentage of advertising 
revenue for television JSAs) did not mitigate the Commission's earlier 
concerns that a fixed fee structure--which the Commission found to be 
common in radio JSAs--effectively transferred the market risk to the 
brokering station. In a percentage fee structure, the broker and 
brokering stations split revenues based on agreed upon percentages. By 
contrast, a flat fee structure provides a payment to the brokered 
station regardless of performance or revenues. The Third Circuit relied 
on this finding when upholding the decision to attribute radio JSAs, 
and the Commission also emphasized the fixed fee structure when it 
proposed to attribute television JSAs in 2004. The record shows, 
however, that television JSAs generally rely on percentage fee 
arrangements in which the brokered station retains a substantial 
portion of the advertising revenue, which makes it substantially less 
likely that the brokered station's programming decisions would be 
significantly influenced by the brokering station. This critical 
difference, however, was simply glossed over without an explanation as 
to how a percentage fee structure transferred market risk to the 
brokering station in the same way as a fixed fee structure. Indeed, it 
appears that the typical revenue split gives the licensee of the 
brokered station a significant interest in the operation and success of 
the station that is not present in a fixed fee arrangement. While the 
Commission declines to attribute television JSAs for the reasons set 
forth in this Order, it notes that, under Ackerley, the Commission 
could still find that the terms of an individual television JSA (either 
alone or in conjunction with other agreements) rise to the level of 
attribution.
    89. The Commission also failed to consider sufficiently other 
distinctions between the television market and the radio market that 
undermined its reliance on the radio JSA attribution precedent. For 
example, unlike radio stations, television stations typically have 
network affiliations, which limits the amount of programming that a 
brokering station could potentially influence and the amount of 
available advertising time for sale. In the Commission's experience 
reviewing

[[Page 749]]

television JSAs in transaction reviews, most of the television JSAs 
approved by the Commission involved the brokering of stations with 
network affiliations. To be sure, the Commission disagreed that this is 
a meaningful distinction, but once again, it failed to provide any 
record evidence to support its theory. The Commission claimed that, 
even with a network affiliation in place, the broker could potentially 
influence the selection of non-network programming, whether to preempt 
network programming, and/or the choice of network affiliation. This 
claim, however, was not supported with any evidence of such influence 
being exerted, neither over individual programming decisions nor the 
selection of a network affiliation.
    90. The Commission similarly brushed aside evidence that television 
stations rely less on local advertising revenue than radio stations, 
which would reduce the amount of advertising time sold by the broker. 
Accordingly, the broker would control less of the television station's 
advertising revenue, which would limit the ability and incentive of the 
broker to exert significant influence or control over the brokered 
station's core operating procedures. The Commission summarily concluded 
that because both radio JSAs and television JSAs involve the sale of 
advertising time, both must be treated the same for attribution 
purposes. But this one-size-fits-all attribution analysis is not 
supported by the record and cannot be sustained.
    91. The lack of evidence supporting the Commission's determination 
that television JSAs confer a significant degree of influence or 
control over the core operating functions of the brokered station 
provides sufficient reason for the Commission to eliminate the 
Television JSA Attribution Rule. But even if the Commission had 
appropriately determined that television JSAs meet the attribution 
criteria, it still should have evaluated whether the public interest 
would be served by making the agreements attributable. While the 
Commission did acknowledge the potential for benefits flowing from the 
use of television JSAs in the Report and Order, the Commission 
expressly refused to consider these public interest benefits in the 
context of its attribution decision, claiming that the public interest 
benefits should be considered in the context of its analysis of the 
local ownership rules. While declining to evaluate the significant 
record evidence of the public interest benefits produced by television 
JSAs, the Commission claimed that it would preserve beneficial 
television JSAs through a waiver process. That process, however, proved 
to be illusory, as the Commission did not grant a single waiver request 
while the Television JSA Attribution Rule was initially in effect, 
which ultimately led to Congressional action to protect existing 
television JSAs. As discussed in this Order, the Commission finds that 
the record does not support attribution of television JSAs in the first 
instance, so there is no need to consider whether to adopt a waiver 
process
    92. The Commission was correct that the potential public interest 
benefits of television JSAs are not relevant to whether these 
agreements satisfy the Commission's general attribution criteria (i.e., 
whether they confer the potential for significant influence), but that 
does not excuse the Commission from assessing the record to determine 
whether, if the attribution criteria are satisfied, attribution would 
serve the public interest. Notably, when the Commission attributed 
radio JSAs in the 2002 Biennial Review Order, it did undertake such an 
assessment and found that the balance of interests, in those particular 
circumstances, supported the decision to attribute radio JSAs. That 
finding was based on the record in that proceeding, which did not 
contain significant or detailed evidence of the claimed public interest 
benefits of radio JSAs, and does not control the Commission's analysis 
of the potential benefits of television JSAs.
    93. Additionally, in the Second Report and Order, which reinstated 
the Television JSA Attribution Rule, the Commission included only a 
brief, general discussion of the rationale for attributing television 
JSAs, largely ignoring the benefits of television JSAs. The Commission 
failed to discuss the voluminous record regarding the benefits produced 
by JSAs, instead citing anecdotal evidence that attribution of 
television JSAs--prior to being vacated by the Third Circuit--had 
produced opportunities for minority and female ownership. Its sole 
citation for this proposition, however, was a blog post authored by 
then-Chairman Tom Wheeler and Commissioner Mignon Clyburn. This claimed 
benefit is not supported by the record and, in fact, there is record 
evidence that refutes this assertion. This cursory treatment does not 
constitute an assessment of the record regarding the potential public 
interest benefits of television JSAs. As such, the Commission is not 
persuaded by the arguments that it properly weighed the public interest 
benefits before implementing this new rule. The American Cable 
Association (ACA) argues that eliminating the Television JSA 
Attribution Rule will allow broadcasters to covertly coordinate their 
retransmission consent negotiations in contravention of the joint 
negotiation prohibition. This argument is not persuasive. Broadcasters 
are prohibited from jointly negotiating retransmission consent for 
stations in the same local market that are not under common de jure 
control permitted by the Commission. Licensees are expected to comply 
with the Communications Act and Commission rules and policies, and the 
Commission has authority to take enforcement action where it finds a 
licensee has violated any relevant statutes, rules, or policies. The 
Commission will not assume that licensees will violate its rules, but 
entities can file a complaint if they believe that any broadcaster is 
violating the joint negotiation prohibition, and the Commission will 
take appropriate action.
    94. On reconsideration, the Commission concludes that the record 
demonstrates that television JSAs can promote the public interest, and 
that this provides an independent reason for eliminating the Television 
JSA Attribution Rule. Indeed, the record demonstrates that television 
JSAs have created efficiencies that benefit local broadcasters--
particularly in small- and medium-sized markets--and have enabled these 
stations to better serve their communities. The video marketplace is 
changing rapidly, and television JSAs can help reduce costs and attract 
vital revenue at a time of increasing competition for viewership. 
Broadcasters can turn these efficiencies into increased services for 
local communities. For example, a JSA between two stations in Kansas 
helped create cost savings that, in turn, allowed the stations to fund 
weather emergency-related crawls in Spanish, a service vital to the 
tornado-prone area. Other stations have been able to increase their 
local news programming and further invest in investigative reporting 
due to their JSAs. Additionally, certain JSAs have helped spur minority 
ownership. As noted in the record, a station owned by Tougaloo College, 
a historically African-American college, has credited its JSA for 
providing the resources necessary to upgrade to HD, to produce content 
relevant to its community, and to cover local sporting events. This is 
just a sampling of the many examples in the record in which JSAs have 
benefited local stations and communities.
    95. Furthermore, the Commission failed to cite any evidence of 
actual harm associated with television JSAs. The Commission's analysis 
here under the public interest standard does not

[[Page 750]]

supersede any antitrust analysis performed by the Department of Justice 
Antitrust Division (DOJ) on a case-by-case basis regarding JSAs or 
other agreements among broadcasters that are similar in function. 
Indeed, the Commission's public interest analysis differs from DOJ's 
antitrust review, reflecting a broader evaluation of the potential 
harms and benefits of ownership combinations in light of the 
requirements of the Communications Act and Commission rules and the 
objectives of the Act and rules. Consequently, nothing in this Order, 
or any amendment made by this Order, should be construed to modify, 
impair, or supersede the operation or applicability of any state or 
federal antitrust laws.
    96. The Commission stated that JSAs could, possibly, allow the 
stations to raise their advertising rates above what could be achieved 
if the ad time were sold independently. The Commission, however, failed 
to engage in any actual analysis of the impact of television JSAs on 
advertisers, and the record in this proceeding contained no evidence of 
stations charging higher rates for advertising sold pursuant to a JSA 
and no support from advertisers for the Television JSA Attribution 
Rule. On the contrary, there was evidence in the record that 
advertisers have benefitted from JSAs, which make their ad buys more 
efficient. Similarly, as discussed above, the Commission did not 
identify a single instance of harm to viewers or competition in local 
markets resulting from a broker's exercise of influence over the 
programming or other core operations of a brokered station--indeed, as 
discussed above, the Commission did not cite a single instance of such 
influence even being exerted.
    97. The Commission finds that, on balance, the public interest is 
best served by not attributing television JSAs, regardless of whether 
they technically satisfy the attribution criteria. As discussed above, 
the Commission's attribution analysis was not supported by the record, 
and this failure provides an independent reason for eliminating the 
Television JSA Attribution Rule. It is well within the Commission's 
authority to decline to attribute an agreement or relationship that 
might otherwise satisfy the attribution criteria in order to help 
foster public interest benefits. For example, in the EDP Attribution 
Modification Order (73 FR 28361, May 16, 2008, FCC 07-217, rel. Mar. 5, 
2008), the Commission modified the Equity/Debt Plus Attribution Rule 
(EDP Rule) by carving out an exemption in certain circumstances to 
encourage investment in eligible entities. There, the record 
demonstrated that small businesses, including those owned by minorities 
and women, were having difficulty obtaining financing. The Commission 
acknowledged the potential role that the EDP Rule had in hindering 
investment in eligible entities and found that it was justified in 
relaxing the EDP Rule to help address this issue. This decision 
demonstrates the need to balance the purpose of the attribution rules--
that is, to identify potentially influential interest holders--with the 
Commission's public interest goals.
    98. Similarly, even if some television JSAs were to provide the 
brokering station some ability to influence the operations of the 
brokered station, the Commission finds that attribution is not 
warranted here in light of the significant public interest benefits 
produced by these agreements. Television JSAs can help promote diverse 
ownership and improve program offerings, including local news and 
public interest programming, in local markets. While the Commission 
agrees that it is important that its attribution rules reflect 
accurately the competitive conditions of local markets, particularly in 
the context of the Commission's local broadcast ownership rules, the 
analysis cannot end there. The Commission must ensure that its 
attribution decisions do not harm the very markets that the attribution 
rules are designed to protect by preventing the accrual of significant 
public interest benefits. As discussed in this Order, the tangible 
benefits of television JSAs far outweigh the benefits that may accrue 
from a rote application of the attribution criteria in these 
circumstances.
    99. The Commission also finds that its decision to eliminate the 
Television JSA Attribution Rule is appropriate, even in light of its 
decision to relax the Local Television Ownership Rule. As discussed 
above, the Commission finds that it failed to establish that television 
JSAs confer significant influence warranting treating JSAs as 
attributable ownership interests, so the existence of television JSAs 
in the marketplace does not have an impact on the Commission's public 
interest analysis in the Local Television Ownership Rule context. 
Indeed, television JSAs have been utilized by many broadcasters with 
increasing prevalence for well over a decade. The record in this 
proceeding lacks any evidence of public interest harm, and there is 
evidence that these agreements have produced and can produce meaningful 
public interest benefits. As such, the Commission does not believe that 
the Local Television Ownership Rule should be made more restrictive due 
to the presence of television JSAs.
    100. And while there may be fewer television JSAs executed moving 
forward because of the Commission's relaxation of the Local Television 
Ownership Rule, that does not diminish the public interest benefits 
associated with these agreements in the television context. The 
television ownership limits are still much more restrictive than the 
radio ownership limits, so there may be a continuing need for JSAs to 
help create economies of scale and improve program offerings, 
particularly for small or independent station owners. By preserving the 
ability to enter into a JSA, some station owners may be able to 
maintain independent operations instead of exiting the marketplace, and 
these agreements will continue to be available to help new entrants and 
small businesses acquire and operate new stations. Thus, the Commission 
is not persuaded that repeal of the eight-voices requirement and the 
Television JSA Attribution Rule will deter new entry based on 
consolidation of advertising sales.

F. Shared Service Agreements

1. Introduction
    101. The Commission upholds its decision in the Second Report and 
Order to adopt a comprehensive definition of SSAs and a requirement 
that commercial television stations disclose SSAs by placing them in 
their online public inspection files.
2. Background
    102. SSAs allow stations in a local market to combine certain 
operations, personnel, and/or facilities, with one station effectively 
performing functions for multiple, independently owned stations. The 
FNPRM proposed a comprehensive definition of SSAs and sought comment on 
the scope of the definition, including any potential refinements to the 
definition to help ensure that it was not overbroad. While certain 
commenters expressed concerns with the scope of the definition, none 
provided an alternative definition or suggested any specific changes to 
the definition proposed in the FNPRM. The FNPRM also sought comment on 
potential disclosure options for these agreements. In the Second Report 
and Order, the Commission adopted a definition of SSAs substantially 
similar to the definition proposed in the FNPRM and a requirement that 
commercial television stations disclose SSAs by placing them in their 
online public inspection files. In its Petition for

[[Page 751]]

Reconsideration, NAB asks the Commission either to eliminate the SSA 
disclosure requirement or rationally define the SSAs subject to it, 
asserting that the SSA disclosure requirement is overbroad and 
unnecessary.
3. Discussion
    103. The Commission declines to reconsider the SSA definition and 
disclosure requirements adopted in the Second Report and Order. The 
Commission finds that both the definition and the disclosure 
requirement were supported by the record and that NAB has failed to 
provide sufficient reasons to reconsider the Commission's decision at 
this time; therefore, the Commission denies the NAB Petition in this 
regard.
    104. Contrary to NAB's claim, the Second Report and Order 
rationally defines SSAs. In the Second Report and Order, the Commission 
adopted a clear definition of SSAs and addressed commenters' concerns 
regarding the types of agreements covered by the definition. As the 
Commission discussed, the definition of SSAs is appropriately limited 
in scope, applying only to those agreements that involve station-
related services. Moreover, the Commission sufficiently illustrated 
this scope by providing guidance in the definition of SSAs with non-
exhaustive examples. The Second Report and Order also addressed 
specific concerns in the record, clarifying that certain agreements, 
such as ad hoc or on-the-fly arrangements during breaking news 
coverage, fall outside the SSA definition. Ultimately, the definition 
is appropriately tailored to include only those agreements that involve 
station operations relevant to the public. NAB expresses concern that 
the SSA definition would apply to agreements encompassing everything 
from janitorial to catering to maintenance to security services. An 
agreement to share facilities and station personnel meeting the 
definition of an SSA may include provisions allocating costs or 
responsibilities related to the operation and upkeep of the shared 
facilities. Consistent with the Second Report and Order, however, 
agreements that relate only to such incidental services, even those 
involving shared facilities, are not encompassed by the SSA definition 
and are not, therefore, subject to disclosure. Accordingly, the 
Commission finds NAB's concerns to be misplaced and sufficiently 
addressed in the Second Report and Order. In light of the Commission's 
analysis and the lack of any alternative definitions or specific 
refinements proposed in the record, including on reconsideration, the 
Commission finds no reason to reconsider the definition of SSAs adopted 
in the Second Report and Order.
    105. The Commission also finds that the Second Report and Order 
provided a sufficient justification for requiring the disclosure of 
SSAs. The Commission is not required to first determine the regulatory 
status of SSAs before requiring disclosure. The Second Report and Order 
addressed the various objections in the record and effectively 
demonstrated that the Commission has the authority to require 
disclosure of SSAs in order help the Commission obtain information 
relevant to its statutory responsibilities. Any efforts to ascertain 
the potential impact of these agreements on the Commission's policy 
goals should not be read to imply only a negative impact. SSAs may help 
facilitate improved service in local communities, and disclosure of 
these agreements may provide greater insight into such potential 
benefits. The Second Report and Order set forth a sufficient 
justification for requiring disclosure in these circumstances, and 
NAB's brief argument to the contrary in its request for reconsideration 
gives the Commission no cause to disturb the underlying decision at 
this time.
    106. While the Commission is upholding the decision in the Second 
Report and Order to require disclosure, the Commission emphasizes that 
its action is not a pretext for future regulation of SSAs. As the Third 
Circuit recognized, the Commission acted appropriately in declining to 
attribute these agreements in this proceeding, as some commenters had 
requested. Among other things, the Commission has admitted that it 
lacks an understanding of the potential impact of SSAs on a station's 
core operating functions, and evidence in the record suggests that 
these agreements help produce significant public interest benefits. 
Accordingly, any consideration of the regulatory status of these 
agreements by a future Commission must reflect significant study and 
understanding of the impact of these agreements on station operations 
and a complete account of the public interest benefits these agreements 
help facilitate. Furthermore, while the record compiled in this 
proceeding does not demonstrate that the disclosure requirement will 
unduly burden commercial television broadcasters, the Commission 
retains the authority to revisit this disclosure requirement should 
evidence of such burdens arise after the disclosure requirement is 
implemented or experience demonstrate that the benefits of this 
requirement are outweighed by its costs.

G. Diversity/Incubator Program

1. Introduction
    107. The Commission grants in part and denies in part NAB's request 
for reconsideration regarding the Commission's decision in the Second 
Report and Order not to adopt an incubator program on the current 
record. The Commission agrees that it should adopt such a program and 
decides in this Order that it will do so. However, the Commission also 
finds that the underlying record fails to provide sufficient guidance 
on how best to structure such a program. Accordingly, the Commission 
adopts in this Order a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking seeking comment on 
how the Commission should structure the incubator program.
2. Background
    108. As explained in greater detail in the accompanying Notice of 
Proposed Rulemaking, an incubator program would provide an ownership 
rule waiver or similar benefits to a company that establishes a program 
to help facilitate station ownership for a certain class of new owners. 
The concept of an incubator program has been discussed since at least 
the early 1990s. Yet, despite general support for the concept, the 
Commission has never undertaken the creation of a comprehensive 
incubator program. The Commission has adopted a limited program that 
provides a duopoly preference to parties that agree to incubate or 
finance an eligible entity. In adopting this general policy preference, 
however, the Commission did not provide details regarding the structure 
and operation of the incubation activities. As such, the Commission 
does not believe that this limited policy preference serves as an 
effective basis upon which to design a comprehensive incubator program.
    109. Most recently, the Commission sought comment in the NPRM and 
FNPRM on whether to adopt an incubator program and, if so, how to 
structure such a program. In the FNPRM, in particular, the Commission 
highlighted administrative concerns and structural issues that needed 
to be addressed before such a program could be adopted. While there was 
general support for an incubator program, and some suggestions on how 
to structure certain aspects of such a program, the Commission found in 
the Second Report and Order that the record failed to address the 
specific concerns detailed in the FNPRM; accordingly, the

[[Page 752]]

Commission declined to adopt an incubator program. NAB sought 
reconsideration of the Commission's rejection of NAB's recommendation 
for an incubator program. According to NAB, the Commission could create 
an incubator program based on the overcoming disadvantages preference 
(ODP) standard, which the Commission rejected in the Second Report and 
Order, or the new entrant criteria in the broadcast services' auction 
rules. The petition otherwise fails to address the many other issues of 
concern highlighted by the Commission in this proceeding.
3. Discussion
    110. On reconsideration, the Commission agrees with NAB that it 
should adopt an incubator program and decides here that it will do so. 
There is support for an incubator program from many industry 
participants and advocacy groups. And the Commission agrees with 
supporters that adopting an incubator program would promote new entry 
and ownership diversity in the broadcast industry by helping address 
barriers to station ownership, such as lack of access to capital and 
the need for technical/operational experience. In this proceeding, 
however, the Commission has identified various, specific concerns 
regarding how to structure and monitor such a program. The Commission 
finds that the comments and recommendations in the record fail to 
adequately address all of these issues. While certain suggestions may 
have merit in regards to specific aspects of the program, the 
Commission is not yet at the point where it can finalize the overall 
structure and method for implementation of the program. Therefore, the 
Commission requires additional comment on how to structure the 
incubator program.
    111. The Commission is initiating a new proceeding in the 
accompanying Notice of Proposed Rulemaking that will seek additional 
comment on how best to implement the Commission's incubator program. 
Initiating a dedicated proceeding will allow the Commission to focus 
its efforts on getting this program up and running, and the Commission 
anticipates that its consideration of this issue will be assisted by 
the newly established Advisory Committee on Diversity and Digital 
Empowerment.

IV. Procedural Matters

A. Supplemental Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis

    112. In compliance with the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), this 
Supplemental Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (Supplemental FRFA) 
supplements the Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) included 
in the Second Report and Order, to the extent that changes adopted on 
reconsideration require changes to the information included and 
conclusions reached in the FRFA. As required by the Regulatory 
Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended (RFA), an Initial Regulatory 
Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) was incorporated in the NPRM that initiated 
this proceeding. The Commission sought written public comment on the 
proposals in the NPRM, including comment on the IRFA. The Commission 
also incorporated a Supplemental Initial Regulatory Flexibility 
Analysis (Supplemental IRFA) in the FNPRM in this proceeding. The 
Commission sought written public comment on the proposals in the FNPRM, 
including comment on the Supplemental IRFA. The Commission received no 
comments in response to the IRFA or the Supplemental IRFA. This present 
Supplemental FRFA conforms to the RFA.
    113. Response to Public Comments and Comments by the Chief Counsel 
for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration. Pursuant to the 
Small Business Jobs Act of 2010, which amended the RFA, the Commission 
is required to respond to any comments filed by the Chief Counsel for 
Advocacy of the Small Business Administration (SBA) and to provide a 
detailed statement of any change made to the proposed rules as a result 
of those comments. The Chief Counsel did not file any comments in 
response to the proposed rules in this proceeding.
    114. Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities to 
Which Rules Will Apply. The RFA directs the Commission to provide a 
description of and, where feasible, an estimate of the number of small 
entities that will be affected by the rules adopted. The RFA generally 
defines the term small entity as having the same meaning as the terms 
small business, small organization, and small governmental 
jurisdiction. In addition, the term small business has the same meaning 
as the term small business concern under the Small Business Act. 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. The final 
rules adopted in this Order affect small television and radio broadcast 
stations and small entities that operate daily newspapers. A 
description of these small entities, as well as an estimate of the 
number of such small entities, is provided below.
    115. 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. These establishments also 
produce or transmit visual programming to affiliated broadcast 
television stations, which in turn broadcast the programs to the public 
on a predetermined schedule. Programming may originate in their own 
studio, from an affiliated network, or from external sources. The SBA 
has created the following small business size standard for such 
businesses: Those having $38.5 million or less in annual receipts. The 
2012 Economic Census data reports that 751 such firms in this category 
operated in that year. Of that number, 656 had annual receipts of 
$25,000,000 or less, 25 had annual receipts between $25,000,000 and 
$49,999,999 and 70 had annual receipts of $50,000,000 or more. Based on 
this data, the Commission therefore estimates that the majority of 
commercial television broadcasters are small entities under the 
applicable SBA size standard.
    116. The Commission has estimated the number of licensed commercial 
television stations to be 1,382. Of this total, 1,262 stations (or 
about 91 percent) had revenues of $38.5 million or less, according to 
Commission staff review of the BIA Kelsey Inc. Media Access Pro 
Television Database (BIA) on May 9, 2017, and therefore these licensees 
qualify as small entities under the SBA definition. In addition, the 
Commission has estimated the number of licensed noncommercial 
educational television stations to be 393. Notwithstanding, the 
Commission does not compile and otherwise does not have access to 
information on the revenue of NCE stations that would permit it to 
determine how many such stations would qualify as small entities.
    117. The Commission notes, however, that, in assessing whether a 
business concern qualifies as small under the above definition, 
business (control) affiliations must be included. The Commission's 
estimate, therefore, likely overstates the number of small entities 
that might be affected by its action, because the revenue figure on 
which it is based does not include or aggregate revenues from 
affiliated companies. In addition, another element of the definition of 
small business is that the entity not be dominant in its field of 
operation. The Commission is unable at

[[Page 753]]

this time to define or quantify the criteria that would establish 
whether a specific television broadcast station is dominant in its 
field of operation. Accordingly, the estimate of small businesses to 
which rules may apply do not exclude any television broadcast station 
from the definition of a small business on this basis and are therefore 
possibly over-inclusive. There are also 2,385 LPTV stations, including 
Class A stations, and 3,776 TV translator stations. Given the nature of 
these services, the Commission will presume that all of these entities 
qualify as small entities under the above SBA small business size 
standard. Also, as noted above, an additional element of the definition 
of small business is that the entity must be independently owned and 
operated. The Commission notes that it is difficult at times to assess 
these criteria in the context of media entities and its estimates of 
small businesses to which they apply may be over-inclusive to this 
extent.
    118. 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. The SBA has 
established a small business size standard for this category as firms 
having $38.5 million or less in annual receipts. Economic Census data 
for 2012 shows 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, 17 with annual receipts between $25 million and 
$49,999,999 million and 26 with annual receipts of $50 million or more. 
Therefore, based on the SBA's size standard the majority of such 
entities are small entities.
    119. According to Commission staff review of the BIA/Kelsey, LLC's 
Media Access Pro Radio Database on May 9, 2017, about 11,392 (or about 
99.9 percent) of 11,401 of commercial radio stations had revenues of 
$38.5 million or less and thus qualify as small entities under the SBA 
definition. The Commission has estimated the number of licensed 
commercial radio stations to be 11,401. The Commission notes it has 
also estimated the number of licensed noncommercial radio stations to 
be 4,111. Nevertheless, the Commission does not compile and otherwise 
does not have access to information on the revenue of NCE stations that 
would permit it to determine how many such stations would qualify as 
small entities.
    120. The Commission also notes, that in assessing whether a 
business concern qualifies as small under the above definition, 
business (control) affiliations must be included. The Commission's 
estimate, therefore, likely overstates the number of small entities 
that might be affected by its 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. The Commission further notes, that it is difficult at times 
to assess these criteria in the context of media entities, and the 
estimate of small businesses to which these rules may apply does not 
exclude any radio station from the definition of a small business on 
these basis, thus the Commission's estimate of small businesses may 
therefore be over-inclusive. Also, as noted above, an additional 
element of the definition of small business is that the entity must be 
independently owned and operated. The Commission notes that it is 
difficult at times to assess these criteria in the context of media 
entities and the estimates of small businesses to which they apply may 
be over-inclusive to this extent.
    121. Daily Newspapers. The SBA has developed a small business size 
standard for the census category of Newspaper Publishers; that size 
standard is 1,000 or fewer employees. Business concerns included in 
this category are those that carry out operations necessary for 
producing and distributing newspapers, including gathering news; 
writing news columns, feature stories, and editorials; and selling and 
preparing advertisements. Census Bureau data for 2012 show that there 
were 4,168 firms in this category that operated for the entire year. Of 
this total, 4,107 firms had employment of 499 or fewer employees, and 
an additional 22 firms had employment of 500 to 999 employees. 
Therefore, the Commission estimates that the majority of Newspaper 
Publishers are small entities that might be affected by its action.
    122. Description of Reporting, Record Keeping, and other Compliance 
Requirements for Small Entities. The Order on Reconsideration 
eliminates the Newspaper/Broadcast Cross-Ownership Rule and the Radio/
Television Cross-Ownership Rule, modifies the Local Television 
Ownership Rule and, and eliminates the Television JSA Attribution Rule. 
The Order on Reconsideration does not adopt any new reporting, 
recordkeeping, or compliance requirements for small entities. The Order 
on Reconsideration thus will not impose additional obligations or 
expenditure of resources on small businesses. In addition, to conform 
to the elimination of the Television JSA Attribution Rule, parties to 
JSAs that were attributable under the previous rule will no longer be 
required to file the agreements with the Commission pursuant to section 
73.3613 of the Commission's rules.
    123. Steps Taken to Minimize Significant Economic Impact on Small 
Entities, and Significant Alternatives Considered. 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 such 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 such small 
entities.
    124. In conducting the quadrennial review, the Commission has three 
chief alternatives available for each of the Commission's media 
ownership rules--eliminate the rule, modify it, or, if the Commission 
determines that the rule is necessary in the public interest, retain 
it. The Commission finds that the modification and elimination of the 
rules in the Order on Reconsideration, which are intended to achieve 
the policy goals of competition, localism, and viewpoint diversity, 
will continue to benefit small entities by fostering a media 
marketplace in which they are better able to compete and by promoting 
additional broadcast ownership opportunities, as described below, among 
a diverse group of owners, including small entities. The Commission 
discusses below several ways in which the rules may benefit small 
entities as well as steps taken, and significant alternatives 
considered, to minimize any potential burdens on small entities.
    125. Newspaper/Broadcast Cross-Ownership (NBCO) Rule. In the Order 
on Reconsideration, the Commission considered whether to retain, 
modify, or eliminate the NBCO Rule. The Commission determined that the 
NBCO Rule is no longer in the public interest and should be repealed. 
As an alternative to the action taken, the Commission considered 
whether to adopt a modified NBCO Rule, but rejected that approach as 
unsupported by the record. As a result, newspapers will be able to 
combine with television and radio stations within the same local

[[Page 754]]

market, subject only to the Local Television and Local Radio Ownership 
Rules. Repeal of the NBCO Rule in its entirety eliminates the economic 
burden of compliance with the rule on small entities. Furthermore, 
repeal of the rule will allow broadcasters and local newspapers to seek 
out new sources of investment and operational expertise, potentially 
increasing the quantity and quality of local news and information they 
provide to consumers. Small broadcasters may find that merging with a 
newspaper could boost their ability to serve their local markets. The 
Order on Reconsideration finds that the NBCO Rule created considerable 
harm in small markets where the benefits of cross-ownership could have 
helped to sustain the local news outlets, many of which are likely to 
be small entities. Elimination of the rule will help promote additional 
investment opportunities for small entities in many local markets. The 
Order on Reconsideration also concludes that repeal of the NBCO Rule is 
unlikely to have a material effect on minority and female ownership of 
newspapers and broadcast stations.
    126. Radio/Television Cross-Ownership Rule. In the Order on 
Reconsideration, the Commission considers whether to retain, modify, or 
eliminate the Radio/Television Cross-Ownership Rule. The Commission 
finds that the Radio/Television Cross-Ownership Rule no longer serves 
the public interest and should be repealed. The Commission considers 
whether to adopt a modified rule, but rejects that approach as 
unsupported by the record. Eliminating the rule allows television 
stations and radio stations in the same market to be commonly owned 
provided that such ownership arrangements otherwise comply with the 
Local Television and Local Radio Ownership Rules. As with the NBCO 
Rule, repeal of the Radio/Television Cross-Ownership Rule in its 
entirety eliminates the economic impact of the rule on small entities. 
Small entities in particular may benefit from the aforementioned 
efficiencies and benefits of common ownership enabled by the rule's 
repeal. The Commission also finds that repeal of the Radio/Television 
Cross-Ownership rule is unlikely to have an effect on minority and 
female ownership of broadcast television and radio stations.
    127. Local Television Ownership Rule. In the Order on 
Reconsideration, the Commission finds that the existing Local 
Television Ownership Rule is no longer necessary in the public interest 
but should be modified further to enable television stations to compete 
more effectively. Accordingly, the Commission repeals the Eight-Voices 
Test that had required at least eight independently owned television 
stations to remain in a market after combining ownership of two 
stations in the market. The Commission considers whether to adopt a 
different voice test, but rejects that approach as unsupported by the 
record. In addition, the Commission considers whether to retain, 
modify, or eliminate the Top-Four Prohibition, a prohibition against 
common ownership of two top-four ranked stations in all markets. The 
Commission finds that the record generally supported the Commission's 
decision in the Second Report and Order to treat combinations involving 
two top-four rated stations differently than other combinations, but on 
reconsideration the Commission modifies the rule to include a case-by-
case approach to account for circumstances in which strict application 
of the prohibition is not in the public interest. Under the new 
modified television ownership rule an entity may own two television 
stations in the same DMA if (1) the digital noise limited service 
contours (NLSCs) of the stations (as determined by section 73.622(e)) 
do not overlap; or (2) at least one of the stations is not ranked among 
the top four stations in the market. The Commission will consider 
combinations otherwise barred by the Top-Four Prohibition on a case-by-
case basis.
    128. The modifications to the Local Television Ownership Rule are 
not expected to create additional burdens for small entities. 
Conversely, the economic impact of the rule modification may benefit 
small entities by enabling them to achieve operational efficiencies 
through common ownership. The Order on Reconsideration also concludes 
that the modifications to the Local Television Ownership Rule are 
unlikely to have an effect on minority and female ownership of 
broadcast television stations.
    129. Television JSA Attribution Rule. On reconsideration, the 
Commission considers whether to retain or eliminate the Television JSA 
Attribution Rule. The Commission finds that the rule was unsupported by 
the record and does not serve the public interest and therefore should 
be repealed. The repeal of the Television JSA Attribution Rule 
eliminates the economic burden of the rule on small entities. In the 
rapidly changing video marketplace, television JSAs help reduce costs 
and attract vital revenue at a time of increasing competition for 
advertising and viewership. Efficiencies provided by JSAs also enable 
broadcasters to improve or increase services for local communities, 
thus fostering significant public interest benefits. Local television 
broadcasters--particularly in small- and medium-sized markets--stand to 
benefit from these efficiencies that television JSAs create. The repeal 
of the attribution rule will remove a regulatory disincentive for 
stations to enter into JSAs and enable these stations to better serve 
their communities. In addition, because of the elimination of the 
Television JSA Attribution Rule, parties to JSAs that were attributable 
under the previous rule will no longer be required to file the 
agreements with the Commission, thus eliminating that economic burden.

B. Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis

    130. This Order on Reconsideration contains information collection 
requirements subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA), 
Public Law 104-13. The requirements will be submitted to the Office of 
Management and Budget (OMB) for review under section 3507(d) of the 
PRA. OMB, the general public, and other Federal agencies will be 
invited to comment on the information collection requirements contained 
in this proceeding. The Commission will publish a separate document in 
the Federal Register at a later date seeking these comments. In 
addition, the Commission notes that, pursuant to the Small Business 
Paperwork Relief Act of 2002, Public Law 107-198, see 44 U.S.C. 
3506(c)(4), the Commission previously sought specific comment on how it 
might further reduce the information collection burden for small 
business concerns with fewer than 25 employees.

C. Congressional Review Act

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

V. Ordering Clauses

    132. Accordingly, it is ordered that, pursuant to the authority 
contained in sections 1, 2(a), 4(i), 257, 303, 307, 309, 310, and 403 
of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 152(a), 
154(i), 257, 303, 307, 309, 310, and 403, and Section 202(h) of the 
Telecommunications Act of 1996, this Order on Reconsideration is 
adopted.
    133. It is further ordered that, pursuant to section 405 of the 
Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 405, and section 
1.429 of the Commission's rules, 47 CFR

[[Page 755]]

1.429, that the petitions for reconsideration filed by (1) Connoisseur 
Media, LLC is granted, in part, and otherwise denied as set forth 
herein; (2) the National Association of Broadcasters is granted, in 
part, and otherwise denied as set forth herein; and (3) Nexstar 
Broadcasting, Inc. is granted, in part, and otherwise denied as set 
forth herein.
    134. It is further ordered that UCC et al.'s Motion to Strike and 
Dismiss is denied as set forth herein.
    135. It is further ordered that the Order on Reconsideration and 
the rule modifications attached hereto shall be effective February 7, 
2018, except for those rules and requirements involving Paperwork 
Reduction Act burdens, which shall become effective on the effective 
date announced in the Federal Register notice announcing OMB approval.
    136. It is further ordered, that the proceedings MB Docket No. 04-
256, MB Docket No. 09-182, and MB Docket No. 14-50 are terminated.

List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 73

    Radio, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Television.

Federal Communications Commission.
Katura Jackson,
Federal Register Liaison Officer, Office of the Secretary.

Final Rules

    For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Federal 
Communications Commission amends 47 CFR part 73 as follows:

PART 73--RADIO BROADCAST SERVICES

0
1. The authority citation for part 73 continues to read as follows:

    Authority:  47 U.S.C. 154, 303, 309, 310, 334, 336 and 339.


0
2. Amend Sec.  73.3555 as follows:
0
a. Revise paragraph (b);
0
b. Remove and reserve paragraphs (c) and (d);
0
c. Revise the introductory text, paragraphs a. through d., and 
paragraphs g. through k. of Note 2 to Sec.  73.3555;
0
d. Revise Notes 4 through 7 to Sec.  73.3555;
0
e. Revise Note 9 to Sec.  73.3555; and
0
f. Remove Note 12 to Sec.  73.3555.
    The revisions read as follows:


Sec.  73.3555   Multiple ownership.

* * * * *
    (b) Local television multiple ownership rule. (1) An entity may 
directly or indirectly own, operate, or control two television stations 
licensed in the same Designated Market Area (DMA) (as determined by 
Nielsen Media Research or any successor entity) if:
    (i) The digital noise limited service contours of the stations 
(computed in accordance with Sec.  73.622(e)) do not overlap; or
    (ii) At the time the application to acquire or construct the 
station(s) is filed, at least one of the stations is not ranked among 
the top four stations in the DMA, based on the most recent all-day (9 
a.m.-midnight) audience share, as measured by Nielsen Media Research or 
by any comparable professional, accepted audience ratings service.
    (2) Paragraph (b)(1)(ii) (Top-Four Prohibition) of this section 
shall not apply in cases where, at the request of the applicant, the 
Commission makes a finding that permitting an entity to directly or 
indirectly own, operate, or control two television stations licensed in 
the same DMA would serve the public interest, convenience, and 
necessity. The Commission will consider showings that the Top-Four 
Prohibition should not apply due to specific circumstances in a local 
market or with respect to a specific transaction on a case-by-case 
basis.
(c)-(d) [Reserved]
* * * * *
    Note 2 to Sec.  73.3555:
    In applying the provisions of this section, ownership and other 
interests in broadcast licensees will be attributed to their holders 
and deemed cognizable pursuant to the following criteria:
    a. Except as otherwise provided herein, partnership and direct 
ownership interests and any voting stock interest amounting to 5% or 
more of the outstanding voting stock of a corporate broadcast licensee 
will be cognizable;
    b. Investment companies, as defined in 15 U.S.C. 80a-3, insurance 
companies and banks holding stock through their trust departments in 
trust accounts will be considered to have a cognizable interest only if 
they hold 20% or more of the outstanding voting stock of a corporate 
broadcast licensee, or if any of the officers or directors of the 
broadcast licensee are representatives of the investment company, 
insurance company or bank concerned. Holdings by a bank or insurance 
company will be aggregated if the bank or insurance company has any 
right to determine how the stock will be voted. Holdings by investment 
companies will be aggregated if under common management.
    c. Attribution of ownership interests in a broadcast licensee that 
are held indirectly by any party through one or more intervening 
corporations will be determined by successive multiplication of the 
ownership percentages for each link in the vertical ownership chain and 
application of the relevant attribution benchmark to the resulting 
product, except that wherever the ownership percentage for any link in 
the chain exceeds 50%, it shall not be included for purposes of this 
multiplication. For purposes of paragraph i. of this note, attribution 
of ownership interests in a broadcast licensee that are held indirectly 
by any party through one or more intervening organizations will be 
determined by successive multiplication of the ownership percentages 
for each link in the vertical ownership chain and application of the 
relevant attribution benchmark to the resulting product, and the 
ownership percentage for any link in the chain that exceeds 50% shall 
be included for purposes of this multiplication. [For example, except 
for purposes of paragraph i. of this note, if A owns 10% of company X, 
which owns 60% of company Y, which owns 25% of ``Licensee,'' then X's 
interest in ``Licensee'' would be 25% (the same as Y's interest because 
X's interest in Y exceeds 50%), and A's interest in ``Licensee'' would 
be 2.5% (0.1 x 0.25). Under the 5% attribution benchmark, X's interest 
in ``Licensee'' would be cognizable, while A's interest would not be 
cognizable. For purposes of paragraph i. of this note, X's interest in 
``Licensee'' would be 15% (0.6 x 0.25) and A's interest in ``Licensee'' 
would be 1.5% (0.1 x 0.6 x 0.25). Neither interest would be attributed 
under paragraph i. of this note.]
    d. Voting stock interests held in trust shall be attributed to any 
person who holds or shares the power to vote such stock, to any person 
who has the sole power to sell such stock, and to any person who has 
the right to revoke the trust at will or to replace the trustee at 
will. If the trustee has a familial, personal or extra-trust business 
relationship to the grantor or the beneficiary, the grantor or 
beneficiary, as appropriate, will be attributed with the stock 
interests held in trust. An otherwise qualified trust will be 
ineffective to insulate the grantor or beneficiary from attribution 
with the trust's assets unless all voting stock interests held by the 
grantor or beneficiary in the relevant broadcast licensee are subject 
to said trust.
* * * * *
    g. Officers and directors of a broadcast licensee are considered to 
have a cognizable interest in the entity with which they are so 
associated. If any such entity engages in businesses in

[[Page 756]]

addition to its primary business of broadcasting, it may request the 
Commission to waive attribution for any officer or director whose 
duties and responsibilities are wholly unrelated to its primary 
business. The officers and directors of a parent company of a broadcast 
licensee, with an attributable interest in any such subsidiary entity, 
shall be deemed to have a cognizable interest in the subsidiary unless 
the duties and responsibilities of the officer or director involved are 
wholly unrelated to the broadcast licensee, and a statement properly 
documenting this fact is submitted to the Commission. [This statement 
may be included on the appropriate Ownership Report.] The officers and 
directors of a sister corporation of a broadcast licensee shall not be 
attributed with ownership of that licensee by virtue of such status.
    h. Discrete ownership interests will be aggregated in determining 
whether or not an interest is cognizable under this section. An 
individual or entity will be deemed to have a cognizable investment if:
    1. The sum of the interests held by or through ``passive 
investors'' is equal to or exceeds 20 percent; or
    2. The sum of the interests other than those held by or through 
``passive investors'' is equal to or exceeds 5 percent; or
    3. The sum of the interests computed under paragraph h. 1. of this 
note plus the sum of the interests computed under paragraph h. 2. of 
this note is equal to or exceeds 20 percent.
    i.1. Notwithstanding paragraphs e. and f. of this Note, the holder 
of an equity or debt interest or interests in a broadcast licensee 
subject to the broadcast multiple ownership rules (``interest holder'') 
shall have that interest attributed if:
    A. The equity (including all stockholdings, whether voting or 
nonvoting, common or preferred) and debt interest or interests, in the 
aggregate, exceed 33 percent of the total asset value, defined as the 
aggregate of all equity plus all debt, of that broadcast licensee; and
    B.(i) The interest holder also holds an interest in a broadcast 
licensee in the same market that is subject to the broadcast multiple 
ownership rules and is attributable under paragraphs of this note other 
than this paragraph i.; or
    (ii) The interest holder supplies over fifteen percent of the total 
weekly broadcast programming hours of the station in which the interest 
is held. For purposes of applying this paragraph, the term, ``market,'' 
will be defined as it is defined under the specific multiple ownership 
rule that is being applied, except that for television stations, the 
term ``market'' will be defined by reference to the definition 
contained in the local television multiple ownership rule contained in 
paragraph (b) of this section.
    2. Notwithstanding paragraph i.1. of this Note, the interest holder 
may exceed the 33 percent threshold therein without triggering 
attribution where holding such interest would enable an eligible entity 
to acquire a broadcast station, provided that:
    i. The combined equity and debt of the interest holder in the 
eligible entity is less than 50 percent, or
    ii. The total debt of the interest holder in the eligible entity 
does not exceed 80 percent of the asset value of the station being 
acquired by the eligible entity and the interest holder does not hold 
any equity interest, option, or promise to acquire an equity interest 
in the eligible entity or any related entity. For purposes of this 
paragraph i.2, an ``eligible entity'' shall include any entity that 
qualifies as a small business under the Small Business Administration's 
size standards for its industry grouping, as set forth in 13 CFR 
121.201, at the time the transaction is approved by the FCC, and holds:
    A. 30 percent or more of the stock or partnership interests and 
more than 50 percent of the voting power of the corporation or 
partnership that will own the media outlet; or
    B. 15 percent or more of the stock or partnership interests and 
more than 50 percent of the voting power of the corporation or 
partnership that will own the media outlet, provided that no other 
person or entity owns or controls more than 25 percent of the 
outstanding stock or partnership interests; or
    C. More than 50 percent of the voting power of the corporation that 
will own the media outlet if such corporation is a publicly traded 
company.
    j. ``Time brokerage'' (also known as ``local marketing'') is the 
sale by a licensee of discrete blocks of time to a ``broker'' that 
supplies the programming to fill that time and sells the commercial 
spot announcements in it.
    1. Where two radio stations are both located in the same market, as 
defined for purposes of the local radio ownership rule contained in 
paragraph (a) of this section, and a party (including all parties under 
common control) with a cognizable interest in one such station brokers 
more than 15 percent of the broadcast time per week of the other such 
station, that party shall be treated as if it has an interest in the 
brokered station subject to the limitations set forth in paragraph (a) 
of this section. This limitation shall apply regardless of the source 
of the brokered programming supplied by the party to the brokered 
station.
    2. Where two television stations are both located in the same 
market, as defined in the local television ownership rule contained in 
paragraph (b) of this section, and a party (including all parties under 
common control) with a cognizable interest in one such station brokers 
more than 15 percent of the broadcast time per week of the other such 
station, that party shall be treated as if it has an interest in the 
brokered station subject to the limitations set forth in paragraphs (b) 
and (e) of this section. This limitation shall apply regardless of the 
source of the brokered programming supplied by the party to the 
brokered station.
    3. Every time brokerage agreement of the type described in this 
Note shall be undertaken only pursuant to a signed written agreement 
that shall contain a certification by the licensee or permittee of the 
brokered station verifying that it maintains ultimate control over the 
station's facilities including, specifically, control over station 
finances, personnel and programming, and by the brokering station that 
the agreement complies with the provisions of paragraph (b) of this 
section if the brokering station is a television station or with 
paragraph (a) of this section if the brokering station is a radio 
station.
    k. ``Joint Sales Agreement'' is an agreement with a licensee of a 
``brokered station'' that authorizes a ``broker'' to sell advertising 
time for the ``brokered station.''
    1. Where two radio stations are both located in the same market, as 
defined for purposes of the local radio ownership rule contained in 
paragraph (a) of this section, and a party (including all parties under 
common control) with a cognizable interest in one such station sells 
more than 15 percent of the advertising time per week of the other such 
station, that party shall be treated as if it has an interest in the 
brokered station subject to the limitations set forth in paragraph (a) 
of this section.
    2. Every joint sales agreement of the type described in this Note 
shall be undertaken only pursuant to a signed written agreement that 
shall contain a certification by the licensee or permittee of the 
brokered station verifying that it maintains ultimate control over the 
station's facilities, including, specifically, control over station 
finances, personnel and programming, and by the brokering station that 
the agreement complies with the limitations set forth in paragraph (a) 
of this section if the brokering station is a radio station.
* * * * *

[[Page 757]]

    Note 4 to Sec.  73.3555:
    Paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section will not be applied so as to 
require divestiture, by any licensee, of existing facilities, and will 
not apply to applications for assignment of license or transfer of 
control filed in accordance with Sec.  73.3540(f) or Sec.  73.3541(b), 
or to applications for assignment of license or transfer of control to 
heirs or legatees by will or intestacy, or to FM or AM broadcast minor 
modification applications for intra-market community of license 
changes, if no new or increased concentration of ownership would be 
created among commonly owned, operated or controlled broadcast 
stations. Paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section will apply to all 
applications for new stations, to all other applications for assignment 
or transfer, to all applications for major changes to existing 
stations, and to all other applications for minor changes to existing 
stations that seek a change in an FM or AM radio station's community of 
license or create new or increased concentration of ownership among 
commonly owned, operated or controlled broadcast stations. Commonly 
owned, operated or controlled broadcast stations that do not comply 
with paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section may not be assigned or 
transferred to a single person, group or entity, except as provided in 
this Note, the Report and Order in Docket No. 02-277, released July 2, 
2003 (FCC 02-127), or the Second Report and Order in MB Docket No. 14-
50, FCC 16-107 (released August 25, 2016).
    Note 5 to Sec.  73.3555:
    Paragraphs (b) and (e) of this section will not be applied to cases 
involving television stations that are ``satellite'' operations. Such 
cases will be considered in accordance with the analysis set forth in 
the Report and Order in MM Docket No. 87-8, FCC 91-182 (released July 
8, 1991), in order to determine whether common ownership, operation, or 
control of the stations in question would be in the public interest. An 
authorized and operating ``satellite'' television station, the digital 
noise limited service contour of which overlaps that of a commonly 
owned, operated, or controlled ``non-satellite'' parent television 
broadcast station may subsequently become a ``non-satellite'' station 
under the circumstances described in the aforementioned Report and 
Order in MM Docket No. 87-8. However, such commonly owned, operated, or 
controlled ``non-satellite'' television stations may not be transferred 
or assigned to a single person, group, or entity except as provided in 
Note 4 of this section.
    Note 6 to Sec.  73.3555:
    Requests submitted pursuant to paragraph (b)(2) of this section 
will be considered in accordance with the analysis set forth in the 
Order on Reconsideration in MB Docket Nos. 14-50, et al. (FCC 17-156).
    Note 7 to Sec.  73.3555:
    The Commission will entertain applications to waive the 
restrictions in paragraph (b) of this section (the local television 
ownership rule) on a case-by-case basis. In each case, we will require 
a showing that the in-market buyer is the only entity ready, willing, 
and able to operate the station, that sale to an out-of-market 
applicant would result in an artificially depressed price, and that the 
waiver applicant does not already directly or indirectly own, operate, 
or control interest in two television stations within the relevant DMA. 
One way to satisfy these criteria would be to provide an affidavit from 
an independent broker affirming that active and serious efforts have 
been made to sell the permit, and that no reasonable offer from an 
entity outside the market has been received.
    We will entertain waiver requests as follows:
    1. If one of the broadcast stations involved is a ``failed'' 
station that has not been in operation due to financial distress for at 
least four consecutive months immediately prior to the application, or 
is a debtor in an involuntary bankruptcy or insolvency proceeding at 
the time of the application.
    2. If one of the television stations involved is a ``failing'' 
station that has an all-day audience share of no more than four per 
cent; the station has had negative cash flow for three consecutive 
years immediately prior to the application; and consolidation of the 
two stations would result in tangible and verifiable public interest 
benefits that outweigh any harm to competition and diversity.
    3. If the combination will result in the construction of an unbuilt 
station. The permittee of the unbuilt station must demonstrate that it 
has made reasonable efforts to construct but has been unable to do so.
* * * * *
    Note 9 to Sec.  73.3555
    Paragraph (a)(1) of this section will not apply to an application 
for an AM station license in the 1605-1705 kHz band where grant of such 
application will result in the overlap of the 5 mV/m groundwave 
contours of the proposed station and that of another AM station in the 
535-1605 kHz band that is commonly owned, operated or controlled.
* * * * *

0
3. Amend Sec.  73.3613 by revising paragraph (d)(2) to read as follows:


Sec.  73.3613   Filing of contracts.

* * * * *
    (d) * * *
    (2) Joint sales agreements: Joint sales agreements involving radio 
stations where the licensee (including all parties under common 
control) is the brokering entity, the brokering and brokered stations 
are both in the same market as defined in the local radio multiple 
ownership rule contained in Sec.  73.3555(a), and more than 15 percent 
of the advertising time of the brokered station on a weekly basis is 
brokered by that licensee. Confidential or proprietary information may 
be redacted where appropriate but such information shall be made 
available for inspection upon request by the FCC.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2017-28329 Filed 1-5-18; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 6712-01-P



                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 5 / Monday, January 8, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                                     733

                                                Information Center, Portals II, 445 12th                governmental entities and sectors, and                   Authority: Secs. 5, 48 Stat. 1068, as
                                                Street SW, Room CY–A257,                                to further promote valuable,                           amended; 47 U.S.C. 155, unless otherwise
                                                Washington, DC 20554. The full text of                  comprehensive, and balanced input that                 noted.
                                                this document and any subsequently                      more comprehensively reflects the                      ■ 2. Amend § 0.701 by revising
                                                filed documents in this matter may also                 views and expertise of our regulatory                  paragraph (b) to read as follows:
                                                be found by searching ECFS at: http://                  partners. The Commission’s experience
                                                                                                                                                               § 0.701 Intergovernmental Advisory
                                                apps.fcc.gov/ecfs/.                                     with other advisory committees of                      Committee.
                                                                                                        similar size shows this to be the case.
                                                Final Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995                      5. The Commission continue to                       *     *      *    *     *
                                                Analysis                                                believe that IAC representation from                     (b) Membership. The IAC will be
                                                  The Order does not contain any new                    each category of state, local, county, and             composed of 30 members (or their
                                                or modified information collection                      Tribal government is important. Thus,                  designated employees), with a
                                                requirements subject to the Paperwork                   the number of members from each                        minimum of: Four elected municipal
                                                Reduction Act of 1995, Public Law 104–                  category set forth in our current rules                officials (city mayors and city council
                                                13. In addition, therefore, it does not                 shall now serve as a minimum                           members); two elected county officials
                                                contain any new or modified                             threshold. The Committee will now                      (county commissioners or council
                                                information collection burden for small                 consist of 30 members, of which at least               members); one elected or appointed
                                                business concerns with fewer than 25                    four shall be elected municipal officials,             local government attorney; one elected
                                                employees, pursuant to the Small                        at least two shall be elected county                   state executive (governor or lieutenant
                                                Business Paperwork Relief Act of 2002,                  officials, at least one shall be a local               governor); three elected state legislators;
                                                Public Law 107–198, see 44 U.S.C.                       government attorney, at least one shall                one elected or appointed public utilities
                                                3506(c)(4).                                             be an elected state executive, at least                or public service commissioner; and
                                                                                                        three shall be elected state legislators, at           three elected or appointed Native
                                                Congressional Review Act                                                                                       American tribal representatives. The
                                                                                                        least one shall be a public utilities or
                                                  The Commission sent a copy of the                     public service commissioner, and at                    Chairman of the Commission will
                                                Order to Congress and the Government                    least three shall be Native American                   appoint members through an
                                                Accountability Office pursuant to the                   Tribal representatives. The                            application process initiated by a Public
                                                Congressional Review Act, see 5 U.S.C.                  Commission’s approach will give the                    Notice, and will select a Chairman and
                                                801(a)(1)(A).                                           Commission flexibility to expand the                   a Vice Chairman to lead the IAC. The
                                                                                                        number and diversity of viewpoints                     Chairman of the Commission will also
                                                Synopsis
                                                                                                        from these sectors while ensuring none                 appoint members to fill any vacancies
                                                   1. The IAC, formerly known as the                                                                           and may replace an IAC member, at his
                                                                                                        is under-represented.
                                                Local and State Government Advisory                                                                            discretion, using the appointment
                                                Committee (LSGAC), was created in                       Ordering Clauses                                       process. Members of the IAC are
                                                1997 to provide guidance to the                           6. The rule modifications adopted                    responsible for travel and other
                                                Commission on issues of importance to                   constitute rules of agency organization,               incidental expenses incurred while on
                                                state, local, county, and Tribal                        procedure and practice. Therefore, the                 IAC business and will not be
                                                governments, as well as to the                          modification of § 0.701 of the                         reimbursed by the Commission for such
                                                Commission. The Committee is                            Commission’s rules is not subject to the               expenses.
                                                currently composed of 15 elected and                    notice and comment and effective date                  *     *      *    *     *
                                                appointed officials of those                            provisions of the Administrative                       [FR Doc. 2018–00015 Filed 1–5–18; 8:45 am]
                                                governmental entities.                                  Procedure Act. See 5 U.S.C.                            BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
                                                   2. The Committee has provided                        553(b)(3)(A), (d).
                                                ongoing advice and information to the                     7. Pursuant to sections 4(i), 4(j), and
                                                Commission on a broad range of                          303(r) of the Communications Act of                    FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
                                                telecommunications issues in which                      1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 154(i),                    COMMISSION
                                                state, local, county, and Tribal                        154(j), and 303(r), subpart G, § 0.701 of
                                                governments share ‘‘intergovernmental                   the Commission’s rules, 47 CFR 0.701,                  47 CFR Part 73
                                                responsibilities or administration’’ with               modified as set forth in the Order, is
                                                the Commission, including cable and                                                                            [MB Docket Nos. 14–50, 09–182, 07–294, 04–
                                                                                                        adopted.                                               256, and 17–289; FCC 17–156]
                                                local franchising, public rights-of-way,
                                                facilities siting, universal service,                   List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 0
                                                                                                                                                               2014 Quadrennial Regulatory Review
                                                barriers to competitive entry, and public                 Organization and functions
                                                safety communications.                                  (Government agencies).                                 AGENCY:  Federal Communications
                                                   3. The Commission has often found                                                                           Commission.
                                                                                                        Federal Communications Commission.
                                                over the years that an IAC membership                                                                          ACTION: Final rule.
                                                                                                        Katura Jackson,
                                                of just 15 does not often capture the
                                                varied perspectives of our regulatory                   Federal Register Liaison Officer.                      SUMMARY:   In this document, an Order on
                                                partners across the country. The IAC                    Final Rule                                             Reconsideration repeals and modifies
                                                works best and its advice helps the                                                                            several of the Commission’s broadcast
                                                                                                          For the reasons discussed in the
                                                Commission the most when it fully                                                                              ownership rules. Specifically, this
                                                                                                        preamble, the Federal Communications
                                                represents perspectives of rural, urban,                                                                       document repeals the Newspaper/
                                                                                                        Commission amends 47 CFR part 0 as
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES




                                                and suburban jurisdictions from various                                                                        Broadcast Cross-Ownership Rule, the
                                                                                                        follows:
                                                geographic areas throughout the United                                                                         Radio/Television Cross-Ownership
                                                States.                                                 PART 0—COMMISSION                                      Rule, and the attribution rule for
                                                   4. By expanding its membership to 30,                ORGANIZATION                                           television joint sales agreements. This
                                                the Commission better enable the IAC’s                                                                         document also revises the Local
                                                ability to represent perspectives and                   ■ 1. The authority citation for part 0 is              Television Ownership Rule to eliminate
                                                viewpoints from all relevant                            revised to read as follows:                            the Eight-Voices Test and to modify the


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:10 Jan 05, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00029   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM   08JAR1


                                                734                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 5 / Monday, January 8, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                                Top-Four Prohibition to better reflect                  Synopsis                                               reconsider its decisions regarding the
                                                the competitive conditions in local                     I. Introduction                                        Local Television Ownership Rule,
                                                markets. This document provides a                                                                              television JSA attribution, SSA
                                                favorable presumption for waiver of the                    1. In this Order on Reconsideration                 disclosure, the Newspaper/Broadcast
                                                Local Radio Ownership Rule’s market                     (Order), the Commission grants in part                 Cross-Ownership Rule, the Radio/
                                                definitions as to transactions in certain               and denies in part, as set forth in this               Television Cross-Ownership Rule, and
                                                embedded markets. Lastly, this                          Order, various petitions for                           the rejection of NAB’s proposal to create
                                                document rejects requests to change the                 reconsideration of the Second Report                   an incubator program to encourage
                                                definition of Shared Service Agreements                 and Order (81 FR 76220, Nov. 1, 2016,                  diversity. On January 24, 2017, the
                                                (SSAs) and the requirement that                         FCC 16–107, rel. Aug. 25, 2016).                       Office of Communication, Inc. of the
                                                commercial television stations disclose                 Specifically, the Commission (1)                       United Church of Christ (UCC), the
                                                SSAs by placing the agreements in each                  eliminates the Newspaper/Broadcast                     Media Alliance, the National
                                                station’s online public inspection file. In             Cross-Ownership Rule; (2) eliminates                   Organization for Women Foundation,
                                                addition, the document finds that the                   the Radio/Television Cross-Ownership                   the Communications Workers of
                                                record supports adoption of an                          Rule; (3) revises the Local Television                 America, the Newspaper Guild, the
                                                incubator program to promote                            Ownership Rule to eliminate the Eight-                 National Association of Broadcast
                                                ownership diversity. The Order on                       Voices Test and to modify the Top-Four                 Employees and Technicians, Common
                                                Reconsideration grants in part and                      Prohibition to better reflect the                      Cause, the Benton Foundation, Media
                                                                                                        competitive conditions in local markets;               Council Hawai’i, the Prometheus Radio
                                                denies in part the Petitions for
                                                                                                        (4) declines to modify the market                      Project, and the Media Mobilizing
                                                Reconsideration filed separately by the
                                                                                                        definitions relied on in the Local Radio               Project (UCC et al.) filed a motion to
                                                National Association of Broadcasters
                                                                                                        Ownership Rule, but provides a                         strike and dismiss the NAB Petition on
                                                (NAB), Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc.
                                                                                                        presumption for certain embedded                       the grounds that the petition improperly
                                                (Nexstar), and Connoisseur Media LLC
                                                                                                        market transactions; (5) eliminates the                evades the strict 25-page limit on
                                                (Connoisseur).
                                                                                                        attribution rule for television joint sales            reconsideration petitions by using a
                                                DATES:  Effective February 7, 2018 except               agreements (JSAs); and (6) retains the                 prohibited, undersized font for footnotes
                                                for the amendment to § 73.3613, which                   disclosure requirement for shared                      and inserting a substantial portion of its
                                                contains information collection                         service agreements (SSAs) involving                    argument into those footnotes in
                                                requirements that are not effective until               commercial television stations. In                     violation of 47 CFR 1.49(a). The motion
                                                approved by the Office of Management                    addition, the Commission finds that the                also alleges that NAB’s summary was
                                                and Budget (OMB). The Commission                        present record supports adoption of an                 well over twice the permissible length,
                                                will publish a document in the Federal                  incubator program to promote                           and improperly contains additional
                                                Register announcing the effective date                  ownership diversity; however, the                      arguments in violation of 47 CFR
                                                of these changes.                                       structure and implementation of such a                 1.49(c). In reply, NAB states that it did
                                                FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                                                                                        program requires further exploration.                  not intend to evade any Commission
                                                Benjamin Arden, Industry Analysis                       II. Background                                         rules and offers to refile if the
                                                Division, Media Bureau, FCC, (202)                                                                             Commission is concerned about UCC et
                                                                                                           2. Congress requires the Commission                 al.’s allegations. In addition, NAB cites
                                                418–2605. For additional information                    to review its broadcast ownership rules
                                                concerning the PRA information                                                                                 precedent that the Commission has
                                                                                                        every four years to determine whether                  considered previously the merits of an
                                                collection requirements contained in the                they are necessary in the public interest
                                                Second Report and Order, contact Cathy                                                                         application for review well in excess of
                                                                                                        as the result of competition and to                    the 25-page limit and notes that parties
                                                Williams at (202) 418–2918, or via the                  repeal or modify any regulation the
                                                internet at PRA@fcc.gov.                                                                                       adverse to NAB have pleadings in the
                                                                                                        Commission determines to be no longer                  proceeding that violate 47 CFR 1.49 but
                                                SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a                    in the public interest. On August 10,                  have been considered on the merits by
                                                summary of the Commission’s Order on                    2016, the Commission adopted the                       the Commission. The Commission
                                                Reconsideration, in MB Docket Nos. 14–                  Second Report and Order (released on                   denies UCC et al.’s motion. The
                                                50, 09–182, 07–294, 04–256, and 17–                     August 25, 2016) to resolve both the                   Commission finds that, to the extent
                                                289; FCC 17–156, was adopted on                         2010 and 2014 quadrennial review                       that NAB’s pleading does not precisely
                                                November 16, 2017, and released on                      proceedings, as well as to address                     conform to 47 CFR 1.49, no party has
                                                November 20, 2017. The complete text                    various issues related to the attribution              been prejudiced, and the public interest
                                                of this document is available                           of television JSAs, diversity initiatives,             is best served by considering NAB’s
                                                electronically via the search function on               and SSAs.                                              arguments. The Commission reminds
                                                the FCC’s Electronic Document                              3. The Second Report and Order                      parties, however, to be mindful of the
                                                Management System (EDOCS) web page                      largely retained the existing broadcast                requirements of § 1.49.
                                                at https://apps.fcc.gov/edocs_public/.                  ownership rules, reinstated the                           4. Nexstar also challenged the Local
                                                The complete document is available for                  previously vacated Television JSA                      Television Ownership Rule and the
                                                inspection and copying during normal                    Attribution Rule, and adopted a                        attribution of television JSAs, while
                                                business hours in the FCC Reference                     definition of SSAs and a disclosure                    Connoisseur challenged an aspect of the
                                                Information Center, 445 12th Street SW,                 requirement for SSAs involving                         Local Radio Ownership Rule related to
                                                Room CY–A257, Washington, DC 20554.                     commercial television stations. The                    embedded markets.
                                                To request materials in accessible                      Commission also committed to explore
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES




                                                formats for people with disabilities                    various diversity-related proposals in                 III. Media Ownership Rules
                                                (Braille, large print, electronic files,                the record, while declining to adopt                   A. Newspaper/Broadcast Cross-
                                                audio format), send an email to fcc504@                 other proposals, including an incubator                Ownership Rule
                                                fcc.gov or call the FCC’s Consumer and                  program. Several parties sought
                                                Governmental Affairs Bureau at (202)                    reconsideration of various aspects of the              1. Introduction
                                                418–0530 (voice), (202) 418–0432                        Second Report and Order. NAB                              5. Upon reconsideration, the
                                                (TTY).                                                  petitioned the Commission to                           Commission repeals the Newspaper/


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:10 Jan 05, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00030   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM   08JAR1


                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 5 / Monday, January 8, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                              735

                                                Broadcast Cross-Ownership (NBCO)                        restriction could harm viewpoint                          8. The Marketplace Has Changed
                                                Rule in its entirety. The Commission’s                  diversity. In addition, the Commission                 Dramatically. On reconsideration, the
                                                decision to repeal the rule means that                  explained that, although the rule may                  Commission finds that its decision to
                                                all newspapers (print or digital) now                   benefit ownership diversity                            retain the NBCO Rule failed to
                                                will be allowed to combine with                         incidentally, the agency’s purpose in                  acknowledge the current realities of the
                                                television and radio stations within the                retaining the rule was not to promote                  media marketplace. In 1975, the
                                                same local market, subject to the                       minority or female ownership. NAB                      broadcast industry was still relatively
                                                remaining broadcast ownership rules                     petitioned the Commission to                           young, but it had found its footing,
                                                and any other applicable laws,                          reconsider its retention of the NBCO                   owing in part to the role that
                                                including antitrust laws. The                           Rule.                                                  newspaper/broadcast cross-ownership
                                                Commission finds that prohibiting                                                                              had played in its success. Supporters of
                                                newspaper/broadcast combinations is                     3. Discussion                                          common ownership claimed that joint
                                                no longer necessary to serve the goal of                   7. The Commission finds that the                    ownership of newspapers and broadcast
                                                promoting viewpoint diversity in light                  NBCO Rule must be repealed because it                  stations made possible the early
                                                of the multiplicity of sources of news                  is not necessary to promote the                        development of FM and TV service even
                                                and information in the current media                    Commission’s policy goals of viewpoint                 though these pioneering stations often
                                                marketplace and the diminished voice                    diversity, localism, and competition,                  had to be operated at a loss. In adopting
                                                of daily print newspapers. Whatever the                 and therefore does not serve the public                the cross-ownership rule, the
                                                limited benefits for viewpoint diversity                interest. Because the Commission is                    Commission acknowledged the
                                                of retaining the rule, in today’s                       repealing the NBCO Rule on other                       pioneering role of newspapers in the
                                                competitive media environment, they                     grounds, it is unnecessary to address                  broadcast medium but found that
                                                are outweighed by the costs of                          arguments that the rule should be                      common ownership with newspapers
                                                preventing traditional news providers                   repealed on competition grounds.                       was no longer a critical factor for
                                                from pursuing cross-ownership                           Similarly, it is unnecessary to reach                  broadcaster success. The Commission
                                                investment opportunities to provide                     arguments that ownership does not                      observed that, on the whole, the
                                                news and information in a manner that                                                                          broadcast industry had matured to the
                                                                                                        influence viewpoint because the
                                                is likely to ensure a more informed                                                                            point that new entrants could be
                                                                                                        Commission is eliminating the rule on
                                                electorate. As such, the NBCO Rule no                                                                          expected to have an interest in pursuing
                                                                                                        the ground that, even if ownership
                                                longer serves the public interest and                                                                          station ownership. It concluded that the
                                                                                                        might influence viewpoint in certain
                                                must be repealed pursuant to Section                                                                           special reason for encouraging
                                                                                                        circumstances, the NBCO Rule is not
                                                202(h).                                                                                                        newspaper ownership, even at the cost
                                                                                                        necessary to foster viewpoint diversity
                                                                                                                                                               of a lessened diversity, was no longer
                                                2. Background                                           (nor to promote localism or
                                                                                                                                                               generally operative in the way it once
                                                   6. In the Second Report and Order,                   competition). The parties that support
                                                                                                                                                               was. The Commission understood its
                                                the Commission affirmed its previous                    reconsideration of the NBCO Rule argue
                                                                                                                                                               obligation to give recognition to the
                                                findings that an absolute ban was overly                that the modifications adopted in the                  changes which have taken place and see
                                                restrictive, but concluded that some                    Second Report and Order were                           to it that its rules adequately reflect the
                                                newspaper/broadcast cross-ownership                     insufficient and that the rule is obsolete             situation as it is, not was.
                                                restrictions continued to be necessary to               and should be eliminated. The                             9. That same obligation now requires
                                                promote viewpoint diversity. It retained                Commission agrees. The Commission                      the Commission to eliminate the NBCO
                                                the general prohibition on common                       affirms its longstanding determination                 Rule. Not only have the means of
                                                ownership of a broadcast station and a                  that the rule does not advance localism                accessing content changed dramatically,
                                                daily print newspaper in the same local                 and competition goals, and finds that it               but the media marketplace has seen an
                                                market, but adopted minor changes to                    is no longer necessary to promote                      explosion in the number and variety of
                                                the rule to accomplish what the                         viewpoint diversity, the rule’s only                   sources of local news and information
                                                Commission called a modest loosening                    remaining policy justification. Although               since the Commission adopted the
                                                of the absolute ban. The Commission:                    elimination of the rule could                          NBCO Rule in 1975. Opponents of the
                                                (1) modified the geographic scope of the                theoretically diminish viewpoint                       rule point to this increase and argue that
                                                rule to update its analog parameters and                diversity to a limited extent due to the               the NBCO Rule has become obsolete as
                                                to reflect more accurately the markets                  loss of an independent voice as a result               a result.
                                                that newspapers and broadcasters                        of any newspaper/broadcast                                10. From the 6,197 full-power radio
                                                actually serve; (2) adopted an explicit                 combination, the Commission finds that                 stations and 851 full-power television
                                                exception for failed and failing                        this impact will be mitigated by the                   stations that existed in the late 1960s,
                                                broadcast stations and newspapers; and                  multiplicity of alternative sources of                 the Commission’s latest broadcast totals
                                                (3) created a case-by-case waiver                       local news and information available in                place the number of full-power radio
                                                standard whereby the Commission                         the marketplace and the overall                        stations at 15,512 and full-power
                                                would grant relief from the rule if the                 financial decline of newspapers. In                    television stations at 1,775. Contrary to
                                                applicants showed that a proposed                       addition, the Commission finds that this               the Commission’s conclusion in the
                                                merger would not unduly harm                            concern is outweighed by the                           Second Report and Order, the fact that
                                                viewpoint diversity in the market. The                  countervailing benefits to consumers                   the number of full-power broadcast
                                                Commission declined to eliminate the                    that can result from newspaper/                        stations has more than doubled
                                                newspaper/radio cross-ownership                         broadcast combinations. Finally, based                 represents a significant increase that
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES




                                                restriction from the NBCO Rule after                    on the Commission’s review of the                      should be considered when evaluating
                                                finding that, despite its earlier tentative             record, the Commission finds that                      the continued necessity of the NBCO
                                                conclusion that radio stations typically                eliminating the rule will have no                      Rule. It was improper for the
                                                are not primary outlets for local news,                 material effect on minority and female                 Commission to dismiss data submitted
                                                radio stations nonetheless provide a                    broadcast ownership. Accordingly, the                  by Bonneville International Corp. and
                                                meaningful amount of local news and                     Commission grants the request that it                  The Scranton Times, L.P.,
                                                information such that lifting the                       eliminate the NBCO Rule.                               demonstrating a substantial increase in


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:10 Jan 05, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00031   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM   08JAR1


                                                736                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 5 / Monday, January 8, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                                the number of broadcast services simply                 news and information. Rather, the                         14. On reconsideration, the
                                                because it represented a nationwide                     picture revealed by the data is that of a              Commission finds that the record
                                                increase which may have been spread                     richer and more nuanced ecosystem of                   clearly demonstrates that the wealth of
                                                unevenly across individual local                        community news and information than                    additional information sources available
                                                markets without citing any evidence to                  researchers have previously identified,                in the media marketplace today, apart
                                                support this notion. In addition, the                   in which Americans turn to a wide                      from traditional newspapers and
                                                Commission should have taken into                       range of platforms to get local news and               broadcasters, strongly supports
                                                account the number of low-power                         information. Thus, the contributions of                repealing the NBCO Rule. These
                                                broadcast stations, which, as of June                   such outlets cannot be dismissed out of                dramatic and ongoing changes in the
                                                2017, includes 417 Class A television                   hand as the existence of these non-                    media industry negate concerns that
                                                stations; 1,968 low-power television                    traditional news outlets nevertheless                  repealing the NBCO Rule will harm
                                                (LPTV) stations; and 1,966 low-power                    results in greater access to independent               viewpoint diversity. The Commission
                                                FM (LPFM) stations—none of which                        information sources in local markets.                  does not perceive a need for the rule in
                                                services existed when the rule was                      Furthermore, the Commission failed to                  light of the current trends toward greater
                                                adopted. This situation is a stark                      acknowledge adequately evidence in the                 consumer reliance on these alternative
                                                contrast to the state of affairs in 1975,               record demonstrating the emergence of                  sources of local news and information.
                                                when the changed circumstances in the                   online outlets that offer local content                The Commission’s failure to account
                                                broadcasting industry that prompted                     and have no affiliation with traditional               properly for the multiplicity of news
                                                adoption of the NBCO Rule included a                    broadcast or print sources.                            and information sources available in the
                                                trend in which the number of channels                      13. Numerous studies cited in the                   current media marketplace factored
                                                open for new licensing had diminished                   record establish the emergence and                     heavily in its unjustified retention of the
                                                substantially.                                          growth of alternative sources of local                 NBCO Rule.
                                                   11. Equally, if not more significantly,                                                                        15. The Decline of the Newspaper
                                                                                                        news and information, including digital-
                                                NAB cites evidence of the growing                                                                              Industry Has Diminished its Voice. In
                                                                                                        only local news outlets as well as other
                                                prevalence of independent digital-only                                                                         addition, restrictions on common
                                                                                                        online sources of local news and
                                                news outlets with no print or broadcast                                                                        ownership of daily print newspapers
                                                                                                        information. For example, according to
                                                affiliation, many with a local or                                                                              and broadcast stations are no longer
                                                                                                        a 2014 Pew Research study, out of 438
                                                hyperlocal focus. Thirteen years ago, the                                                                      justified to protect viewpoint diversity
                                                                                                        digital news sites examined, more than                 as the strength of daily print
                                                Third Circuit agreed with the
                                                Commission that the record suggested                    half had a local focus, with the typical               newspapers has declined significantly
                                                that cable and the internet contribute to               outlet described as focused on coverage                since 1975. In the Second Report and
                                                viewpoint diversity; the panel members                  of local or even neighborhood-level                    Order, the Commission failed to credit
                                                simply disagreed about the degree and                   news. Even by 2011, a Pew study                        properly the evidence in the record
                                                importance of this trend at that time.                  confirmed that while newspapers                        regarding the challenges facing the
                                                Since then, however, the picture has                    remain popular sources for some such                   newspaper industry and the resulting
                                                changed significantly. Even the U.S.                    information, 69 percent of those                       effects on the ability of print
                                                Supreme Court recently recognized the                   surveyed said that if their local                      newspapers to serve their readers.
                                                importance of the internet and social                   newspaper no longer existed, it would                  Rather than merely modifying the rule’s
                                                media as sources of news and                            not have a major impact on their ability               waiver standard and adjusting its carve-
                                                information for many Americans. As                      to keep up with information and news                   outs, the Commission should have
                                                this trend continues to gain momentum                   about their community. By 2016, Pew                    acknowledged the diminution of
                                                and new voices proliferate, the                         reported that just 20 percent of U.S.                  newspapers’ voices and concluded that
                                                dominance of traditional news outlets                   adults often get news from print                       the time has come to eliminate the rule
                                                diminishes. Although the record                         newspapers, with even steeper declines                 altogether.
                                                contains some evidence that local                       in particular demographics—only 5                         16. In light of the long decline of the
                                                television stations and newspapers may                  percent of those aged 18 through 29, and               newspaper industry, the loss of an
                                                still be consumers’ primary sources of                  only 10 percent of those aged 30                       independent daily newspaper voice in a
                                                local news and information, the                         through 49. According to the earlier Pew               community will have a much smaller
                                                Commission finds that it improperly                     study, for the 79 percent of Americans                 impact on viewpoint diversity than
                                                discounted the role of non-traditional                  who are online, the internet is the first              would have been the case in 1975. In
                                                news outlets, including internet and                    or second most important source for 15                 addition, as discussed below, repeal of
                                                digital-only, in the local media                        of the 16 local topics examined. Nearly                the NBCO Rule will permit newspaper/
                                                marketplace.                                            half of adults (47 percent) use mobile                 broadcast combinations that can
                                                   12. The Commission concluded in the                  devices to get local news and                          strengthen local voices and thus enable
                                                Second Report and Order that online                     information, and for none of Pew’s                     the combined outlets to better serve
                                                outlets do not serve as a substitute for                topics did more than 6 percent of                      their communities.
                                                newspapers and broadcasters providing                   respondents say they depended on the                      17. The NBCO Rule Prevents
                                                local news and information. As noted                    website of a legacy news organization.                 Combinations that Could Benefit
                                                below, this conclusion does not appear                  Among adults under age 40, the web                     Localism. The Commission repeatedly
                                                to reflect the record evidence as to how                ranks first or ties for first for 12 of the            has recognized that the NBCO Rule does
                                                the internet has transformed the                        16 local topics asked about.                           not promote localism and actually may
                                                American people’s consumption of                        Furthermore, in the Second Report and                  hinder it by preventing local news
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES




                                                news and information, the direction of                  Order, the Commission too readily                      outlets from achieving efficiencies by
                                                current trends in this regard, and in                   dismissed cable news programming as                    combining resources needed to gather,
                                                particular how those trends have                        primarily targeted to a wide geographic                report, and disseminate local news and
                                                affected younger adults. At a minimum,                  audience, without considering that most                information. The Commission
                                                the record reflects studies that reject the             of the major cable operators carry                     nevertheless retained newspaper/
                                                premise that people have a primary or                   locally-focused cable news networks in                 broadcast cross-ownership restrictions
                                                single source for most of their local                   parts of their footprint.                              in order to promote its goal of viewpoint


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:10 Jan 05, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00032   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM   08JAR1


                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 5 / Monday, January 8, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                              737

                                                diversity. Because the NBCO Rule is no                  information, and covering Notre Dame                   combinations outweigh the minimal
                                                longer necessary to foster viewpoint                    sports. NMA also cited prior                           loss of viewpoint diversity that may
                                                diversity, and the rule can be repealed                 Commission studies for the proposition                 result from eliminating the rule. With
                                                without harming the public interest, the                that, on average, a cross-owned                        the elimination of the NBCO Rule these
                                                potential benefits to localism arising                  television station produces more local                 localism benefits can finally begin to
                                                from common ownership finally can                       news and more coverage of local and                    materialize.
                                                accrue. The Commission expects that                     state political candidates than                           19. In light of the well-documented
                                                eliminating the NBCO Rule will allow                    comparable non-cross-owned television                  and continuing struggles of the
                                                both broadcasters and newspapers to                     stations. NMA pointed to the finding in                newspaper industry, the efficiencies
                                                seek out new sources of investment and                  one Commission study that cross-owned                  produced by newspaper/broadcast
                                                operational expertise, increasing the                   television stations, on average, air 50                combinations are more important than
                                                quantity and quality of local news and                  percent more local news than non-cross-                ever. A report in February 2017
                                                information they provide in their local                 owned stations. The Commission’s                       examining the health of small
                                                markets.                                                Media Ownership Study 4 also found                     newspapers was cautiously optimistic
                                                   18. There is ample evidence in the                   that the total amount of local news aired              about the future of publications with a
                                                record that eliminating the rule will                   by all television stations in the market               community or hyperlocal focus but
                                                help facilitate such investment and                     may be negatively correlated with                      acknowledged that their battle for
                                                                                                        newspaper/broadcast cross-ownership.                   survival will not be easy and will
                                                enable both broadcasters and
                                                                                                        As noted in the FNPRM (79 FR 29010,                    require new approaches and strategies
                                                newspapers to better serve the public.
                                                                                                                                                               that take advantage of their niche
                                                For example, Cox Media Group, LLC                       May 20, 2014, FCC 14–28, rel. Apr. 14,
                                                                                                                                                               position. Removing the regulatory
                                                (Cox) asserts that collaboration and cost-              2014), however, the study authors
                                                                                                                                                               obstacle of this outdated rule will help
                                                sharing between its television station                  cautioned that this finding was
                                                                                                                                                               financially troubled newspapers carry
                                                and its newspaper in Dayton, Ohio,                      imprecisely measured and not
                                                                                                                                                               on their important work. While the
                                                helped them be the first to report on                   statistically different from zero. An
                                                                                                                                                               Commission recognizes that cost-
                                                what became a national story about the                  earlier Commission study cited by NMA
                                                                                                                                                               savings gained from common ownership
                                                failures of the Veterans Administration                 found that cross-owned television
                                                                                                                                                               will not necessarily be invested in the
                                                to provide adequate medical services. In                stations aired between seven to ten
                                                                                                                                                               production of local news, by allowing
                                                addition, Cox previously provided                       percent more local news, which still                   newspapers and broadcasters to
                                                several examples showing how the                        represents a meaningful increase in the                collaborate and combine resources, the
                                                combination of resources across its                     average amount of local news aired on                  Commission’s action in this Order
                                                commonly owned newspaper,                               cross-owned television stations. This                  creates new opportunities for local
                                                television, and radio properties in both                study also found that cross-owned                      broadcasters and newspapers to better
                                                Dayton and Atlanta, Georgia, allowed                    television stations, on average, provide               serve the local news and information
                                                them to report on breaking news stories                 roughly 25 percent more coverage of                    needs of their communities.
                                                more quickly and accurately and to also                 local and state politics. The Commission                  20. The NBCO Rule Must be
                                                provide more thorough coverage of                       has acknowledged that prior                            Eliminated. The Commission’s decision
                                                events, such as political elections, that               Commission studies have found that                     to repeal the rule reflects the situation
                                                involve numerous interviews and in-                     cross-owned radio stations are more                    as it currently is, not as it was more than
                                                depth issue reporting. Cox asserts that                 likely to air news and public affairs                  40 years ago. Whereas the Commission
                                                the common ownership of multiple                        programming and are four to five times                 determined in 1975 that newspaper/
                                                outlets has enabled its media properties                more likely to have a news format than                 broadcast combinations were no longer
                                                ‘‘to vastly improve service at a time                   a non-cross-owned station. Comments                    necessary to support the growth of the
                                                when the economics of the newspaper                     in this proceeding bear that out,                      broadcast industry and that the interest
                                                and broadcast business would seem to                    providing anecdotal evidence, such as                  in viewpoint diversity required separate
                                                dictate the opposite.’’ In addition, the                that offered by Morris Communications,                 ownership of newspapers and broadcast
                                                News Media Alliance (NMA) provided                      which explained that its radio stations                licenses, the Commission now
                                                numerous examples of the benefits to                    in Topeka, Kansas, and in Amarillo,                    determines that this restriction is no
                                                local programming involving cross-                      Texas, were able to invest more heavily                longer necessary to promote viewpoint
                                                owned media outlets in various markets.                 in local news production and in news                   diversity and can potentially harm
                                                For example, a cross-owned newspaper/                   staff because of their cross-ownership                 localism, and that removing the
                                                television combination in Phoenix                       with the local newspaper. As the                       restriction best serves the public
                                                combined resources to report on stories                 Commission discussed in the Second                     interest.
                                                such as the shooting of Congresswoman                   Report and Order, the record contains                     21. Indeed, even to the extent that
                                                Gabrielle Giffords and 18 others in                     support for the proposition that                       eliminating the rule would permit
                                                Tucson, the Yarnell Hill fire that killed               newspaper/broadcast combinations can                   transactions that would reduce the
                                                19 firefighters and destroyed more than                 promote localism by creating                           number of outlets for news and
                                                100 homes, and a massive dust storm.                    efficiencies through the sharing of                    information in local markets, the
                                                In South Bend, Indiana, a commonly                      expertise, resources, and capital that can             markets will continue to have far more
                                                owned local newspaper, television                       lead to a higher quantity and quality of               voices than when the rule was enacted.
                                                station, and two radio stations regularly               local news programming. The                            The modern media marketplace
                                                worked together on issues of local                      Commission has long accepted that                      abounds with new, non-traditional
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES




                                                significance, such as uncovering                        proposition, but it concluded in its                   voices, the number of local broadcasters
                                                harmful substances in drinking water,                   previous decisions that some                           has increased dramatically, and the
                                                hosting town-hall meetings for political                restrictions remained necessary to                     strength of local newspapers relative to
                                                candidates and local officials, sending a               promote viewpoint diversity. The                       other media has diminished as a result
                                                reporter to Iraq, commemorating the                     Commission concludes now that the                      of the difficulties facing the industry
                                                150th anniversary of the local                          potential public interest benefits of                  and the rise of new voices. And the
                                                Studebaker factory, providing weather                   permitting newspaper/broadcast                         Commission expects the number of


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:10 Jan 05, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00033   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM   08JAR1


                                                738                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 5 / Monday, January 8, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                                voices to continue to grow, as the                      mount. In its 2010 NOI (75 FR 33227,                      27. In addition, the modified rule
                                                internet, in particular, has lowered the                June 11, 2010, FCC 10–92, rel. May 25,                 inexplicably left in place a definition of
                                                barriers to entry and provided a publicly               2010), the Commission described                        daily newspaper that is outdated and
                                                accessible platform for individuals and                 newspapers’ declining circulation and                  illogical in that it applies only to
                                                organizations to serve the news and                     advertising revenues and asked whether                 newspapers printed at least four days a
                                                information needs of their local                        relaxing the rule would help                           week. The distinction between print
                                                communities. Furthermore, eliminating                   newspapers to survive. In the FNPRM,                   newspapers and digital outlets has
                                                the NBCO Rule will permit efficient                     the Commission expressed concern for                   become blurred as some newspapers
                                                combinations that will allow                            the future of newspapers but disagreed                 reduce the number of days a week they
                                                broadcasters and newspapers to                          with the suggestion that the NBCO Rule                 publish in print and rely more heavily
                                                combine resources and enable them to                    should be repealed or relaxed on that                  on their online distribution. Indeed,
                                                better serve their local communities. On                basis alone. The Commission was                        many publishers today continuously
                                                balance, therefore, the Commission                      reluctant to jeopardize viewpoint                      update the content of the online
                                                concludes that retaining the rule does                  diversity in local markets in response to              versions of their newspapers as they
                                                not serve the public interest.                          assertions that the rule limited                       compete with bloggers and social media
                                                   22. The Commission consistently has                  opportunities for traditional media                    that rapidly produce and update their
                                                recognized that changing circumstances                  owners to expand their revenues. Now,                  own content. Applying the NBCO Rule
                                                in the marketplace warrant a retreat                    however, the Commission concludes                      to newspapers only if they are printed
                                                from a total ban; accordingly, the                      that the continuance of the NBCO Rule                  in hardcopy at least four days per week
                                                Commission has attempted to impose                      is not necessary or appropriate to                     ignores the reality that what defines a
                                                various limits on the rule through the                  preserve or promote viewpoint diversity                newspaper has changed and that many
                                                years. The Commission’s overall                         under Section 202(h). The Commission                   consumers access the paper’s news and
                                                direction has been toward a growing                     anticipates that both newspapers and                   information over the internet
                                                acknowledgment that the rule is not                     broadcasters will benefit from the rule’s              throughout the day. A newspaper’s
                                                always necessary to promote viewpoint                   repeal, as will, ultimately, the public, as            influence should no longer be measured
                                                diversity and should be modified to                     discussed above.                                       by how many mornings a week it is
                                                reflect changes in the marketplace. The                    25. The Commission recognized in the                delivered to the doorstep. Doing so
                                                Commission’s action in this Order is                    FNPRM that the NBCO Rule does not                      would exacerbate the perverse incentive
                                                simply the logical extension of this                    promote viewpoint diversity when a                     for a newspaper seeking to combine
                                                acknowledgment in response to the                       newspaper is in financial distress, and                with a broadcaster to reduce its print
                                                radically altered media marketplace.                    the FNPRM proposed an exception to                     editions in order to avoid triggering the
                                                   23. As noted in the 2002 Biennial                    the rule for failed and failing merger                 rule. Given the current media
                                                Review Order (68 FR 46286, Aug. 5,                      applicants. In the Second Report and                   marketplace and the way consumers
                                                2003, FCC 03–127, rel. July 2, 2003), the               Order, the Commission adopted that                     access content, the rule’s reliance on a
                                                Commission must consider the impact                     exception and explained that allowing                  newspaper’s printing schedule makes
                                                of [its] rules on the strength of media                 such mergers is not likely to harm                     no sense.
                                                outlets, particularly those that are                    viewpoint diversity. In addition, the                     28. As the modified rule adopted in
                                                primary sources of local news and                       Commission incorporated into the rule                  the Second Report and Order is not
                                                information, as well as on the number                   a case-by-case waiver standard for                     necessary to promote the public interest,
                                                of independently owned outlets.                         markets of all sizes to account for                    the Commission cannot retain it
                                                Maximizing the number of independent                    merger situations that do not pose an                  consistent with Section 202(h). the
                                                voices does not further diversity if those              undue risk to viewpoint diversity.                     Commission emphasizes that the rule’s
                                                voices lack the resources to create and                    26. On reconsideration, the                         repeal in no way reflects a lessening of
                                                publish news and public information. In                 Commission finds that its modifications                the importance of viewpoint diversity as
                                                Prometheus Radio Project v. FCC, 373                    to the NBCO Rule in the Second Report                  a Commission policy goal. Rather, the
                                                F.3d 372 (3d Cir. 2004) (Prometheus I),                 and Order were inadequate. Given the                   Commission concludes that the rule is
                                                the court affirmed the Commission’s                     current state of the newspaper industry,               no longer necessary to promote
                                                finding in the 2002 Biennial Review                     it might very well be too late to save a               viewpoint diversity.
                                                Order that the NBCO Rule was                            newspaper that would qualify as failed                    29. The Commission finds also that
                                                overbroad and should be relaxed. In the                 or failing under the exception adopted                 the NBCO Rule should be eliminated
                                                2006 Quadrennial Review Order (73 FR                    in the Second Report and Order. The                    rather than relaxed. The Commission’s
                                                9481, Feb. 21, 2008, FCC 07–216, rel.                   Commission’s goal should be to keep                    previous attempts to relax the rule
                                                Feb. 2008), the Commission took into                    local voices strong, not to maintain                   demonstrate the difficulty in designing
                                                consideration the imperiled state of the                artificial barriers that prevent efficient             an approach that works effectively for
                                                newspaper industry, recounting                          combinations and then wait until                       the range of market circumstances
                                                statistics and data showing that the                    newspapers reach a failed or failing                   across the country. Paradoxically,
                                                shrinking newspaper industry had                        state before providing regulatory relief.              previous attempts at relaxing the rule
                                                suffered circulation declines, staff                    In addition, the Commission’s case-by-                 arguably threatened the greatest harm in
                                                layoffs, shuttered news bureaus, flat                   case waiver standard was wholly                        small markets where cross-ownership
                                                advertising revenues, rising operating                  insufficient because the Commission                    may be needed most to sustain local
                                                costs, and falling stock prices. These                  failed to provide any meaningful                       news outlets. The record does not
                                                hardships influenced the Commission’s                   guidance on how it would evaluate each                 provide an adequate basis for
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES




                                                finding that the existing ban on                        waiver request. An exception or a                      distinguishing areas where application
                                                newspaper/broadcast combinations                        waiver standard may be appropriate                     of the rule could serve the public
                                                continued to be overly restrictive.                     when a rule is sound and exceptional                   interest from those where it would not.
                                                   24. The newspaper industry had not                   circumstances exist, but such                          There was significant opposition to the
                                                recovered when the Commission began                     mechanisms do not redeem an unsound                    modified rule proposed by the
                                                its 2010/2014 ownership review and,                     rule, as the Commission finds this one                 Commission in this proceeding, and
                                                indeed, the hardships continued to                      to be.                                                 only one commenter proposed a


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:10 Jan 05, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00034   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM   08JAR1


                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 5 / Monday, January 8, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                            739

                                                detailed alternative approach, and the                  impact on minority and female                          sees no evidence to suggest that
                                                Commission explained why it declined                    ownership. After seeking public                        eliminating the NBCO Rule will
                                                to adopt it. Thus, the record does not                  comment on this topic a number of                      produce a different result and
                                                support a narrowed restriction.                         times, the Commission expressed its                    precipitate such a decline. Ultimately,
                                                Moreover, as discussed above, the                       view that the rule does not promote or                 given the state of the newspaper
                                                Commission finds that it would be                       protect minority and female ownership.                 industry, the Commission expects that
                                                outdated and illogical to adopt a rule                  Not only have past debates on this issue               broadcasters may be better positioned to
                                                based on the distinction between print                  not persuaded the Commission that the                  be the buyer, rather than the seller, in
                                                newspapers and digital outlets. Indeed,                 ban on newspaper/broadcast                             most transactions that flow from the
                                                any modified rule that continues to                     combinations is necessary to protect or                rule’s repeal. Furthermore, submissions
                                                single out newspapers of any kind                       promote minority and female                            in the record suggest that some minority
                                                cannot be sustained.                                    ownership, no arguments were made in                   media owners may be poised to pursue
                                                   30. In light of the significantly                    this reconsideration proceeding that                   cross-ownership acquisition and
                                                expanded media marketplace and the                      would lead the Commission to conclude                  investment opportunities. Therefore,
                                                overall state of the newspaper industry,                otherwise. On the contrary, two                        eliminating the rule potentially could
                                                and the Commission’s conclusion that                    organizations representing minority                    increase minority ownership of
                                                the rule is not necessary to promote                    media owners seek relief from the rule’s               newspapers and broadcast stations.
                                                viewpoint diversity, competition, or                    restrictions. Their comments directly                     34. In addition, the Commission
                                                localism, and may hinder localism, the                  refute arguments in the record that                    rejects assertions that Prometheus III
                                                Commission concludes that immediate                     repealing the rule will harm small                     prevents the Commission from repealing
                                                repeal is required by Section 202(h) and                broadcasters, including minority and                   or modifying any of its broadcast
                                                will permit combinations that would                     women broadcasters, because they are at                ownership rules on reconsideration.
                                                benefit consumers. The Commission’s                     a competitive disadvantage compared to                 Contrary to such assertions, the Third
                                                decision will enable all broadcasters                   large media outlets. As the Commission                 Circuit’s holding in Prometheus III does
                                                and newspapers to attract new                           contemplated in the FNPRM, merging                     not require the Commission to adopt a
                                                investment in order to preserve and                     with a newspaper could boost the                       socially disadvantaged business (SDB)
                                                expand their local news output.                         ability of a small broadcaster to compete              definition before it can revise or repeal
                                                   31. In addition, though the                          more effectively in the market and to                  any rules; rather, the court simply
                                                Commission finds that the entire NBCO                   improve its local news offerings. The                  required the Commission to complete its
                                                Rule must be eliminated, the                            Commission’s action in this Order will                 analysis of whether to adopt such a
                                                Commission finds that the record                        provide the flexibility to do just that.               definition. The Commission completed
                                                provides an additional and independent                                                                         that required analysis in the Second
                                                justification for eliminating the                          33. The Commission agrees with
                                                                                                        comments stating that lifting the ban on               Report and Order and declined to adopt
                                                restriction on newspaper/radio                                                                                 an SDB standard.
                                                combinations. Opponents of this aspect                  newspaper/radio combinations is
                                                                                                        unlikely to have a significant effect on                  35. Finally, in the Second Report and
                                                of the rule argue that evidence in the                                                                         Order, the Commission stated that the
                                                record does not provide adequate                        minority and female ownership in the
                                                                                                        radio market given that the thousands of               revised NBCO Rule it adopted would
                                                support for the Commission’s                                                                                   help promote ownership diversity. The
                                                conclusion that radio is a sufficiently                 radio stations across the country offer
                                                                                                        plenty of purchasing opportunities for                 Commission’s comment, however, did
                                                meaningful source of local news and                                                                            not indicate a belief that the rule would
                                                public interest programming such that                   minorities and women and at lower cost
                                                                                                        than most other forms of traditional                   promote minority and female ownership
                                                allowing newspaper/radio combinations                                                                          specifically, but rather that the rule
                                                could harm viewpoint diversity. The                     media. In addition, the Commission
                                                                                                        does not anticipate that lifting the ban               would promote ownership diversity
                                                Commission agrees. As discussed in the                                                                         generally by requiring the separation of
                                                following section, the Commission is                    on newspaper/television combinations
                                                                                                        will lead to a meaningful decrease in the              newspaper and broadcast station
                                                eliminating the Radio/Television Cross-                                                                        ownership. Moreover, the Commission
                                                Ownership Rule based on its finding                     number of minority-owned television
                                                                                                        stations. Some groups previously                       made it clear that promoting viewpoint
                                                that the diminished contributions of
                                                                                                        expressed concern that minority-owned                  diversity, as opposed to preserving or
                                                local broadcast radio stations to
                                                                                                        television stations would be targeted for              promoting minority and female
                                                viewpoint diversity, together with
                                                                                                        acquisition if the ban were relaxed to                 ownership, was the purpose of its
                                                increasing contributions from new
                                                                                                        favor waiver requests for certain                      revised rule. The record does not
                                                media outlets and the public interest
                                                                                                        newspaper/television combinations                      suggest that restricting common
                                                benefits of radio/television
                                                                                                        with stations ranked below the top four                ownership of newspapers and broadcast
                                                combinations, no longer justify
                                                                                                        television stations in a market—a                      stations promotes minority and female
                                                continued radio/television cross-
                                                                                                        category that includes many minority-                  ownership of broadcast stations, and
                                                ownership regulation. For the same
                                                                                                        owned stations. Removing the ban                       there is evidence in the record that
                                                reasons relating to viewpoint diversity
                                                contributions of radio and the                          across-the-board will ensure that no                   tends to support the contrary. Thus,
                                                proliferation of alternative media voices,              artificial incentives are created, and the             fostering minority and female
                                                as well as the countervailing public                    record provides no evidence that                       ownership does not provide a basis to
                                                interest benefits of newspaper/radio                    minority- and female-owned stations                    retain the rule.
                                                combinations, the Commission                            will be singled out for acquisition, as                B. Radio/Television Cross-Ownership
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES




                                                concludes that the restriction on                       some commenters have speculated. To                    Rule
                                                newspaper/radio combinations is not in                  the contrary, record evidence
                                                the public interest and must be                         demonstrates that previous relaxations                 1. Introduction
                                                eliminated pursuant to Section 202(h).                  of other ownership rules have not                         36. The Commission grants the
                                                   32. Minority and Female Ownership.                   resulted in an overall decline in                      request for reconsideration of the
                                                The Commission finds that repealing                     minority and female ownership of                       Commission’s decision in the Second
                                                the NBCO Rule will not have a material                  broadcast stations, and the Commission                 Report and Order to retain the Radio/


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:10 Jan 05, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00035   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM   08JAR1


                                                740                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 5 / Monday, January 8, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                                Television Cross-Ownership Rule.                           39. Contrary to the Commission’s                    position in the NPRM and FNPRM that
                                                Ownership of television and radio                       findings in the Second Report and                      radio stations make only limited
                                                stations will continue to be limited by                 Order, as discussed below, the                         contributions to local viewpoint
                                                the Local Television and Local Radio                    Commission finds that broadcast radio                  diversity. The Commission agrees and
                                                Ownership Rules.                                        stations’ contributions to viewpoint                   find that the Commission’s conclusion
                                                                                                        diversity in local markets no longer                   in the Second Report and Order that
                                                2. Background                                           justify retention of the Radio/Television              radio contributes to local viewpoint
                                                   37. In the Second Report and Order,                  Cross-Ownership Rule. The Commission                   diversity in meaningful ways, such that
                                                the Commission retained the Radio/                      tentatively concluded in the NPRM (77                  it justified retention of the rule—a clear
                                                Television Cross-Ownership Rule with                    FR 2867, Jan. 19, 2012, FCC 11–186, rel.               departure from its earlier, well-
                                                only minor technical modifications,                     Dec. 22, 2011) that the rule was no                    supported position—was not supported
                                                finding that the rule remained necessary                longer necessary to promote viewpoint                  by the record. The Commission has long
                                                to promote viewpoint diversity. Despite                 diversity. It then sought further                      maintained that broadcast radio stations
                                                its prior tentative conclusion to the                   comment on that tentative conclusion in                are not a primary source of viewpoint
                                                contrary, the Commission concluded                      the FNPRM. The Commission’s                            diversity in local markets. While the
                                                that the Radio/Television Cross-                        approach in the NPRM and FNPRM was                     record indicates that broadcast radio
                                                Ownership Rule remains necessary                        based on an already robust record—                     stations may contribute to viewpoint
                                                given that radio stations and television                which was strengthened by comments                     diversity in local markets to a certain
                                                stations both contribute in meaningful                  filed in response to the FNPRM—                        degree, the Commission finds that, in
                                                ways to promote viewpoint diversity in                  demonstrating that local radio stations                the current media marketplace, these
                                                local markets. The Commission further                   are not primary sources of viewpoint                   contributions no longer justify
                                                claimed that the rule continues to play                 diversity in local markets and that                    restrictions on television/radio cross-
                                                an independent role in serving the                      alternative media outlets are a growing                ownership.
                                                public interest separate and apart from                 and important source of viewpoint                         42. For example, the Commission
                                                the Local Radio and Local Television                    diversity. The Commission, however,                    itself acknowledged that consumers’
                                                Ownership Rules, which are designed                     reversed itself in the Second Report and               reliance on radio for some local news
                                                primarily to promote competition. In its                Order, concluding that the rule should
                                                                                                                                                               and information has declined
                                                petition for reconsideration, NAB                       be retained. In doing so, the
                                                                                                                                                               significantly over time—falling from 54
                                                asserts that the decision in the Second                 Commission largely relied on limited
                                                                                                                                                               percent to 34 percent over the last two
                                                Report and Order to retain the Radio/                   evidence, much of it anecdotal or
                                                                                                                                                               decades—as has the number of all-news
                                                Television Cross-Ownership Rule (with                   immaterial, to conclude that radio
                                                                                                                                                               commercial radio stations—down to 30
                                                only minor technical modifications) was                 contributes to viewpoint diversity in
                                                                                                                                                               stations from (the already low) 50
                                                arbitrary and capricious and contrary to                local markets to a degree sufficient to
                                                                                                                                                               stations in the mid-1980s out of over
                                                Section 202(h) of the 1996 Act.                         justify retention of the rule. For
                                                                                                                                                               11,000 commercial radio stations.
                                                                                                        example, the comments cited by the
                                                3. Discussion                                                                                                  Moreover, the overwhelming majority of
                                                                                                        Commission primarily discussed format
                                                                                                        selection, music programming, and                      programming on news-talk stations is
                                                   38. On reconsideration, the                          national news content, all of which are                nationally syndicated, rather than
                                                Commission eliminates the Radio/                        aspects of radio programming that do                   locally produced. Comments in the
                                                Television Cross-Ownership Rule,                        not inform the Commission’s viewpoint                  record, which the Second Report and
                                                concluding that it is no longer necessary               diversity analysis.                                    Order did not address or dispute,
                                                to promote viewpoint diversity in local                    40. The Commission also discussed                   support these findings. A Gallup poll
                                                markets. The Commission concludes                       broadcast radio’s contributions to                     found that only six percent of
                                                that the Commission erred in finding in                 viewpoint diversity in the NBCO rule                   Americans turn to radio as their main
                                                the Second Report and Order that                        section of the Second Report and Order.                news source, and a Pew study found
                                                broadcast radio stations contribute to                  That discussion was equally                            that the percentage of Americans
                                                viewpoint diversity to a degree that                    unpersuasive. The Commission failed to                 reporting that they got any news from
                                                justifies retention of the rule,                        demonstrate that broadcast radio                       radio on the previous day dropped from
                                                particularly in light of other local media              stations are significant independent                   more than 50 percent in 1990 to 33
                                                outlets that contribute to viewpoint                    sources of local news, relied on                       percent in 2012 (consistent with earlier
                                                diversity. The Commission also                          statistics that failed to distinguish                  findings cited by the Commission). Only
                                                concludes that, given that the rule                     between local and national news                        five percent cite radio as a main source
                                                already permits a significant degree of                 content, referenced examples of                        for political and arts and cultural
                                                common ownership, it is doing very                      broadcast content on low-power                         information, four percent for crime
                                                little to promote viewpoint diversity                   stations, and relied heavily on only a                 updates, and three percent or less for
                                                and its elimination therefore will have                 handful of anecdotes regarding                         information on various other topics. A
                                                a negligible effect. The record in this                 broadcast radio’s contributions to                     2013 Pew study confirmed the overall
                                                proceeding gives no cause to disturb the                viewpoint diversity. The rule does not                 trend, finding that news programming
                                                long-standing conclusion that the rule is               apply to low-power stations, and their                 had been relegated to an even smaller
                                                not necessary to promote localism.                      contribution to diversity is unaffected                corner of the listening landscape. Even
                                                However, elimination of the rule is                     by the decision to retain or repeal the                within this smaller universe, a
                                                likely to have a negligible impact in                   radio-television cross-ownership rule.                 substantial segment consists of National
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES




                                                most markets, so any impact on                          All of these flaws undermine the broad                 Public Radio (NPR)-affiliated
                                                localism—positive or negative—will be                   finding that broadcast radio stations                  noncommercial broadcast radio stations,
                                                similarly negligible. Finally, the                      contribute to viewpoint diversity to an                which are not subject to the broadcast
                                                Commission finds that elimination of                    extent that continues to justify cross-                ownership limits. At present, NPR has
                                                the rule is not likely to have a negative               ownership regulation.                                  over 900 member stations in the U.S. As
                                                impact on minority and female                              41. NAB argues that the Commission                  discussed above, the attempt in the
                                                ownership.                                              failed to justify its departure from its               Second Report and Order to overcome


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:10 Jan 05, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00036   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM   08JAR1


                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 5 / Monday, January 8, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                               741

                                                the record in this proceeding of radio’s                marks a change from the circumstances                  prevent an undue concentration of
                                                relatively minor contribution as a source               the Commission faced when it upheld                    broadcast facilities, thereby preserving
                                                of local news and the Commission’s                      the rule in the 2006 Quadrennial Review                opportunities for diverse local
                                                historical recognition of radio’s reduced               Order. Accordingly, the Commission                     ownership, and are therefore adequate
                                                role in promoting viewpoint diversity is                finds that contributions to viewpoint                  to serve the goals the Radio/Television
                                                unpersuasive. The record supports far                   diversity from platforms such as the                   Cross-Ownership Rule was intended to
                                                better the Commission’s tentative                       internet and cable, while not primary                  promote.
                                                conclusions in the NPRM and FNPRM                       sources of viewpoint diversity in local                   47. In light of its limited benefits, the
                                                regarding radio’s limited contributions                 markets, help mitigate any potential loss              Commission finds that the Radio/
                                                to viewpoint diversity in local markets.                of viewpoint diversity that might result               Television Cross-Ownership Rule no
                                                   43. In addition, the Commission finds                from limited increases in radio/                       longer strikes an appropriate balance
                                                that, as NAB contends, the                              television cross-ownership.                            between the protection of viewpoint
                                                Commission’s decision to retain the rule                   45. Importantly, the Commission does                diversity and the potential public
                                                did not properly acknowledge the                        not mean to suggest that broadcast radio               interest benefits that could result from
                                                realities of the digital media                          stations make no contribution to                       the efficiencies gained by common
                                                marketplace, in which consumers now                     viewpoint diversity in local markets—                  ownership of radio and television
                                                have access to a multitude of                           they do. In order to continue to justify               stations in a local market, efficiencies
                                                information sources that contribute to                  the radio/television cross-ownership                   that the Commission has previously
                                                viewpoint diversity in local markets. In                limits under Section 202(h), however,                  recognized. For example, NAB cites
                                                the Second Report and Order, the                        the Commission is compelled to                         numerous Commission studies that
                                                Commission found that platforms such                    consider these contributions in the                    found that radio/television cross-
                                                as the internet or cable do not contribute              context of the broader marketplace as it               ownership produces public interest
                                                significantly to viewpoint diversity in                 exists today, in which broadcast                       benefits, including increased news and
                                                local markets and therefore do not                      television, print, cable, and online                   public affairs programming. The
                                                meaningfully protect against the                        sources all contribute to viewpoint                    Tribune Company also provides
                                                potential loss of viewpoint diversity that              diversity. Broadcast radio’s                           examples of how its co-owned radio/
                                                would result from increased radio/                      contributions notwithstanding, the wide                television combinations have been able
                                                television cross-ownership. The                         selection of sources now available                     to improve outreach to their local
                                                Commission disagrees with arguments                     renders the Radio/Television Cross-                    community and work collaboratively to
                                                that the Commission properly found                      Ownership Rule obsolete in today’s                     improve coverage of issues of local
                                                that cable and satellite programming do                 vibrant media marketplace.                             concern. The current rule prevents
                                                not meaningfully contribute to coverage                    46. Moreover, the Commission finds                  localism benefits from accruing more
                                                of local issues and that information                    that because the rule already permits                  broadly, without providing meaningful
                                                available online usually originates from                significant cross-ownership in local                   offsetting benefits to viewpoint
                                                traditional media sources. The                          markets, eliminating it will have only a               diversity. As such, the Commission can
                                                Commission finds instead that the                       minimal impact on common ownership,                    no longer justify retention of the Radio/
                                                Commission erred in discounting the                     as parties will continue to be                         Television Cross-Ownership Rule under
                                                role that non-traditional sources play in               constrained by the applicable                          Section 202(h). In light of the significant
                                                the local media marketplace and that                    ownership limits in the Local Television               common ownership already allowed
                                                the contributions of such outlets result                and Local Radio Ownership Rules. For                   under the rule, it is not appropriate to
                                                in greater access to independent                        example, pursuant to the Radio/                        modify and retain the rule, which the
                                                information sources in local markets. In                Television Cross-Ownership Rule, in the                Commission has found is no longer in
                                                particular, evidence in the record                      largest markets, entities are permitted to             the public interest under Section 202(h).
                                                clearly demonstrates the emergence of                   own, in combination, either two                        Indeed, the record demonstrates that
                                                online outlets—including many                           television stations and six radio stations             there is no policy justification—
                                                unaffiliated with broadcast or print                    or one television station and seven radio              competition, localism, or viewpoint
                                                sources—that now offer local news and                   stations. The Local Radio Ownership                    diversity—upon which to base such a
                                                information. And as discussed above,                    Rule permits an entity to own a                        revised rule. Because the Commission is
                                                the Commission finds that it failed to                  maximum of eight radio stations in a                   eliminating the Radio/Television Cross-
                                                properly credit the local news offerings                single market. Therefore, in the largest               Ownership Rule on the grounds
                                                of cable operators. Even if cable and                   markets, absent the Radio/Television                   discussed herein, it is not necessary to
                                                online outlets are not yet primary                      Cross-Ownership Rule, an entity                        reach alternative arguments involving
                                                sources of local news and information                   approaching the limits of the existing                 the impact of ownership on viewpoint
                                                programming, their contributions                        cap will be permitted to acquire only                  diversity.
                                                cannot be overlooked. While the                         one additional radio station and remain                   48. Minority and Female Ownership.
                                                Commission relied on a handful of                       in compliance with the Local Radio                     Lastly, consistent with the
                                                anecdotes to overcome its earlier,                      Ownership Rule. Likewise, an entity                    Commission’s preliminary view in the
                                                compelling findings regarding broadcast                 with one television station already                    FNPRM, the Commission finds that the
                                                radio’s limited contributions to local                  could acquire only one additional                      record fails to demonstrate that
                                                news and information programming, it                    station in these large markets under the               eliminating the Radio/Television Cross-
                                                refused to give appropriate                             Local Television Ownership Rule. Thus,                 Ownership Rule is likely to harm
                                                consideration to more persuasive                        the effect of eliminating the radio/                   minority and female ownership. While
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES




                                                evidence of the increasing contributions                television cross-ownership rule will be                broadcast radio remains an important
                                                of non-traditional media—a trend the                    small and, as discussed above, mitigated               entry point into media ownership,
                                                Commission had previously noted, and                    by contributions to viewpoint diversity                eliminating this rule will not result in
                                                which has continued.                                    from other media outlets. In addition,                 significant additional consolidation
                                                   44. The decline of radio’s role in                   the local ownership limits for television              because of the constraints of the Local
                                                providing local news and information,                   and radio, while intended primarily to                 Radio Ownership Rule. Furthermore,
                                                together with the rise of online sources,               promote competition, will continue to                  there is no evidence that any additional


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:10 Jan 05, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00037   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM   08JAR1


                                                742                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 5 / Monday, January 8, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                                common ownership that would be                          and Order, an entity may own up to two                 petitioner’s last opportunity to respond.
                                                permitted as a result of eliminating the                television stations in the same market if:             Even if a petition is repetitious, the
                                                Radio/Television Cross-Ownership Rule                   (1) the digital noise limited service                  Commission can, in its discretion,
                                                would disproportionately or negatively                  contours (NLSCs) of the stations (as                   consider it. While the petitioners repeat
                                                impact minority- and female-owned                       determined by section 73.622(e) of the                 some arguments made earlier in this
                                                stations. Indeed, the analyses within the               Commission’s rules) do not overlap; or                 proceeding, they nonetheless provide
                                                contexts of the Local Television                        (2) at least one of the stations is not                valid grounds for the Commission to
                                                Ownership Rule and the Local Radio                      ranked among the top-four stations in                  reconsider its previous action. As
                                                Ownership Rule suggest that previous                    the market and at least eight                          discussed below, the Commission finds
                                                relaxations of those rules have not                     independently owned television                         that the petitioners have identified
                                                resulted in reduced levels of minority                  stations would remain in the market                    material errors in the Second Report
                                                and female ownership. The Commission                    following the combination. NAB and                     and Order warranting reconsideration of
                                                finds that the record provides no                       Nexstar filed petitions for                            certain aspects of the Local Television
                                                information to suggest that eliminating                 reconsideration of the Local Television                Ownership Rule.
                                                the Radio/Television Cross-Ownership                    Ownership Rule, specifically                             54. Market. The Commission finds
                                                Rule will have a different impact on                    challenging the Top-Four Prohibition                   that its decision in the Second Report
                                                minority and female ownership. The                      and the Eight-Voices Test.                             and Order to adopt a rule focused on
                                                Commission disagrees with the general                                                                          promoting competition among broadcast
                                                                                                        3. Discussion                                          television stations in local television
                                                assertion by UCC et al. that the
                                                Commission cannot modify any of its                        52. On reconsideration, the                         viewing markets was appropriate given
                                                media ownership rules without further                   Commission adopts a revised Local                      the record compiled in this proceeding.
                                                study of the impact on minority and                     Television Ownership Rule, finding that                The Commission concluded in the
                                                female ownership.                                       the rule adopted in the Second Report                  Second Report and Order that non-
                                                   49. In the Second Report and Order,                  and Order is no longer necessary in the                broadcast video offerings still do not
                                                the Commission found that although the                  public interest as a result of                         serve as meaningful substitutes for local
                                                rule could help promote opportunities                   competition. The Commission’s revised                  broadcast television and that
                                                for diversity in broadcast television and               rule reflects its assessment of both the               competition within a local market
                                                radio ownership, it was not being                       current video marketplace and the                      motivates a broadcast television station
                                                retained for the purpose of preserving or               continued importance of broadcast                      to invest in better programming and to
                                                creating specific amounts of minority                   television stations in their local markets.            provide programming tailored to the
                                                and female ownership. The                               Specifically, the Commission finds that                needs and interests of the local
                                                Commission’s comment, however, did                      the Eight-Voices Test is not supported                 community in order to gain market
                                                                                                        by the record and must be eliminated.                  share. NAB and Nexstar urge the
                                                not indicate a belief that the rule would
                                                                                                        In addition, the Commission modifies                   Commission to expand the market
                                                promote minority and female ownership
                                                                                                        the Top-Four Prohibition by                            definition to include non-broadcast
                                                specifically, but rather that the rule
                                                                                                        incorporating a new case-by-case review                video alternatives, such as online and
                                                would promote ownership diversity
                                                                                                        process to address evidence in the                     multichannel video programming
                                                generally by requiring the separation of
                                                                                                        record that the prohibition may be                     distributors (MVPD) video programming
                                                radio and television broadcasters. The
                                                                                                        unwarranted in certain circumstances.                  sources. While the video marketplace
                                                Commission cannot justify retaining the
                                                                                                        The Commission finds that these                        has changed substantially since the
                                                rule under Section 202(h) based on the
                                                                                                        modifications to the Local Television                  current television ownership limits
                                                unsubstantiated hope that the rule will
                                                                                                        Ownership Rule are not likely to have                  were adopted in 1999 and since the last
                                                promote minority and female                             a negative impact on minority and                      Commission review of these rules
                                                ownership.                                              female ownership.                                      concluded in 2008, broadcast television
                                                C. Local Television Ownership Rule                         53. The Commission rejects the                      stations still play a unique and
                                                                                                        argument that reconsideration is                       important role in their local
                                                1. Introduction                                         inappropriate because petitioners rely                 communities. As such, the Commission
                                                  50. Upon reconsideration, the                         on arguments that have been fully                      believes that, on the current record, a
                                                Commission finds that the Local                         considered and rejected by the                         rule focused on preserving competition
                                                Television Ownership Rule adopted in                    Commission within the same                             among local broadcast television
                                                the Second Report and Order is not                      proceeding. Neither the                                stations is still warranted. Thus, the
                                                supported by the record and must be                     Communications Act nor the                             Commission does not include other
                                                modified.                                               Commission’s rules preclude granting                   types of video programming providers
                                                                                                        petitions for reconsideration that fail to             within the market to which the
                                                2. Background                                           rely on new arguments. Likewise, the                   restriction applies. The Commission
                                                   51. The Second Report and Order                      Commission rejects UCC’s claim that                    emphasizes, however, that this
                                                effectively retained the existing Local                 reconsideration is not warranted unless                conclusion could change in a future
                                                Television Ownership Rule (with only a                  petitioners present new evidence. UCC’s                proceeding with a different record.
                                                minor technical modification of the                     reliance on section 1.429(b) of the                       55. The Commission’s finding does
                                                contour overlap provision to reflect the                Commission’s rules is misplaced, as this               not mean, however, that changes
                                                transition to digital broadcasting),                    section does not require petitioners to                outside the local broadcast television
                                                finding that the rule remained necessary                support their claims of Commission                     market should not factor into the
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES




                                                to promote competition. Despite a                       error with new evidence. Commission                    Commission’s assessment of the rule
                                                record replete with evidence of the                     precedent establishes that                             under Section 202(h) or that the
                                                significant changes in the video                        reconsideration is generally appropriate               Commission is free to retain its existing
                                                marketplace, the Commission’s decision                  where the petitioner shows either a                    rule without any adjustments that take
                                                left in place ownership restrictions                    material error or omission in the                      into account marketplace changes.
                                                originally implemented in 1999. Under                   original order or raises additional facts              Indeed, television broadcasters’
                                                the rule adopted in the Second Report                   not known or not existing until after the              important role makes it critical for the


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:10 Jan 05, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00038   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM   08JAR1


                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 5 / Monday, January 8, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                            743

                                                Commission to ensure that its rules do                  no justification for the notion that the               decision, as discussed below, to retain
                                                not unnecessarily restrict their ability to             dominance of four top-performing                       the Top-Four Prohibition. Another
                                                serve their local markets in the face of                stations must be balanced by an equal                  commenter argued that the Eight-Voices
                                                ever-growing video programming                          number of independent, lower-                          Test should be eliminated and not
                                                options. Consumers are increasingly                     performing stations. The Commission                    replaced with an alternative test. No
                                                accessing video programming delivered                   provided no precedent, record evidence,                other commenters offered support for a
                                                via MVPDs, the internet, and mobile                     or economic theory to support this                     different voice test. The Commission
                                                devices. Moreover, the online video                     notion. Moreover, a significant gap in                 finds no justification for relying on an
                                                distributor (OVD) industry—which                        audience share between the top-four                    arbitrary voice count to promote
                                                includes entities such as Netflix and                   stations and the other stations in a                   competition and concludes that the
                                                Hulu—continues to grow and evolve. In                   market could also logically justify                    public interest is better served by the
                                                addition to providing on-demand access                  permitting the common ownership of                     revised rule the Commission adopts in
                                                to vast content libraries, many OVDs are                non-top-four stations to form a stronger               this Order, which will allow
                                                now offering original programming and/                  competitor to the top-four stations and                combinations that will help lower-rated
                                                or live television offerings similar to                 thus promote competition, even if fewer                stations better serve their viewers while
                                                traditional MVPD offerings. The Second                  than eight independent voices remain.                  preserving the restriction that an entity
                                                Report and Order acknowledged the                         59. Instead, the Commission’s primary                may not own two top-four rated stations
                                                popularity of these services but failed to              justification for retaining the Eight-                 in a market unless it can demonstrate
                                                properly account for this in its analysis.              Voices Test apparently stems from the                  that such a combination will serve the
                                                Accordingly, the Commission                             historical use of the number eight as the              public interest and in no event will
                                                reconsidered the Local Television                       proper number of voices when the rule                  allow common ownership of more than
                                                Ownership Rule and adopt common                         was revised in 1999 to permit duopoly                  two stations in a market, subject to the
                                                sense modifications that will help local                ownership in certain circumstances.                    contour overlap provision. The
                                                television broadcasters achieve                         Notably, that decision relied on                       Commission finds that this is a more
                                                economies of scale and improve their                    viewpoint diversity grounds to                         effective way to promote competition
                                                ability to serve their local markets in the             determine the appropriate numerical                    and still avoid harms associated with
                                                face of an evolving video marketplace.                  limit. The Commission subsequently                     significant concentration in local
                                                   56. Eight-Voices Test. Upon                          determined that the rule was no longer                 markets than an arbitrary remaining
                                                reconsideration, the Commission finds                   necessary to promote viewpoint                         voices test.
                                                that the Eight-Voices Test is                           diversity and instead relied on
                                                unsupported by the record or reasoned                   competition to support its adoption of                    61. The Commission not only failed to
                                                analysis and is no longer necessary in                  the exact same voices limit in the 2006                provide a reasoned basis for retaining
                                                the public interest. Accordingly, the                   Quadrennial Review Order. The                          the Eight-Voices Test; it also ignored
                                                Commission grants the NAB Petition                      Commission, however, offered no                        evidence in the record demonstrating
                                                and the Nexstar Petition with respect to                empirical evidence to support this line                that the Eight-Voices Test lacks any
                                                this issue.                                             drawing in the 2006 Quadrennial                        economic support, is inconsistent with
                                                   57. Despite the fact that the                        Review Order as necessary to preserve                  the realities of the television
                                                Commission has spent years seeking                      competition, and as discussed above,                   marketplace, and prevents combinations
                                                comment regarding the local ownership                   the Commission finds that the rationale                that would likely produce significant
                                                rule, the record lacks evidence sufficient              set forth in the Second Report and                     public interest benefits. Indeed, no
                                                to support the Commission’s decision to                 Order was flawed. Although the                         commenter has produced evidence of
                                                retain the Eight-Voices Test. In the                    Commission’s decision to retain the                    any other industry where the
                                                Second Report and Order, the                            Eight-Voices Test in the 2006                          government employs an eight-
                                                Commission asserted that competition                    Quadrennial Review Order was upheld                    competitor test. In multiple instances,
                                                among stations affiliated with the Big                  in Prometheus Radio Project v. FCC, 652                the Commission acknowledged the
                                                Four networks (often the top-four rated                 F.3d 431 (3d Cir. 2011) (Prometheus II),               potential public interest benefits of
                                                broadcast stations in a local market) and               the Commission is obligated under                      common ownership, which potentially
                                                at least four independent competitors                   Section 202(h) to justify its broadcast                allow a local broadcast station to invest
                                                unaffiliated with a Big Four network                    ownership rules based on the existing                  more resources in news or other public
                                                motivates all of the stations in a market               record and in light of current                         interest programming that meets the
                                                to improve their programming,                           marketplace realities. On                              needs of its local community. The
                                                including providing additional local                    reconsideration, the Commission finds                  Commission finds that the Eight-Voices
                                                news and public interest programming.                   no record support for retaining the                    Test denies the public interest benefits
                                                Yet the Commission did not provide or                   Eight-Voices Test and concludes that                   produced by common ownership
                                                cite any evidence to support this                       retaining it does not serve the public                 without any evidence of countervailing
                                                argument, even though the Eight-Voices                  interest. Further, as discussed below,                 benefits to competition from preserving
                                                Test has been around since 1999 (more                   the Eight-Voices Test prevents the                     the requirement. Furthermore, these
                                                than enough time to observe whether                     realization of public interest benefits.               markets—including many small and
                                                the Eight-Voices Test has been having                   Accordingly, it must be eliminated.                    mid-sized markets that have less
                                                the expected impact in local markets).                    60. The record fails to support the                  advertising revenue to fund local
                                                   58. The Commission also failed to                    adoption of a different voice test, e.g.,              programming—are the places where the
                                                explain adequately why the number of                    six voices, despite specific requests for              efficiencies of common ownership can
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES




                                                independent television stations must be                 comment on alternative voice tests in                  often yield the greatest benefits. The
                                                equal to the number of top-performing                   this proceeding. One commenter argued                  Commission’s action in repealing the
                                                stations in a market. The Commission                    for lowering the voice count in general,               Eight-Voices Test will enable local
                                                stated that a significant gap in audience               and another proposed changing the test                 television broadcasters to realize these
                                                share persists between the top-four rated               to four voices—a proposal the                          benefits and better serve their local
                                                stations in a market and the remaining                  Commission rejects because such a                      markets. In particular, the record
                                                stations in most markets, but it offered                restriction would be redundant given its               suggests that local news programming is


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:10 Jan 05, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00039   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM   08JAR1


                                                744                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 5 / Monday, January 8, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                                typically one of the largest operational                order to address instances in which the                appropriate to modify the rule to allow
                                                costs for broadcasters; accordingly,                    application of the Top-Four Prohibition                for more flexibility.
                                                stations may find that common                           may not be warranted based on the                         64. In particular, the Commission
                                                ownership enables them to provide                       circumstances in a particular market or                takes steps to mitigate the potentially
                                                more high-quality local programming,                    with respect to a particular transaction.              detrimental impacts of applying the
                                                especially in revenue-scarce small and                  This hybrid approach will allow for a                  Top-Four Prohibition in certain
                                                mid-sized markets. After the draft order                more refined application of the Local                  circumstances. In the Second Report
                                                in this proceeding was publicly                         Television Ownership Rule that will                    and Order, the Commission conceded
                                                released, DISH Network L.L.C. (DISH)                    help facilitate the public interest                    the potential public interest benefits
                                                submitted an economic study based on                    benefits associated with common                        from allowing additional common
                                                viewer ratings data applicable to                       ownership in local markets.                            ownership, yet found that the harms
                                                existing combinations of local television                  63. The ratings data in the record                  associated with top-four combinations
                                                stations as compared with ratings data                  generally supported the Commission’s                   exceeded these benefits. This logic no
                                                from independently owned stations in                    line drawing, and the potential harms                  doubt holds when the rationale for
                                                DMAs deemed comparable to the DMAs                      associated with top-four combinations                  adopting the Top-Four Prohibition
                                                served by commonly owned stations.                      find support in the record. The                        applies, though the benefits could
                                                DISH claims that the study shows that                   Commission has repeatedly concluded                    exceed the harms in certain
                                                common ownership of local television                    that the Top-Four Prohibition is                       circumstances based on an evaluation of
                                                stations does not produce increased                                                                            the characteristics of a particular market
                                                                                                        necessary to promote competition in the
                                                ratings for local programming; therefore,                                                                      or a particular transaction.
                                                                                                        local television marketplace. As the
                                                common ownership does not produce                                                                                 65. Instead of relying solely on the
                                                                                                        Commission has consistently found,                     bright-line application of the Top-Four
                                                higher-quality local programming. DISH                  there is generally a significant cushion
                                                provides no reason it could not have                                                                           Prohibition, the Commission is adopting
                                                                                                        of audience share percentage points that               a hybrid approach that will allow
                                                submitted this study earlier in response                separates the top four stations from the
                                                to broadcasters’ claims that relaxation of                                                                     applicants to request a case-by-case
                                                                                                        fifth-ranked stations. In the Second                   examination of a proposed combination
                                                the rule would lead to more locally                     Report and Order, the Commission
                                                responsive and higher quality                                                                                  that would otherwise be prohibited by
                                                                                                        found that this pattern has not changed.               the Top-Four Prohibition. Under a
                                                programming. Thus, it is inexcusably                    Thus, top-four combinations would
                                                late. 47 CFR 1.429(b), (f). Moreover, the                                                                      hybrid approach, a rule includes both
                                                                                                        generally result in a single firm’s                    bright-line provisions and a case-by-case
                                                study suffers from significant                          obtaining a significantly larger market                element to allow for consideration of
                                                methodological issues and fails to                      share than other stations and reduced                  market-specific factors. Such an
                                                provide a sufficient basis upon which to                incentives for commonly owned local                    approach provides certainty and
                                                draw any conclusions. For example, the                  stations to compete for programming,                   flexibility when determining whether a
                                                study employs a simplistic analysis                     advertising, and audience shares. The                  particular transaction should be granted.
                                                covering a small sample size and the                    Commission also finds that the data                    Though no party commented on this
                                                results are highly dependent on the                     were sufficiently recent and                           issue, the Commission finds that the
                                                selection of data points, such as control               uncontradicted by any newer ratings                    record supports its approach. As
                                                DMAs, viewing period, and time slot.                    data in the record, such that it was                   discussed in this Order, special scrutiny
                                                Furthermore, the analysis fails to                      appropriate for the Commission to rely                 of combinations of two top-four rated
                                                address issues of statistical significance              on the data in reaching its decision. The              stations is still supported by the record,
                                                regarding viewership, and the cross-                    Commission considered alternative                      though the record also demonstrates a
                                                sectional analysis fails to account for                 arguments and data in the record and                   need for flexibility in addressing
                                                other variables that may influence                      ultimately found that the Top-Four                     circumstances in which application of
                                                viewership in different markets or                      Prohibition, last endorsed in the 2006                 the Top-Four Prohibition may not be
                                                otherwise address the cases in the filing               Quadrennial Review Order, continued                    appropriate due to the particular
                                                for which viewership is higher in                       to be supported. In arguing that the Top-              circumstances in a local market. The
                                                duopoly markets. Ultimately, the study                  Four Prohibition should be eliminated,                 hybrid approach is well suited for such
                                                does not undermine the Commission’s                     NAB notes that evidence in the record                  circumstances. Such an approach will
                                                finding that efficiencies gained through                demonstrated that the concerns that the                help mitigate the potential drawbacks
                                                common ownership can allow                              Top-Four Prohibition is intended to                    associated with strict application of the
                                                broadcasters to invest more resources in                address may not be present in many                     Top-Four Prohibition, while still
                                                producing more and higher-quality                       markets. NAB also provides additional                  preserving the ease and efficiency of
                                                locally responsive programming.                         information demonstrating that some                    applying the rule. This revised rule will
                                                   62. Top-Four Prohibition. In contrast                markets do not have a gap between the                  continue to promote robust competition
                                                to the Eight-Voices Test, the                           ratings of the fourth- and fifth-ranked                in local markets while also facilitating
                                                Commission finds that its decision in                   stations or that the gap is larger between             transactions, in appropriate
                                                the Second Report and Order to treat                    second- and third-ranked stations in                   circumstances, that will allow broadcast
                                                combinations of two top-four stations                   some markets. The Commission has                       stations to achieve economies of scale
                                                differently from other combinations is                  long conceded that the justification for               and better serve their local viewers.
                                                supported in the record. The                            the Top-Four Prohibition does not apply                   66. As the Commission has just
                                                Commission therefore denies the NAB                     in all markets. Thus, the rule may                     discussed, the record demonstrates the
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES




                                                Petition and the Nexstar Petition to the                prohibit combinations that do not                      need for flexibility in the application of
                                                extent each requested complete                          present public interest harms or that                  the Top-Four Prohibition. Given the
                                                elimination of the Top-Four Prohibition.                offer potential public interest benefits               variations in local markets and specific
                                                As discussed below, however, the                        that outweigh any potential harms. To                  transactions, however, the Commission
                                                Commission finds that modification of                   this extent, the bright-line prohibition is            does not believe that applicants would
                                                the Top-Four Prohibition to include a                   over-inclusive. On reconsideration, the                be well served by a rigid set of criteria
                                                case-by-case analysis is appropriate in                 Commission believes that it is                         for its case-by-case analysis. The record


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:10 Jan 05, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00040   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM   08JAR1


                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 5 / Monday, January 8, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                             745

                                                does, however, suggest the types of                     result of the Commission’s case-by-case                offerings, are better considered in its
                                                information that applicants could                       review of proposed top-four                            case-by-case analysis at this time. The
                                                provide to help establish that                          combinations will provide bargaining                   Commission anticipates that any
                                                application of the Top-Four Prohibition                 parties with advance notice of whether                 transactions processed under this case-
                                                is not in the public interest because the               joint retransmission consent                           by-case approach will help inform any
                                                reduction in competition is minimal                     negotiations for the two stations in                   consideration of specific criteria that
                                                and is outweighed by public interest                    question will be allowed. Moreover,                    could be included in any future revision
                                                benefits. Such information regarding the                common ownership of two top-four                       of the Local Television Ownership Rule,
                                                impacts on competition in the local                     stations implicates a broader range of                 which will be reviewed again in the
                                                market could include (but is not limited                potential benefits and harms than a                    forthcoming 2018 Quadrennial Review
                                                to): (1) Ratings share data of the stations             narrow agreement between two top-four                  proceeding.
                                                proposed to be combined compared                        stations to jointly negotiate                             70. Minority and Female Ownership.
                                                with other stations in the market; (2)                  retransmission consent so there is no                  The Commission finds that the
                                                revenue share data of the stations                      inherent inconsistency between                         modifications adopted to the Local
                                                proposed to be combined compared                        adopting a bright-line rule in the latter              Television Ownership Rule are not
                                                with other stations in the market,                      case and a case-by-case review in the                  likely to harm minority and female
                                                including advertising (on-air and                       former case. Additionally, the                         ownership. As noted in the Second
                                                digital) and retransmission consent fees;               Commission rejects the contention that                 Report and Order, data in the record
                                                (3) market characteristics, such as                     adopting a case-by-case review is                      demonstrate that relaxation of the Local
                                                population and the number and types of                  inconsistent with the statute. To the                  Television Ownership Rule in 1999 did
                                                broadcast television stations serving the               extent that the existing Top-Four                      not have a negative impact on overall
                                                market (including any strong                            Prohibition is overbroad given the                     minority ownership levels. In this
                                                competitors outside the top-four rated                  current state of competition, as the                   lengthy proceeding, no party has
                                                broadcast television stations); (4) the                 Commission concludes here, then the                    presented contrary evidence or a
                                                likely effects on programming meeting                   existing prohibition, absent                           compelling argument demonstrating
                                                the needs and interests of the                          modification, is not necessary in the                  why relaxing this rule will have a
                                                community; and (5) any other                            public interest as a result of competition             different impact. Indeed, consistent
                                                circumstances impacting the market,                     and should be modified. Moreover, in                   with the Second Report and Order, the
                                                particularly any disparities primarily                  adopting this approach, the Commission                 Commission finds that the record does
                                                impacting small and mid-sized markets.                  declines to adopt specific criteria                    not support a causal connection
                                                Applicants are encouraged to provide                    related to the issue of retransmission                 between modifications to the Local
                                                data over a substantial period (e.g., the               consent, as recently advocated by some                 Television Ownership Rule and
                                                past three years, similar to the                        commenters. Instead, as discussed in                   minority and female ownership levels.
                                                                                                        this Order, the Commission believes                       71. In the Second Report and Order,
                                                requirement in the failing/failed station
                                                                                                        that the case-by-case review process will              the Commission stated that ensuring the
                                                waiver test) to strengthen their request
                                                                                                        allow parties to advance any relevant                  presence of independently owned
                                                and to help avoid circumvention of the
                                                                                                        concerns—including concerns related to                 broadcast television stations in the local
                                                Top-Four Prohibition based on
                                                                                                        retransmission consent issues—in the                   market indirectly increases the
                                                anomalous data over a short period of
                                                                                                        context of a specific proposed                         likelihood of a variety of viewpoints and
                                                time or manipulation of program
                                                                                                        transaction if such issues are relevant to             preserving ownership opportunities for
                                                offerings prior to the proposed
                                                                                                        the particular market, stations, or                    new entrants. The Commission’s
                                                transaction. In the end, applicants must                                                                       comment, however, did not indicate a
                                                demonstrate that the benefits of the                    transaction.
                                                                                                           68. Similarly, the Commission rejects               belief that the rule would promote
                                                proposed transaction would outweigh                                                                            minority and female ownership
                                                                                                        the recommendation of Independent
                                                the harms, and the Commission will                                                                             specifically, but rather that the rule
                                                                                                        Television Group (ITG) that the
                                                undertake a careful review of such                                                                             would promote ownership diversity
                                                                                                        Commission adopt a presumption in
                                                showings in light of the record with                                                                           generally by limiting common
                                                                                                        favor of top-four combinations in small
                                                respect to each such application.                                                                              ownership of broadcast television
                                                                                                        and mid-sized markets. ITG provides no
                                                   67. The Commission disagrees with                    evidence sufficient to support such a                  stations. This statement will continue to
                                                the contention that affording licensees a               presumption. ITG simply relies on                      be true with respect to the revised rule
                                                case-by-case opportunity to seek                        NAB’s assertion in its 2014 comments                   that the Commission adopts in this
                                                approval of top-four combinations                       that in some markets, there may have                   Order. Under Section 202(h), however,
                                                cannot be squared with the bright-line                  been significant disparities in audience               the Commission cannot continue to
                                                rule adopted in the Commission’s 2014                   share among some of the top-four rated                 subject broadcast television licensees to
                                                Retransmission Consent Report and                       stations. The case-by-case analysis is not             aspects of the Local Television
                                                Order (79 FR 28615, May 19, 2014, FCC                   weighted in favor of transactions in any               Ownership Rule that can no longer be
                                                14–29, rel. Mar. 31, 2014). There, the                  particular market, and applicants in                   justified based on the unsubstantiated
                                                Commission concluded that the                           small and mid-sized markets will be                    hope that these restrictions will promote
                                                potential competitive harms arising                     able to provide market-specific evidence               minority and female ownership. In
                                                from joint negotiation of retransmission                supporting their requests.                             addition, the Commission disagrees
                                                consent by non-commonly owned                              69. Gray Television, Inc. proposes                  with the general assertion by UCC et al.
                                                stations outweighed the potential                       that, at least in smaller markets, two                 that the Commission cannot modify any
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES




                                                benefits and determined that a bright-                  stations be permitted to combine                       of its media ownership rules without
                                                line prohibition would be more                          ownership if one of the stations has not               further study of the impact on minority
                                                administratively efficient than case-by-                produced a local newscast in the                       and female ownership. The Commission
                                                case review because it would provide                    previous two years. The Commission                     also disagrees with assertions by the
                                                the bargaining parties with advance                     finds, however, that market                            Multicultural Media, Telecom and
                                                notice of the appropriate process for                   characteristics and the state of local                 internet Council and the National
                                                such negotiation. Here, however, the                    programming, including local news                      Association of Black Owned


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:10 Jan 05, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00041   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM   08JAR1


                                                746                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 5 / Monday, January 8, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                                Broadcasters that the rules can be                      that are included in a larger parent                   deciding to retain the current
                                                retained based on promoting news                        market). The Commission grants                         methodology. In particular, Connoisseur
                                                coverage of specific issues.                            Connoisseur’s petition to the extent it                maintains that counting stations from
                                                   72. Incentive Auction. The                           seeks a presumption that would apply                   multiple embedded markets for
                                                Commission reiterates that it remains                   its two-prong test for waiver requests                 purposes of calculating compliance with
                                                premature to analyze the implications of                involving existing parent markets with                 the numerical limits in the parent
                                                the incentive auction on the Local                      multiple embedded markets pending                      market is unreasonable because stations
                                                Television Ownership Rule. Contrary to                  further consideration of this issue in the             in embedded markets do not compete in
                                                the position of certain parties, the                    2018 Quadrennial Review proceeding.                    any meaningful way with stations in
                                                Commission cannot—and did not in the                                                                           other embedded markets or stations in
                                                                                                        2. Background
                                                Second Report and Order—use the                                                                                the central city of the parent market.
                                                auction as an excuse for delaying action                   74. Connoisseur seeks reconsideration               The Commission noted in the Second
                                                and refusing to fulfill its obligations                 of the decision in the Second Report                   Report and Order, it has long relied on
                                                under Section 202(h). While the                         and Order to retain the existing                       Nielsen Audio’s market analysis, as
                                                Commission finds fault in its prior                     methodology for embedded markets and                   reported by BIA, which lists all the
                                                decision to retain the existing television              asks the Commission to adopt a new                     stations that are deemed to compete in
                                                ownership restrictions without                          two-pronged test for a station owner that              a given market (often referred to as
                                                modification, the incentive auction was                 seeks to own stations licensed to home                 above-the-line stations), as the basis for
                                                not a factor in that decision. Instead, the             counties (i.e., the county in which the                multiple ownership calculations for
                                                Commission properly found that it                       station’s community of license is                      embedded and parent markets. The
                                                could not delay a decision on its rules                 geographically located) in different                   Commission found that the Nielsen-
                                                because of the auction nor could it                     embedded markets within a single                       defined markets are the primary means
                                                adopt changes to its rules based on                     parent market. Consistent with the                     by which broadcasters and advertisers
                                                speculation as to the final results of the              Commission’s current methodology,                      place a value on advertising sold by
                                                auction. The Commission agrees with its                 under the first part of Connoisseur’s                  stations listed as participating in the
                                                prior finding. Section 202(h) compels                   proposed test, a station owner would be                market. Nielsen Audio’s market
                                                the Commission to act on the record                     required to comply with the numerical                  definitions are recognized as the
                                                before it and determine whether to                      ownership limits using the Nielsen                     industry standard and provide for
                                                retain, repeal, or modify the Local                     Audio Metro methodology in each                        consistency and ease of application in
                                                Television Ownership Rule based on the                  embedded market. Under the second
                                                                                                                                                               comparison to other possible methods
                                                realities of the current marketplace,                   part, however, the station owner would
                                                                                                                                                               for defining local radio markets. The
                                                which the Commission has done.                          be required to comply with the
                                                                                                                                                               inclusion of an embedded market
                                                Though the auction has finished, it is                  ownership limits using a contour-
                                                                                                                                                               station as an above-the-line station in a
                                                still too soon to evaluate its impacts on               overlap methodology in lieu of the
                                                                                                                                                               parent market therefore has long been
                                                the television marketplace. While there                 Commission’s current parent market
                                                                                                                                                               thought to reflect a determination by
                                                is still time for stations to change their              analysis. Connoisseur argues that, as a
                                                                                                                                                               Nielsen Audio that, absent other
                                                post-auction channel sharing elections,                 result of the Commission’s existing
                                                                                                                                                               information, the station competes in
                                                the initial results of the auction suggest              methodology, a broadcaster which owns
                                                                                                                                                               that market. The Commission notes that
                                                that the auction may not have a                         stations in one embedded market may
                                                                                                                                                               its continued reliance on Nielsen Audio
                                                significant impact in the context of the                be precluded from owning stations in
                                                                                                                                                               market definitions for purposes of
                                                Local Television Ownership Rule, as the                 another embedded market, despite the
                                                                                                                                                               applying the Local Radio Ownership
                                                overwhelming majority of commercial,                    lack of competitive overlap between
                                                                                                                                                               Rule provides an important level of
                                                full-power winning bidders have elected                 those markets.
                                                                                                                                                               certainty to radio licensees in all
                                                to channel share once they surrender                    3. Discussion                                          markets, including those in embedded
                                                their spectrum. The Commission will                        75. The Commission denies in part                   markets, and overcomes disadvantages
                                                continue to monitor these elections as                  and grants in part Connoisseur’s                       associated with the contour-overlap
                                                part of its continuing efforts to assess                petition for reconsideration. First, the               approach. Although Nielsen has
                                                the impact of the auction on the                        Commission finds that its decision to                  historically defined what stations
                                                television marketplace. As noted in the                 not adopt a blanket change to the                      compete in a market based on
                                                Second Report and Order, the                            current methodology was supported by                   geographical market boundaries, and the
                                                Commission will evaluate the broadcast                  a reasoned explanation. Second, the                    Commission’s rules have relied on these
                                                marketplace post-auction and expects                    Commission finds that its decision to                  determinations in determining
                                                that these issues will be considered in                 adopt a contour-overlap methodology                    compliance with its ownership caps,
                                                the forthcoming 2018 Quadrennial                        for the Puerto Rico market is not at odds              Connoisseur’s Oct. 30, 2017 ex parte
                                                Review proceeding.                                      with the approach the Commission took                  letter raises issues related to embedded
                                                D. Local Radio Ownership Rule                           regarding embedded markets. Finally,                   markets that should be further explored
                                                                                                        the Commission grants Connoisseur’s                    in greater detail in the 2018
                                                1. Introduction                                         alternative request to adopt a                         Quadrennial Review proceeding.
                                                   73. The Commission denies in part                    presumptive waiver approach for                        However, the arguments in the ex parte
                                                and grants in part Connoisseur’s                        existing parent markets with multiple                  letter support adoption of a presumptive
                                                petition for reconsideration of the                     embedded markets.                                      waiver approach for transactions
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES




                                                Commission’s decision in the Second                        76. The Commission finds that it                    involving existing parent markets with
                                                Report and Order to retain the current                  provided a reasoned explanation for its                multiple embedded markets.
                                                methodology for determining                             decision in the Second Report and                         77. The Commission also finds that its
                                                compliance with the Local Radio                         Order to not adopt a blanket change to                 decision in the Second Report and
                                                Ownership Rule in markets containing                    the current embedded market                            Order to adopt a contour-overlap
                                                embedded markets (i.e., smaller                         methodology. Connoisseur argues that                   methodology for the Puerto Rico market
                                                markets, as defined by Nielsen Audio,                   the Commission acted arbitrarily in                    is not inconsistent with the approach to


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:10 Jan 05, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00042   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM   08JAR1


                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 5 / Monday, January 8, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                            747

                                                embedded markets. Connoisseur argues                    modified, or eliminated in the future.                 limit the presumption to these markets
                                                that parent markets containing multiple                 For instance, in addition to New York                  (New York and Washington, DC),
                                                embedded markets are analogous to the                   and Washington, DC, Connoisseur                        pending review in the 2018 Quadrennial
                                                Puerto Rico market where mountainous                    previously had identified San Francisco                Review proceeding, to avoid any
                                                topography, as opposed to a central city,               as an example of a parent market with                  potential manipulation of embedded
                                                separates smaller centers of economic                   two embedded markets. One of those                     markets in other Nielsen Audio markets.
                                                activity within the larger parent market.               embedded markets, however, is no                          80. Adoption of this presumption will
                                                Accordingly, Connoisseur asserts that                   longer rated by Nielsen. Accordingly,                  give Connoisseur—and other parties—
                                                the contour-overlap methodology the                     the San Francisco market now includes                  sufficient confidence with which to
                                                Commission applies to the Puerto Rico                   only one embedded market and is                        assess possible future actions. Further,
                                                market likewise should be applied in                    therefore no longer relevant to the issues             the Commission anticipates that any
                                                the context of embedded markets in lieu                 discussed in Connoisseur’s petition,                   such transactions will help inform its
                                                of the Commission’s current parent                      which pertain solely to parent markets                 subsequent review of the Local Radio
                                                market analysis. The Commission finds                   containing multiple embedded markets.                  Ownership Rule—and, in particular, the
                                                that differences between the Puerto Rico                As such, the potential impact of a                     treatment of embedded market
                                                market and a parent market that                         proposed transaction involving                         transactions.
                                                includes embedded markets make the                      embedded market stations may vary
                                                                                                                                                               E. Television JSA Attribution
                                                comparison between the two                              based on the specific markets, stations,
                                                circumstances inappropriate. As one                     and ownership interests involved.                      1. Introduction
                                                example, the core location of a station’s                  79. Accordingly, the Commission                        81. On reconsideration, the
                                                listenership has the potential to shift                 finds Connoisseur’s argument regarding                 Commission finds that it erred in its
                                                geographically over time in a parent/                   a presumptive waiver approach to be                    decision to adopt the Television JSA
                                                embedded market scenario in a way that                  persuasive. While a bright-line rule                   Attribution Rule and eliminates the
                                                would be unlikely, or even impossible,                  codifying Connoisseur’s preferred                      Television JSA Attribution Rule. The
                                                where, as in Puerto Rico, the physical                  approach to embedded markets would                     petitioners also argue that the
                                                terrain prevents a station from reaching                no doubt provide greater certainty, as                 attribution decision must be reversed on
                                                other geographic areas. Indeed, the                     discussed in this Order, the Commission                the grounds that (1) the decision had the
                                                Commission has long stated that the                     does not believe that such an approach                 effect of tightening the media ownership
                                                Puerto Rico market is unique, even as                   is supported by the record at this time.               rules, and that the Commission failed to
                                                compared to other large metro areas.                    Instead, the Commission intends to fully               properly analyze the impact of the
                                                The Commission has a long history—                      examine its existing methodology                       attribution decision as required under
                                                dating back to 2003—of applying the                     regarding embedded market transactions                 Section 202(h) of the 1996
                                                contour-overlap methodology to Puerto                   in the forthcoming 2018 Quadrennial                    Telecommunications Act; and (2) the
                                                Rico on a case-by-case basis due to the                 Review proceeding. Pending the                         decision was inconsistent with the
                                                unique characteristics of that market.                  outcome of this review, however, the                   Commission’s repeal of the wireless
                                                The Commission therefore finds that its                 Commission adopts a presumption in                     attributable material relationship (AMR)
                                                decision to retain the existing                         favor of applying Connoisseur’s two-                   rule. Because the Commission is
                                                methodology for embedded markets is                     prong test proposed on reconsideration                 reversing its decision to adopt the
                                                not undermined by its decision to adopt                 to waiver requests involving existing                  Television JSA Attribution Rule on
                                                a contour-overlap methodology in                        parent markets with multiple embedded                  other grounds, it does not need to reach
                                                Puerto Rico.                                            markets (i.e., New York and                            these arguments.
                                                   78. For these reasons, the Commission                Washington, DC). The Commission
                                                continues to find that, rather than                     finds that there is sufficient evidence on             2. Background
                                                adopting Connoisseur’s proposal for an                  the record to support a presumption that                  82. The Commission first considered
                                                across-the-board change to the                          a waiver of the Local Radio Ownership                  whether to attribute television JSAs in
                                                Commission’s embedded market                            Rule as to stations in these markets                   1999. It declined to do so, finding that
                                                methodology, entertaining a market-                     serves the public interest if the                      JSAs did not convey a sufficient degree
                                                specific waiver is the appropriate                      transaction at issue satisfies the two-                of influence or control over station
                                                approach at this time. In the Second                    prong test. Pursuant to section 310(d) of              programming or core operations to
                                                Report and Order, the Commission                        the Communications Act, the                            warrant attribution and that JSAs helped
                                                acknowledged Connoisseur’s concerns                     Commission must make a public                          produce public interest benefits. The
                                                with respect to the particular                          interest determination with respect to                 Commission sought additional comment
                                                characteristics of the current New York                 any future applications based on the                   on this conclusion in a 2004 notice of
                                                market and indicated its willingness to                 entire record with respect to that                     proposed rulemaking after attributing
                                                entertain a waiver specific to that                     application. Throughout the proceeding,                radio JSAs in the 2002 Biennial Review
                                                market, a willingness the Commission                    Connoisseur has provided information                   Order. Then in 2014, nearly a decade
                                                reiterates in this Order. Ultimately, the               demonstrating that, due to the particular              after initially seeking comment on the
                                                issue continues to appear narrow in                     circumstances in these markets,                        issue, the Commission changed course
                                                scope—largely specific to a small                       applying the existing market                           and adopted the Television JSA
                                                number of parties’ concerns with at                     methodology may not be warranted.                      Attribution Rule, despite a lack of
                                                most two markets. The circumstances                     These showings provide the                             evidence suggesting that its prior
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES




                                                Connoisseur describes could apply                       Commission with sufficient confidence                  determination that television JSAs do
                                                currently to, at most, two markets—New                  that transactions consistent with this                 not convey sufficient influence or
                                                York City and Washington, DC. The                       presumption likely will not unduly                     control to warrant attribution was
                                                Commission notes, however, that                         impact competition in these markets,                   wrong. Specifically, the rule established
                                                embedded market designations are                        subject to the Commission’s review                     that JSAs that involve the sale of more
                                                subject to change, with the potential for               under section 310(d). The Commission                   than 15 percent of the weekly
                                                embedded markets to be created,                         finds, however, that it is appropriate to              advertising time of a station (brokered


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:10 Jan 05, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00043   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM   08JAR1


                                                748                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 5 / Monday, January 8, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                                station) by another in-market station                   Order. Though television JSAs will no                  its theory of attribution by relying on
                                                (brokering station) are attributable under              longer be attributable as a result of the              the decision in the 2002 Biennial
                                                the Commission’s ownership rules. As a                  amount of advertising time brokered,                   Review Order to attribute radio JSAs.
                                                result, the brokering station was deemed                the Commission reminds licensees that                  The Commission now agrees with
                                                to have an attributable interest in the                 they must retain ultimate control over                 Nexstar that this reliance was not
                                                brokered station, and the brokered                      their programming and core operations                  appropriate. First, the Commission
                                                station would count toward the                          so as to avoid the potential for an                    failed to explain why differences in fee
                                                brokering station’s permissible                         unauthorized transfer of control or the                structure (typically fixed fees for radio
                                                ownership totals.                                       existence of an undisclosed or                         JSAs versus a percentage of advertising
                                                  83. In the Second Report and Order,                   unauthorized real party in interest.                   revenue for television JSAs) did not
                                                the Commission concluded that the                          85. The Commission failed to                        mitigate the Commission’s earlier
                                                Local Television Ownership Rule (with                   demonstrate that television JSAs confer                concerns that a fixed fee structure—
                                                a minor modification) still served the                  a sufficient degree of influence or                    which the Commission found to be
                                                public interest and it re-adopted the                   control so as to be considered an                      common in radio JSAs—effectively
                                                Television JSA Attribution Rule based                   attributable ownership interest under                  transferred the market risk to the
                                                on the same rationale articulated in the                the Commission’s ownership rules.                      brokering station. In a percentage fee
                                                Report and Order (79 FR 28996, May 20,                  While the Commission pointed out that                  structure, the broker and brokering
                                                2014, FCC 14–28, rel. Apr. 15, 2014). By                the attribution analysis traditionally                 stations split revenues based on agreed
                                                their Petitions, NAB and Nexstar now                    seeks to identify interests that provide               upon percentages. By contrast, a flat fee
                                                seek reconsideration of the decision to                 the holder with the incentive and ability              structure provides a payment to the
                                                re-adopt the Television JSA Attribution                 to influence or control the programming                brokered station regardless of
                                                Rule, arguing that the Commission, in                   or other core operational decisions of                 performance or revenues. The Third
                                                adopting the rule, ignored the evidence                 the licensees—an inquiry that often                    Circuit relied on this finding when
                                                before it and reached a decision                        relies on the Commission’s predictive                  upholding the decision to attribute radio
                                                unsupported by the record.                              judgement—the Commission may not                       JSAs, and the Commission also
                                                                                                        ignore the record or the realities of the              emphasized the fixed fee structure when
                                                3. Discussion
                                                                                                        marketplace when making this                           it proposed to attribute television JSAs
                                                   84. The Commission finds that                        determination.                                         in 2004. The record shows, however,
                                                Petitioners provide valid reasons to                       86. Here, the Commission’s theory of                that television JSAs generally rely on
                                                reconsider the Commission’s decision to                 attribution—a reversal of its earlier                  percentage fee arrangements in which
                                                adopt the Television JSA Attribution                    decision that television JSAs should not               the brokered station retains a substantial
                                                Rule. The Commission’s attribution                      be attributable—was belied by its own
                                                analysis was deficient and failed to                                                                           portion of the advertising revenue,
                                                                                                        extensive experience reviewing and
                                                adequately consider the record, which                                                                          which makes it substantially less likely
                                                                                                        approving television JSAs. Between
                                                does not support the Commission’s                                                                              that the brokered station’s programming
                                                                                                        2008 and the decision to attribute
                                                conclusion that television JSAs confer                                                                         decisions would be significantly
                                                                                                        television JSAs in 2014, the
                                                on the brokering station a sufficient                                                                          influenced by the brokering station.
                                                                                                        Commission’s Media Bureau reviewed
                                                degree of influence or control over the                                                                        This critical difference, however, was
                                                                                                        and approved 85 television JSAs in the
                                                core operating functions of the brokered                                                                       simply glossed over without an
                                                                                                        context of transaction reviews. Given
                                                station to warrant attribution. In                                                                             explanation as to how a percentage fee
                                                                                                        the Commission’s extensive history
                                                addition, the record contains ample                                                                            structure transferred market risk to the
                                                                                                        reviewing specific television JSAs, it is
                                                evidence of the public interest benefits                                                                       brokering station in the same way as a
                                                                                                        telling that the record was devoid of any
                                                that these JSAs provide. Even if the                    evidence that any JSA allowed a                        fixed fee structure. Indeed, it appears
                                                Commission had correctly determined                     brokering station to influence even a                  that the typical revenue split gives the
                                                that television JSAs involving more than                single programming decision of a                       licensee of the brokered station a
                                                15 percent of the brokered station’s                    brokered station.                                      significant interest in the operation and
                                                weekly advertising time confer                             87. As Nexstar points out, the                      success of the station that is not present
                                                sufficient influence to warrant                         Commission’s only citation in support                  in a fixed fee arrangement. While the
                                                attribution, the Commission concludes                   of the theory that television JSAs might               Commission declines to attribute
                                                that the potential benefits of television               provide some measure of influence or                   television JSAs for the reasons set forth
                                                JSAs outweigh the public interest in                    control was inapposite. In Ackerley                    in this Order, it notes that, under
                                                attributing such JSAs. Accordingly, the                 Group, Inc., 17 FCC Rcd 10828 (2002),                  Ackerley, the Commission could still
                                                Commission grants the NAB Petition                      the Commission found that a                            find that the terms of an individual
                                                and the Nexstar Petition with respect to                combination of agreements, which                       television JSA (either alone or in
                                                this issue. As a result of the                          included a flat-fee television JSA, were               conjunction with other agreements) rise
                                                Commission’s decision, 47 CFR                           substantively equivalent to an                         to the level of attribution.
                                                73.3613(d)(2) and the notes to 47 CFR                   attributable local marketing agreement                    89. The Commission also failed to
                                                73.3555 will be amended to reflect the                  (LMA). Yet the Commission’s                            consider sufficiently other distinctions
                                                fact that television JSAs are no longer                 attribution analysis in the Report and                 between the television market and the
                                                attributable. Additionally, various                     Order relied solely on the sale of                     radio market that undermined its
                                                Commission rules will need to be                        advertising time and not a combination                 reliance on the radio JSA attribution
                                                revised to reflect the other rule changes               of other agreements that may justify                   precedent. For example, unlike radio
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES




                                                and decisions adopted in this Order, as                 attribution under the Commission’s                     stations, television stations typically
                                                set forth in the final rules. The                       rules and precedent. As such, this                     have network affiliations, which limits
                                                Commission directs the Media Bureau                     isolated incident failed to provide                    the amount of programming that a
                                                to make all form modifications and to                   support for the Commission’s theory of                 brokering station could potentially
                                                take any other steps necessary to                       attribution.                                           influence and the amount of available
                                                implement all the rule changes and                         88. The Commission attempted to                     advertising time for sale. In the
                                                other relevant decisions adopted in this                sidestep the lack of evidence to support               Commission’s experience reviewing


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:10 Jan 05, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00044   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM   08JAR1


                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 5 / Monday, January 8, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                             749

                                                television JSAs in transaction reviews,                 waiver process. That process, however,                 JSA Attribution Rule will allow
                                                most of the television JSAs approved by                 proved to be illusory, as the                          broadcasters to covertly coordinate their
                                                the Commission involved the brokering                   Commission did not grant a single                      retransmission consent negotiations in
                                                of stations with network affiliations. To               waiver request while the Television JSA                contravention of the joint negotiation
                                                be sure, the Commission disagreed that                  Attribution Rule was initially in effect,              prohibition. This argument is not
                                                this is a meaningful distinction, but                   which ultimately led to Congressional                  persuasive. Broadcasters are prohibited
                                                once again, it failed to provide any                    action to protect existing television                  from jointly negotiating retransmission
                                                record evidence to support its theory.                  JSAs. As discussed in this Order, the                  consent for stations in the same local
                                                The Commission claimed that, even                       Commission finds that the record does                  market that are not under common de
                                                with a network affiliation in place, the                not support attribution of television                  jure control permitted by the
                                                broker could potentially influence the                  JSAs in the first instance, so there is no             Commission. Licensees are expected to
                                                selection of non-network programming,                   need to consider whether to adopt a                    comply with the Communications Act
                                                whether to preempt network                              waiver process                                         and Commission rules and policies, and
                                                programming, and/or the choice of                          92. The Commission was correct that                 the Commission has authority to take
                                                network affiliation. This claim,                        the potential public interest benefits of              enforcement action where it finds a
                                                however, was not supported with any                     television JSAs are not relevant to                    licensee has violated any relevant
                                                evidence of such influence being                        whether these agreements satisfy the                   statutes, rules, or policies. The
                                                exerted, neither over individual                        Commission’s general attribution                       Commission will not assume that
                                                programming decisions nor the                           criteria (i.e., whether they confer the                licensees will violate its rules, but
                                                selection of a network affiliation.                     potential for significant influence), but              entities can file a complaint if they
                                                   90. The Commission similarly                         that does not excuse the Commission                    believe that any broadcaster is violating
                                                brushed aside evidence that television                  from assessing the record to determine                 the joint negotiation prohibition, and
                                                stations rely less on local advertising                 whether, if the attribution criteria are               the Commission will take appropriate
                                                revenue than radio stations, which                      satisfied, attribution would serve the                 action.
                                                would reduce the amount of advertising                  public interest. Notably, when the                        94. On reconsideration, the
                                                time sold by the broker. Accordingly,                   Commission attributed radio JSAs in the                Commission concludes that the record
                                                the broker would control less of the                    2002 Biennial Review Order, it did                     demonstrates that television JSAs can
                                                television station’s advertising revenue,               undertake such an assessment and                       promote the public interest, and that
                                                which would limit the ability and                       found that the balance of interests, in                this provides an independent reason for
                                                incentive of the broker to exert                        those particular circumstances,                        eliminating the Television JSA
                                                significant influence or control over the               supported the decision to attribute radio              Attribution Rule. Indeed, the record
                                                brokered station’s core operating                       JSAs. That finding was based on the                    demonstrates that television JSAs have
                                                procedures. The Commission summarily                    record in that proceeding, which did not               created efficiencies that benefit local
                                                concluded that because both radio JSAs                  contain significant or detailed evidence               broadcasters—particularly in small- and
                                                and television JSAs involve the sale of                 of the claimed public interest benefits of             medium-sized markets—and have
                                                advertising time, both must be treated                  radio JSAs, and does not control the                   enabled these stations to better serve
                                                the same for attribution purposes. But                  Commission’s analysis of the potential                 their communities. The video
                                                this one-size-fits-all attribution analysis             benefits of television JSAs.                           marketplace is changing rapidly, and
                                                is not supported by the record and                         93. Additionally, in the Second                     television JSAs can help reduce costs
                                                cannot be sustained.                                    Report and Order, which reinstated the                 and attract vital revenue at a time of
                                                   91. The lack of evidence supporting                  Television JSA Attribution Rule, the                   increasing competition for viewership.
                                                the Commission’s determination that                     Commission included only a brief,                      Broadcasters can turn these efficiencies
                                                television JSAs confer a significant                    general discussion of the rationale for                into increased services for local
                                                degree of influence or control over the                 attributing television JSAs, largely                   communities. For example, a JSA
                                                core operating functions of the brokered                ignoring the benefits of television JSAs.              between two stations in Kansas helped
                                                station provides sufficient reason for the              The Commission failed to discuss the                   create cost savings that, in turn, allowed
                                                Commission to eliminate the Television                  voluminous record regarding the                        the stations to fund weather emergency-
                                                JSA Attribution Rule. But even if the                   benefits produced by JSAs, instead                     related crawls in Spanish, a service vital
                                                Commission had appropriately                            citing anecdotal evidence that                         to the tornado-prone area. Other stations
                                                determined that television JSAs meet                    attribution of television JSAs—prior to                have been able to increase their local
                                                the attribution criteria, it still should               being vacated by the Third Circuit—had                 news programming and further invest in
                                                have evaluated whether the public                       produced opportunities for minority                    investigative reporting due to their JSAs.
                                                interest would be served by making the                  and female ownership. Its sole citation                Additionally, certain JSAs have helped
                                                agreements attributable. While the                      for this proposition, however, was a                   spur minority ownership. As noted in
                                                Commission did acknowledge the                          blog post authored by then-Chairman                    the record, a station owned by Tougaloo
                                                potential for benefits flowing from the                 Tom Wheeler and Commissioner                           College, a historically African-American
                                                use of television JSAs in the Report and                Mignon Clyburn. This claimed benefit is                college, has credited its JSA for
                                                Order, the Commission expressly                         not supported by the record and, in fact,              providing the resources necessary to
                                                refused to consider these public interest               there is record evidence that refutes this             upgrade to HD, to produce content
                                                benefits in the context of its attribution              assertion. This cursory treatment does                 relevant to its community, and to cover
                                                decision, claiming that the public                      not constitute an assessment of the                    local sporting events. This is just a
                                                interest benefits should be considered in               record regarding the potential public                  sampling of the many examples in the
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES




                                                the context of its analysis of the local                interest benefits of television JSAs. As               record in which JSAs have benefited
                                                ownership rules. While declining to                     such, the Commission is not persuaded                  local stations and communities.
                                                evaluate the significant record evidence                by the arguments that it properly                         95. Furthermore, the Commission
                                                of the public interest benefits produced                weighed the public interest benefits                   failed to cite any evidence of actual
                                                by television JSAs, the Commission                      before implementing this new rule. The                 harm associated with television JSAs.
                                                claimed that it would preserve                          American Cable Association (ACA)                       The Commission’s analysis here under
                                                beneficial television JSAs through a                    argues that eliminating the Television                 the public interest standard does not


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:10 Jan 05, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00045   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM   08JAR1


                                                750                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 5 / Monday, January 8, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                                supersede any antitrust analysis                        circumstances to encourage investment                  Ownership Rule should be made more
                                                performed by the Department of Justice                  in eligible entities. There, the record                restrictive due to the presence of
                                                Antitrust Division (DOJ) on a case-by-                  demonstrated that small businesses,                    television JSAs.
                                                case basis regarding JSAs or other                      including those owned by minorities                       100. And while there may be fewer
                                                agreements among broadcasters that are                  and women, were having difficulty                      television JSAs executed moving
                                                similar in function. Indeed, the                        obtaining financing. The Commission                    forward because of the Commission’s
                                                Commission’s public interest analysis                   acknowledged the potential role that the               relaxation of the Local Television
                                                differs from DOJ’s antitrust review,                    EDP Rule had in hindering investment                   Ownership Rule, that does not diminish
                                                reflecting a broader evaluation of the                  in eligible entities and found that it was             the public interest benefits associated
                                                potential harms and benefits of                         justified in relaxing the EDP Rule to                  with these agreements in the television
                                                ownership combinations in light of the                  help address this issue. This decision                 context. The television ownership limits
                                                requirements of the Communications                      demonstrates the need to balance the                   are still much more restrictive than the
                                                Act and Commission rules and the                        purpose of the attribution rules—that is,              radio ownership limits, so there may be
                                                objectives of the Act and rules.                        to identify potentially influential                    a continuing need for JSAs to help
                                                Consequently, nothing in this Order, or                 interest holders—with the                              create economies of scale and improve
                                                any amendment made by this Order,                       Commission’s public interest goals.                    program offerings, particularly for small
                                                should be construed to modify, impair,                     98. Similarly, even if some television              or independent station owners. By
                                                or supersede the operation or                           JSAs were to provide the brokering                     preserving the ability to enter into a
                                                applicability of any state or federal                   station some ability to influence the                  JSA, some station owners may be able
                                                antitrust laws.                                         operations of the brokered station, the                to maintain independent operations
                                                   96. The Commission stated that JSAs                  Commission finds that attribution is not               instead of exiting the marketplace, and
                                                could, possibly, allow the stations to                  warranted here in light of the significant             these agreements will continue to be
                                                raise their advertising rates above what                public interest benefits produced by                   available to help new entrants and small
                                                could be achieved if the ad time were                   these agreements. Television JSAs can                  businesses acquire and operate new
                                                sold independently. The Commission,                     help promote diverse ownership and                     stations. Thus, the Commission is not
                                                however, failed to engage in any actual                 improve program offerings, including                   persuaded that repeal of the eight-voices
                                                analysis of the impact of television JSAs               local news and public interest                         requirement and the Television JSA
                                                on advertisers, and the record in this                  programming, in local markets. While                   Attribution Rule will deter new entry
                                                proceeding contained no evidence of                     the Commission agrees that it is                       based on consolidation of advertising
                                                stations charging higher rates for                      important that its attribution rules                   sales.
                                                advertising sold pursuant to a JSA and                  reflect accurately the competitive
                                                no support from advertisers for the                     conditions of local markets, particularly              F. Shared Service Agreements
                                                Television JSA Attribution Rule. On the                 in the context of the Commission’s local               1. Introduction
                                                contrary, there was evidence in the                     broadcast ownership rules, the analysis
                                                record that advertisers have benefitted                 cannot end there. The Commission must                    101. The Commission upholds its
                                                from JSAs, which make their ad buys                     ensure that its attribution decisions do               decision in the Second Report and
                                                more efficient. Similarly, as discussed                 not harm the very markets that the                     Order to adopt a comprehensive
                                                above, the Commission did not identify                  attribution rules are designed to protect              definition of SSAs and a requirement
                                                a single instance of harm to viewers or                 by preventing the accrual of significant               that commercial television stations
                                                competition in local markets resulting                  public interest benefits. As discussed in              disclose SSAs by placing them in their
                                                from a broker’s exercise of influence                   this Order, the tangible benefits of                   online public inspection files.
                                                over the programming or other core                      television JSAs far outweigh the benefits              2. Background
                                                operations of a brokered station—                       that may accrue from a rote application
                                                indeed, as discussed above, the                         of the attribution criteria in these                     102. SSAs allow stations in a local
                                                Commission did not cite a single                        circumstances.                                         market to combine certain operations,
                                                instance of such influence even being                      99. The Commission also finds that its              personnel, and/or facilities, with one
                                                exerted.                                                decision to eliminate the Television JSA               station effectively performing functions
                                                   97. The Commission finds that, on                    Attribution Rule is appropriate, even in               for multiple, independently owned
                                                balance, the public interest is best                    light of its decision to relax the Local               stations. The FNPRM proposed a
                                                served by not attributing television                    Television Ownership Rule. As                          comprehensive definition of SSAs and
                                                JSAs, regardless of whether they                        discussed above, the Commission finds                  sought comment on the scope of the
                                                technically satisfy the attribution                     that it failed to establish that television            definition, including any potential
                                                criteria. As discussed above, the                       JSAs confer significant influence                      refinements to the definition to help
                                                Commission’s attribution analysis was                   warranting treating JSAs as attributable               ensure that it was not overbroad. While
                                                not supported by the record, and this                   ownership interests, so the existence of               certain commenters expressed concerns
                                                failure provides an independent reason                  television JSAs in the marketplace does                with the scope of the definition, none
                                                for eliminating the Television JSA                      not have an impact on the Commission’s                 provided an alternative definition or
                                                Attribution Rule. It is well within the                 public interest analysis in the Local                  suggested any specific changes to the
                                                Commission’s authority to decline to                    Television Ownership Rule context.                     definition proposed in the FNPRM. The
                                                attribute an agreement or relationship                  Indeed, television JSAs have been                      FNPRM also sought comment on
                                                that might otherwise satisfy the                        utilized by many broadcasters with                     potential disclosure options for these
                                                attribution criteria in order to help                   increasing prevalence for well over a                  agreements. In the Second Report and
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES




                                                foster public interest benefits. For                    decade. The record in this proceeding                  Order, the Commission adopted a
                                                example, in the EDP Attribution                         lacks any evidence of public interest                  definition of SSAs substantially similar
                                                Modification Order (73 FR 28361, May                    harm, and there is evidence that these                 to the definition proposed in the
                                                16, 2008, FCC 07–217, rel. Mar. 5, 2008),               agreements have produced and can                       FNPRM and a requirement that
                                                the Commission modified the Equity/                     produce meaningful public interest                     commercial television stations disclose
                                                Debt Plus Attribution Rule (EDP Rule)                   benefits. As such, the Commission does                 SSAs by placing them in their online
                                                by carving out an exemption in certain                  not believe that the Local Television                  public inspection files. In its Petition for


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:10 Jan 05, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00046   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM   08JAR1


                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 5 / Monday, January 8, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                             751

                                                Reconsideration, NAB asks the                           Commission finds no reason to                          of this requirement are outweighed by
                                                Commission either to eliminate the SSA                  reconsider the definition of SSAs                      its costs.
                                                disclosure requirement or rationally                    adopted in the Second Report and
                                                                                                                                                               G. Diversity/Incubator Program
                                                define the SSAs subject to it, asserting                Order.
                                                that the SSA disclosure requirement is                     105. The Commission also finds that                 1. Introduction
                                                overbroad and unnecessary.                              the Second Report and Order provided                     107. The Commission grants in part
                                                3. Discussion                                           a sufficient justification for requiring the           and denies in part NAB’s request for
                                                                                                        disclosure of SSAs. The Commission is                  reconsideration regarding the
                                                   103. The Commission declines to                      not required to first determine the
                                                reconsider the SSA definition and                                                                              Commission’s decision in the Second
                                                                                                        regulatory status of SSAs before                       Report and Order not to adopt an
                                                disclosure requirements adopted in the                  requiring disclosure. The Second Report
                                                Second Report and Order. The                                                                                   incubator program on the current
                                                                                                        and Order addressed the various                        record. The Commission agrees that it
                                                Commission finds that both the                          objections in the record and effectively
                                                definition and the disclosure                                                                                  should adopt such a program and
                                                                                                        demonstrated that the Commission has                   decides in this Order that it will do so.
                                                requirement were supported by the                       the authority to require disclosure of
                                                record and that NAB has failed to                                                                              However, the Commission also finds
                                                                                                        SSAs in order help the Commission                      that the underlying record fails to
                                                provide sufficient reasons to reconsider                obtain information relevant to its
                                                the Commission’s decision at this time;                                                                        provide sufficient guidance on how best
                                                                                                        statutory responsibilities. Any efforts to             to structure such a program.
                                                therefore, the Commission denies the                    ascertain the potential impact of these
                                                NAB Petition in this regard.                                                                                   Accordingly, the Commission adopts in
                                                                                                        agreements on the Commission’s policy                  this Order a Notice of Proposed
                                                   104. Contrary to NAB’s claim, the
                                                                                                        goals should not be read to imply only                 Rulemaking seeking comment on how
                                                Second Report and Order rationally
                                                defines SSAs. In the Second Report and                  a negative impact. SSAs may help                       the Commission should structure the
                                                Order, the Commission adopted a clear                   facilitate improved service in local                   incubator program.
                                                definition of SSAs and addressed                        communities, and disclosure of these
                                                                                                        agreements may provide greater insight                 2. Background
                                                commenters’ concerns regarding the
                                                types of agreements covered by the                      into such potential benefits. The Second                  108. As explained in greater detail in
                                                definition. As the Commission                           Report and Order set forth a sufficient                the accompanying Notice of Proposed
                                                discussed, the definition of SSAs is                    justification for requiring disclosure in              Rulemaking, an incubator program
                                                appropriately limited in scope, applying                these circumstances, and NAB’s brief                   would provide an ownership rule
                                                only to those agreements that involve                   argument to the contrary in its request                waiver or similar benefits to a company
                                                station-related services. Moreover, the                 for reconsideration gives the                          that establishes a program to help
                                                Commission sufficiently illustrated this                Commission no cause to disturb the                     facilitate station ownership for a certain
                                                scope by providing guidance in the                      underlying decision at this time.                      class of new owners. The concept of an
                                                definition of SSAs with non-exhaustive                     106. While the Commission is                        incubator program has been discussed
                                                examples. The Second Report and Order                   upholding the decision in the Second                   since at least the early 1990s. Yet,
                                                also addressed specific concerns in the                 Report and Order to require disclosure,                despite general support for the concept,
                                                record, clarifying that certain                         the Commission emphasizes that its                     the Commission has never undertaken
                                                agreements, such as ad hoc or on-the-fly                action is not a pretext for future                     the creation of a comprehensive
                                                arrangements during breaking news                       regulation of SSAs. As the Third Circuit               incubator program. The Commission has
                                                coverage, fall outside the SSA                          recognized, the Commission acted                       adopted a limited program that provides
                                                definition. Ultimately, the definition is               appropriately in declining to attribute                a duopoly preference to parties that
                                                appropriately tailored to include only                  these agreements in this proceeding, as                agree to incubate or finance an eligible
                                                those agreements that involve station                   some commenters had requested.                         entity. In adopting this general policy
                                                operations relevant to the public. NAB                  Among other things, the Commission                     preference, however, the Commission
                                                expresses concern that the SSA                          has admitted that it lacks an                          did not provide details regarding the
                                                definition would apply to agreements                    understanding of the potential impact of               structure and operation of the
                                                encompassing everything from janitorial                 SSAs on a station’s core operating                     incubation activities. As such, the
                                                to catering to maintenance to security                  functions, and evidence in the record                  Commission does not believe that this
                                                services. An agreement to share                         suggests that these agreements help                    limited policy preference serves as an
                                                facilities and station personnel meeting                produce significant public interest                    effective basis upon which to design a
                                                the definition of an SSA may include                    benefits. Accordingly, any consideration               comprehensive incubator program.
                                                provisions allocating costs or                          of the regulatory status of these                         109. Most recently, the Commission
                                                responsibilities related to the operation               agreements by a future Commission                      sought comment in the NPRM and
                                                and upkeep of the shared facilities.                    must reflect significant study and                     FNPRM on whether to adopt an
                                                Consistent with the Second Report and                   understanding of the impact of these                   incubator program and, if so, how to
                                                Order, however, agreements that relate                  agreements on station operations and a                 structure such a program. In the
                                                only to such incidental services, even                  complete account of the public interest                FNPRM, in particular, the Commission
                                                those involving shared facilities, are not              benefits these agreements help facilitate.             highlighted administrative concerns and
                                                encompassed by the SSA definition and                   Furthermore, while the record compiled                 structural issues that needed to be
                                                are not, therefore, subject to disclosure.              in this proceeding does not demonstrate                addressed before such a program could
                                                Accordingly, the Commission finds                       that the disclosure requirement will                   be adopted. While there was general
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES




                                                NAB’s concerns to be misplaced and                      unduly burden commercial television                    support for an incubator program, and
                                                sufficiently addressed in the Second                    broadcasters, the Commission retains                   some suggestions on how to structure
                                                Report and Order. In light of the                       the authority to revisit this disclosure               certain aspects of such a program, the
                                                Commission’s analysis and the lack of                   requirement should evidence of such                    Commission found in the Second Report
                                                any alternative definitions or specific                 burdens arise after the disclosure                     and Order that the record failed to
                                                refinements proposed in the record,                     requirement is implemented or                          address the specific concerns detailed in
                                                including on reconsideration, the                       experience demonstrate that the benefits               the FNPRM; accordingly, the


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:10 Jan 05, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00047   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM   08JAR1


                                                752                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 5 / Monday, January 8, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                                Commission declined to adopt an                         Supplemental Final Regulatory                          the number of such small entities, is
                                                incubator program. NAB sought                           Flexibility Analysis (Supplemental                     provided below.
                                                reconsideration of the Commission’s                     FRFA) supplements the Final                               115. Television Broadcasting. This
                                                rejection of NAB’s recommendation for                   Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA)                 Economic Census category comprises
                                                an incubator program. According to                      included in the Second Report and                      establishments primarily engaged in
                                                NAB, the Commission could create an                     Order, to the extent that changes                      broadcasting images together with
                                                incubator program based on the                          adopted on reconsideration require                     sound. These establishments operate
                                                overcoming disadvantages preference                     changes to the information included and                television broadcasting studios and
                                                (ODP) standard, which the Commission                    conclusions reached in the FRFA. As                    facilities for the programming and
                                                rejected in the Second Report and                       required by the Regulatory Flexibility                 transmission of programs to the public.
                                                Order, or the new entrant criteria in the               Act of 1980, as amended (RFA), an                      These establishments also produce or
                                                broadcast services’ auction rules. The                  Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis                transmit visual programming to
                                                petition otherwise fails to address the                 (IRFA) was incorporated in the NPRM                    affiliated broadcast television stations,
                                                many other issues of concern                            that initiated this proceeding. The                    which in turn broadcast the programs to
                                                highlighted by the Commission in this                   Commission sought written public                       the public on a predetermined schedule.
                                                proceeding.                                             comment on the proposals in the NPRM,                  Programming may originate in their own
                                                                                                        including comment on the IRFA. The                     studio, from an affiliated network, or
                                                3. Discussion                                           Commission also incorporated a                         from external sources. The SBA has
                                                   110. On reconsideration, the                         Supplemental Initial Regulatory                        created the following small business
                                                Commission agrees with NAB that it                      Flexibility Analysis (Supplemental                     size standard for such businesses: Those
                                                should adopt an incubator program and                   IRFA) in the FNPRM in this proceeding.                 having $38.5 million or less in annual
                                                decides here that it will do so. There is               The Commission sought written public                   receipts. The 2012 Economic Census
                                                support for an incubator program from                   comment on the proposals in the                        data reports that 751 such firms in this
                                                many industry participants and                          FNPRM, including comment on the                        category operated in that year. Of that
                                                advocacy groups. And the Commission                     Supplemental IRFA. The Commission                      number, 656 had annual receipts of
                                                agrees with supporters that adopting an                 received no comments in response to                    $25,000,000 or less, 25 had annual
                                                incubator program would promote new                     the IRFA or the Supplemental IRFA.                     receipts between $25,000,000 and
                                                entry and ownership diversity in the                    This present Supplemental FRFA                         $49,999,999 and 70 had annual receipts
                                                broadcast industry by helping address                   conforms to the RFA.                                   of $50,000,000 or more. Based on this
                                                barriers to station ownership, such as                     113. Response to Public Comments                    data, the Commission therefore
                                                lack of access to capital and the need for              and Comments by the Chief Counsel for                  estimates that the majority of
                                                technical/operational experience. In this               Advocacy of the Small Business                         commercial television broadcasters are
                                                proceeding, however, the Commission                     Administration. Pursuant to the Small                  small entities under the applicable SBA
                                                has identified various, specific concerns               Business Jobs Act of 2010, which                       size standard.
                                                regarding how to structure and monitor                  amended the RFA, the Commission is                        116. The Commission has estimated
                                                such a program. The Commission finds                    required to respond to any comments                    the number of licensed commercial
                                                that the comments and                                   filed by the Chief Counsel for Advocacy                television stations to be 1,382. Of this
                                                recommendations in the record fail to                   of the Small Business Administration                   total, 1,262 stations (or about 91
                                                adequately address all of these issues.                 (SBA) and to provide a detailed                        percent) had revenues of $38.5 million
                                                While certain suggestions may have                      statement of any change made to the                    or less, according to Commission staff
                                                merit in regards to specific aspects of                 proposed rules as a result of those                    review of the BIA Kelsey Inc. Media
                                                the program, the Commission is not yet                  comments. The Chief Counsel did not                    Access Pro Television Database (BIA) on
                                                at the point where it can finalize the                  file any comments in response to the                   May 9, 2017, and therefore these
                                                overall structure and method for                        proposed rules in this proceeding.                     licensees qualify as small entities under
                                                implementation of the program.                             114. Description and Estimate of the                the SBA definition. In addition, the
                                                                                                        Number of Small Entities to Which                      Commission has estimated the number
                                                Therefore, the Commission requires
                                                                                                        Rules Will Apply. The RFA directs the                  of licensed noncommercial educational
                                                additional comment on how to structure
                                                                                                        Commission to provide a description of                 television stations to be 393.
                                                the incubator program.
                                                                                                        and, where feasible, an estimate of the                Notwithstanding, the Commission does
                                                   111. The Commission is initiating a
                                                                                                        number of small entities that will be                  not compile and otherwise does not
                                                new proceeding in the accompanying
                                                                                                        affected by the rules adopted. The RFA                 have access to information on the
                                                Notice of Proposed Rulemaking that will
                                                                                                        generally defines the term small entity                revenue of NCE stations that would
                                                seek additional comment on how best to
                                                                                                        as having the same meaning as the terms                permit it to determine how many such
                                                implement the Commission’s incubator
                                                                                                        small business, small organization, and                stations would qualify as small entities.
                                                program. Initiating a dedicated                                                                                   117. The Commission notes, however,
                                                                                                        small governmental jurisdiction. In
                                                proceeding will allow the Commission                                                                           that, in assessing whether a business
                                                                                                        addition, the term small business has
                                                to focus its efforts on getting this                                                                           concern qualifies as small under the
                                                                                                        the same meaning as the term small
                                                program up and running, and the                                                                                above definition, business (control)
                                                                                                        business concern under the Small
                                                Commission anticipates that its                         Business Act. A small business concern                 affiliations must be included. The
                                                consideration of this issue will be                     is one which: (1) Is independently                     Commission’s estimate, therefore, likely
                                                assisted by the newly established                       owned and operated; (2) is not                         overstates the number of small entities
                                                Advisory Committee on Diversity and                     dominant in its field of operation; and                that might be affected by its action,
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES




                                                Digital Empowerment.                                    (3) satisfies any additional criteria                  because the revenue figure on which it
                                                IV. Procedural Matters                                  established by the SBA. The final rules                is based does not include or aggregate
                                                                                                        adopted in this Order affect small                     revenues from affiliated companies. In
                                                A. Supplemental Final Regulatory                        television and radio broadcast stations                addition, another element of the
                                                Flexibility Analysis                                    and small entities that operate daily                  definition of small business is that the
                                                  112. In compliance with the                           newspapers. A description of these                     entity not be dominant in its field of
                                                Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), this                  small entities, as well as an estimate of              operation. The Commission is unable at


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:10 Jan 05, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00048   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM   08JAR1


                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 5 / Monday, January 8, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                             753

                                                this time to define or quantify the                     definition, business (control) affiliations            businesses. In addition, to conform to
                                                criteria that would establish whether a                 must be included. The Commission’s                     the elimination of the Television JSA
                                                specific television broadcast station is                estimate, therefore, likely overstates the             Attribution Rule, parties to JSAs that
                                                dominant in its field of operation.                     number of small entities that might be                 were attributable under the previous
                                                Accordingly, the estimate of small                      affected by its action, because the                    rule will no longer be required to file
                                                businesses to which rules may apply do                  revenue figure on which it is based does               the agreements with the Commission
                                                not exclude any television broadcast                    not include or aggregate revenues from                 pursuant to section 73.3613 of the
                                                station from the definition of a small                  affiliated companies. In addition, an                  Commission’s rules.
                                                business on this basis and are therefore                element of the definition of small                        123. Steps Taken to Minimize
                                                possibly over-inclusive. There are also                 business is that the entity not be                     Significant Economic Impact on Small
                                                2,385 LPTV stations, including Class A                  dominant in its field of operation. The                Entities, and Significant Alternatives
                                                stations, and 3,776 TV translator                       Commission further notes, that it is                   Considered. The RFA requires an
                                                stations. Given the nature of these                     difficult at times to assess these criteria            agency to describe any significant
                                                services, the Commission will presume                   in the context of media entities, and the              alternatives that it has considered in
                                                that all of these entities qualify as small             estimate of small businesses to which                  reaching its approach, which may
                                                entities under the above SBA small                      these rules may apply does not exclude                 include the following four alternatives
                                                business size standard. Also, as noted                  any radio station from the definition of               (among others): (1) The establishment of
                                                above, an additional element of the                     a small business on these basis, thus the              differing compliance or reporting
                                                definition of small business is that the                Commission’s estimate of small                         requirements or timetables that take into
                                                entity must be independently owned                      businesses may therefore be over-                      account the resources available to small
                                                and operated. The Commission notes                      inclusive. Also, as noted above, an                    entities; (2) the clarification,
                                                that it is difficult at times to assess these           additional element of the definition of                consolidation, or simplification of
                                                criteria in the context of media entities               small business is that the entity must be              compliance or reporting requirements
                                                and its estimates of small businesses to                independently owned and operated.                      under the rule for such small entities;
                                                which they apply may be over-inclusive                  The Commission notes that it is difficult              (3) the use of performance, rather than
                                                to this extent.                                         at times to assess these criteria in the               design, standards; and (4) an exemption
                                                  118. Radio Stations. This Economic                    context of media entities and the                      from coverage of the rule, or any part
                                                Census category comprises                               estimates of small businesses to which                 thereof, for such small entities.
                                                establishments primarily engaged in                     they apply may be over-inclusive to this                  124. In conducting the quadrennial
                                                broadcasting aural programs by radio to                 extent.                                                review, the Commission has three chief
                                                the public. Programming may originate                      121. Daily Newspapers. The SBA has                  alternatives available for each of the
                                                in their own studio, from an affiliated                 developed a small business size                        Commission’s media ownership rules—
                                                network, or from external sources. The                  standard for the census category of                    eliminate the rule, modify it, or, if the
                                                SBA has established a small business                    Newspaper Publishers; that size                        Commission determines that the rule is
                                                size standard for this category as firms                standard is 1,000 or fewer employees.                  necessary in the public interest, retain
                                                having $38.5 million or less in annual                  Business concerns included in this                     it. The Commission finds that the
                                                receipts. Economic Census data for 2012                 category are those that carry out                      modification and elimination of the
                                                shows that 2,849 radio station firms                    operations necessary for producing and                 rules in the Order on Reconsideration,
                                                operated during that year. Of that                      distributing newspapers, including                     which are intended to achieve the
                                                number, 2,806 operated with annual                      gathering news; writing news columns,                  policy goals of competition, localism,
                                                receipts of less than $25 million per                   feature stories, and editorials; and                   and viewpoint diversity, will continue
                                                year, 17 with annual receipts between                   selling and preparing advertisements.                  to benefit small entities by fostering a
                                                $25 million and $49,999,999 million                     Census Bureau data for 2012 show that                  media marketplace in which they are
                                                and 26 with annual receipts of $50                      there were 4,168 firms in this category                better able to compete and by promoting
                                                million or more. Therefore, based on the                that operated for the entire year. Of this             additional broadcast ownership
                                                SBA’s size standard the majority of such                total, 4,107 firms had employment of                   opportunities, as described below,
                                                entities are small entities.                            499 or fewer employees, and an                         among a diverse group of owners,
                                                  119. According to Commission staff                    additional 22 firms had employment of                  including small entities. The
                                                review of the BIA/Kelsey, LLC’s Media                   500 to 999 employees. Therefore, the                   Commission discusses below several
                                                Access Pro Radio Database on May 9,                     Commission estimates that the majority                 ways in which the rules may benefit
                                                2017, about 11,392 (or about 99.9                       of Newspaper Publishers are small                      small entities as well as steps taken, and
                                                percent) of 11,401 of commercial radio                  entities that might be affected by its                 significant alternatives considered, to
                                                stations had revenues of $38.5 million                  action.                                                minimize any potential burdens on
                                                or less and thus qualify as small entities                 122. Description of Reporting, Record               small entities.
                                                under the SBA definition. The                           Keeping, and other Compliance                             125. Newspaper/Broadcast Cross-
                                                Commission has estimated the number                     Requirements for Small Entities. The                   Ownership (NBCO) Rule. In the Order
                                                of licensed commercial radio stations to                Order on Reconsideration eliminates the                on Reconsideration, the Commission
                                                be 11,401. The Commission notes it has                  Newspaper/Broadcast Cross-Ownership                    considered whether to retain, modify, or
                                                also estimated the number of licensed                   Rule and the Radio/Television Cross-                   eliminate the NBCO Rule. The
                                                noncommercial radio stations to be                      Ownership Rule, modifies the Local                     Commission determined that the NBCO
                                                4,111. Nevertheless, the Commission                     Television Ownership Rule and, and                     Rule is no longer in the public interest
                                                does not compile and otherwise does                     eliminates the Television JSA                          and should be repealed. As an
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES




                                                not have access to information on the                   Attribution Rule. The Order on                         alternative to the action taken, the
                                                revenue of NCE stations that would                      Reconsideration does not adopt any new                 Commission considered whether to
                                                permit it to determine how many such                    reporting, recordkeeping, or compliance                adopt a modified NBCO Rule, but
                                                stations would qualify as small entities.               requirements for small entities. The                   rejected that approach as unsupported
                                                  120. The Commission also notes, that                  Order on Reconsideration thus will not                 by the record. As a result, newspapers
                                                in assessing whether a business concern                 impose additional obligations or                       will be able to combine with television
                                                qualifies as small under the above                      expenditure of resources on small                      and radio stations within the same local


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:10 Jan 05, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00049   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM   08JAR1


                                                754                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 5 / Monday, January 8, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                                market, subject only to the Local                       effectively. Accordingly, the                          JSAs also enable broadcasters to
                                                Television and Local Radio Ownership                    Commission repeals the Eight-Voices                    improve or increase services for local
                                                Rules. Repeal of the NBCO Rule in its                   Test that had required at least eight                  communities, thus fostering significant
                                                entirety eliminates the economic burden                 independently owned television                         public interest benefits. Local television
                                                of compliance with the rule on small                    stations to remain in a market after                   broadcasters—particularly in small- and
                                                entities. Furthermore, repeal of the rule               combining ownership of two stations in                 medium-sized markets—stand to benefit
                                                will allow broadcasters and local                       the market. The Commission considers                   from these efficiencies that television
                                                newspapers to seek out new sources of                   whether to adopt a different voice test,               JSAs create. The repeal of the attribution
                                                investment and operational expertise,                   but rejects that approach as                           rule will remove a regulatory
                                                potentially increasing the quantity and                 unsupported by the record. In addition,                disincentive for stations to enter into
                                                quality of local news and information                   the Commission considers whether to                    JSAs and enable these stations to better
                                                they provide to consumers. Small                        retain, modify, or eliminate the Top-                  serve their communities. In addition,
                                                broadcasters may find that merging with                 Four Prohibition, a prohibition against                because of the elimination of the
                                                a newspaper could boost their ability to                common ownership of two top-four                       Television JSA Attribution Rule, parties
                                                serve their local markets. The Order on                 ranked stations in all markets. The                    to JSAs that were attributable under the
                                                Reconsideration finds that the NBCO                     Commission finds that the record                       previous rule will no longer be required
                                                Rule created considerable harm in small                 generally supported the Commission’s                   to file the agreements with the
                                                markets where the benefits of cross-                    decision in the Second Report and                      Commission, thus eliminating that
                                                ownership could have helped to sustain                  Order to treat combinations involving                  economic burden.
                                                the local news outlets, many of which                   two top-four rated stations differently
                                                are likely to be small entities.                        than other combinations, but on                        B. Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis
                                                Elimination of the rule will help                       reconsideration the Commission                            130. This Order on Reconsideration
                                                promote additional investment                           modifies the rule to include a case-by-                contains information collection
                                                opportunities for small entities in many                case approach to account for                           requirements subject to the Paperwork
                                                local markets. The Order on                             circumstances in which strict                          Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA), Public
                                                Reconsideration also concludes that                     application of the prohibition is not in               Law 104–13. The requirements will be
                                                repeal of the NBCO Rule is unlikely to                  the public interest. Under the new                     submitted to the Office of Management
                                                have a material effect on minority and                  modified television ownership rule an                  and Budget (OMB) for review under
                                                female ownership of newspapers and                      entity may own two television stations                 section 3507(d) of the PRA. OMB, the
                                                broadcast stations.                                     in the same DMA if (1) the digital noise               general public, and other Federal
                                                   126. Radio/Television Cross-                         limited service contours (NLSCs) of the                agencies will be invited to comment on
                                                Ownership Rule. In the Order on                         stations (as determined by section                     the information collection requirements
                                                Reconsideration, the Commission                         73.622(e)) do not overlap; or (2) at least             contained in this proceeding. The
                                                considers whether to retain, modify, or                 one of the stations is not ranked among                Commission will publish a separate
                                                eliminate the Radio/Television Cross-                   the top four stations in the market. The               document in the Federal Register at a
                                                Ownership Rule. The Commission finds                    Commission will consider combinations                  later date seeking these comments. In
                                                that the Radio/Television Cross-                        otherwise barred by the Top-Four                       addition, the Commission notes that,
                                                Ownership Rule no longer serves the                     Prohibition on a case-by-case basis.                   pursuant to the Small Business
                                                public interest and should be repealed.                    128. The modifications to the Local                 Paperwork Relief Act of 2002, Public
                                                The Commission considers whether to                     Television Ownership Rule are not                      Law 107–198, see 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(4),
                                                adopt a modified rule, but rejects that                 expected to create additional burdens                  the Commission previously sought
                                                approach as unsupported by the record.                  for small entities. Conversely, the                    specific comment on how it might
                                                Eliminating the rule allows television                  economic impact of the rule                            further reduce the information
                                                stations and radio stations in the same                 modification may benefit small entities                collection burden for small business
                                                market to be commonly owned provided                    by enabling them to achieve operational                concerns with fewer than 25 employees.
                                                that such ownership arrangements                        efficiencies through common
                                                otherwise comply with the Local                         ownership. The Order on                                C. Congressional Review Act
                                                Television and Local Radio Ownership                    Reconsideration also concludes that the                  131. The Commission will send a
                                                Rules. As with the NBCO Rule, repeal                    modifications to the Local Television                  copy of this Order on Reconsideration to
                                                of the Radio/Television Cross-                          Ownership Rule are unlikely to have an                 Congress and the Government
                                                Ownership Rule in its entirety                          effect on minority and female                          Accountability Office pursuant to the
                                                eliminates the economic impact of the                   ownership of broadcast television                      Congressional Review Act, see 5 U.S.C.
                                                rule on small entities. Small entities in               stations.                                              801(a)(1)(A).
                                                particular may benefit from the                            129. Television JSA Attribution Rule.
                                                aforementioned efficiencies and benefits                On reconsideration, the Commission                     V. Ordering Clauses
                                                of common ownership enabled by the                      considers whether to retain or eliminate                 132. Accordingly, it is ordered that,
                                                rule’s repeal. The Commission also                      the Television JSA Attribution Rule.                   pursuant to the authority contained in
                                                finds that repeal of the Radio/Television               The Commission finds that the rule was                 sections 1, 2(a), 4(i), 257, 303, 307, 309,
                                                Cross-Ownership rule is unlikely to                     unsupported by the record and does not                 310, and 403 of the Communications
                                                have an effect on minority and female                   serve the public interest and therefore                Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 151,
                                                ownership of broadcast television and                   should be repealed. The repeal of the                  152(a), 154(i), 257, 303, 307, 309, 310,
                                                radio stations.                                         Television JSA Attribution Rule                        and 403, and Section 202(h) of the
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES




                                                   127. Local Television Ownership Rule.                eliminates the economic burden of the                  Telecommunications Act of 1996, this
                                                In the Order on Reconsideration, the                    rule on small entities. In the rapidly                 Order on Reconsideration is adopted.
                                                Commission finds that the existing                      changing video marketplace, television                   133. It is further ordered that,
                                                Local Television Ownership Rule is no                   JSAs help reduce costs and attract vital               pursuant to section 405 of the
                                                longer necessary in the public interest                 revenue at a time of increasing                        Communications Act of 1934, as
                                                but should be modified further to enable                competition for advertising and                        amended, 47 U.S.C. 405, and section
                                                television stations to compete more                     viewership. Efficiencies provided by                   1.429 of the Commission’s rules, 47 CFR


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:10 Jan 05, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00050   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM   08JAR1


                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 5 / Monday, January 8, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                              755

                                                1.429, that the petitions for                           in the same Designated Market Area                     more intervening corporations will be
                                                reconsideration filed by (1) Connoisseur                (DMA) (as determined by Nielsen Media                  determined by successive multiplication
                                                Media, LLC is granted, in part, and                     Research or any successor entity) if:                  of the ownership percentages for each
                                                otherwise denied as set forth herein; (2)                  (i) The digital noise limited service               link in the vertical ownership chain and
                                                the National Association of Broadcasters                contours of the stations (computed in                  application of the relevant attribution
                                                is granted, in part, and otherwise denied               accordance with § 73.622(e)) do not                    benchmark to the resulting product,
                                                as set forth herein; and (3) Nexstar                    overlap; or                                            except that wherever the ownership
                                                Broadcasting, Inc. is granted, in part,                    (ii) At the time the application to                 percentage for any link in the chain
                                                and otherwise denied as set forth herein.               acquire or construct the station(s) is                 exceeds 50%, it shall not be included
                                                   134. It is further ordered that UCC et               filed, at least one of the stations is not             for purposes of this multiplication. For
                                                al.’s Motion to Strike and Dismiss is                   ranked among the top four stations in                  purposes of paragraph i. of this note,
                                                denied as set forth herein.                             the DMA, based on the most recent all-                 attribution of ownership interests in a
                                                   135. It is further ordered that the                  day (9 a.m.–midnight) audience share,                  broadcast licensee that are held
                                                Order on Reconsideration and the rule                   as measured by Nielsen Media Research                  indirectly by any party through one or
                                                modifications attached hereto shall be                  or by any comparable professional,                     more intervening organizations will be
                                                effective February 7, 2018, except for                  accepted audience ratings service.                     determined by successive multiplication
                                                those rules and requirements involving                     (2) Paragraph (b)(1)(ii) (Top-Four                  of the ownership percentages for each
                                                Paperwork Reduction Act burdens,                        Prohibition) of this section shall not                 link in the vertical ownership chain and
                                                which shall become effective on the                     apply in cases where, at the request of                application of the relevant attribution
                                                effective date announced in the Federal                 the applicant, the Commission makes a                  benchmark to the resulting product, and
                                                Register notice announcing OMB                          finding that permitting an entity to                   the ownership percentage for any link in
                                                approval.                                               directly or indirectly own, operate, or                the chain that exceeds 50% shall be
                                                   136. It is further ordered, that the                 control two television stations licensed               included for purposes of this
                                                proceedings MB Docket No. 04–256, MB                    in the same DMA would serve the                        multiplication. [For example, except for
                                                Docket No. 09–182, and MB Docket No.                    public interest, convenience, and                      purposes of paragraph i. of this note, if
                                                14–50 are terminated.                                   necessity. The Commission will                         A owns 10% of company X, which
                                                                                                        consider showings that the Top-Four                    owns 60% of company Y, which owns
                                                List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 73                      Prohibition should not apply due to                    25% of ‘‘Licensee,’’ then X’s interest in
                                                  Radio, Reporting and recordkeeping                    specific circumstances in a local market               ‘‘Licensee’’ would be 25% (the same as
                                                requirements, Television.                               or with respect to a specific transaction              Y’s interest because X’s interest in Y
                                                                                                        on a case-by-case basis.                               exceeds 50%), and A’s interest in
                                                Federal Communications Commission.
                                                Katura Jackson,                                         (c)–(d) [Reserved]                                     ‘‘Licensee’’ would be 2.5% (0.1 × 0.25).
                                                Federal Register Liaison Officer, Office of the
                                                                                                                                                               Under the 5% attribution benchmark,
                                                                                                        *      *    *     *     *                              X’s interest in ‘‘Licensee’’ would be
                                                Secretary.                                                 Note 2 to § 73.3555:
                                                                                                           In applying the provisions of this                  cognizable, while A’s interest would not
                                                Final Rules                                                                                                    be cognizable. For purposes of
                                                                                                        section, ownership and other interests
                                                  For the reasons discussed in the                      in broadcast licensees will be attributed              paragraph i. of this note, X’s interest in
                                                preamble, the Federal Communications                    to their holders and deemed cognizable                 ‘‘Licensee’’ would be 15% (0.6 × 0.25)
                                                Commission amends 47 CFR part 73 as                     pursuant to the following criteria:                    and A’s interest in ‘‘Licensee’’ would be
                                                follows:                                                   a. Except as otherwise provided                     1.5% (0.1 × 0.6 × 0.25). Neither interest
                                                                                                        herein, partnership and direct                         would be attributed under paragraph i.
                                                PART 73—RADIO BROADCAST                                 ownership interests and any voting                     of this note.]
                                                SERVICES                                                stock interest amounting to 5% or more                    d. Voting stock interests held in trust
                                                                                                        of the outstanding voting stock of a                   shall be attributed to any person who
                                                ■ 1. The authority citation for part 73                                                                        holds or shares the power to vote such
                                                continues to read as follows:                           corporate broadcast licensee will be
                                                                                                        cognizable;                                            stock, to any person who has the sole
                                                  Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 303, 309, 310,                 b. Investment companies, as defined                 power to sell such stock, and to any
                                                334, 336 and 339.                                       in 15 U.S.C. 80a–3, insurance                          person who has the right to revoke the
                                                ■ 2. Amend § 73.3555 as follows:                        companies and banks holding stock                      trust at will or to replace the trustee at
                                                ■ a. Revise paragraph (b);                              through their trust departments in trust               will. If the trustee has a familial,
                                                ■ b. Remove and reserve paragraphs (c)                  accounts will be considered to have a                  personal or extra-trust business
                                                and (d);                                                cognizable interest only if they hold                  relationship to the grantor or the
                                                ■ c. Revise the introductory text,                      20% or more of the outstanding voting                  beneficiary, the grantor or beneficiary,
                                                paragraphs a. through d., and                           stock of a corporate broadcast licensee,               as appropriate, will be attributed with
                                                paragraphs g. through k. of Note 2 to                   or if any of the officers or directors of              the stock interests held in trust. An
                                                § 73.3555;                                              the broadcast licensee are                             otherwise qualified trust will be
                                                ■ d. Revise Notes 4 through 7 to                        representatives of the investment                      ineffective to insulate the grantor or
                                                § 73.3555;                                              company, insurance company or bank                     beneficiary from attribution with the
                                                ■ e. Revise Note 9 to § 73.3555; and                    concerned. Holdings by a bank or                       trust’s assets unless all voting stock
                                                ■ f. Remove Note 12 to § 73.3555.                       insurance company will be aggregated if                interests held by the grantor or
                                                  The revisions read as follows:                        the bank or insurance company has any                  beneficiary in the relevant broadcast
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES




                                                                                                        right to determine how the stock will be               licensee are subject to said trust.
                                                § 73.3555   Multiple ownership.                         voted. Holdings by investment                          *      *     *     *     *
                                                *     *     *     *     *                               companies will be aggregated if under                     g. Officers and directors of a broadcast
                                                  (b) Local television multiple                         common management.                                     licensee are considered to have a
                                                ownership rule. (1) An entity may                          c. Attribution of ownership interests               cognizable interest in the entity with
                                                directly or indirectly own, operate, or                 in a broadcast licensee that are held                  which they are so associated. If any
                                                control two television stations licensed                indirectly by any party through one or                 such entity engages in businesses in


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:10 Jan 05, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00051   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM   08JAR1


                                                756                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 5 / Monday, January 8, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                                addition to its primary business of                     except that for television stations, the               the source of the brokered programming
                                                broadcasting, it may request the                        term ‘‘market’’ will be defined by                     supplied by the party to the brokered
                                                Commission to waive attribution for any                 reference to the definition contained in               station.
                                                officer or director whose duties and                    the local television multiple ownership                   2. Where two television stations are
                                                responsibilities are wholly unrelated to                rule contained in paragraph (b) of this                both located in the same market, as
                                                its primary business. The officers and                  section.                                               defined in the local television
                                                directors of a parent company of a                         2. Notwithstanding paragraph i.1. of                ownership rule contained in paragraph
                                                broadcast licensee, with an attributable                this Note, the interest holder may                     (b) of this section, and a party
                                                interest in any such subsidiary entity,                 exceed the 33 percent threshold therein                (including all parties under common
                                                shall be deemed to have a cognizable                    without triggering attribution where                   control) with a cognizable interest in
                                                interest in the subsidiary unless the                   holding such interest would enable an                  one such station brokers more than 15
                                                duties and responsibilities of the officer              eligible entity to acquire a broadcast                 percent of the broadcast time per week
                                                or director involved are wholly                         station, provided that:                                of the other such station, that party shall
                                                unrelated to the broadcast licensee, and                   i. The combined equity and debt of                  be treated as if it has an interest in the
                                                a statement properly documenting this                   the interest holder in the eligible entity             brokered station subject to the
                                                fact is submitted to the Commission.                    is less than 50 percent, or                            limitations set forth in paragraphs (b)
                                                [This statement may be included on the                     ii. The total debt of the interest holder           and (e) of this section. This limitation
                                                appropriate Ownership Report.] The                      in the eligible entity does not exceed 80              shall apply regardless of the source of
                                                officers and directors of a sister                      percent of the asset value of the station              the brokered programming supplied by
                                                corporation of a broadcast licensee shall               being acquired by the eligible entity and              the party to the brokered station.
                                                not be attributed with ownership of that                the interest holder does not hold any                     3. Every time brokerage agreement of
                                                licensee by virtue of such status.                      equity interest, option, or promise to                 the type described in this Note shall be
                                                    h. Discrete ownership interests will be             acquire an equity interest in the eligible             undertaken only pursuant to a signed
                                                aggregated in determining whether or                    entity or any related entity. For                      written agreement that shall contain a
                                                not an interest is cognizable under this                purposes of this paragraph i.2, an                     certification by the licensee or permittee
                                                section. An individual or entity will be                ‘‘eligible entity’’ shall include any entity           of the brokered station verifying that it
                                                deemed to have a cognizable investment                  that qualifies as a small business under               maintains ultimate control over the
                                                if:                                                     the Small Business Administration’s                    station’s facilities including,
                                                    1. The sum of the interests held by or              size standards for its industry grouping,              specifically, control over station
                                                through ‘‘passive investors’’ is equal to               as set forth in 13 CFR 121.201, at the                 finances, personnel and programming,
                                                or exceeds 20 percent; or                               time the transaction is approved by the                and by the brokering station that the
                                                    2. The sum of the interests other than              FCC, and holds:                                        agreement complies with the provisions
                                                those held by or through ‘‘passive                         A. 30 percent or more of the stock or               of paragraph (b) of this section if the
                                                investors’’ is equal to or exceeds 5                    partnership interests and more than 50                 brokering station is a television station
                                                percent; or                                             percent of the voting power of the                     or with paragraph (a) of this section if
                                                    3. The sum of the interests computed                corporation or partnership that will own               the brokering station is a radio station.
                                                under paragraph h. 1. of this note plus                 the media outlet; or                                      k. ‘‘Joint Sales Agreement’’ is an
                                                the sum of the interests computed under                    B. 15 percent or more of the stock or               agreement with a licensee of a
                                                paragraph h. 2. of this note is equal to                partnership interests and more than 50                 ‘‘brokered station’’ that authorizes a
                                                or exceeds 20 percent.                                  percent of the voting power of the                     ‘‘broker’’ to sell advertising time for the
                                                    i.1. Notwithstanding paragraphs e.                  corporation or partnership that will own               ‘‘brokered station.’’
                                                and f. of this Note, the holder of an                   the media outlet, provided that no other                  1. Where two radio stations are both
                                                equity or debt interest or interests in a               person or entity owns or controls more                 located in the same market, as defined
                                                broadcast licensee subject to the                       than 25 percent of the outstanding stock               for purposes of the local radio
                                                broadcast multiple ownership rules                      or partnership interests; or                           ownership rule contained in paragraph
                                                (‘‘interest holder’’) shall have that                      C. More than 50 percent of the voting               (a) of this section, and a party (including
                                                interest attributed if:                                 power of the corporation that will own                 all parties under common control) with
                                                    A. The equity (including all                        the media outlet if such corporation is                a cognizable interest in one such station
                                                stockholdings, whether voting or                        a publicly traded company.                             sells more than 15 percent of the
                                                nonvoting, common or preferred) and                        j. ‘‘Time brokerage’’ (also known as                advertising time per week of the other
                                                debt interest or interests, in the                      ‘‘local marketing’’) is the sale by a                  such station, that party shall be treated
                                                aggregate, exceed 33 percent of the total               licensee of discrete blocks of time to a               as if it has an interest in the brokered
                                                asset value, defined as the aggregate of                ‘‘broker’’ that supplies the programming               station subject to the limitations set
                                                all equity plus all debt, of that broadcast             to fill that time and sells the commercial             forth in paragraph (a) of this section.
                                                licensee; and                                           spot announcements in it.                                 2. Every joint sales agreement of the
                                                    B.(i) The interest holder also holds an                1. Where two radio stations are both                type described in this Note shall be
                                                interest in a broadcast licensee in the                 located in the same market, as defined                 undertaken only pursuant to a signed
                                                same market that is subject to the                      for purposes of the local radio                        written agreement that shall contain a
                                                broadcast multiple ownership rules and                  ownership rule contained in paragraph                  certification by the licensee or permittee
                                                is attributable under paragraphs of this                (a) of this section, and a party (including            of the brokered station verifying that it
                                                note other than this paragraph i.; or                   all parties under common control) with                 maintains ultimate control over the
                                                    (ii) The interest holder supplies over              a cognizable interest in one such station              station’s facilities, including,
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES




                                                fifteen percent of the total weekly                     brokers more than 15 percent of the                    specifically, control over station
                                                broadcast programming hours of the                      broadcast time per week of the other                   finances, personnel and programming,
                                                station in which the interest is held. For              such station, that party shall be treated              and by the brokering station that the
                                                purposes of applying this paragraph, the                as if it has an interest in the brokered               agreement complies with the limitations
                                                term, ‘‘market,’’ will be defined as it is              station subject to the limitations set                 set forth in paragraph (a) of this section
                                                defined under the specific multiple                     forth in paragraph (a) of this section.                if the brokering station is a radio station.
                                                ownership rule that is being applied,                   This limitation shall apply regardless of              *       *     *    *     *


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:10 Jan 05, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00052   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM   08JAR1


                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 5 / Monday, January 8, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                                     757

                                                   Note 4 to § 73.3555:                                 person, group, or entity except as                     in the 535–1605 kHz band that is
                                                   Paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section               provided in Note 4 of this section.                    commonly owned, operated or
                                                will not be applied so as to require                       Note 6 to § 73.3555:                                controlled.
                                                divestiture, by any licensee, of existing                  Requests submitted pursuant to                      *     *     *    *     *
                                                facilities, and will not apply to                       paragraph (b)(2) of this section will be               ■ 3. Amend § 73.3613 by revising
                                                applications for assignment of license or               considered in accordance with the                      paragraph (d)(2) to read as follows:
                                                transfer of control filed in accordance                 analysis set forth in the Order on
                                                with § 73.3540(f) or § 73.3541(b), or to                Reconsideration in MB Docket Nos. 14–                  § 73.3613   Filing of contracts.
                                                applications for assignment of license or               50, et al. (FCC 17–156).                               *     *     *     *    *
                                                transfer of control to heirs or legatees by                Note 7 to § 73.3555:                                  (d) * * *
                                                will or intestacy, or to FM or AM                          The Commission will entertain                         (2) Joint sales agreements: Joint sales
                                                broadcast minor modification                            applications to waive the restrictions in              agreements involving radio stations
                                                applications for intra-market                           paragraph (b) of this section (the local               where the licensee (including all parties
                                                community of license changes, if no                     television ownership rule) on a case-by-               under common control) is the brokering
                                                new or increased concentration of                       case basis. In each case, we will require              entity, the brokering and brokered
                                                ownership would be created among                        a showing that the in-market buyer is                  stations are both in the same market as
                                                commonly owned, operated or                             the only entity ready, willing, and able               defined in the local radio multiple
                                                controlled broadcast stations.                          to operate the station, that sale to an                ownership rule contained in
                                                Paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section                  out-of-market applicant would result in                § 73.3555(a), and more than 15 percent
                                                will apply to all applications for new                  an artificially depressed price, and that              of the advertising time of the brokered
                                                stations, to all other applications for                 the waiver applicant does not already                  station on a weekly basis is brokered by
                                                assignment or transfer, to all                          directly or indirectly own, operate, or                that licensee. Confidential or
                                                applications for major changes to                       control interest in two television                     proprietary information may be redacted
                                                existing stations, and to all other                     stations within the relevant DMA. One                  where appropriate but such information
                                                applications for minor changes to                       way to satisfy these criteria would be to              shall be made available for inspection
                                                existing stations that seek a change in an              provide an affidavit from an                           upon request by the FCC.
                                                FM or AM radio station’s community of                   independent broker affirming that active               *     *     *     *    *
                                                license or create new or increased                      and serious efforts have been made to                  [FR Doc. 2017–28329 Filed 1–5–18; 8:45 am]
                                                concentration of ownership among                        sell the permit, and that no reasonable                BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
                                                commonly owned, operated or                             offer from an entity outside the market
                                                controlled broadcast stations.                          has been received.
                                                Commonly owned, operated or                                We will entertain waiver requests as                DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
                                                controlled broadcast stations that do not               follows:
                                                comply with paragraphs (a) and (b) of                      1. If one of the broadcast stations                 National Oceanic and Atmospheric
                                                this section may not be assigned or                     involved is a ‘‘failed’’ station that has              Administration
                                                transferred to a single person, group or                not been in operation due to financial
                                                entity, except as provided in this Note,                distress for at least four consecutive                 50 CFR Part 660
                                                the Report and Order in Docket No. 02–                  months immediately prior to the
                                                                                                                                                               [Docket No. 170627602–7999–02]
                                                277, released July 2, 2003 (FCC 02–127),                application, or is a debtor in an
                                                or the Second Report and Order in MB                    involuntary bankruptcy or insolvency                   RIN 0648–BG98
                                                Docket No. 14–50, FCC 16–107 (released                  proceeding at the time of the
                                                August 25, 2016).                                       application.                                           Magnuson-Stevens Act Provisions;
                                                   Note 5 to § 73.3555:                                    2. If one of the television stations                Fisheries Off West Coast States;
                                                   Paragraphs (b) and (e) of this section               involved is a ‘‘failing’’ station that has             Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery;
                                                will not be applied to cases involving                  an all-day audience share of no more                   Pacific Whiting; Pacific Coast
                                                television stations that are ‘‘satellite’’              than four per cent; the station has had                Groundfish Fishery Management Plan;
                                                operations. Such cases will be                          negative cash flow for three consecutive               Amendment 21–3; Trawl
                                                considered in accordance with the                       years immediately prior to the                         Rationalization Program
                                                analysis set forth in the Report and                    application; and consolidation of the                  AGENCY:  National Marine Fisheries
                                                Order in MM Docket No. 87–8, FCC 91–                    two stations would result in tangible                  Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
                                                182 (released July 8, 1991), in order to                and verifiable public interest benefits                Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
                                                determine whether common ownership,                     that outweigh any harm to competition                  Commerce.
                                                operation, or control of the stations in                and diversity.
                                                                                                                                                               ACTION: Final rule.
                                                question would be in the public interest.                  3. If the combination will result in the
                                                An authorized and operating ‘‘satellite’’               construction of an unbuilt station. The                SUMMARY:   NMFS issues this final rule to
                                                television station, the digital noise                   permittee of the unbuilt station must                  change the management of the Pacific
                                                limited service contour of which                        demonstrate that it has made reasonable                whiting at-sea sectors’ (i.e., the
                                                overlaps that of a commonly owned,                      efforts to construct but has been unable               Mothership [MS] and Catcher/Processor
                                                operated, or controlled ‘‘non-satellite’’               to do so.                                              [C/P] sectors) allocations for
                                                parent television broadcast station may                 *      *      *    *     *                             darkblotched rockfish and Pacific ocean
                                                subsequently become a ‘‘non-satellite’’                    Note 9 to § 73.3555                                 perch (POP) by managing the allocations
jstallworth on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES




                                                station under the circumstances                            Paragraph (a)(1) of this section will               as set-asides rather than as total catch
                                                described in the aforementioned Report                  not apply to an application for an AM                  limits, under the authority of the Pacific
                                                and Order in MM Docket No. 87–8.                        station license in the 1605–1705 kHz                   Coast Groundfish Fishery Management
                                                However, such commonly owned,                           band where grant of such application                   Plan (FMP), and the Magnuson-Stevens
                                                operated, or controlled ‘‘non-satellite’’               will result in the overlap of the 5 mV/                Fishery Conservation and Management
                                                television stations may not be                          m groundwave contours of the proposed                  Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act). This rule
                                                transferred or assigned to a single                     station and that of another AM station                 revises regulations in accordance with


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:10 Jan 05, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00053   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\08JAR1.SGM   08JAR1



Document Created: 2018-01-06 02:32:01
Document Modified: 2018-01-06 02:32:01
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 February 7, 2018 except for the amendment to Sec. 73.3613, which contains information collection requirements that are not effective until approved by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). The Commission will publish a document in the Federal Register announcing the effective date of these changes.
ContactBenjamin Arden, Industry Analysis Division, Media Bureau, FCC, (202) 418-2605. For additional information concerning the PRA information collection requirements contained in the Second Report and Order, contact Cathy Williams at (202) 418-2918, or via the internet at [email protected]
FR Citation83 FR 733 
CFR AssociatedRadio; Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements and Television

2025 Federal Register | Disclaimer | Privacy Policy
USC | CFR | eCFR