FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION WASHINGTON OFFICE OF THE CHAIRMAN July 30, 2019 The Honorable Chris Van Hollen United States Senate 110 Hart Senate Office Building Washington, DC 20510 Dear Senator Van Hollen: Thank you for your letter regarding the impact that the statutory cap on franchise fees has on funding for public, educational, or governmental (PEG) channels. The Commission recently released the attached draft Third Report and Order, which the Commission plans to consider during its upcoming August meeting. While this draft may change in response to further input from stakeholders and Commissioners, you will see that it addresses in detail each of the concerns raised in your letter. As you know, the Communications Act limits franchise fees to five percent of cable revenues and defines  franchise fee to include  any tax, fee, or assessment of any kind imposed by a franchising authority or other governmental entity on a cable operator or cable subscriber, or both, solely because of their status as such. 47 U.S.C. §542(g)(l). In Montgomery County, Md. eta!. v. FCC, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit held that the terms  tax and  assessment were broad enough to encompass nonmonetary exactions such as cable-related, in-kind contributions. $63 F.3d 485, 490-91 (6th Cir. 2017). But the court held that just because the statutory definition of  franchise fee could include such nonmonetary contributions did not necessarily mean that it did include them, and it remanded the issue to the Commission for further consideration. See Id. at 491-92. In response to this remand, the Commission unanimously issued its Second Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking to consider the scope of the congressionally-mandated statutory limit on franchise fees. The Commission developed a voluminous record in response to this notice, including numerous submissions from local franchising authorities, providers of PEG programming, and cable operators. The draft order is the product of our careful consideration of this record. The result, we believe, is both consistent with the Act and responsive to your concerns regarding PEG programming. Among other things, the Commission observed that Congress broadly defined franchise fees; indeed, with respect to PEG channels, it only excluded support payments with respect to franchises granted prior to October 30, 1984 as well as certain capital costs required by franchises granted after that date. 47 U.S.C. § 542(g)(2)(B) & (C). The draft order therefore concludes that cable-related, in-kind contributions including PEG-related contributions are  franchise fees subject to the Act s five-percent cap unless otherwise expressly excluded. Attachment part proceeding any your PEG-related record. against capacity, Page further of letter 2 The the Again, At the The and the Commission s concerning franchise assistance. and as draft capital Honorable concludes same thank order time, costs. you you fee the also that cap can Chris for the review. order s These broadens the until your see order Van costs in latter potential the letter. See the defers Hollen Commission of the Draft draft two providing Your Commission s ruling impact conclusions Third Order Sincerely, views iitV. on Report on at can PEG the Pai have 12 PEG address complex directly n.82. channel interpretation and been programming. Order have Please the entered address issues capacity issue let of raised into on the me should an a been concerns the know exclusion more by record PEG not considered if complete be I raised channel can for of offset the be certain in as of