Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 Before the Federal Communications Commission Washington, D.C. 20554 In the Matter of Amendment of the Commission’s Rules Related to Retransmission Consent ) ) ) ) MB Docket No. 10-71 NOTICE OF PROPOSED RULEMAKING Adopted: March 3, 2011 Released: March 3, 2011 Comment Date: [60 days after date of publication in the Federal Register] Reply Comment Date: [90 days after date of publication in the Federal Register] By the Commission: Chairman Genachowski and Commissioners Copps, McDowell, Clyburn, and Baker issuing separate statements. TABLE OF CONTENTS Heading Paragraph # I. INTRODUCTION.................................................................................................................................. 1 II. BACKGROUND.................................................................................................................................... 4 A. Retransmission Consent................................................................................................................... 4 B. Good Faith Negotiations .................................................................................................................. 8 C. Petition for Rulemaking................................................................................................................. 13 D. Consumer Impact ........................................................................................................................... 15 III. DISCUSSION....................................................................................................................................... 17 A. Strengthening the Good Faith Negotiation Standards of Section 76.65(b)(1) ............................... 20 B. Specification of the Totality of the Circumstances Standard of Section 76.65(b)(2) .................... 31 C. Revision of the Notice Requirements ............................................................................................ 34 D. Application of the “Sweeps” Prohibition to Retransmission Consent Disputes ............................ 38 E. Elimination of the Network Non-Duplication and Syndicated Exclusivity Rules......................... 42 F. Other Proposals.............................................................................................................................. 46 IV. CONCLUSION .................................................................................................................................... 47 V. PROCEDURAL MATTERS................................................................................................................ 48 A. Initial Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis.................................................................................... 48 B. Paperwork Reduction Act .............................................................................................................. 49 C. Ex Parte Rules................................................................................................................................ 50 D. Filing Requirements....................................................................................................................... 51 VI. ORDERING CLAUSES....................................................................................................................... 55 APPENDIX A - List of Commenters APPENDIX B - Proposed Rule Changes APPENDIX C - Initial Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 2 I. INTRODUCTION 1. In this Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (“NPRM”), we seek comment on a series of proposals to streamline and clarify our rules concerning or affecting retransmission consent negotiations. Our primary objective is to assess whether and how the Commission rules in this arena are ensuring that the market-based mechanisms Congress designed to govern retransmission consent negotiations are working effectively and, to the extent possible, minimize video programming service disruptions to consumers. 2. The Communications Act of 1934, as amended (the “Act”), prohibits cable systems and other multichannel video programming distributors (“MVPDs”) from retransmitting a broadcast station’s signal without the station’s consent.1 This consent is what is known as “retransmission consent.” The law requires broadcasters and MVPDs to negotiate for retransmission consent in good faith.2 Since Congress enacted the retransmission consent regime in 1992, there have been significant changes in the video programming marketplace. One such change is the form of compensation sought by broadcasters. Historically, cable operators typically compensated broadcasters for consent to retransmit the broadcasters’ signals through in-kind compensation, which might include, for example, carriage of additional channels of the broadcaster’s programming on the cable system or advertising time.3 Today, however, broadcasters are increasingly seeking and receiving monetary compensation from MVPDs in exchange for consent to the retransmission of their signals. Another important change concerns the rise of competitive video programming providers. In 1992, the only option for many local broadcast television stations seeking to reach MVPD customers in a particular Designated Market Area (“DMA”) was a single local cable provider. Today, in contrast, many consumers have additional options for receiving programming, including two national direct broadcast satellite (“DBS”) providers, telephone providers that offer video programming in some areas, and, to a degree, the Internet. One result of such changes in the marketplace is that disputes over retransmission consent have become more contentious and more public, and we recently have seen a rise in negotiation impasses that have affected millions of consumers.4 3. Accordingly, we have concluded that it is appropriate for us to reexamine our rules relating to retransmission consent. We consider below revisions to the retransmission consent and related rules that we believe could allow the market-based negotiations contemplated by the statute to proceed more smoothly, provide greater certainty to the negotiating parties, and help protect consumers. Accordingly, as discussed below, we seek comment on rule changes that would: · Provide more guidance under the good faith negotiation requirements to the negotiating parties by: o Specifying additional examples of per se violations in Section 76.65(b)(1) of our rules; and o Further clarifying the totality of the circumstances standard of Section 76.65(b)(2); 1 47 U.S.C. § 325(b)(1)(A). We note that, by statute, the retransmission consent requirements, including the good faith and exclusivity provisions, apply to all MVPDs, while the mandatory carriage requirements apply only to cable and satellite providers. See 47 U.S.C. §§ 338, 534, and 535. 2 See 47 U.S.C. §§ 325(b)(3)(C)(ii)-(iii); 47 C.F.R. § 76.65. 3 See, e.g., General Motors Corp. and Hughes Electronics Corp., Transferors, and The News Corp. Ltd., Transferee, Memorandum Opinion and Order, 19 FCC Rcd 473, 503, ¶ 56 (2004) (“News/Hughes Order”). 4 See infra ¶ 15. But see Opposition of the National Association of Broadcasters et al. at 7 (“Broadcaster Associations Opposition”); Comments of Hoak Media, LLC at 2 (“Hoak Comments”); Comments of Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc. at 9 (“Sinclair Comments”). Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 3 · Improve notice to consumers in advance of possible service disruptions by extending the coverage of our notice rules to non-cable MVPDs and broadcasters as well as cable operators, and specifying that, if a renewal or extension agreement has not been executed 30 days in advance of a retransmission consent agreement’s expiration, notice of potential deletion of a broadcaster’s signal must be given to consumers regardless of whether the signal is ultimately deleted; · Extend to non-cable MVPDs the prohibition now applicable to cable operators on deleting or repositioning a local commercial television station during ratings “sweeps” periods;5 and · Allow MVPDs to negotiate for alternative access to network programming by eliminating the Commission’s network non-duplication and syndicated exclusivity rules. We also seek comment on any other revisions or additions to our rules within the scope of our authority6 that would improve the retransmission consent negotiation process and help protect consumers from programming disruptions. II. BACKGROUND A. Retransmission Consent 4. The current regulatory scheme for carriage of broadcast television stations was established by the Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992 (“1992 Cable Act”).7 In 1992, unlike today, local broadcast television stations seeking to reach viewers in a particular DMA through an MVPD service often had only one option – namely, a single local cable provider. While broadcasters benefited from cable carriage, Congress recognized that broadcast programming “remains the most popular programming on cable systems, and a substantial portion of the benefits for which consumers pay cable systems is derived from carriage of the signals of network affiliates, independent television stations, and public television stations.”8 In adopting the retransmission consent provisions of the 1992 Cable Act, Congress found that cable operators obtained great benefit from the local broadcast signals that they were able to carry without broadcaster consent or copyright liability, and that this benefit resulted in an effective subsidy to cable operators.9 Accordingly, Congress adopted its retransmission consent provisions to allow broadcasters to negotiate to receive compensation for the value of their signals. Through the 1992 Cable Act, Congress modified the Communications Act, inter alia, to provide television stations with certain carriage rights on cable television systems in their local market.10 5 See infra n. 112. 6 The Commission does not have the power to force broadcasters to consent to MVPD carriage of their signals nor can the Commission order binding arbitration. See infra ¶ 18 and n. 54. See also Letter from Chairman Julius Genachowski, FCC, to The Honorable John F. Kerry, Chairman, Subcommittee on Communications, Technology, and the Internet, Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, U.S. Senate, at 1 (Oct. 29, 2010) (“[C]urrent law does not give the agency the tools necessary to prevent service disruptions.”). 7 1992 Cable Act, Pub. L. No. 102-385, 106 Stat. 1460 (1992). Previously, under the new Copyright Act in 1976, Congress permitted cable operators to retransmit broadcast television signals without the broadcaster’s consent. See Malrite T.V. of New York v. FCC, 652 F.2d 1140, 1146 (2d Cir. 1981) (discussing 17 U.S.C. § 111). In exchange, cable operators paid a prescribed royalty fee based on the number of distant signals that a system carried and its gross revenues. See id. 8 See 1992 Cable Act § 2(a)(19). 9 See id. 10 See 47 U.S.C. §§ 325, 534. Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 4 5. Pursuant to the statutory provisions enacted in 1992, television broadcasters elect every three years whether to proceed under the retransmission consent requirements of Section 325 of the Act, or the mandatory carriage (“must carry”) requirements of Sections 338 and 614 of the Act.11 There are important differences between the retransmission consent and must carry regimes. Specifically, a broadcaster electing must carry status is guaranteed carriage on cable systems in its market, and the cable operator is generally prohibited from accepting or requesting compensation for carriage, 12 whereas a broadcaster who elects carriage under the retransmission consent rules may insist on compensation. In order to reach MVPD customers, most broadcasters elected carriage under the must carry rules in the early years following enactment of the new regime.13 6. Since 2001, broadcasters have also had mandatory carriage rights on DBS systems. The Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act of 1999 (“SHVIA”)14 gives satellite carriers a statutory copyright license to retransmit local broadcast stations to subscribers in the station’s market, also known as “local-into-local” service. Generally, when a satellite carrier provides local-into-local service pursuant to the statutory copyright license, the satellite carrier is obligated to carry any qualified local television station in the particular DMA that has made a timely election for mandatory carriage, unless the station’s programming is duplicative of the programming of another station carried by the carrier in the DMA or the station does not provide a good quality signal to the carrier’s local receive facility.15 7. As an alternative to seeking mandatory carriage, a broadcaster may elect carriage under the retransmission consent rules, which allow for negotiations with cable operators and other MVPDs for carriage. A broadcaster electing retransmission consent may accept or request compensation for carriage in retransmission consent negotiations. The legislative history of Section 325 indicates that Congress intended “to establish a marketplace for the disposition of the rights to retransmit broadcast signals; it is not the Committee’s intention in this bill to dictate the outcome of the ensuing marketplace negotiations.”16 Under Section 325(b)(1)(A) of the Act, if a broadcaster electing retransmission consent and an MVPD are unable to reach an agreement, or do not agree to the extension of an existing agreement prior to its expiration, then the MVPD may not retransmit the broadcasting station’s signal because the signal cannot be carried without the broadcast station’s consent.17 11 See 47 U.S.C. §§ 325(b), 338, 534. Section 338 governs mandatory carriage on satellite, and Section 614 (codified at 47 U.S.C. § 534) governs mandatory carriage of commercial television stations on cable. 12 See Implementation of the Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992, Broadcast Signal Carriage Issues, Report and Order, 8 FCC Rcd 2965, 2992, ¶ 111 (1993); see also 47 U.S.C. § 534(b)(10). 13 By 2009, only 37 percent of stations relied on must carry. See Omnibus Broadband Initiative, Spectrum Analysis: Options for Broadcast Spectrum, OBI Technical Paper No. 3, at 8 (June 2010); see also id. at Exhibit C (showing decrease in must carry elections and increase in retransmission consent elections since 2003); id. at n. 23. 14 SHVIA was enacted as Title I of the Intellectual Property and Communications Omnibus Reform Act of 1999 (“IPACORA”) (relating to copyright licensing and carriage of broadcast signals by satellite carriers, codified in scattered sections of 17 and 47 U.S.C.), Pub. L. No. 106-113, 113 Stat. 1501, Appendix I (1999). 15 See 47 U.S.C. § 338. 16 S. Rep. No. 92, 102nd Cong., 1st Sess. 1991, reprinted in 1992 U.S.C.C.A.N. 1133, 1169. 17 Section 325(b)(1)(A) of the Act states, “No cable system or other multichannel video programming distributor shall retransmit the signal of a broadcasting station, or any part thereof, except– (A) with the express authority of the originating station. . . .” 47 U.S.C. § 325(b)(1). Pursuant to Section 325(b)(2), there are five circumstances in which the retransmission restrictions do not apply: (A) to retransmission of the signal of a noncommercial television broadcast station; (continued….) Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 5 B. Good Faith Negotiations 8. Initially, Section 325 of the Act did not include any standards governing retransmission consent negotiations between broadcasters and MVPDs.18 That changed in 1999 when Congress adopted SHVIA, which contained provisions concerning the satellite industry, as well as television broadcast stations and terrestrial MVPDs.19 Specifically, Congress required broadcast television stations engaging in retransmission consent negotiations with any MVPD to negotiate in good faith.20 Congress required the Commission to revise its regulations so that they: . . . prohibit a television broadcast station that provides retransmission consent from . . . failing to negotiate in good faith, and it shall not be a failure to negotiate in good faith if the television broadcast station enters into retransmission consent agreements containing different terms and conditions, including price terms, with different multichannel video programming distributors if such different terms and conditions are based on competitive marketplace considerations.21 (…continued from previous page) (B) to retransmission of the signal of a television broadcast station outside the station’s local market by a satellite carrier directly to its subscribers, if– (i) such station was a superstation on May 1, 1991; (ii) as of July 1, 1998, such station was retransmitted by a satellite carrier under the statutory license of section 119 of title 17, United States Code; and (iii) the satellite carrier complies with any network nonduplication, syndicated exclusivity, and sports blackout rules adopted by the Commission under section 339(b) of this Act; (C) until December 31, 2014, to retransmission of the signals of network stations directly to a home satellite antenna, if the subscriber receiving the signal– (i) is located in an area outside the local market of such stations; and (ii) resides in an unserved household; (D) to retransmission by a cable operator or other multichannel video provider, other than a satellite carrier, of the signal of a television broadcast station outside the station’s local market if such signal was obtained from a satellite carrier and– (i) the originating station was a superstation on May 1, 1991; and (ii) as of July 1, 1998, such station was retransmitted by a satellite carrier under the statutory license of section 119 of title 17, United States Code; or (E) during the 6-month period beginning on the date of the enactment of the Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act of 1999, to the retransmission of the signal of a television broadcast station within the station’s local market by a satellite carrier directly to its subscribers under the statutory license of section 122 of title 17, United States Code. 18 We note that Congress directed the Commission to consider, in implementing provisions of the 1992 Cable Act, “the impact that the grant of retransmission consent by television stations may have on the rates for the basic service tier,” and to “ensure that the regulations prescribed under this subsection do not conflict with the Commission’s obligation under section 623(b)(1) to ensure that the rates for the basic service tier are reasonable.” See 47 U.S.C. § 325(b)(3)(A). 19 See supra n. 14. The Act defines an MVPD as “a person such as, but not limited to, a cable operator, a multichannel multipoint distribution service, a direct broadcast satellite service, or a television receive-only satellite program distributor, who makes available for purchase, by subscribers or customers, multiple channels of video programming.” 47 U.S.C. § 522(13). 20 See 47 U.S.C. § 325(b)(3)(C). This good faith negotiation obligation was later made reciprocal to MVPDs as well as broadcasters by the Satellite Home Viewer Extension and Reauthorization Act of 2004 (“SHVERA”), Pub. L. No. 108-447, 118 Stat. 2809 (2004). SHVIA also prohibited broadcasters from entering into exclusive retransmission consent agreements. See 47 U.S.C. § 325(b)(3)(C). 21 47 U.S.C. § 325(b)(3)(C)(ii). Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 6 The Joint Explanatory Statement of the Committee of Conference (“Conference Report”) did not explain or clarify the statutory language, instead merely stating that the regulations would: . . . prohibit a television broadcast station from . . . refusing to negotiate in good faith regarding retransmission consent agreements. A television station may generally offer different retransmission consent terms or conditions, including price terms, to different distributors. The [Commission] may determine that such different terms represent a failure to negotiate in good faith only if they are not based on competitive marketplace considerations.22 9. In implementing the good faith negotiation requirement, the Commission concluded “that the statute does not intend to subject retransmission consent negotiation to detailed substantive oversight by the Commission. Instead, the order concludes that Congress intended that the Commission follow established precedent, particularly in the field of labor law, in implementing the good faith retransmission consent negotiation requirement.”23 Given the dearth of guidance in Section 325 and its legislative history, the Commission drew guidance from analogous statutory standards, such as the good faith bargaining requirement of Section 8(d) of the Taft-Hartley Act.24 The Commission also looked to its own rules implementing the good faith negotiation requirement of Section 251 of the Act, which largely relies on labor law precedent.25 10. The Commission adopted a two-part framework to determine whether broadcasters and MVPDs negotiate retransmission consent in good faith. First, the Commission established a list of seven objective good faith negotiation standards, the violation of which is considered a per se breach of the good faith negotiation obligation.26 Second, even if the seven specific standards are met, the Commission may consider whether, based on the totality of the circumstances, a party failed to negotiate retransmission consent in good faith.27 The Commission has stated that, where “a broadcaster is determined to have failed to negotiate in good faith, the Commission will instruct the parties to 22 Conference Report at 13. 23 Implementation of the Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act of 1999; Retransmission Consent Issues: Good Faith Negotiation and Exclusivity, First Report and Order, 15 FCC Rcd 5445, 5448, ¶ 6 (2000) (“Good Faith Order”). 24 Id. at 5453-5454, ¶ 22. 25 Id. at 5454 n. 42. 26 See 47 C.F.R. § 76.65(b)(1), which states as follows: “The following actions or practices violate a broadcast television station’s or multichannel video programming distributor’s (the ‘Negotiating Entity’) duty to negotiate retransmission consent agreements in good faith: (i) Refusal by a Negotiating Entity to negotiate retransmission consent; (ii) Refusal by a Negotiating Entity to designate a representative with authority to make binding representations on retransmission consent; (iii) Refusal by a Negotiating Entity to meet and negotiate retransmission consent at reasonable times and locations, or acting in a manner that unreasonably delays retransmission consent negotiations; (iv) Refusal by a Negotiating Entity to put forth more than a single, unilateral proposal; (v) Failure of a Negotiating Entity to respond to a retransmission consent proposal of the other party, including the reasons for the rejection of any such proposal; (vi) Execution by a Negotiating Entity of an agreement with any party, a term or condition of which, requires that such Negotiating Entity not enter into a retransmission consent agreement with any other television broadcast station or multichannel video programming distributor; and (vii) Refusal by a Negotiating Entity to execute a written retransmission consent agreement that sets forth the full understanding of the television broadcast station and the multichannel video programming distributor.” 27 See 47 C.F.R. § 76.65(b)(2) (“In addition to the standards set forth in § 76.65(b)(1), a Negotiating Entity may demonstrate, based on the totality of the circumstances of a particular retransmission consent negotiation, that a television broadcast station or multichannel video programming distributor breached its duty to negotiate in good faith as set forth in § 76.65(a).”). Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 7 renegotiate the agreement in accordance with the Commission’s rules and Section 325(b)(3)(C).”28 While the Commission did not find any statutory authority to impose damages, it noted “that, as with all violations of the Communications Act or the Commission’s rules, the Commission has the authority to impose forfeitures for violations of Section 325(b)(3)(C).”29 In discussing remedies for a violation of the good faith negotiation requirement, the Commission did not reference continued carriage as a potential remedy,30 and stated that it could not adopt regulations permitting retransmission during good faith negotiation or while a good faith complaint is pending before the Commission, absent broadcaster consent to such retransmission.31 11. The Commission concluded that Congress did not intend for it to sit in judgment of the terms of every executed retransmission consent agreement.32 Rather, the Commission said, “[w]e believe that, by imposing the good faith obligation, Congress intended that the Commission develop and enforce a process that ensures that broadcasters and MVPDs meet to negotiate retransmission consent and that such negotiations are conducted in an atmosphere of honesty, purpose and clarity of process.”33 In adopting the good faith negotiation rules, the Commission pointed to commenters’ arguments that intrusive Commission action was unnecessary because of the thousands of retransmission consent agreements that had been concluded successfully since the adoption of the 1992 Cable Act.34 12. There have been very few complaints filed alleging violations of the Commission’s good faith rules. For example, in 2001, the former Cable Services Bureau issued an order denying EchoStar Satellite Corporation’s retransmission consent complaint alleging that Young Broadcasting, Inc. et al. failed to negotiate in good faith.35 More recently, in 2007, the Media Bureau issued an order denying Mediacom Communications Corporation’s (“Mediacom”) retransmission consent complaint alleging that Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc. (“Sinclair”) failed to negotiate in good faith.36 Also in 2007, the Media Bureau ruled that a cable operator failed to negotiate in good faith under the totality of the circumstances, and ordered resumption of negotiations within 10 days and status updates every 30 days.37 Further, in 2009, the Media Bureau issued an order denying ATC Broadband LLC and Dixie Cable TV, Inc.’s retransmission consent complaint alleging that Gray Television Licensee, Inc. failed to negotiate in good faith.38 Also in 2009, Mediacom filed another retransmission consent complaint alleging that Sinclair 28 Good Faith Order, 15 FCC Rcd at 5480, ¶ 81. 29 Id. at 5480, ¶ 82 (footnote omitted). 30 Id. at 5479-80, ¶¶ 80-82. 31 Id. at 5471, ¶ 60. 32 Id. at 5454, ¶ 23. 33 Id. at 5455, ¶ 24. 34 Id. at 5451, ¶ 15. 35 See EchoStar Satellite Corp. v. Young Broadcasting, Inc. et al., Memorandum Opinion and Order, 16 FCC Rcd 15070 (CSB 2001). 36 See Mediacom Communications Corp. v. Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc., Memorandum Opinion and Order, 22 FCC Rcd 47 (MB 2007). Although Mediacom filed an application for review of the Media Bureau’s order, Mediacom and Sinclair subsequently announced the completion of a retransmission consent agreement, and the Media Bureau thus granted Mediacom’s motion to dismiss the case with prejudice. See Mediacom Communications Corp. v. Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc., Order, 22 FCC Rcd 11093 (MB 2007). 37 See Letter to Jorge L. Bauermeister, 22 FCC Rcd 4933 (MB 2007); see also infra ¶ 33. 38 See ATC Broadband LLC and Dixie Cable TV, Inc. v. Gray Television Licensee, Inc., Memorandum Opinion and Order, 24 FCC Rcd 1645 (MB 2009) Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 8 failed to negotiate in good faith, but, following an agreed-upon extension, the parties announced the completion of a retransmission consent agreement and the Media Bureau granted Mediacom’s motion to dismiss the case with prejudice.39 Accordingly, there is little Commission precedent regarding the good faith rules, and there has only been one finding that a party to a retransmission consent agreement negotiated in bad faith.40 C. Petition for Rulemaking 13. In March 2010, 14 MVPDs and public interest groups filed a rulemaking petition arguing that the Commission’s retransmission consent regulations are outdated and are harming consumers.41 The petitioners argued that changes in the marketplace, and the increasingly contentious nature of retransmission consent negotiations, justify revisions to the Commission’s rules governing retransmission consent. Specifically, the Petition stated that, in 1992, Congress acted out of “concern that cable operators were functioning as monopolies and in turn threatened to undercut the public interest benefits associated with over-the-air broadcasting.”42 The petitioners argued that broadcasters today “enjoy distribution options beyond the cable incumbent in nearly every [DMA].”43 The Petition also contended that Congress expected broadcaster demands for compensation, if any, to be modest, because of the benefits that broadcasters derive from carriage.44 The Petition argued that the recent shift of bargaining power to broadcasters has resulted in retransmission consent negotiations in which MVPDs must either agree to the significantly higher fees requested by broadcasters or lose access to programming.45 14. On March 19, 2010, the Media Bureau released a Public Notice inviting public comment on the Petition.46 While some commenters agree with the petitioners that the retransmission consent regime is in need of reform,47 others argue that the retransmission consent process is working as intended 39 See Mediacom Communications Corp. v. Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc., Order, 25 FCC Rcd 257 (MB 2010). 40 See supra n. 37. 41 Time Warner Cable Inc. et al. Petition for Rulemaking to Amend the Commission’s Rules Governing Retransmission Consent, MB Docket No. 10-71, at 1 (filed Mar. 9, 2010) (the “Petition”). The Petition was filed by: American Cable Association; Bright House Networks, LLC; Cablevision Systems Corp.; Charter Communications, Inc.; DIRECTV, Inc.; DISH Network LLC; Insight Communications Company, Inc.; Mediacom Communications Corp.; New America Foundation; OPASTCO; Public Knowledge; Suddenlink Communications; Time Warner Cable Inc.; and Verizon. 42 Petition at 2-3 (footnote omitted). 43 Id. at 4. 44 Id. 45 Id. at 5. 46 See Public Notice, Media Bureau Seeks Comment on a Petition for Rulemaking to Amend the Commission’s Rules Governing Retransmission Consent, DA 10-474 (MB 2010) (the “Public Notice”). Following the grant of an extension, comments were due May 18, 2010, and reply comments were due June 3, 2010. See Petition for Rulemaking to Amend the Commission’s Rules Governing Retransmission Consent, Order, 25 FCC Rcd 3334 (MB 2010). 47 See, e.g., Comments of the American Cable Association at 1 (“ACA Comments”); Comments of The Africa Channel at 4 (“Africa Channel Comments”); Comments of the American Public Power Association et al. at 2 (“APPA Group Comments”); Comments of AT&T at 1 (“AT&T Comments”); Comments of BEVCOMM, Inc. and Cannon Valley Cablevision, Inc. at 1; Comments of Bright House Networks, LLC at 1 (“BHN Comments”); Comments of Cablevision Systems Corporation at 5 (“Cablevision Comments”); Comments of the C-SPAN Networks at 2; Comments of Discovery Communications LLC at 2-4 (“Discovery Comments”); Comments of Massillon Cable TV et al. at 1 (“Free Market Operators Comments”); Comments of Free Press et al. at 1-2 (“Free Press et al. Comments”); Comments of Institute for Policy Innovation at 1; Comments of The Organization for the (continued….) Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 9 and that the shift in retransmission consent pricing represents a market correction reflecting the increased competition faced by incumbent cable operators.48 D. Consumer Impact 15. In the past year, we have seen high profile retransmission consent disputes result in carriage impasses. When Cablevision Systems Corp. (“Cablevision”) and News Corp.’s agreement for two Fox-affiliated television stations and one MyNetwork TV-affiliated television station expired on October 15, 2010 and the parties did not reach an extension or renewal agreement, Cablevision was forced to discontinue carriage of the three stations until agreement was reached on October 30, 2010. The carriage impasse resulted in affected Cablevision subscribers being unable to view on cable the baseball National League Championship Series, the first two games of the World Series, a number of NFL regular season games, and other regularly scheduled programs. Previously, on March 7, 2010, Walt Disney Co. (“Disney”) and Cablevision were unable to reach agreement on carriage of Disney’s ABC signal for nearly 21 hours after a previous agreement expired. As a result, the approximately 3.1 million households served by Cablevision were unable to view the first 14 minutes of the Academy Awards through their cable provider. Most recently, we are aware of losses of programming resulting from retransmission consent carriage impasses involving DISH Network and Chambers Communications Corp., Time Warner Cable and Smith Media LLC, DISH Network and Frontier Radio Management, DirecTV and Northwest Broadcasting, Mediacom and KOMU-TV, and Full Channel TV and Entravision. (…continued from previous page) Promotion and Advancement of Small Telecommunications Companies et al. at 2 (“OPASTCO et al. Comments”); Comments of Ovation at 1 (“Ovation Comments”); Comments of Pioneer Communications et al. at 4 (“Pioneer et al. Comments”); Comments of Precursor LLC at 1 (“Precursor Comments”); Comments of RCN Telecom Services, Inc. at 1 (“RCN Comments”); Comments of Retirement Living TV at 2; Comments of Starz Entertainment, LLC at 4 (“Starz Comments”); Comments of Time Warner Cable Inc. at 5-6 (“Time Warner Comments”); Comments of the United States Telecom Association at 3 (“US Telecom Comments”); Comments of Verizon at 3 (“Verizon Comments”); Reply Comments of Charter Communications, Inc. at 1; Reply Comments of DIRECTV, Inc. and DISH Network L.L.C. at 1 (“DIRECTV/DISH Reply”); Reply Comments of Insight Communications Company, Inc. at 2-6 (“Insight Reply”); Reply Comments of Media Access Project et al. at 2; Reply Comments of Mediacom Communications Corporation and Suddenlink Communications at 2-3 (“Mediacom/Suddenlink Reply”); Reply Comments of Public Knowledge at 1 (“Public Knowledge Reply”). 48 See, e.g., Comments of ATV Broadcast LLC at 1; Comments of Belo Corp. at 1 (“Belo Comments”); Broadcaster Associations Opposition at 4-5; Comments of CBS Corp. et al. at ii-iv, 1 (“Broadcast Networks Comments”); Comments of Broadcasting Licenses, Limited Partnership et al. at 7 (“Broadcast Television Licensees Comments”); Comments of the Walt Disney Company at 12 (“Disney Comments”); Comments of Fox Television Affiliates Association at 7 (“Fox Affiliates Comments”); Comments of Gray Television, Inc. at 5 (“Gray Comments”); Hoak Comments at 1; Comments of LIN Television Corporation at 1 (“LIN Comments”); Opposition of the Local Television Broadcasters at 2 (“LTB Opposition”); Comments of Morgan Murphy Media at 3 (“Morgan Murphy Comments”); Comments of New Age Media, LLC at 2; Comments of Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc. at 2 (“Nexstar Comments”); Comments of Named State Broadcasters Associations at 15 (“NSBA Comments”); Sinclair Comments at 2-4; Comments of Univision Communications Inc. at 1-2; Reply Comments of Fox Entertainment Group, Inc. and Fox Television Stations, Inc. at 2 (“Fox Reply”); Reply Comments of the National Football League at 2. See also Comments of CBS Corp. at 12 (“[I]it is no secret that in recent years vastly increased competition and dramatic technological change have brought the business model of television broadcasters under increasing strain. Audiences have fragmented, advertising revenues have dropped, and new rivals for the attention of audiences . . . have emerged. In this new environment, if broadcasters are to compete with cable networks that enjoy a dual revenue stream, they must have the same unfettered right to bargain with MVPDs for compensation for their programming.”); Comments of Allbritton Communications Company et al. at 7 (“Local Broadcasters Comments”) (“Now . . . it is more critical than ever that local broadcasters receive a fair level of compensation reflecting the large audiences they deliver as a result of their decades-long, expensive investments in news, sports, and entertainment programming for their local audiences.”). Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 10 16. In addition, consumers have been concerned about other high profile retransmission consent negotiations that seemed close to an impasse.49 We are concerned about the uncertainty that consumers have faced regarding their ability to continue receiving certain broadcast television stations during recent contentious retransmission consent negotiations.50 Accordingly, recognizing the consumer harm caused by retransmission consent negotiation impasses and near impasses, the Commission seeks comment on certain proposals to modify the rules governing retransmission consent. III. DISCUSSION 17. Our goal in this proceeding is to take appropriate action, within our existing authority, to protect consumers from the disruptive impact of the loss of broadcast programming carried on MVPD video services. Subscribers are the innocent bystanders adversely affected when broadcasters and MVPDs fail to reach an agreement to extend or renew their retransmission consent contracts. In light of the changing marketplace, our proposals in this NPRM are intended to update the good faith rules and remedies in order to better utilize the good faith requirement as a consumer protection tool. While one way to protect consumers’ interests might be for the Commission to order that a station continue to be carried notwithstanding the parties’ failure to reach an agreement, the statute does not authorize carriage without the station’s consent,51 as discussed below. Therefore, we have identified other measures that we could take to improve the process and decrease the occurrence of these disruptions. As detailed in this NPRM, we seek comment on these measures and on others that could be beneficial and constructive. Is there an impact on the basic service rate that consumers pay as a result of the retransmission consent fees or disputes? 18. As a threshold matter, we note that the Petition proposed, among other suggestions, that the Commission adopt a mandatory arbitration mechanism for retransmission consent disputes, and provide for mandatory interim carriage while an MVPD negotiates in good faith or while dispute resolution proceedings are pending.52 We do not believe that the Commission has authority to adopt 49 For example, a retransmission consent agreement with Time Warner Cable for News Corp.’s Fox television stations expired at midnight on December 31, 2009. A statement from FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski at the time acknowledged that a failure to conclude a new agreement could harm consumers, noting that “[c]ompanies shouldn’t force cable-watching football fans to scramble for other means of TV delivery on New Year’s weekend.” See News Release, FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski Statement on Retransmission Disputes, (rel. Dec. 31, 2009). Ultimately, Fox and Time Warner reached agreement without any carriage interruption, but consumers who were aware of the dispute were unsure if they would have continued access to Fox programming through their Time Warner subscription. 50 The early termination fees imposed by some MVPDs may cause consumers faced with a potential retransmission consent negotiating impasse to be unwilling or unable to consider switching to another MVPD to maintain access to a particular broadcast station. See infra ¶ 30. 51 47 U.S.C. § 325(b)(1)(A). 52 Petition at 31-40. In response to the Public Notice seeking comment on the Petition, some commenters have agreed that the Commission should adopt mandatory dispute resolution procedures and/or interim carriage mechanisms. See, e.g., APPA Group Comments at 17-18; BHN Comments at 14-16; Comments of Cox Enterprises, Inc. at 4-5 (“Cox Comments”); Free Press et al. Comments at 4-7; Comments of the Media Access Project at 9-10 (“MAP Comments”); OPASTCO et al. Comments at 9-10; Precursor Comments at 1; RCN Comments at 6-8; US Telecom Comments at 7, 9; Verizon Comments at 6-7; DIRECTV/DISH Reply at 6-7; Mediacom/Suddenlink Reply at 43-44; Reply Comments of Precursor LLC at 1 (“Precursor Reply”); Public Knowledge Reply at 2. In contrast, other commenters have argued that the Commission should not, as a matter of policy, adopt mandatory dispute resolution procedures or interim carriage mechanisms, and/or that in any event the Commission lacks authority to adopt such procedures and mechanisms. See, e.g., Belo Comments at 7-9; Broadcaster Associations Opposition at 63-78; Broadcast Networks Comments at ii, 7-11; Broadcast Television Licensees Comments at 2-9; Disney Comments at 5-11; Fox Affiliates Comments at 3-4; Gray Comments at 7-8; Hoak Comments at 8-9; Local Broadcasters Comments at 10-12; LTB Opposition at 12, 14-17; Morgan Murphy Comments at 10-11; Nexstar (continued….) Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 11 either interim carriage mechanisms or mandatory binding dispute resolution procedures applicable to retransmission consent negotiations.53 First, regarding interim carriage, examination of the Act and its legislative history has convinced us that the Commission lacks authority to order carriage in the absence of a broadcaster’s consent due to a retransmission consent dispute. Rather, Section 325(b) of the Act expressly prohibits the retransmission of a broadcast signal without the broadcaster’s consent.54 Furthermore, consistent with the statutory language, the legislative history of Section 325(b) states that the retransmission consent provisions were not intended “to dictate the outcome of the ensuing marketplace negotiations” and that broadcasters would retain the “right to control retransmission and to be compensated for others’ use of their signals.”55 We thus interpret Section 325(b) to prevent the Commission from ordering carriage over the objection of the broadcaster, even upon a finding of a violation of the good faith negotiation requirement. Consistent with this interpretation, the Commission previously found that it has “no latitude . . . to adopt regulations permitting retransmission during good faith negotiation or while a good faith or exclusivity complaint is pending before the Commission where the broadcaster has not consented to such retransmission.”56 Contrary to the suggestion of some commenters, Section 4(i) of the Act does not authorize the Commission to act in a manner that is inconsistent with other provisions of the Act,57 and thus does not support Commission-ordered carriage in this context.58 Second, we believe that mandatory binding dispute resolution procedures would be inconsistent with both Section 325 of the Act, in which Congress opted for retransmission consent negotiations to be handled by private parties subject to certain requirements,59 and with the (…continued from previous page) Comments at 5-8; NSBA Comments at 12, 17-19; Sinclair Comments at 7-9; Reply Comments of the National Association of Broadcasters et al. at 2-7 (“Broadcaster Associations Reply”); Reply Comments of the Walt Disney Company et al. at 2-4 (“Disney Reply”). 53 See supra n. 6. 54 47 U.S.C. § 325(b)(1)(A) (“No cable system or other multichannel video programming distributor shall retransmit the signal of a broadcasting station, or any part thereof, except– (A) with the express authority of the originating station”). 55 S.Rep.No. 92, 102nd Cong., 1st Sess. 1991, reprinted in 1992 U.S.C.C.A.N. 1133, 1169. 56 Good Faith Order, 15 FCC Rcd at 5471, ¶ 60. In contrast, in the 2007 retransmission consent dispute between Mediacom and Sinclair, the Media Bureau implied, in obiter dicta, that the Commission would have authority to grant interim carriage rights if there were a finding of a violation of the good faith negotiation rules. See Mediacom Communications Corp. v. Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc., Order, 22 FCC Rcd 284, 286, ¶ 3 (MB 2007). We note that the Media Bureau did not in that case explicitly state that the Commission may grant interim carriage rights upon a finding of a good faith violation. Further, staff-level decisions are not binding on the Commission. See Comcast Corp. v. FCC, 526 F.3d 763, 769 (D.C. Cir. 2008). 57 47 U.S.C. § 154(i); see also Shawnee Tribe v. U.S., 423 F.3d 1204, 1213 (10th Cir. 2005) (“It is a fundamental canon of statutory construction that, when there is an apparent conflict between a specific provision and a more general one, the more specific one governs”) (internal quotations omitted). 58 Some commenters have argued that the standstill procedures that the Commission adopted in program access cases support adopting interim carriage in retransmission consent disputes. See, e.g., BHN Comments at 15-16; Time Warner Comments at 12-13; see also Review of the Commission’s Program Access Rules and Examination of Programming Tying Arrangements, First Report and Order, 25 FCC Rcd 746, 794-797, ¶¶ 71-75 (2010). Other commenters have argued that Section 325(b)(1) distinguishes the retransmission consent context from the program access context. See, e.g., Broadcast Networks Comments at 10; Fox Reply at 18. We agree that, in contrast to the program access context, imposing a temporary standstill or other interim carriage mechanism in the context of retransmission consent disputes would be inconsistent with Section 325(b)(1). 59 47 U.S.C. § 325; see also Good Faith Order, 15 FCC Rcd at 5462, ¶ 40 (“failure to reach agreement does not violate Section 325(b)(3)(C)”). Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 12 Administrative Dispute Resolution Act (“ADRA”), which authorizes an agency to use arbitration “whenever all parties consent.”60 19. In light of the statutory mandate in Section 325 and the restrictions imposed by the ADRA, we do not believe that we have authority to require either interim carriage requirements or mandatory binding dispute resolution procedures. Parties may comment on that conclusion. We seek comment below on other ways the Commission can protect the public from, and decrease the frequency of, retransmission consent negotiation impasses within our existing statutory authority. A. Strengthening the Good Faith Negotiation Standards of Section 76.65(b)(1) 20. When the Commission originally adopted the good faith standards in 2000, the circumstances were different from the conditions industry and consumers face today. At that time programming disruptions due to retransmission consent disputes were rare. The Commission’s approach then was to provide broad standards of what constitutes good faith negotiation but generally leave the negotiations to the parties.61 As the Commission stated, “The statute does not appear to contemplate an intrusive role for the Commission with regard to retransmission consent.”62 Instead, the Commission stated that “[w]e believe that, by imposing the good faith obligation, Congress intended that the Commission develop and enforce a process that ensures that broadcasters and MVPDs meet to negotiate retransmission consent and that such negotiations are conducted in an atmosphere of honesty, purpose and clarity of process.”63 In recent times, the actual and threatened service disruptions resulting from increasingly contentious retransmission consent disputes present a growing inconvenience and source of confusion for consumers. We believe that these changes in circumstances support reevaluation of the good faith rules, particularly to ameliorate the impact of retransmission consent negotiations on innocent consumers.64 60 5 U.S.C. § 575(a)(1). 61 See, e.g., Good Faith Order, 15 FCC Rcd at 5450, ¶ 14 (“[T]he Commission concluded in the Broadcast Signal Carriage Order that Congress did not intend that the Commission should intrude in the negotiation of retransmission consent. We do not interpret the good faith requirement of SHVIA to alter this settled course and require that the Commission assume a substantive role in the negotiation of the terms and conditions of retransmission consent.”) (internal footnote omitted). 62 See id. at 5450, ¶ 13; see also id. at 5454-55, ¶ 23. 63 See id. at 5455, ¶ 24. The good faith provision of SHVIA was specifically targeted at constraining unacceptable negotiating conduct on the part of broadcasters, but Congress subsequently recognized that it is necessary to constrain unacceptable retransmission consent negotiating conduct of MVPDs as well as broadcasters, and thus imposed a reciprocal bargaining obligation in SHVERA. See, e.g., Implementation of Section 207 of the Satellite Home Viewer Extension and Reauthorization Act of 2004; Reciprocal Bargaining Obligation, Report and Order, 20 FCC Rcd 10339, ¶ 1 (2005) (“SHVERA Reciprocal Bargaining Order”) (“Section 207 [of SHVERA] . . . amends [Section 325(b)(3)(C) of the Act] to impose a reciprocal good faith retransmission consent bargaining obligation on [MVPDs]. This section alters the bargaining obligations created by [SHVIA] which imposed a good faith bargaining obligation only on broadcasters.”) (footnote omitted). 64 We note that recent letters from members of Congress have emphasized the effect of retransmission consent negotiations on consumers. See, e.g., Letter from Sen. John F. Kerry to Chairman Julius Genachowski, FCC, at 1 (Oct. 19, 2010) (“Currently, either party, sufficiently strong willed, can play a game of negotiating chicken with the consumer caught in the middle.”); Letter from Rep. Howard Coble to Chairman Julius Genachowski, FCC (Aug. 3, 2010) (“The Federal Communications Commission has a responsibility to ensure the interests of consumers are not undermined when retransmission consent negotiations break down.”); Letter from Rep. Carolyn B. Maloney to Chairman Julius Genachowski, FCC (Jul. 24, 2010) (“It is not fair to punish consumers for the failure of these companies to reach an agreement….”); Letter from Rep. Charles B. Rangel to Chairman Julius Genachowski, FCC (Jul. 15, 2010) (“It is not fair to punish consumers for the failure of these companies to reach an agreement….”); Letter from Rep. Gregory W. Meeks to Chairman Julius Genachowski, FCC (Aug. 11, 2010) (“Television viewers (continued….) Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 13 21. As discussed above, in implementing the reciprocal good faith negotiation requirement of Section 325 of the Act,65 the Commission established a list of seven objective good faith negotiation standards.66 Violation of any of these standards by a broadcast station or MVPD is considered a per se breach of its obligation to negotiate in good faith. The record indicates that there is some uncertainty in the marketplace about whether certain conduct constitutes a failure to negotiate in good faith.67 Accordingly, we seek comment on augmenting our rules to include additional objective good faith negotiation standards, the violation of which would be considered a per se breach of Section 76.65 of our rules. We believe that additional per se good faith negotiation standards could increase certainty in the marketplace, thereby promoting the successful completion of retransmission consent negotiations and protecting consumers from impasses or near impasses. In addition, we seek comment on clarifying various aspects of our existing good faith rules. 22. First, we seek comment on whether it should be a per se violation for a station to agree to give a network with which it is affiliated the right to approve a retransmission consent agreement with an MVPD or to comply with such an approval provision.68 Interested parties have argued that, in recent retransmission consent negotiations, a network’s exercise of its contractual approval right has hindered the progress of the negotiations.69 The good faith rules currently require the Negotiating Entity to designate a representative with authority to make binding representations on retransmission consent and not unreasonably delay negotiations.70 If a station has granted a network a veto power over any retransmission consent agreement with an MVPD, then it has arguably impaired its own ability to designate a representative who can bind the station in negotiations, contrary to our rules. Do provisions in network affiliation agreements giving the network approval rights over the grant of retransmission consent by its affiliate represent a reasonable exercise by a network of its distribution rights in network programming? If so, in considering revisions to the good faith rules, how should the Commission balance (…continued from previous page) are undoubtedly harmed when channels are taken off the air due to a failure to reach compromise; however, simply the public threat of a station taking their signal off the air can cause complications that will adversely affect consumers also.”); Letter from Rep. Steve Israel et al. to Chairman Julius Genachowski, FCC, at 1 (Jul. 27, 2010) (“We have serious concerns with the harm these disputes are having on our constituents, who either lose access to broadcast programming or bear the increased costs of such programming in the form of more expensive bills from their pay-TV provider.”). 65 47 U.S.C. § 325(b)(3)(C)(ii)-(iii). 66 See supra ¶ 10 and n. 26. 67 See, e.g., Mediacom/Suddenlink Reply at 49 (“. . . the proposed rulemaking proceeding provides a perfect opportunity to flesh out the good faith rules in a way that will afford meaningful protection to consumers.”). 68 In response to the Public Notice seeking comment on the Petition, certain commenters discussed network involvement in the retransmission consent process. Some commenters have argued that the Commission should consider preventing networks from dictating whether and by what terms an affiliated station may grant retransmission consent. See, e.g., Cox Comments at 2, 5-6; Free Market Operators Comments at 2. Others have argued that provisions in network-affiliate agreements do not interfere with the requirement that broadcasters negotiate retransmission consent in good faith. See, e.g., Fox Reply at 4-6. 69 See, e.g, Petition at 21-22 (noting the “contractual issues” that Sinclair cited in its retransmission consent negotiations with Mediacom); Ex Parte Comments of Time Warner Cable Inc. in Support of Mediacom Communications Corporation’s Retransmission Consent Complaint, at 3, Mediacom Communications Corp. v. Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc., CSR No. 8233-C and CSR No. 8234-M, Dec. 8, 2009 (“Like Mediacom, TWC has also experienced significant distortions in recent retransmission consent negotiations due to FOX’s recent assertion of veto power . . . .”). 70 47 C.F.R. § 76.65(b)(1)(ii)-(iii). Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 14 the networks’ rights against the stations’ obligation to negotiate in good faith and the regulatory goal of protecting consumers from service disruptions? We seek comment on the appropriate parameters of network involvement in retransmission consent negotiations. We would also welcome comment and data regarding how frequently a network’s assertion of the right to review or approve an agreement affects negotiations. In our consideration of the role of the network in its affiliates’ retransmission consent negotiations, we do not intend to interfere with the flow of revenue between networks and their affiliates. We recognize the special value of broadcast network programming to local broadcast television stations and to MVPDs.71 Accordingly, we do not propose to prevent a network from contracting to receive a portion of its affiliates’ retransmission consent fees. Rather, we seek comment on the permissible scope of a network’s involvement in the negotiations or right to approve an agreement. If the Commission decides to prohibit stations from granting networks the right to approve their affiliates’ retransmission consent agreements, should we, on a going-forward basis, abrogate any provisions restricting an affiliate’s power to grant retransmission consent without network approval that appear in existing agreements? 23. Second, we seek comment on whether it should be a per se violation for a station to grant another station or station group the right to negotiate or the power to approve its retransmission consent agreement when the stations are not commonly owned. Such consent might be reflected in local marketing agreements (“LMAs”),72 Joint Sales Agreements (“JSAs”),73 shared services agreements,74 or other similar agreements. Some commenters have noted problems that occur when one station or station group negotiates retransmission consent on behalf of a station or station group that is not commonly owned.75 The Commission believes that, when a station relinquishes its responsibility to negotiate retransmission consent, there may be delays to the negotiation process, and negotiations may become unnecessarily complicated if an MVPD is forced to negotiate with multiple parties with divergent interests, potentially including interests that extend beyond a single local market. The proposal on which we seek comment would effectively prohibit joint retransmission consent negotiations by stations that are not commonly owned. Should the Commission, on a going-forward basis, abrogate any such terms that appear in existing agreements? One commenter has argued that the negotiating arrangements about which others complain are rare, and that they are largely in small markets “where such sharing agreements may well be necessary for the stations to survive economically.”76 Accordingly, we seek 71 See, e.g., Disney Reply at 6-7; Fox Reply at 8-9. 72 An LMA or time brokerage agreement refers to “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.” See 47 C.F.R. § 73.3555, Note 2(j). 73 A JSA is “an agreement with a licensee of a ‘brokered station’ that authorizes a ‘broker’ to sell advertising time for the ‘brokered station.’” See 47 C.F.R. § 73.3555, Note 2(k). 74 A shared services agreement is an agreement between broadcasters to share services such as technical support, back-office support or production of newscasts. 75 See, e.g., ACA Comments at 9 (while Section 73.3555(b) of the Commission’s rules generally prohibits common ownership of multiple Big 4 stations in a single DMA, “broadcasters circumvent this general prohibition through the Commission’s waiver process, or via contractual agreements that offer one Big 4 station control of another in the same market.”); Pioneer et al. Comments at 4 (“Even in cases where stations remain independently owned, local marketing arrangements between and among television stations are used to require MVPDs to negotiate retransmission consent rights for multiple local stations as a single package. Thus, in a number of markets, one or two broadcasters can effectively control access to the retransmission consent rights to most if not all of the major network programming available in that market.”); Mediacom/Suddenlink Reply at v (urging the Commission to seek comment on “rules that would create a more competitive environment for retransmission consent by requiring that stations that have entered into LMAs or similar relationships negotiate separately for retransmission consent . . . .”). 76 Broadcaster Associations Reply at 22-23 (footnote omitted). Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 15 comment on the prevalence of agreements that grant one station or station group the right to negotiate or approve the retransmission consent agreement of a station or station group that is not commonly owned; the impact of such arrangements on the negotiation process; and the potential harms and benefits of prohibiting such agreements. How should the Commission balance any asserted benefits of such sharing agreements against the goal of protecting consumers from service disruptions? 24. Third, we seek comment on whether it should be a per se violation for a Negotiating Entity to refuse to put forth bona fide proposals on important issues. One commenter has stated that a refusal to make proposals as to key issues is a bad faith tactic in retransmission consent negotiations.77 How should we identify the category of issues about which a Negotiating Entity is required to put forth a bona fide proposal? How should we determine what constitutes a bona fide proposal,78 or whether a proposal is sufficiently unreasonable as to constitute bad faith? 25. Fourth, we seek comment on whether it should be a per se violation for a Negotiating Entity to refuse to agree to non-binding mediation when the parties reach an impasse within 30 days of the expiration of their retransmission consent agreement. We seek comment on whether 30 days from the expiration of the retransmission consent agreement is the appropriate time frame within which to require non-binding mediation. In previous retransmission consent disputes, the Commission has encouraged parties to engage in voluntary dispute resolution mechanisms as a means to reach agreement because a neutral third party may be able to facilitate agreement where the parties have otherwise failed.79 If parties are unable to reach agreement on their own and the expiration of their existing agreement is imminent, should we consider it bad faith for them to refuse to participate in non-binding mediation? Would mediation advance the successful completion of retransmission consent negotiations, even if it is not binding on the parties? Although as noted above we do not believe we have authority to mandate binding arbitration,80 we believe that we have authority to require non-binding mediation. Because the mediation would be non-binding, we believe that it would be consistent with the statutory prohibition on retransmission without the originating station’s express authority. Non-binding mediation would also be consistent with the ADRA, which prohibits compelled binding arbitration.81 We seek comment on our proposal to require non-binding mediation. If we require mediation, how should a mediator be selected, and how should the parties determine who is responsible for the costs of mediation? How would the ground rules of the mediation be determined? 26. Fifth, we seek comment on what it means to “unreasonably” delay retransmission consent negotiations. Section 76.65(b)(1)(iii) currently provides that “[r]efusal by a Negotiating Entity to meet and negotiate retransmission consent at reasonable times and locations, or acting in a manner that unreasonably delays retransmission consent negotiations,” constitutes a violation of the Negotiating 77 See RCN Comments at 10 (one bad faith tactic is “the outright refusal by broadcasters to make proposals as to key issues.”); see also Mediacom/Suddenlink Reply at 48 (arguing that the Commission’s per se negotiation standards “are easily evaded, as was shown by the Commission’s approval of Sinclair’s de facto ‘take it or leave it’ bargaining tactics during its 2006 dispute with Mediacom.”) (footnote omitted). 78 We note that the Commission has defined a bona fide request in the context of a programmer’s request for leased access on a system of a small cable operator. See 47 C.F.R. § 76.970(i)(3). 79 The Commission previously stated its belief “that voluntary mediation can play an important part in the facilitation of retransmission consent and [we] encourage parties involved in protracted retransmission consent negotiations to pursue mediation on a voluntary basis.” See Good Faith Order, 15 FCC Rcd at 5477, ¶ 74 (also stating that the Commission would revisit the issue of mandatory retransmission consent mediation if its experience in enforcing the good faith provision indicates that it is necessary). 80 See supra ¶ 18. 81 See 5 U.S.C. §§ 571-584. Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 16 Entity’s duty to negotiate retransmission consent in good faith.82 Commenters report that negotiations have been adversely affected by a party – either a broadcaster or an MVPD – delaying the commencement or progress of a negotiation as a tactic to gain advantage rather than out of necessity.83 We believe that delaying retransmission consent negotiations could predictably and intentionally lead to the type of impasse and threat of disruption that inconveniences consumers. Accordingly, we seek comment on what standards we should consider in determining whether a Negotiating Entity has acted in a manner that “unreasonably” delays retransmission consent negotiations and thus violates the duty to negotiate in good faith. 27. Sixth, we seek comment on whether a broadcaster’s request or requirement, as a condition of retransmission consent, that an MVPD not carry an out-of-market “significantly viewed” (“SV”)84 station violates Section 76.65(b)(1)(vi) of our rules. Section 76.65(b)(1)(vi) provides that “[e]xecution by a Negotiating Entity of an agreement with any party, a term or condition of which, requires that such Negotiating Entity not enter into a retransmission consent agreement with any other television broadcast station or multichannel video programming distributor” is a violation of the Negotiating Entity’s duty to negotiate in good faith.85 Despite the existence of this rule, in the Commission’s proceeding implementing Section 203 of the Satellite Television Extension and Localism Act of 2010 (“STELA”), DISH Network L.L.C. requested that the Commission adopt a rule to “clarify that tying retransmission consent to restrictions on SV station carriage” violates the requirement that parties negotiate retransmission consent in good faith.86 DISH Network stated that some “local stations have tied the grant of their retransmission consent for local-into-local service to concessions from satellite carriers that the carriers will not introduce any SV stations of the same network.”87 We note that the Commission previously interpreted Section 76.65(b)(1)(vi) narrowly, as involving collusion between a 82 47 C.F.R. § 76.65(b)(1)(iii). 83 See, e.g., Broadcaster Associations Opposition at 60 (“Many MVPDs routinely delay substantive negotiations until days (or, in some cases, even hours) before the expiration of an existing retransmission consent agreement to test the will of the local station to allow a carriage agreement to lapse without continuing consent for carriage of the station’s signal.”); LIN Comments at 11 (“We worked until midnight on October 2, 2008 in an effort to reach agreement, but because of the long delay in starting negotiations we were unable to reach agreement before the previous, long-extended agreement expired.”); RCN Comments at 10 (one bad faith tactic used by broadcasters is “repeated foot-dragging, delaying responses and counterproposals far past the time reasonably need[ed] to prepare them.”); Sinclair Comments at 9 (“A popular negotiating tactic of some MVPDs is to delay serious negotiations until literally the last hours of an expiring deal, and then to seek an extension on favorable terms, knowing that a carriage interruption can be costly for a broadcaster.”) 84 SV stations are “television broadcast stations that the Commission has determined have sufficient over-the-air (i.e., non-cable or non-satellite) viewing to be considered local for certain purposes and so are not constrained by the boundary of the station’s local market or [DMA]. The individual TV station, or cable operator or satellite carrier that seeks to carry the station, may petition the Commission to obtain ‘significantly viewed’ status for the station .... The designation of ‘significantly viewed’ status allows a station assigned to one market to be treated as a ‘local’ station with respect to a particular cable or satellite community in another market, and, thus, enables it to be carried by cable or satellite in that community in the other market.” See Implementation of Section 203 of the Satellite Television Extension and Localism Act of 2010, MB Docket No. 10-148, FCC 10-193, Report and Order and Order on Reconsideration, ¶ 2 (rel. Nov. 23, 2010) (footnotes omitted). 85 See 47 C.F.R. § 76.65(b)(1)(vi). 86 See Comments and Petition for Further Rulemaking of DISH Network L.L.C., MB Docket No. 10-148, at 9 (filed Aug. 17, 2010). 87 Id. (footnote omitted). Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 17 broadcaster and an MVPD.88 We seek comment on whether to interpret this rule more expansively to preclude a broadcast station from executing an agreement prohibiting an MVPD from carrying an out-of- market SV station that might otherwise be available to consumers as a partial substitute for the in-market station’s programming, in the event of a retransmission consent negotiation impasse. Should we expand our prior interpretation of this rule to cover any additional scenarios? Have there been instances in which an MVPD would have carried an out-of-market SV station, but for a local broadcaster’s request or requirement to the contrary? Do the holders of the rights to certain programming, including but not limited to broadcast networks, impose geographic restrictions on the stations to which they license programming, such that an out-of-market SV station may be prohibited from consenting to carriage, in any event? We also invite comment on whether stations have threatened to delay or refuse to reach a retransmission agreement unless the MVPD commits to forego carriage of out-of-market SV stations without including such commitment in the executed agreement. Do such threats circumvent the rule as written by keeping the commitment out of the executed document? Should we revise the rule to prevent such circumvention? 28. Finally, we seek comment on whether there are any additional actions or practices that should be deemed to constitute per se violations of a Negotiating Entity’s duty to negotiate retransmission consent agreements in good faith under Section 76.65 of our rules, or that we should otherwise prohibit in order to protect consumers. For example, if a broadcaster or MVPD repeatedly insists on month-to- month retransmission consent agreements89 or a new agreement term of less than one year, should that constitute a per se violation of the Negotiating Entity’s duty to negotiate retransmission consent in good faith? In addition, how should the Commission view the required inclusion of a “most favored nation” (“MFN”) clause90 in a retransmission consent agreement? How often are MFN clauses included in retransmission consent agreements, what is their intended purpose, and what is their effect on retransmission consent negotiations? 29. With respect to other practices the Commission should consider, one commenter stated, “Small and mid-size MVPDs could greatly enhance their ability to negotiate with broadcasters if they 88 See, e.g., Good Faith Order, 15 FCC Rcd at 5464, ¶45 (“For example, Broadcaster A is prohibited from agreeing with MVPD B that it will not reach retransmission consent with MVPD C.”); SHVERA Reciprocal Bargaining Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 10355, ¶ 34 (“As is evidenced by the discussion in the Good Faith Order, that provision is intended to cover collusion between a broadcaster and an MVPD requiring non-carriage by another MVPD….”); see also ATC Broadband LLC and Dixie Cable TV, Inc. v. Gray Television Licensee, Inc., 24 FCC Rcd at 1649, ¶ 7. 89 Month-to-month retransmission consent agreements are different from short-term extensions to existing retransmission consent agreements for the purpose of negotiating a mutually satisfactory long-term retransmission consent agreement, which the Commission encourages as a means of avoiding a loss of programming. 90 An MFN clause refers to an agreement that if Party A awards terms or conditions to a third party that are more favorable than those currently in place with Party B, then Party A must offer the more favorable terms or conditions to Party B. See, e.g., AT&T Comments at 9 and Reply of the American Public Power Association et al. at 8 (“Under [MFN] provisions, the effect of retransmission consent payments quickly could escalate, driving up MVPD costs, and, concomitantly, subscribers’ rates.”). See also William P. Rogerson, The Economic Effects of Price Discrimination in Retransmission Consent Agreements, at 16 (May 18, 2010), attached as App. A to ACA Comments (suggesting that the Commission could require broadcasters to make the same terms and conditions available to all MVPDs regardless of size); Cablevision Comments at 17-18 (requesting that the Commission prohibit broadcasters from charging discriminatory rates to different distributors in the same market); OPASTCO et al. Comments at 8-9 (proposing that small and mid-size MVPDs have access to MFN pricing for programming, enabling them to request the same prices and conditions that a broadcaster provides other MVPDs); Broadcaster Associations Reply at 39-40 (arguing that Cablevision’s “non-discrimination” proposal would lead to the largest MVPD with the most negotiating leverage setting the retransmission consent rates for all MVPDs in the market). Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 18 were permitted to pool their resources, appoint an agent, and negotiate as a group.”91 We seek comment on this proposal, including how to reconcile it with the proposal described above that would prevent a broadcast station from granting to another station or station group the right to negotiate or the power to approve its retransmission consent agreement when the stations are not commonly owned.92 In addition, we ask parties to comment on whether small and new entrant MVPDs are typically forced to accept retransmission consent terms that are less favorable than larger or more established MVPDs, and if so, whether this is fair. And, several commenters have suggested that the Commission should address the ability of broadcasters to condition retransmission consent on the purchase of other programming services, such as the programming of affiliated non-broadcast networks.93 Is this something that the Commission should consider in evaluating whether broadcasters have negotiated in good faith? 30. Are there additional actions that should be listed as presumptive breaches of good faith but subject to arguments rebutting the presumption in special circumstances? Would the approach of rebuttable presumptions rather than per se violations offer beneficial flexibility or diminish the benefits of greater specificity in the good faith rule? We also invite comment on ways the Commission can strengthen the remedies available upon finding a violation of the good faith standards to encourage compliance with the rules. Are there additional penalties that the Commission can impose for failure to negotiate in good faith that would provide a meaningful incentive for compliance with the good faith standard, such as considering such failure in the context of license renewals, including, e.g., satellite and CARS licenses?94 Finally, to what extent do MVPDs impose early termination fees (“ETFs”) on their subscribers, and what effect, if any, do ETFs have on retransmission consent negotiations and on consumers’ ability to switch MVPDs in the event of a negotiation impasse? What actions, if any, could the Commission take to address any problems involving ETFs? B. Specification of the Totality of the Circumstances Standard of Section 76.65(b)(2) 31. We seek comment on revising the “totality of the circumstances” standard for determining whether actions in the negotiating process are taken in good faith, in an effort to improve the standard’s utility and to better serve innocent consumers. As described in greater detail below, we invite comment on how the Commission can more effectively evaluate complaints that do not allege per se violations but involve behavior calculated to threaten disruption of consumer access as a negotiating tactic. We seek comment on particular behavior that the Commission should evaluate in the context of the “totality of the circumstances” standard. 32. Pursuant to Section 76.65(b)(2) of our rules, “a Negotiating Entity may demonstrate, based on the totality of the circumstances of a particular retransmission consent negotiation, that a television broadcast station or multichannel video programming distributor breached its duty to negotiate 91 See OPASTCO et al. Comments at 6. We note that conditions adopted in previous merger decisions require certain broadcast stations to negotiate with bargaining agents that bargain collectively on behalf of “small cable companies,” defined as cable companies with 400,000 or fewer subscribers. See Applications for Authority to Transfer Control, News Corporation and The DIRECTV Group, Inc., Transferors, and Liberty Media Corporation, Transferee, Memorandum Opinion and Order, 23 FCC Rcd 3265, 3344, Appendix B, § IV.D.1 (2008) (“Liberty/DIRECTV Order”); News/Hughes Order, 19 FCC Rcd at 682, Appendix F, § IV. 92 See supra ¶ 23. 93 We note that a number of commenters see problems with such broadcaster requirements. See, e.g., Africa Channel Comments at 2-3; APPA Group Comments at 17-18; Cablevision Comments at 11; Cox Comments at 6-7; Discovery Comments at 15; MAP Comments at 2 n. 6, 8; Ovation Comments at 3; Starz Comments at 5-8; US Telecom Comments at 9-10; Reply of HDNet LLC at 2; Public Knowledge Reply at 2; see also Petition at 34. 94 See, e.g., 47 C.F.R. §§ 25.102, 25.156, 25.160, 78.11 et seq.; 47 U.S.C. §§ 301, 308(b), 309. Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 19 in good faith . . . .”95 The Commission has stated, “[w]e do not intend the totality of the circumstances test to serve as a ‘back door’ inquiry into the substantive terms negotiated between the parties.”96 Rather, the totality of the circumstances test enables the Commission to consider a complaint alleging that, while a Negotiating Entity did not violate the per se objective standards, its proposals or actions were “sufficiently outrageous,” or included terms or conditions not based on competitive marketplace considerations, so as to violate the good faith negotiation requirement.97 33. Some commenters have argued that the Commission should clarify or expand on the totality of the circumstances standard, including the related concept of competitive marketplace considerations,98 while others do not support changes to our rules governing retransmission consent.99 We seek comment on whether to provide more specificity for the meaning and scope of the “totality of the circumstances” standard of Section 76.65(b)(2) of our rules, in order to define more clearly the instances in which a Negotiating Entity may violate this standard. For example, the Media Bureau previously found a violation of the totality of the circumstances standard, in response to a petition filed by WLII/WSUR Licensee Partnership, G.P. against Choice Cable T.V. (“Choice”), regarding the parties’ negotiations for carriage of WLII-TV and its booster stations WSUR-TV and WORA-TV.100 While Choice stated that it halted negotiations because it began carrying WLII’s programming through arrangements with WORA, Choice failed to provide evidence of a valid retransmission consent agreement with WORA, and thus the Media Bureau found that Choice breached its duty to negotiate in good faith.101 Are there additional circumstances that the Commission should consider in evaluating the totality of the circumstances, or is the “totality of the circumstances” best left as a general provision to capture those actions and behaviors that we do not now foresee but that may impede productive and fair negotiations?102 Should any of the potential additional per se violations proposed in Section III.A., above, instead be considered as part of the totality of the circumstances of a particular negotiation? Is it sufficient to retain the existing flexible standard, and look to precedent to provide specificity as 95 47 C.F.R. § 76.65(b)(2). 96 Good Faith Order, 15 FCC Rcd at 5458, ¶ 32. 97 See id. 98 See, e.g., ACA Comments at 20 (“It is within the Commission’s authority to conclude that the price discrimination faced by smaller operators today is not based on ‘competitive marketplace considerations,’ and to impose regulations to address the resulting harm.”) (footnote omitted); Cablevision Comments at 17 (“. . . the Commission must also ensure adherence to the statutory directive that any differences in rates charged to different MVPDs be based on ‘competitive marketplace considerations’ rather than differences in market power and leverage between the two parties.”) (internal footnote omitted); Mediacom/Suddenlink Reply at 49 (“. . . the Commission has given no indication that there is any level of consideration that it would consider outrageous enough to warrant scrutiny. . . . [O]ne way for the Commission to address the problem of discriminatory pricing is to clarify when negotiations will be deemed to have taken place on the basis of ‘competitive marketplace considerations.’”). 99 See, e.g., Broadcaster Associations Opposition at 28 (“What Petitioners really want, then, is for the Commission to favor certain competitors, namely pay TV providers, rather than the principles of competition.”); Broadcast Networks Comments at 15 (“The fact that competition has emerged to the point where MVPDs have to compete for consumers on pricing should be a testament to Congress’ vision for a competitive marketplace, not a criticism of retransmission consent.”). 100 See Letter to Jorge L. Bauermeister, 22 FCC Rcd 4933. 101 See id. at 4933-34. 102 We note that the Commission previously provided examples of bargaining proposals that are presumptively consistent and presumptively inconsistent with competitive marketplace considerations and the good faith negotiation requirement. See Good Faith Order, 15 FCC Rcd at 5469-70, ¶¶ 56-58. Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 20 warranted? We seek comment on particular ways in which we could provide more specificity in defining when conduct would breach the duty of good faith negotiation under the “totality of the circumstances.” C. Revision of the Notice Requirements 34. Adequate advance notice of retransmission consent disputes for consumers can enable them to prepare for disruptions in their video service. However, such notice can be unnecessarily costly and disruptive when it creates a false alarm, i.e., concern about disruption that does not come to pass, and induces subscribers to switch MVPD providers in anticipation of a service disruption that never takes place. We seek comment on how best to balance useful advance notice against the potential for causing unnecessary anxiety to consumers. We invite comment on how best to revise our notice rules in light of these considerations, as well as the economic impact of notice requirements on both broadcasters and MVPDs. 35. Our current notice requirements apply to cable operators only and are not violated by a failure to provide notice unless service is actually disrupted. Specifically, Section 614(b)(9) of the Act requires a cable operator to notify a local commercial television station in writing at least 30 days before either deleting or repositioning that station.103 Section 76.1601 of the Commission’s rules further specifies that a cable operator must “provide written notice to any broadcast television station at least 30 days prior to either deleting from carriage or repositioning that station. Such notification shall also be provided to subscribers of the cable system.”104 Accordingly, under the current rule, if a cable operator fails to give notice 30 days before the retransmission consent agreement’s expiration, and the agreement is ultimately renewed without the station being deleted, then the cable operator has not violated the rule. If, however, the station is ultimately deleted, and the cable operator has not given the required 30 day notice, then the cable operator is in violation of Section 76.1601.105 Of course, the cable operator does not know whether the negotiations will ultimately fail and it will be required to delete the broadcast signal until the agreement actually expires. 36. Some commenters have proposed that we not only clarify but also expand our existing notice requirements106 so that consumers will have sufficient time to determine their options and take appropriate action in the event that a broadcast signal is deleted from an MVPD’s service. Asserted benefits of enhanced notice include providing consumers with sufficient time to obtain access to particular broadcast signals by alternative means, and encouraging the successful completion of renewal retransmission consent agreements more than 30 days before an existing agreement expires.107 In contrast, other commenters have argued that enhanced notice would have negative results such as 103 47 U.S.C. § 534(b)(9). 104 47 C.F.R. § 76.1601. Sections 76.1602 and 76.1603 of our rules contain additional requirements for notifying subscribers and cable franchise authorities. 47 C.F.R. §§ 76.1602, 76.1603. 105 We note that, notwithstanding the fact that the Commission may not have enforced the current notice requirements in all instances in which a station is deleted without notice, it reserves the right to do so in its discretion. See Heckler v. Chaney, 470 U.S. 821, 831 (1985) (“an agency’s decision not to prosecute or enforce, whether through civil or criminal process, is a decision generally committed to an agency’s absolute discretion”). 106 See, e.g., Broadcast Networks Comments at 5 (the Commission “ could explore ways to ensure that consumers have timely information about their right and ability to obtain desired programming from alternative sources.”); NSBA Comments at 20 (MVPDs should provide “subscribers with earlier notice of the pendency and prospects of [retransmission consent] negotiations.”); Sinclair Comments at 2 n. 2 (“MVPDs should be required to give clear notification to all system subscribers, commencing not less than 30 days prior to the expiration of existing retransmission consent agreements, of the possible termination of carriage of the subject signal.”). 107 See, e.g., Broadcast Networks Comments at 5; LIN Comments at 14; Local Broadcasters Comments at 12; Sinclair Comments at 2 n. 2. Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 21 unnecessarily alarming consumers and public officials, making negotiations increasingly contentious, providing broadcasters and rival MVPDs with more time to encourage customers to switch MVPDs, and causing customers who do switch to bear the associated costs unnecessarily if the negotiations are resolved without service disruption.108 37. We seek comment on whether we should revise our notice rules to require that notice of potential deletion of a broadcaster’s signal be given to consumers once a retransmission consent agreement is within 30 days of expiration, unless a renewal or extension has been executed, and regardless of whether the station’s signal is ultimately deleted.109 Under this approach, if parties have not reached a new agreement prior to 30 days from the agreement’s expiration, notice must be given to consumers. Would the requirement to provide such notice encourage the parties to conclude their negotiations more than 30 days before the expiration of the existing agreement, and thus help avoid the station deletions that deprive MVPD customers of local broadcast stations? Should we require notice to be given by any particular means? How should the Commission avoid imposing notice requirements that become so frequent that MVPD customers discount the notices? We have observed that the notices of impending impasses that generally have been provided by broadcasters and MVPDs alike are often little more than ad hominem attacks on the other party. We seek comment on what steps the Commission could take to ensure, to the extent possible, that required notifications provide useful information to consumers instead of merely serving as a further front in the retransmission consent war. For example, LIN objects to notices in which MVPDs “discount the possibility of a carriage interruption.”110 If the parties to a retransmission consent agreement begin giving notice, and subsequently agree to an extension pending further negotiations, should new notice be required of the extension agreement, and when should that notice be given? Where the parties enter into multiple extensions of their existing agreement, should notice be given of each extension? Would multiple notices be confusing to consumers? We also seek comment on extending the notice requirements with respect to deletions associated with retransmission consent disputes to non-cable MVPDs and broadcasters. What sources of authority does the Commission possess to support imposing notice requirements on non-cable MVPDs and broadcasters?111 Would the benefits of advance notice to subscribers, particularly in allowing customers to switch providers in order to avoid service disruptions and possibly reducing their likelihood, exceed the costs to subscribers, particularly in encouraging unnecessary switching of MVPDs when service disruptions do not occur? D. Application of the “Sweeps” Prohibition to Retransmission Consent Disputes 38. We seek comment on whether we should extend the Commission’s “sweeps” prohibition to non-cable MVPDs. Section 614(b)(9) of the Act states: 108 See, e.g., Cox Comments at 5 n. 7; Reply Comments of Cablevision Systems Corporation at 8-10; Insight Reply at 8; Mediacom/Suddenlink Reply at 30-32; Precursor Reply at 1; Reply Comments of Time Warner Cable Inc. at 16 (“Time Warner Reply”); Reply Comments of Verizon at 10-11 (“Verizon Reply”). 109 We note that some cable operators have expressed their view that the existing notice requirements are not triggered by failed retransmission consent negotiations because the loss of the signal is not within the cable operators’ “control.” See 47 C.F.R. § 76.1603(b) (“Notice must be given to subscribers a minimum of thirty (30) days in advance of such changes if the change is within the control of the cable operator.”). We clarify that the notice requirements of Section 76.1601 do not vary based on whether a change is within the cable operator’s control. Our focus in this NPRM is on Section 76.1601, which requires notice when a cable operator deletes or repositions broadcast signals, rather than Section 76.1603, which addresses customer service rules applicable to cable operators. Additionally, even if we were concerned with Section 76.1603, we would consider retransmission consent negotiations to be within the control of both parties to the negotiations, and thus, failure to reach retransmission consent agreement would not be an excuse for failing to provide notice. 110 See LIN Comments at 13. 111 See, e.g., 47 U.S.C. §§ 154(i), 301, 303(r), 303(v), 307, 309, 335(a). Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 22 A cable operator shall provide written notice to a local commercial television station at least 30 days prior to either deleting from carriage or repositioning that station. No deletion or repositioning of a local commercial television station shall occur during a period in which major television ratings services measure the size of audiences of local television stations. The notification provisions of this paragraph shall not be used to undermine or evade the channel positioning or carriage requirements imposed upon cable operators under this section.112 Commenters have expressed differing views about the scope of this provision. 39. We note that the record evidences some confusion about whether, despite the prohibition on deletion during the sweeps period, a broadcaster may require a cable operator to delete the broadcaster’s signal when the retransmission consent agreement expires during sweeps and the parties do not reach an extension or renewal agreement.113 The sweeps prohibition, found in Section 614(b)(9) of the Act, states that “No deletion or repositioning of a local commercial television station shall occur during a period in which major television ratings services measure the size of audiences of local television stations.”114 The provision is contained within Section 614 which imposes carriage obligations on cable operators.115 Although the language of the statute is broadly worded, there is nothing in Section 614(b)(9) to suggest that Congress intended to impose a reciprocal obligation on broadcasters during sweeps. To the contrary, the legislative history explains that “A cable operator may not drop or reposition any such station during a ‘sweeps’ period when ratings services measure local television audiences.”116 Moreover, this reading of the statute would eliminate any tension with the retransmission consent provisions, which provide that “No cable system or other multichannel video programming distributor shall retransmit the signal of a broadcasting station, or any part thereof, except with the express authority of the originating station.”117 Interpreting Section 614(b)(9) to prohibit broadcasters from withholding retransmission consent during sweeps would run counter to Section 325(b)(1)(A)’s express limitation on broadcast carriage without a broadcaster’s consent.118 While DirecTV and DISH have stated that permitting 112 47 U.S.C. § 534(b)(9). Note 1 to Section 76.1601 of our rules states: No deletion or repositioning of a local commercial television station shall occur during a period in which major television ratings services measure the size of audiences of local television stations. For this purpose, such periods are the four national four-week ratings periods – generally including February, May, July and November – commonly known as audience sweeps. 47 C.F.R. § 76.1601, Note 1. 113 See, e.g, DIRECTV/DISH Reply at 4 n. 10 (“Broadcasters claim that this prohibition nonetheless allows the broadcaster to withhold programming during sweeps, a position that appears contrary to Commission precedent.”) (emphasis in original); Mediacom/Suddenlink Reply at 14 n. 22 (discussing Sinclair’s threatened legal action against Suddenlink for continuing to carry Sinclair stations during July “sweeps,” despite the lack of a retransmission consent agreement). We also note that a broadcaster previously filed a Petition for Declaratory Ruling asking the Commission to rule that a cable system is required to delete a broadcast signal if the broadcaster does not consent to carriage, even during a “sweeps” period. See WCHS Licensee, LLC, et al., Petition for Declaratory Ruling, CSR No. 7039-C (Jul. 6, 2006). The petitioner subsequently requested dismissal of its petition prior to Commission action. See Joint Motion to Dismiss, CSR No. 7039-C (Aug. 7, 2006). 114 47 U.S.C. § 534(b)(9). 115 47 U.S.C. § 534(a). 116 See S. Rep. No. 92, 102nd Cong., 1st Sess. 1991, at 86, reprinted in 1992 U.S.C.C.A.N. 1133, 1219 (emphasis added). 117 47 U.S.C. § 325(b)(1)(A). 118 47 U.S.C. §§ 534(b)(9), 325(b)(1)(A). Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 23 broadcasters to withhold programming during sweeps would be contrary to precedent,119 we note that neither of those bureau-level decisions involved a retransmission consent agreement expiring during sweeps and the broadcaster requesting deletion of its own signal. In any event, to the extent that language in any prior cases could be read as precluding a broadcaster from requiring a cable operator to delete its signal during sweeps, staff-level decisions are not binding on the Commission.120 We seek comment on the above analysis. 40. Likewise, it does not appear that Section 335(a) grants the Commission authority to impose a sweeps limitation on broadcasters. Section 335(a) directs the Commission to “initiate a rulemaking proceeding to impose, on providers of direct broadcast satellite service, public interest or other requirements for providing video programming.”121 Thus, while Section 335 would arguably grant the Commission authority to extend the sweeps rule to DBS providers, it does not appear to confer authority to extend the sweeps rule to broadcasters. We invite comment on this view. 41. The sweeps prohibition generally prevents a cable operator from deleting a station during the sweeps period if the retransmission consent agreement expires during sweeps. We do not believe that the existing prohibition on deleting or repositioning a local commercial television station during sweeps periods applies to non-cable MVPDs, such as DBS, given that the provision appears within Section 614, a section that focuses on the carriage obligations of cable operators.122 Accordingly, to achieve regulatory parity between cable systems and other MVPDs, we seek comment on whether we should extend the Commission’s “sweeps rule” to non-cable MVPDs. Does the Commission have authority to extend the prohibition to DBS and other non-cable MVPDs, such as through Sections 154(i), 303(r), 303(v), and 335(a) of the Act?123 E. Elimination of the Network Non-Duplication and Syndicated Exclusivity Rules 42. We seek comment on the potential benefits and harms of eliminating the Commission’s rules concerning network non-duplication and syndicated programming exclusivity.124 The network non- duplication rules permit a station with exclusive rights to network programming, as granted by the network, to assert those rights by using notification procedures in the Commission’s rules.125 The rules, in turn, prohibit the cable system from carrying the network programming as broadcast by any other station within the “geographic zone” to which the contractual rights and rules apply.126 Thus, a cable 119 See DirecTV/DISH Reply at 4 n. 10 (citing Northland Cable TV, Inc., 23 FCC Rcd 7865 (MB 2008), which cites Time Warner Cable, 15 FCC Rcd 7882 (CSB 2006)). 120 See Comcast Corp. v. FCC, 526 F.3d at 769. 121 47 U.S.C. § 335(a). 122 See 47 U.S.C. § 534(b)(9). We further note that the prohibition on deleting a local station during sweeps periods appears inextricably intertwined with the prior sentence expressly requiring a “cable operator” to provide at least 30 days notice to a local station prior to deletion of that station. Id. We see nothing in the legislative history of the statute to suggest that Congress intended Section 614(b)(9) to apply to non-cable MVPDs. Consistent with the statute, Section 76.1601 of the Commission’s rules expressly applies to cable operators only. See 47 C.F.R. § 76.1601. A different provision of the Act, Section 338, governs satellite carriage of local broadcast stations, and it does not include a prohibition on deletion or repositioning during sweeps. See 47 U.S.C. § 338. 123 47 U.S.C. §§ 154(i), 303(r), 303(v), 335(a). 124 See 47 C.F.R. §§ 76.92 et seq., 76.101 et seq., 76.122, 76.123. 125 See 47 C.F.R. §§ 76.92-76.94. 126 See 47 C.F.R. § 76.92. The size of the geographic zone depends upon the size of the market in which the station is located. See 47 C.F.R. § 76.92(b). Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 24 system negotiating retransmission consent with a local network affiliate may face greater pressure to reach agreement by virtue of the cable system’s inability to carry another affiliate of the same network if the retransmission consent negotiations fail. Similarly, under the syndicated exclusivity rules, a station may assert its contractual rights to exclusivity within a specified geographic zone to prevent a cable system from carrying the same syndicated programming aired by another station.127 These rules are collectively referred to as the “exclusivity rules.” They are grounded in the private contractual arrangements that exist between a station and the provider of network or syndicated programming. The Commission’s rules do not create these rights but rather provide a means for the parties to the exclusive contracts to enforce them through the Commission rather than through the courts.128 43. The Petition argued that the Commission’s rules provide broadcasters with a “one-sided level of protection” that is no longer justified, including through the network non-duplication and syndicated exclusivity rules.129 Commenters also argued that the exclusivity rules provide broadcasters with artificially inflated bargaining leverage in retransmission consent negotiations.130 In contrast, other commenters have asserted that network non-duplication and syndicated exclusivity provisions are important to foster localism.131 Some commenters have also suggested that eliminating the Commission’s 127 See 47 C.F.R. § 76.101 et seq. In the year 2000, the Commission adopted rules implementing provisions of SHVIA that applied the network non-duplication and syndicated exclusivity rules to satellite retransmission of six “nationally distributed superstations.” See Implementation of the Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act of 1999: Application of Network Non-Duplication, Syndicated Exclusivity, and Sports Blackout Rules To Satellite Retransmissions of Broadcast Signals, Report and Order, 15 FCC Rcd 21688 (2000) (“SHVIA Exclusivity Rules Order”). 128 In fact, the Commission’s rules limit the circumstances in which the private contracts can be enforced by, for example, limiting the geographic area in which the exclusivity applies or exempting small cable systems and significantly viewed stations. See, e.g., 47 C.F.R. §§ 76.92(b) and (f), 76.95(a); see also 47 C.F.R. § 76.93 (“Television broadcast station licensees shall be entitled to exercise non-duplication rights . . . in accordance with the contractual provisions of the network-affiliate agreement.”) (emphasis added). 129 Petition at 12-15. 130 See, e.g., APPA Group Comments at 3, 20; AT&T Comments at 6, 12; Discovery Comments at 2-3; Free Market Operators Comments at 3-5; OPASTCO et al. Comments at 2; RCN Comments at 2, 3; Time Warner Comments at 7 n. 14; US Telecom Comments at 5 n. 16; Verizon Comments at 3; Public Knowledge Reply at 2-3; Time Warner Reply at 14 (arguing that, while the network non-duplication and syndicated exclusivity rules “certainly exacerbate the problems surrounding existing retransmission consent negotiations . . . the Commission should focus first and foremost on the brinkmanship that causes consumer harm in the first place.”); Verizon Reply at 2, 11. In addition, ACA filed a “Petition for Rulemaking to Amend 47 C.F.R. §§ 76.64, 76.93 and 76.103” on March 2, 2005 (“ACA’s 2005 Petition”), asserting that competition and consumers are harmed when broadcasters use exclusivity and network affiliation agreements to extract “supracompetitive prices” for retransmission consent from small cable companies. See Public Notice, Report No. 2696, RM-11203 (Mar. 17, 2005). We hereby incorporate in this proceeding by reference ACA’s 2005 Petition, as well as the comments filed in response thereto. 131 See, e.g., Morgan Murphy Comments at 9 (“the rules for syndicated exclusivity and network nonduplication exist not to deter competition but to give primacy to localism over the importation of distant signals, again in furtherance of federal policy.”); Broadcaster Associations Reply at 33 (“The name of the new satellite legislation (Satellite Television Extension and Localism Act of 2010) is instructive. The term ‘Localism’ is in the title—which, of course, is the very public policy rationale for the network non-duplication and syndicated program exclusivity rules. If the Commission prohibited program providers (which it cannot, by statute, do in the case of broadcast signals retransmitted by satellite carriers) from granting program exclusivity to local stations for local distribution of their programming, then local, free, over-the-air broadcast service would cease to exist.”) (emphasis in original). Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 25 exclusivity rules may have little effect on retransmission consent negotiations, because private exclusive contracts between broadcasters and programming suppliers would remain in place.132 44. We seek comment on whether eliminating the Commission’s network non-duplication and syndicated exclusivity rules, without abrogating any private contractual provisions, would have a beneficial impact on retransmission consent negotiations. Would eliminating these rules help to minimize regulatory intrusion in the market, thus better enabling free market negotiations to set the terms for retransmission consent?133 The Commission previously stated in discussing its exclusivity rules, “By requiring MVPDs to black out duplicative programming carried on any distant signals they may import into a local market, the Commission’s network non-duplication and syndicated exclusivity rules provide a regulatory means for broadcasters to prevent MVPDs from undermining their contractually negotiated exclusivity rights.”134 Are these rules still necessary, or is any benefit of these rules outweighed by a negative impact on retransmission consent negotiations? Do these rules serve a useful purpose in today’s marketplace? Should exclusivity in this area be left entirely to the private marketplace, without providing any means of enforcement through the Commission? Would there be a beneficial impact to removing these rules if the contractual provisions that the rules enforce stay in place? Would the elimination of the network non-duplication and syndicated exclusivity rules have a negative impact on localism? We seek comment on the impact of our network non-duplication and syndicated exclusivity rules on the distribution of programming by television stations. Do these rules provide stations and networks with any rights that cannot be secured through a combination of network-affiliate contracts and retransmission consent? Under the existing exclusivity rules, the in-market television station has the right to assert network non-duplication and syndicated exclusivity protection based on its contractual relationship with the network, regardless of whether it is actually carried by the cable system.135 As an alternative to eliminating the network non-duplication rule completely as discussed above, we seek comment on revising the network non-duplication rule so that it does not apply to a television station that has not granted retransmission consent. Thus, a television station would only be permitted to assert network non- duplication protection if it is actually carried on the cable system. We seek comment on this proposal. 132 See, e.g., Broadcaster Associations Opposition at 23-24 (“The actual program exclusivity terms for network non- duplication and syndicated program exclusivity are a matter of private contractual agreement between the program supplier and the local television station.”) (emphasis in original); Disney Comments at 14 n. 19; LIN Comments at 19 (“Absent FCC regulations, broadcasters could enforce exclusivity throughout their DMAs if they could obtain those rights from their program suppliers.”); MAP Comments at 5 n. 17 (“Moreover, as petitioners are well aware, Commission regulations such as the network non-duplication and syndicated exclusivity rules protect broadcasters only to the extent that the network affiliation or syndication contracts grant such exclusive rights.”); Sinclair Comments at 3 (“. . . the Petitioners’ claims that broadcasters artificially benefit from the FCC’s network nonduplication and syndicated exclusivity rules ignore the geographical exclusivity normally provided contractually to broadcast stations in network affiliation and syndicated programming agreements.”); Broadcaster Associations Reply at 11 (“the rules actually limit and restrict program exclusivity by limiting the geographic area in which television stations may enter into program exclusivity agreements with network and syndicated program suppliers.”) (emphasis in original); Disney Reply at 7-8; Time Warner Reply at 15 (“. . . eliminating the network non-duplication and syndicated exclusivity rules would accomplish nothing without an affirmative ban on the underlying exclusivity agreements. . . .”). 133 See supra ¶ 20 and n. 61. 134 See Retransmission Consent and Exclusivity Rules: Report to Congress Pursuant to Section 208 of the Satellite Home Viewer Extension and Reauthorization Act of 2004, ¶ 17 (Sept. 8, 2005), available at http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-260936A1.pdf. 135 See Amendment of Parts 73 and 76 of the Commission’s Rules relating to program exclusivity in the cable and broadcast industries, Report and Order, 3 FCC Rcd 5299, 5313-14, 5320, ¶¶ 92, 95, 122 (1988). Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 26 45. We note that in SHVIA136 Congress extended the network non-duplication and syndicated exclusivity rules to DBS but only in extremely limited situations that are not equivalent to their application to cable systems.137 As specified in SHVIA, the Commission’s rules apply the exclusivity requirements only to “nationally distributed superstations.”138 We do not propose to eliminate or revise these statutorily mandated rules. In SHVERA, Congress permitted DBS to carry out-of-market significantly viewed stations139 and applied the exclusivity rules insofar as local stations could challenge the significantly viewed status of the out-of-market station and thus prevent its carriage, just as in the cable context.140 We seek comment on whether and, if so, how, this limited application of the exclusivity rules would apply to DBS if we eliminate the rules as they apply to cable and whether eliminating rules as to cable systems would create undue disparities or unintended consequences for DBS. We also seek comment on whether new rules would be needed to permit local stations to challenge the significantly viewed status of an out-of-market station if the network non-duplication rules are revised or eliminated. F. Other Proposals 46. We seek comment on whether there are other actions the Commission should take either to revise its existing rules or adopt new rules in order to protect consumers from harm as a result of impasses or threatened impasses in retransmission consent negotiations. Commenters advocating rule revisions or additions should address the Commission’s authority to adopt their proposals. IV. CONCLUSION 47. In conclusion, in this NPRM, we seek comment on proposed changes to our rules to provide greater certainty to parties engaged in retransmission consent negotiations and to better protect consumers from the uncertainty and disruption that they may experience when such negotiations fail to yield an agreement. 136 See supra n. 14. 137 See 47 U.S.C. § 339(b) (1) (applying network non-duplication protection and syndicated exclusivity protection only to “nationally distributed superstations,” which are defined so that they are limited to six stations); 47 U.S.C. § 339(d)(2). See also SHVIA Exclusivity Rules Order, 15 FCC Rcd at 21692-93, ¶¶ 9-10. In contrast, the cable network non-duplication rules may apply to any station broadcasting network programming. See 47 C.F.R. §§ 76.92(a), 76.93 (subject to geographic limitations and exemptions based on the cable system’s size or a station’s “significantly viewed” status, 76.92(f), 76.95(a)). See also 47 C.F.R. §§ 76.101 and 76.106 (governing syndicated exclusivity). 138 See SHVIA Exclusivity Rules Order, 15 FCC Rcd at 21689, ¶ 2. 139 Currently, 17 U.S.C. § 122(a)(2) and 47 U.S.C. § 340. 140 See Implementation of the Satellite Home Viewer Extension and Reauthorization Act of 2004, Implementation of Section 340 of the Communications Act, Report and Order, 20 FCC Rcd 17278, 17295-96, ¶ 39 (2005) (“SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report and Order”). SV status is an exception to the network non-duplication rules. 47 C.F.R. § 76.92(f). SHVERA provided that if a station was to be carried out-of-market as a SV station, it would be subject to the rules allowing an in-market station to assert network non-duplication to prevent carriage of the SV station if it demonstrated that the SV status was no longer valid. See SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report and Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 17296, ¶ 41. Thus, for DBS, if a station is demonstrated to no longer be significantly viewed, it is not eligible for carriage as an out-of-market SV station. We do not propose to change this result. Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 27 V. PROCEDURAL MATTERS A. Initial Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis 48. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (“RFA”),141 the Commission has prepared an Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (“IRFA”) relating to this NPRM. The IRFA is attached to this NPRM as Appendix C. B. Paperwork Reduction Act 49. This document contains proposed new information collection requirements. The Commission, as part of its continuing effort to reduce paperwork burdens, invites the general public and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to comment on the information collection requirements contained in this document, as required by the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.142 In addition, pursuant to the Small Business Paperwork Relief Act of 2002,143 we seek specific comment on how we might “further reduce the information collection burden for small business concerns with fewer than 25 employees.”144 C. Ex Parte Rules 50. Permit-But-Disclose. This proceeding will be treated as a “permit-but-disclose” proceeding subject to the “permit-but-disclose” requirements under section 1.1206(b) of the Commission’s rules.145 Ex parte presentations are permissible if disclosed in accordance with Commission rules, except during the Sunshine Agenda period when presentations, ex parte or otherwise, are generally prohibited. Persons making oral ex parte presentations are reminded that a memorandum summarizing a presentation must contain a summary of the substance of the presentation and not merely a listing of the subjects discussed. More than a one- or two-sentence description of the views and arguments presented is generally required.146 Additional rules pertaining to oral and written presentations are set forth in section 1.1206(b). D. Filing Requirements 51. Comments and Replies. Pursuant to Sections 1.415 and 1.419 of the Commission’s rules,147 interested parties may file comments and reply comments on or before the dates indicated on the first page of this document.148 Comments may be filed using: (1) the Commission’s Electronic Comment 141 See 5 U.S.C. § 603. The RFA, see 5 U.S.C. § 601 et. seq., has been amended by the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (“SBREFA”), Pub. L. No. 104-121, Title II, 110 Stat. 847 (1996). The SBREFA was enacted as Title II of the Contract With America Advancement Act of 1996 (“CWAAA”). 142 Pub. L. No. 104-13. 143 Pub. L. No. 107-198. 144 44 U.S.C. § 3506(c)(4). 145 See 47 C.F.R. § 1.1206(b); see also id. §§ 1.1202, 1.1203. 146 See id. § 1.1206(b)(2). 147 See id. §§ 1.415, 1.419. 148 To the extent any filings in response to this NPRM relate to issues pending in MB Docket No. 07-198, where the Commission sought comment on the issue of tying of an MVPD’s rights to carry broadcast stations with carriage of other owned or affiliated broadcast stations in the same or a distant market or one or more affiliated non-broadcast networks, they must also be filed in MB Docket No. 07-198. Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 28 Filing System (“ECFS”), (2) the Federal Government’s eRulemaking Portal, or (3) by filing paper copies.149 · Electronic Filers: Comments may be filed electronically using the Internet by accessing the ECFS: http://www.fcc.gov/cgb/ecfs/ or the Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov. · Paper Filers: Parties who choose to file by paper must file an original and four copies of each filing. If more than one docket or rulemaking number appears in the caption of this proceeding, filers must submit two additional copies for each additional docket or rulemaking number. Filings can be sent by hand or messenger delivery, by commercial overnight courier, or by first-class or overnight U.S. Postal Service mail. All filings must be addressed to the Commission’s Secretary, Office of the Secretary, Federal Communications Commission. o All hand-delivered or messenger-delivered paper filings for the Commission’s Secretary must be delivered to FCC Headquarters at 445 12th St., SW, Room TW- A325, Washington, DC 20554. All hand deliveries must be held together with rubber bands or fasteners. Any envelopes must be disposed of before entering the building. The filing hours are 8:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. o Commercial overnight mail (other than U.S. Postal Service Express Mail and Priority Mail) must be sent to 9300 East Hampton Drive, Capitol Heights, MD 20743. o U.S. Postal Service first-class, Express, and Priority mail must be addressed to 445 12th Street, SW, Washington DC 20554. 52. Availability of Documents. Comments, reply comments, and ex parte submissions will be available for public inspection during regular business hours in the FCC Reference Center, Federal Communications Commission, 445 12th Street, S.W., CY-A257, Washington, D.C., 20554. These documents will also be available via ECFS. Documents will be available electronically in ASCII, Microsoft Word, and/or Adobe Acrobat. 53. Accessibility Information. To request information in accessible formats (computer diskettes, large print, audio recording, and Braille), send an e-mail to fcc504@fcc.gov or call the FCC’s Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau at (202) 418-0530 (voice), (202) 418-0432 (TTY). This document can also be downloaded in Word and Portable Document Format (PDF) at: http://www.fcc.gov. 54. Additional Information. For additional information on this proceeding, contact Diana Sokolow, Diana.Sokolow@fcc.gov, of the Media Bureau, Policy Division, (202) 418-2120. VI. ORDERING CLAUSES 55. Accordingly, IT IS ORDERED that pursuant to the authority contained in Sections 4(i), 4(j), 301, 303(r), 303(v), 307, 309, 325, 335, and 614 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. §§ 154(i), 154(j), 301, 303(r), 303(v), 307, 309, 325, 335, and 534, this Notice of Proposed Rulemaking IS ADOPTED. 149 See Electronic Filing of Documents in Rulemaking Proceedings, GC Docket No. 97-113, Report and Order, 13 FCC Rcd 11322 (1998). Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 29 56. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Commission’s Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau, Reference Information Center, SHALL SEND a copy of this Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, including the Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration. FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION Marlene H. Dortch Secretary Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 30 APPENDIX A List of Commenters Comments filed in MB Docket No. 10-71 The Africa Channel American Cable Association (“ACA”) The American Public Power Association et al. (“APPA Group”) AT&T Inc. ATV Broadcast LLC Belo Corp. BEVCOMM, Inc. and Cannon Valley Cablevision, Inc. Bright House Networks, LLC (“BHN”) Broadcaster Associations (National Association of Broadcasters, ABC Television Affiliates Association, CBS Television Network Affiliates Association, FBC Television Affiliates Association, and NBC Television Affiliates) Broadcast Networks (CBS Corporation; Fox Entertainment Group, Inc. and Fox Television Stations, Inc.; NBC Universal, Inc. and NBC Telemundo License Co.; The Walt Disney Company; and Univision Communications Inc.) Broadcast Television Licensees (Broadcasting Licenses, Limited Partnership; Eagle Creek Broadcasting of Laredo, LLC; Mountain Licenses, L.P.; Sarkes Tarzian, Inc.; Stainless Broadcasting, L.P.; and WSBS Licensing, Inc.) Cablevision Systems Corporation CBS Corporation Cox Enterprises, Inc. C-SPAN Networks Discovery Communications LLC The Walt Disney Company (“Disney”) Fox Television Affiliates Association (“Fox Affiliates”) Free Market Operators (Massillon Cable TV; WaveDivision Holdings, LLC; NPG Cable Inc.; the Comporium Group; and Harron Communications, LP) Free Press, Parents Television Council, and Consumers Union (“Free Press et al.) Gray Television, Inc. Hoak Media, LLC Institute for Policy Innovation LIN Television Corporation Local Broadcasters Coalition (Allbritton Communications Company; Bahakel Communications, Ltd.; Communications Corporation of America; Cordillera Communications, Inc.; Granite Broadcasting Corporation; Local TV, LLC; Malara Broadcast Group, Inc.; McGraw-Hill Broadcasting Company; Media General, Inc.; Meredith Corporation; Midwest Television, Inc.; Smith Media, LLC; White Knight Holdings, Inc.; and WNAC, LLC) Local Television Broadcasters (Barrington Broadcasting Group, LLC; Bonten Media Group, LLC; Dispatch Broadcast Group; Gannett Co., Inc.; Newport Television LLC; Post-Newsweek Stations, Inc.; Raycom Media, Inc.; and Weigel Broadcasting Company) (“LTB”) Media Access Project (“MAP”) Morgan Murphy Media Named State Broadcasters Associations (“NSBA”) New Age Media, LLC Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc. Office of Advocacy, U.S. Small Business Administration Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 31 The Organization for the Promotion and Advancement of Small Telecommunications Companies; the National Telecommunications Cooperative Association; the Independent Telephone and Telecommunications Alliance; the Western Telecommunications Alliance; and the Rural Independent Competitive Alliance (“OPASTCO et al.”) Ovation Pioneer Communications, CT Communications, and West Kentucky Rural Telephone Cooperative, Inc. (“Pioneer et al.”) Precursor LLC RCN Telecom Services, Inc. Retirement Living TV Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc. Starz Entertainment, LLC Time Warner Cable Inc. United States Telecom Association (“US Telecom”) Univision Communications Inc. Verizon Reply Comments filed in MB Docket No. 10-71 The American Public Power Association et al. (“APPA Group”) Broadcaster Associations (National Association of Broadcasters, ABC Television Affiliates Association, CBS Television Network Affiliates Association, FBC Television Affiliates Association, and NBC Television Affiliates) Cablevision Systems Corporation CBS Corporation Charter Communications, Inc. DIRECTV, Inc. and DISH Network L.L.C. The Walt Disney Company (“Disney”) Fox Entertainment Group, Inc. and Fox Television Stations, Inc. (“Fox”) Gray Television, Inc. HDNet LLC Insight Communications Company, Inc. Institute for Policy Innovation Media Access Project, on behalf of Consumers Union, Free Press, and Parents Television Council (“MAP et al.”) Mediacom Communications Corporation and Cequel Communications LLC d/b/a Suddenlink Communications (“Mediacom/Suddenlink”) The National Football League National Religious Broadcasters Precursor LLC Public Knowledge Time Warner Cable Inc. Verizon In addition, a number of individual consumers filed comments in this proceeding. Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 32 APPENDIX B Proposed Rule Changes Note: For ease of review, the proposed rule changes are written below with additions in bold underlined text. The Federal Communications Commission proposes to amend Part 76 of Title 47 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) as set forth below: PART 76 – Multichannel Video and Cable Television Service. 1. The authority citation for Part 76 continues to read as follows: AUTHORITY: 47 U.S.C. 151, 152, 153, 154, 301, 302, 302a, 303, 303a, 307, 308, 309, 312, 315, 317, 325, 339, 340, 341, 503, 521, 522, 531, 532, 534, 535, 536, 537, 543, 544, 544a, 545, 548, 549, 552, 554, 556, 558, 560, 561, 571, 572, 573. 2. Amend § 76.65 by revising paragraph (b)(1)(iv) and adding paragraphs (b)(1)(viii)-(x) to read as follows: § 76.65 Good faith and exclusive retransmission consent complaints. * * * * * (b) Good faith negotiation—(1) Standards. * * * * * * * * (iv) Refusal by a Negotiating Entity to put forth more than a single, unilateral proposal, or to provide a bona fide proposal on an important issue; * * * * * (viii) Agreement by a broadcast television station Negotiating Entity to provide a network with which it is affiliated the right to approve the station’s retransmission consent agreement with an MVPD; (ix) Agreement by a broadcast television station Negotiating Entity to grant another station or station group the right to negotiate or the power to approve its retransmission consent agreement when the stations are not commonly owned; and (x) Refusal by a Negotiating Entity to agree to non-binding mediation when the parties reach an impasse within 30 days of the expiration of their retransmission consent agreement. * * * * * 3. Amend § 76.1601 to read as follows (Note 1 to § 76.1601 remains unchanged) § 76.1601 Deletion or repositioning of broadcast signals. Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 33 (a) Effective April 2, 1993, a cable operator shall provide written notice to any broadcast television station at least 30 days prior to either deleting from carriage or repositioning that station. Such notification shall also be provided to subscribers of the cable system. (b) Broadcast television stations and multichannel video programming distributors shall notify affected subscribers of the potential deletion of a broadcaster’s signal a minimum of 30 days in advance of a retransmission consent agreement’s expiration, unless a renewal or extension agreement has been executed. Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 34 APPENDIX C Initial Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis 1. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended (“RFA”)1 the Commission has prepared this present Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (“IRFA”) concerning the possible significant economic impact on small entities by the policies and rules proposed in this Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (“NPRM”). Written public comments are requested on this IRFA. Comments must be identified as responses to the IRFA and must be filed by the deadlines for comments provided on the first page of the NPRM. The Commission will send a copy of the NPRM, including this IRFA, to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration (“SBA”).2 In addition, the NPRM and IRFA (or summaries thereof) will be published in the Federal Register.3 A. Need for, and Objectives of, the Proposed Rule Changes 2. The NPRM seeks comment on a series of proposals, set forth in Paragraph 4 below, to streamline and clarify the Commission’s rules concerning or affecting retransmission consent negotiations. The Commission’s primary objective is to assess whether and how the Commission rules in this arena are ensuring that the market-based mechanisms Congress designed to govern retransmission consent negotiations are working effectively and, to the extent possible, minimize video programming service disruptions to consumers. 3. Since Congress enacted the retransmission consent regime in 1992, there have been significant changes in the video programming marketplace. One such change is the form of compensation sought by broadcasters. Historically, cable operators typically compensated broadcasters for consent to retransmit the broadcasters’ signals through in-kind compensation, which might include, for example, carriage of additional channels of the broadcaster’s programming on the cable system or advertising time.4 Today, however, broadcasters are increasingly seeking and receiving monetary compensation from multichannel video programming distributors (“MVPDs”) in exchange for consent to the retransmission of their signals. Another important change concerns the rise of competitive video programming providers. In 1992, the only option for many local broadcast television stations seeking to reach MVPD customers in a particular Designated Market Area (“DMA”) was a single local cable provider. Today, in contrast, many consumers have additional options for receiving programming, including two national direct broadcast satellite (“DBS”) providers, telephone providers that offer video programming in some areas, and, to a degree, the Internet. One result of such changes in the marketplace is that disputes over retransmission consent have become more contentious and more public, and we recently have seen a rise in negotiation impasses that have affected millions of consumers.5 4. Accordingly, we have concluded that it is appropriate for us to reexamine our rules relating to retransmission consent. In the NPRM, we consider revisions to the retransmission consent and 1 See 5 U.S.C. § 603. The RFA, see 5 U.S.C. § 601 – 612, has been amended by the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (SBREFA), Pub. L. No. 104-121, Title II, 110 Stat. 857 (1996). 2 See 5 U.S.C. § 603(a). 3 See id. 4 See, e.g., General Motors Corp. and Hughes Electronics Corp., Transferors, and The News Corp. Ltd., Transferee, Memorandum Opinion and Order, 19 FCC Rcd 473, 503, ¶ 56 (2004). 5 See NPRM, ¶ 15 (discussing the 2010 retransmission consent disputes between Cablevision Systems Corp. (“Cablevision”) and News Corp., and between Cablevision and Walt Disney Co., both of which resulted in carriage impasses). But see Opposition of the National Association of Broadcasters et al. at 7; Comments of Hoak Media, LLC at 2; Comments of Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc. at 9. Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 35 related rules that we believe could allow the market-based negotiations contemplated by the statute to proceed more smoothly, provide greater certainty to the negotiating parties, and help protect consumers. Accordingly, the NPRM seeks comment on rule changes that would: · Provide more guidance under the good faith negotiation requirements to the negotiating parties by: o Specifying additional examples of per se violations in Section 76.65(b)(1) of our rules;6 and o Further clarifying the totality of the circumstances standard of Section 76.65(b)(2);7 · Improve notice to consumers in advance of possible service disruptions by extending the coverage of our notice rules to non-cable MVPDs and broadcasters as well as cable operators, and specifying that, if a renewal or extension agreement has not been executed 30 days in advance of a retransmission consent agreement’s expiration, notice of potential deletion of a broadcaster’s signal must be given to consumers regardless of whether the signal is ultimately deleted;8 · Extend to non-cable MVPDs the prohibition now applicable to cable operators on deleting or repositioning a local commercial television station during ratings “sweeps” periods;9 and · Allow MVPDs to negotiate for alternative access to network programming by eliminating the Commission’s network non-duplication and syndicated exclusivity rules.10 6 See NPRM, Section III.A. In Section III.A. of the NPRM, among other things, the Commission seeks comment on (1) whether it should be a per se violation for a station to agree to give a network with which it is affiliated the right to approve a retransmission consent agreement with an MVPD or to comply with such an approval provision; (2) whether it should be a per se violation for a station to grant another station or station group the right to negotiate or the power to approve its retransmission consent agreement when the stations are not commonly owned; (3) whether it should be a per se violation for a negotiating entity to refuse to put forth bona fide proposals on important issues; (4) whether it should be a per se violation for a negotiating entity to refuse to agree to non-binding mediation when the parties reach an impasse within 30 days of the expiration of their retransmission consent agreement; (5) what it means to “unreasonably” delay retransmission consent negotiations; and (6) whether a broadcaster’s request or requirement, as a condition of retransmission consent, that an MVPD not carry an out-of-market “significantly viewed” station violates Section 76.65(b)(1)(vi) of our rules. 7 See id., Section III.B. In Section III.B. of the NPRM, the Commission seeks comment on whether to provide more specificity for the meaning and scope of the “totality of the circumstances” standard of Section 76.65(b)(2) of its rules, in order to define more clearly the instances in which a negotiating entity may violate this standard. 8 See id., Section III.C. 9 See id., Section III.D. 10 See id., Section III.E. The network non-duplication rules permit a station with exclusive rights to network programming, as granted by the network, to assert those rights by using notification procedures in the Commission’s rules. See 47 C.F.R. §§ 76.92-76.94. The rules, in turn, prohibit the cable system from carrying the network programming as broadcast by any other station within the “geographic zone” to which the contractual rights and rules apply. See 47 C.F.R. § 76.92. Thus, a cable system negotiating retransmission consent with a local network affiliate may face greater pressure to reach agreement by virtue of the cable system’s inability to carry another affiliate of the same network if the retransmission consent negotiations fail. Similarly, under the syndicated exclusivity rules, a station may assert its contractual rights to exclusivity within a specified geographic zone to prevent a cable system from carrying the same syndicated programming aired by another station. See 47 C.F.R. § 76.101 et seq. In the year 2000, the Commission adopted rules implementing provisions of the Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act of 1999 (“SHVIA”) that applied the network non-duplication and syndicated exclusivity rules to satellite retransmission of six “nationally distributed superstations.” See Implementation of the Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act of 1999: Application of Network Non-Duplication, Syndicated Exclusivity, and (continued….) Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 36 We also seek comment on any other revisions or additions to our rules within the scope of our authority11 that would improve the retransmission consent negotiation process and help protect consumers from programming disruptions.12 B. Legal Basis 5. The proposed action is authorized pursuant to Sections 4(i), 4(j), 301, 303(r), 303(v), 307, 309, 325, 335, and 614 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. §§ 154(i), 154(j), 301, 303(r), 303(v), 307, 309, 325, 335, and 534. C. Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities to Which the Proposed Rules Will Apply 6. The RFA directs agencies to provide a description of and, where feasible, an estimate of the number of small entities that may be affected by the proposed rules, if adopted.13 The RFA generally defines the term “small entity” as having the same meaning as the terms “small business,” “small organization,” and “small governmental jurisdiction.”14 In addition, the term “small business” has the same meaning as the term “small business concern” under the Small Business Act.15 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.16 Below, we provide a description of such small entities, as well as an estimate of the number of such small entities, where feasible. 7. Wired Telecommunications Carriers. The 2007 North American Industry Classification System (“NAICS”) defines “Wired Telecommunications Carriers” as follows: “This industry comprises establishments primarily engaged in operating and/or providing access to transmission facilities and infrastructure that they own and/or lease for the transmission of voice, data, text, sound, and video using wired telecommunications networks. Transmission facilities may be based on a single technology or a combination of technologies. Establishments in this industry use the wired telecommunications network facilities that they operate to provide a variety of services, such as wired telephony services, including VoIP services; wired (cable) audio and video programming distribution; and wired broadband Internet services. By exception, establishments providing satellite television distribution services using facilities (…continued from previous page) Sports Blackout Rules To Satellite Retransmissions of Broadcast Signals, Report and Order, 15 FCC Rcd 21688 (2000). 11 The Commission does not have the power to force broadcasters to consent to MVPD carriage of their signals nor can the Commission order binding arbitration. See NPRM, ¶ 18 and n. 54. See also Letter from Chairman Julius Genachowski, FCC, to The Honorable John F. Kerry, Chairman, Subcommittee on Communications, Technology, and the Internet, Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, U.S. Senate, at 1 (Oct. 29, 2010) (“[C]urrent law does not give the agency the tools necessary to prevent service disruptions.”). 12 See NPRM, Section III.F. 13 5 U.S.C. § 603(b)(3). 14 5 U.S.C. § 601(6). 15 5 U.S.C. § 601(3) (incorporating by reference the definition of “small business concern” in 15 U.S.C. § 632). Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. § 601(3), the statutory definition of a small business applies “unless an agency, after consultation with the Office of Advocacy of the Small Business Administration and after opportunity for public comment, establishes one or more definitions of such term which are appropriate to the activities of the agency and publishes such definition(s) in the Federal Register.” 5 U.S.C. § 601(3). 16 15 U.S.C. § 632. Application of the statutory criteria of dominance in its field of operation and independence are sometimes difficult to apply in the context of broadcast television. Accordingly, the Commission’s statistical account of television stations may be over-inclusive. Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 37 and infrastructure that they operate are included in this industry.”17 The SBA has developed a small business size standard for wireline firms within the broad economic census category, “Wired Telecommunications Carriers.”18 Under this category, the SBA deems a wireline business to be small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. Census Bureau data for 2007, which now supersede data from the 2002 Census, show that there were 3,188 firms in this category that operated for the entire year. Of this total, 3,144 had employment of 999 or fewer, and 44 firms had had employment of 1,000 employees or more. Thus under this category and the associated small business size standard, the majority of these firms can be considered small.19 8. Cable Television Distribution Services. Since 2007, these services have been defined within the broad economic census category of Wired Telecommunications Carriers; that category is defined above. The SBA has developed a small business size standard for this category, which is: All such firms having 1,500 or fewer employees. Census Bureau data for 2007, which now supersede data from the 2002 Census, show that there were 3,188 firms in this category that operated for the entire year. Of this total, 3,144 had employment of 999 or fewer, and 44 firms had had employment of 1,000 employees or more. Thus under this category and the associated small business size standard, the majority of these firms can be considered small.20 9. Cable Companies and Systems. The Commission has also developed its own small business size standards, for the purpose of cable rate regulation. Under the Commission’s rules, a “small cable company” is one serving 400,000 or fewer subscribers, nationwide.21 Industry data indicate that, of 1,076 cable operators nationwide, all but eleven are small under this size standard.22 In addition, under the Commission’s rules, a “small system” is a cable system serving 15,000 or fewer subscribers.23 Industry data indicate that, of 7,208 systems nationwide, 6,139 systems have under 10,000 subscribers, and an additional 379 systems have 10,000-19,999 subscribers.24 Thus, under this standard, most cable systems are small. 10. Cable System Operators. The Communications Act of 1934, as amended, also contains a size standard for small cable system operators, which is “a cable operator that, directly or through an affiliate, serves in the aggregate fewer than 1 percent of all subscribers in the United States and is not affiliated with any entity or entities whose gross annual revenues in the aggregate exceed $250,000,000.”25 The Commission has determined that an operator serving fewer than 677,000 17 U.S. Census Bureau, 2007 NAICS Definitions, “517110 Wired Telecommunications Carriers”; http://www.census.gov/naics/2007/def/ND517110.HTM#N517110. 18 13 C.F.R. § 121.201 (NAICS code 517110). 19 See http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/IBQTable?_bm=y&-fds_name=EC0700A1&-geo_id=&-_skip=600&- ds_name=EC0751SSSZ5&-_lang=en. 20 See http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/IBQTable?_bm=y&-fds_name=EC0700A1&-geo_id=&-_skip=600&- ds_name=EC0751SSSZ5&-_lang=en. 21 47 C.F.R. § 76.901(e). The Commission determined that this size standard equates approximately to a size standard of $100 million or less in annual revenues. Implementation of Sections of the 1992 Cable Act: Rate Regulation, Sixth Report and Order and Eleventh Order on Reconsideration, 10 FCC Rcd 7393, 7408 (1995). 22 See BROADCASTING & CABLE YEARBOOK 2006, at A-8, C-2 (Harry A. Jessell ed., 2005) (data current as of June 30, 2005); TELEVISION AND CABLE FACTBOOK 2006, at D-805 to D-1857 (Albert Warren ed., 2005). 23 47 C.F.R. § 76.901(c). 24 TELEVISION AND CABLE FACTBOOK 2006, at F-2 (Albert Warren ed., 2005) (data current as of Oct. 2005). The data do not include 718 systems for which classifying data were not available. 25 47 U.S.C. § 543(m)(2); see 47 C.F.R. § 76.901(f) & nn. 1-3. Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 38 subscribers shall be deemed a small operator, if its annual revenues, when combined with the total annual revenues of all its affiliates, do not exceed $250 million in the aggregate.26 Industry data indicate that, of 1,076 cable operators nationwide, all but ten are small under this size standard.27 We note that the Commission neither requests nor collects information on whether cable system operators are affiliated with entities whose gross annual revenues exceed $250 million,28 and therefore we are unable to estimate more accurately the number of cable system operators that would qualify as small under this size standard. 11. Direct Broadcast Satellite (“DBS”) Service. DBS service is a nationally distributed subscription service that delivers video and audio programming via satellite to a small parabolic “dish” antenna at the subscriber’s location. DBS, by exception, is now included in the SBA’s broad economic census category, “Wired Telecommunications Carriers,”29 which was developed for small wireline firms. Under this category, the SBA deems a wireline business to be small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees.30 Census Bureau data for 2007, which now supersede data from the 2002 Census, show that there were 3,188 firms in this category that operated for the entire year. Of this total, 3,144 had employment of 999 or fewer, and 44 firms had had employment of 1,000 employees or more. Thus under this category and the associated small business size standard, the majority of these firms can be considered small.31 Currently, only two entities provide DBS service, which requires a great investment of capital for operation: DIRECTV and EchoStar Communications Corporation (“EchoStar”) (marketed as the DISH Network).32 Each currently offers subscription services. DIRECTV33 and EchoStar34 each report annual revenues that are in excess of the threshold for a small business. Because DBS service requires significant capital, we believe it is unlikely that a small entity as defined by the SBA would have the financial wherewithal to become a DBS service provider. 12. Satellite Master Antenna Television (SMATV) Systems, also known as Private Cable Operators (PCOs). SMATV systems or PCOs are video distribution facilities that use closed transmission paths without using any public right-of-way. They acquire video programming and distribute it via terrestrial wiring in urban and suburban multiple dwelling units such as apartments and 26 47 C.F.R. § 76.901(f); see FCC Announces New Subscriber Count for the Definition of Small Cable Operator, Public Notice, 16 FCC Rcd 2225 (Cable Services Bureau 2001). 27 See BROADCASTING & CABLE YEARBOOK 2006, at A-8, C-2 (Harry A. Jessell ed., 2005) (data current as of June 30, 2005); TELEVISION AND CABLE FACTBOOK 2006, at D-805 to D-1857 (Albert Warren ed., 2005). 28 The Commission does receive such information on a case-by-case basis if a cable operator appeals a local franchise authority’s finding that the operator does not qualify as a small cable operator pursuant to § 76.901(f) of the Commission’s rules. See 47 C.F.R. § 76.901(f). 29 See 13 C.F.R. § 121.201, NAICS code 517110 (2007). The 2007 NAICS definition of the category of “Wired Telecommunications Carriers” is in paragraph 7, above. 30 13 C.F.R. § 121.201, NAICS code 517110 (2007). 31 See http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/IBQTable?_bm=y&-fds_name=EC0700A1&-geo_id=&-_skip=600&- ds_name=EC0751SSSZ5&-_lang=en. 32 See Annual Assessment of the Status of Competition in the Market for the Delivery of Video Programming, Thirteenth Annual Report, 24 FCC Rcd 542, 580, ¶ 74 (2009) (“13th Annual Report”). We note that, in 2007, EchoStar purchased the licenses of Dominion Video Satellite, Inc. (“Dominion”) (marketed as Sky Angel). See Public Notice, “Policy Branch Information; Actions Taken,” Report No. SAT-00474, 22 FCC Rcd 17776 (IB 2007). 33 As of June 2006, DIRECTV is the largest DBS operator and the second largest MVPD, serving an estimated 16.20% of MVPD subscribers nationwide. See 13th Annual Report, 24 FCC Rcd at 687, Table B-3. 34 As of June 2006, DISH Network is the second largest DBS operator and the third largest MVPD, serving an estimated 13.01% of MVPD subscribers nationwide. Id. Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 39 condominiums, and commercial multiple tenant units such as hotels and office buildings. SMATV systems or PCOs are now included in the SBA’s broad economic census category, “Wired Telecommunications Carriers,”35 which was developed for small wireline firms. Under this category, the SBA deems a wireline business to be small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees.36 Census Bureau data for 2007, which now supersede data from the 2002 Census, show that there were 3,188 firms in this category that operated for the entire year. Of this total, 3,144 had employment of 999 or fewer, and 44 firms had had employment of 1,000 employees or more. Thus under this category and the associated small business size standard, the majority of these firms can be considered small.37 13. Home Satellite Dish (“HSD”) Service. HSD or the large dish segment of the satellite industry is the original satellite-to-home service offered to consumers, and involves the home reception of signals transmitted by satellites operating generally in the C-band frequency. Unlike DBS, which uses small dishes, HSD antennas are between four and eight feet in diameter and can receive a wide range of unscrambled (free) programming and scrambled programming purchased from program packagers that are licensed to facilitate subscribers’ receipt of video programming. Because HSD provides subscription services, HSD falls within the SBA-recognized definition of Wired Telecommunications Carriers.38 The SBA has developed a small business size standard for this category, which is: all such firms having 1,500 or fewer employees. Census Bureau data for 2007, which now supersede data from the 2002 Census, show that there were 3,188 firms in this category that operated for the entire year. Of this total, 3,144 had employment of 999 or fewer, and 44 firms had had employment of 1,000 employees or more. Thus under this category and the associated small business size standard, the majority of these firms can be considered small.39 14. Broadband Radio Service and Educational Broadband Service. Broadband Radio Service systems, previously referred to as Multipoint Distribution Service (MDS) and Multichannel Multipoint Distribution Service (MMDS) systems, and “wireless cable,” transmit video programming to subscribers and provide two-way high speed data operations using the microwave frequencies of the Broadband Radio Service (BRS) and Educational Broadband Service (EBS) (previously referred to as the Instructional Television Fixed Service (ITFS)).40 In connection with the 1996 BRS auction, the Commission established a small business size standard as an entity that had annual average gross revenues of no more than $40 million in the previous three calendar years.41 The BRS auctions resulted in 67 successful bidders obtaining licensing opportunities for 493 Basic Trading Areas (BTAs). Of the 67 auction winners, 61 met the definition of a small business. BRS also includes licensees of stations authorized prior to the auction. At this time, we estimate that of the 61 small business BRS auction winners, 48 remain small business licensees. In addition to the 48 small businesses that hold BTA 35 See 13 C.F.R. § 121.201, NAICS code 517110 (2007). 36 13 C.F.R. § 121.201, NAICS code 517110 (2007). 37 See http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/IBQTable?_bm=y&-fds_name=EC0700A1&-geo_id=&-_skip=600&- ds_name=EC0751SSSZ5&-_lang=en. 38 13 C.F.R. § 121.201, NAICS code 517110 (2007). 39 See http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/IBQTable?_bm=y&-fds_name=EC0700A1&-geo_id=&-_skip=600&- ds_name=EC0751SSSZ5&-_lang=en. 40 Amendment of Parts 21 and 74 of the Commission’s Rules with Regard to Filing Procedures in the Multipoint Distribution Service and in the Instructional Television Fixed Service and Implementation of Section 309(j) of the Communications Act—Competitive Bidding, MM Docket No. 94-131, PP Docket No. 93-253, Report and Order, 10 FCC Rcd 9589, 9593, ¶ 7 (1995). 41 47 C.F.R. § 21.961(b)(1). Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 40 authorizations, there are approximately 392 incumbent BRS licensees that are considered small entities.42 After adding the number of small business auction licensees to the number of incumbent licensees not already counted, we find that there are currently approximately 440 BRS licensees that are defined as small businesses under either the SBA or the Commission’s rules. In 2009, the Commission conducted Auction 86, the sale of 78 licenses in the BRS areas.43 The Commission offered three levels of bidding credits: (i) a bidder with attributed average annual gross revenues that exceed $15 million and do not exceed $40 million for the preceding three years (small business) will receive a 15 percent discount on its winning bid; (ii) a bidder with attributed average annual gross revenues that exceed $3 million and do not exceed $15 million for the preceding three years (very small business) will receive a 25 percent discount on its winning bid; and (iii) a bidder with attributed average annual gross revenues that do not exceed $3 million for the preceding three years (entrepreneur) will receive a 35 percent discount on its winning bid.44 Auction 86 concluded in 2009 with the sale of 61 licenses.45 Of the ten winning bidders, two bidders that claimed small business status won 4 licenses; one bidder that claimed very small business status won three licenses; and two bidders that claimed entrepreneur status won six licenses. 15. In addition, the SBA’s Cable Television Distribution Services small business size standard is applicable to EBS. There are presently 2,032 EBS licensees. All but 100 of these licenses are held by educational institutions. Educational institutions are included in this analysis as small entities.46 Thus, we estimate that at least 1,932 licensees are small businesses. Since 2007, Cable Television Distribution Services have been defined within the broad economic census category of Wired Telecommunications Carriers; that category is defined as follows: “This industry comprises establishments primarily engaged in operating and/or providing access to transmission facilities and infrastructure that they own and/or lease for the transmission of voice, data, text, sound, and video using wired telecommunications networks. Transmission facilities may be based on a single technology or a combination of technologies.”47 The SBA has developed a small business size standard for this category, which is: all such firms having 1,500 or fewer employees. Census Bureau data for 2007, which now supersede data from the 2002 Census, show that there were 3,188 firms in this category that operated for the entire year. Of this total, 3,144 had employment of 999 or fewer, and 44 firms had had employment of 1,000 employees or more. Thus under this category and the associated small business size standard, the majority of these firms can be considered small.48 42 47 U.S.C. § 309(j). Hundreds of stations were licensed to incumbent MDS licensees prior to implementation of Section 309(j) of the Communications Act of 1934, 47 U.S.C. § 309(j). For these pre-auction licenses, the applicable standard is SBA’s small business size standard of 1500 or fewer employees. 43 Auction of Broadband Radio Service (BRS) Licenses, Scheduled for October 27, 2009, Notice and Filing Requirements, Minimum Opening Bids, Upfront Payments, and Other Procedures for Auction 86, Public Notice, 24 FCC Rcd 8277 (2009). 44 Id. at 8296. 45 Auction of Broadband Radio Service Licenses Closes, Winning Bidders Announced for Auction 86, Down Payments Due November 23, 2009, Final Payments Due December 8, 2009, Ten-Day Petition to Deny Period, Public Notice, 24 FCC Rcd 13572 (2009). 46 The term “small entity” within SBREFA applies to small organizations (nonprofits) and to small governmental jurisdictions (cities, counties, towns, townships, villages, school districts, and special districts with populations of less than 50,000). 5 U.S.C. §§ 601(4)–(6). We do not collect annual revenue data on EBS licensees. 47 U.S. Census Bureau, 2007 NAICS Definitions, “517110 Wired Telecommunications Carriers,” (partial definition), www.census.gov/naics/2007/def/ND517110.HTM#N517110. 48 See http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/IBQTable?_bm=y&-fds_name=EC0700A1&-geo_id=&-_skip=600&- ds_name=EC0751SSSZ5&-_lang=en. Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 41 16. Fixed Microwave Services. Microwave services include common carrier,49 private- operational fixed,50 and broadcast auxiliary radio services.51 They also include the Local Multipoint Distribution Service (LMDS),52 the Digital Electronic Message Service (DEMS),53 and the 24 GHz Service,54 where licensees can choose between common carrier and non-common carrier status.55 At present, there are approximately 31,428 common carrier fixed licensees and 79,732 private operational- fixed licensees and broadcast auxiliary radio licensees in the microwave services. There are approximately 120 LMDS licensees, three DEMS licensees, and three 24 GHz licensees. The Commission has not yet defined a small business with respect to microwave services. For purposes of the IRFA, we will use the SBA’s definition applicable to Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except satellite)—i.e., an entity with no more than 1,500 persons.56 Under the present and prior categories, the SBA has deemed a wireless business to be small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees.57 For the category of Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite), Census data for 2007, which supersede data contained in the 2002 Census, show that there were 1,383 firms that operated that year.58 Of those 1,383, 1,368 had fewer than 100 employees, and 15 firms had more than 100 employees. Thus under this category and the associated small business size standard, the majority of firms can be considered small. We note that the number of firms does not necessarily track the number of licensees. We estimate that virtually all of the Fixed Microwave licensees (excluding broadcast auxiliary licensees) would qualify as small entities under the SBA definition. 17. Open Video Systems. The open video system (“OVS”) framework was established in 1996, and is one of four statutorily recognized options for the provision of video programming services by local exchange carriers.59 The OVS framework provides opportunities for the distribution of video programming other than through cable systems. Because OVS operators provide subscription services,60 OVS falls within the SBA small business size standard covering cable services, which is “Wired Telecommunications Carriers.”61 The SBA has developed a small business size standard for this 49 See 47 C.F.R. Part 101, Subparts C and I. 50 See 47 C.F.R. Part 101, Subparts C and H. 51 Auxiliary Microwave Service is governed by Part 74 of Title 47 of the Commission’s Rules. See 47 C.F.R. Part 74. Available to licensees of broadcast stations and to broadcast and cable network entities, broadcast auxiliary microwave stations are used for relaying broadcast television signals from the studio to the transmitter, or between two points such as a main studio and an auxiliary studio. The service also includes mobile TV pickups, which relay signals from a remote location back to the studio. 52 See 47 C.F.R. Part 101, Subpart L. 53 See 47 C.F.R. Part 101, Subpart G. 54 See id. 55 See 47 C.F.R. §§ 101.533, 101.1017. 56 13 C.F.R. § 121.201, NAICS code 517210. 57 13 C.F.R. § 121.201, NAICS code 517210 (2007 NAICS). The now-superseded, pre-2007 C.F.R. citations were 13 C.F.R. § 121.201, NAICS codes 517211 and 517212 (referring to the 2002 NAICS). 58 U.S. Census Bureau, 2007 Economic Census, Sector 51, 2007 NAICS code 517210 (rel. Oct. 20, 2009), http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/IBQTable?_bm=y&-geo_id=&-fds_name=EC0700A1&-_skip=700&- ds_name=EC0751SSSZ5&-_lang=en. 59 47 U.S.C. § 571(a)(3)-(4). See 13th Annual Report, 24 FCC Rcd at 606, ¶ 135. 60 See 47 U.S.C. § 573. 61 U.S. Census Bureau, 2007 NAICS Definitions, “517110 Wired Telecommunications Carriers”; http://www.census.gov/naics/2007/def/ND517110.HTM#N517110. Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 42 category, which is: all such firms having 1,500 or fewer employees. Census Bureau data for 2007, which now supersede data from the 2002 Census, show that there were 3,188 firms in this category that operated for the entire year. Of this total, 3,144 had employment of 999 or fewer, and 44 firms had had employment of 1,000 employees or more. Thus under this category and the associated small business size standard, the majority of these firms can be considered small.62 In addition, we note that the Commission has certified some OVS operators, with some now providing service.63 Broadband service providers (“BSPs”) are currently the only significant holders of OVS certifications or local OVS franchises.64 The Commission does not have financial or employment information regarding the entities authorized to provide OVS, some of which may not yet be operational. Thus, at least some of the OVS operators may qualify as small entities. 18. Cable and Other Subscription Programming. The Census Bureau defines this category as follows: “This industry comprises establishments primarily engaged in operating studios and facilities for the broadcasting of programs on a subscription or fee basis . . . . These establishments produce programming in their own facilities or acquire programming from external sources. The programming material is usually delivered to a third party, such as cable systems or direct-to-home satellite systems, for transmission to viewers.”65 To gauge small business prevalence in the Cable and Other Subscription Programming industries, the Commission relies on data currently available from the U.S. Census for the year 2007. According to that source, which supersedes data from the 2002 Census, there were 396 firms that in 2007 were engaged in production of Cable and Other Subscription Programming. Of these, 386 operated with less than 1,000 employees, and 10 operated with more than 1,000 employees. However, as to the latter 10 there is no data available that shows how many operated with more than 1,500 employees. Thus, under this category and associated small business size standard, the majority of firms can be considered small.66 19. Small Incumbent Local Exchange Carriers. We have included small incumbent local exchange carriers in this present RFA analysis. A “small business” under the RFA is one that, inter alia, meets the pertinent small business size standard (e.g., a telephone communications business having 1,500 or fewer employees), and “is not dominant in its field of operation.”67 The SBA’s Office of Advocacy contends that, for RFA purposes, small incumbent local exchange carriers are not dominant in their field of operation because any such dominance is not “national” in scope.68 We have therefore included small incumbent local exchange carriers in this RFA analysis, although we emphasize that this RFA action has no effect on Commission analyses and determinations in other, non-RFA contexts. 62 See http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/IBQTable?_bm=y&-fds_name=EC0700A1&-geo_id=&-_skip=600&- ds_name=EC0751SSSZ5&-_lang=en. 63 A list of OVS certifications may be found at http://www.fcc.gov/mb/ovs/csovscer.html. 64 See 13th Annual Report, 24 FCC Rcd at 606-07, ¶ 135. BSPs are newer firms that are building state-of-the-art, facilities-based networks to provide video, voice, and data services over a single network. 65 U.S. Census Bureau, 2007 NAICS Definitions, “515210 Cable and Other Subscription Programming”; http://www.census.gov/naics/2007/def/ND515210.HTM#N515210. 66 See http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/IBQTable?_bm=y&-fds_name=EC0700A1&-geo_id=&-_skip=600&- ds_name=EC0751SSSZ5&-_lang=en. 67 15 U.S.C. § 632. 68 Letter from Jere W. Glover, Chief Counsel for Advocacy, SBA, to William E. Kennard, Chairman, FCC (May 27, 1999). The Small Business Act contains a definition of “small-business concern,” which the RFA incorporates into its own definition of “small business.” See 15 U.S.C. § 632(a) (Small Business Act); 5 U.S.C. § 601(3) (RFA). SBA regulations interpret “small business concern” to include the concept of dominance on a national basis. See 13 C.F.R. § 121.102(b). Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 43 20. Incumbent Local Exchange Carriers (“LECs”). Neither the Commission nor the SBA has developed a small business size standard specifically for incumbent local exchange services. The appropriate size standard under SBA rules is for the category Wired Telecommunications Carriers. Under that size standard, such a business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees.69 Census Bureau data for 2007, which now supersede data from the 2002 Census, show that there were 3,188 firms in this category that operated for the entire year. Of this total, 3,144 had employment of 999 or fewer, and 44 firms had had employment of 1,000 employees or more. Thus under this category and the associated small business size standard, the majority of these firms can be considered small.70 21. Competitive Local Exchange Carriers, Competitive Access Providers (CAPs), “Shared- Tenant Service Providers,” and “Other Local Service Providers.” Neither the Commission nor the SBA has developed a small business size standard specifically for these service providers. The appropriate size standard under SBA rules is for the category Wired Telecommunications Carriers. Under that size standard, such a business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees.71 Census Bureau data for 2007, which now supersede data from the 2002 Census, show that there were 3,188 firms in this category that operated for the entire year. Of this total, 3,144 had employment of 999 or fewer, and 44 firms had had employment of 1,000 employees or more. Thus under this category and the associated small business size standard, the majority of these firms can be considered small.72 Consequently, the Commission estimates that most providers of competitive local exchange service, competitive access providers, “Shared-Tenant Service Providers,” and “Other Local Service Providers” are small entities. 22. Television Broadcasting. The SBA defines a television broadcasting station as a small business if such station has no more than $14.0 million in annual receipts.73 Business concerns included in this industry are those “primarily engaged in broadcasting images together with sound.”74 The Commission has estimated the number of licensed commercial television stations to be 1,392.75 According to Commission staff review of the BIA/Kelsey, MAPro Television Database (“BIA”) as of April 7, 2010, about 1,015 of an estimated 1,380 commercial television stations76 (or about 74 percent) have revenues of $14 million or less and, thus, qualify as small entities under the SBA definition. The Commission has estimated the number of licensed noncommercial educational (NCE) television stations 69 13 C.F.R. § 121.201 (2007 NAICS code 517110). 70 See http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/IBQTable?_bm=y&-fds_name=EC0700A1&-geo_id=&-_skip=600&- ds_name=EC0751SSSZ5&-_lang=en. 71 13 C.F.R. § 121.201 (2007 NAICS code 517110). 72 See http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/IBQTable?_bm=y&-fds_name=EC0700A1&-geo_id=&-_skip=600&- ds_name=EC0751SSSZ5&-_lang=en. 73 See 13 C.F.R. § 121.201, NAICS Code 515120 (2007). 74 Id. This category description continues, “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 studios, from an affiliated network, or from external sources.” Separate census categories pertain to businesses primarily engaged in producing programming. See Motion Picture and Video Production, NAICS code 512110; Motion Picture and Video Distribution, NAICS Code 512120; Teleproduction and Other Post-Production Services, NAICS Code 512191; and Other Motion Picture and Video Industries, NAICS Code 512199. 75 See News Release, “Broadcast Station Totals as of December 31, 2009,” 2010 WL 676084 (F.C.C.) (dated Feb. 26, 2010) (“Broadcast Station Totals”); also available at http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC- 296538A1.pdf. 76 We recognize that this total differs slightly from that contained in Broadcast Station Totals, supra, note 75; however, we are using BIA's estimate for purposes of this revenue comparison. Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 44 to be 390.77 We note, however, that, in assessing whether a business concern qualifies as small under the above definition, business (control) affiliations78 must be included. Our estimate, therefore, likely overstates the number of small entities that might be affected by our action, because the revenue figure on which it is based does not include or aggregate revenues from affiliated companies. 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. 23. In addition, an element of the definition of “small business” is that the entity not be dominant in its field of operation. We are unable at this time to define or quantify the criteria that would establish whether a specific television station is dominant in its field of operation. Accordingly, the estimate of small businesses to which rules may apply do not exclude any television station from the definition of a small business on this basis and are therefore over-inclusive to that extent. Also, as noted, an additional element of the definition of “small business” is that the entity must be independently owned and operated. We note that it is difficult at times to assess these criteria in the context of media entities and our estimates of small businesses to which they apply may be over-inclusive to this extent. D. Description of Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance Requirements 24. Certain proposed rule changes discussed in the NPRM would affect reporting, recordkeeping or other compliance requirements. Specifically, a potential rule change would (1) revise the Commission’s notice rules to specify that, if a renewal or extension agreement has not been executed 30 days in advance of a retransmission consent agreement’s expiration, notice of potential deletion of a broadcaster’s signal must be given to consumers regardless of whether the signal is ultimately deleted; and (2) extend the coverage of this notice rule to non-cable MVPDs and broadcasters. E. Steps Taken to Minimize Significant Economic Impact on Small Entities, and Significant Alternatives Considered 25. The RFA requires an agency to describe any significant alternatives that it has considered in reaching its proposed approach, which may include the following four alternatives (among others): (1) the establishment of differing compliance or reporting requirements or timetables that take into account the resources available to small entities; (2) the clarification, consolidation, or simplification of compliance or reporting requirements under the rule for small entities; (3) the use of performance, rather than design, standards; and (4) an exemption from coverage of the rule, or any part thereof, for small entities.79 26. As discussed in the NPRM, our goal in this proceeding is to take appropriate action, within our existing authority, to protect consumers from the disruptive impact of the loss of broadcast programming carried on MVPD video services. The specific changes on which we seek comment, set forth in Paragraph 4 above, are intended to allow the market-based negotiations contemplated by the statute to proceed more smoothly, provide greater certainty to the negotiating parties, and help protect consumers. The improved successful completion of retransmission consent negotiations would benefit both broadcasters and MVPDs, including those that are smaller entities, as well as MVPD subscribers. Thus, the proposed rules would benefit smaller entities as well as larger entities. For this reason, an analysis of alternatives to the proposed rules is unnecessary. Further, we note that in its discussion of whether there are any additional actions or practices that should be deemed to constitute per se violations of a negotiating entity’s duty to negotiate retransmission consent agreements in good faith, the 77 See Broadcast Station Totals, supra, note 75. 78 “[Business concerns] are affiliates of each other when one concern controls or has the power to control the other or a third party or parties controls or has to power to control both.” 13 C.F.R. § 121.103(a)(1). 79 5 U.S.C. § 603(c)(1)-(c)(4) Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 45 Commission specifically references a proposal to permit small and mid-size MVPDs to “pool their resources, appoint an agent, and negotiate as a group.”80 Such a proposal would provide particular benefit to small entities. The NPRM further considers the impact of retransmission consent on small entities by asking whether small and new entrant MVPDs are typically forced to accept retransmission consent terms that are less favorable than larger or more established MVPDs, and if so, whether this is fair.81 27. We invite comment on whether there are any alternatives we should consider to our proposed modifications to rules that apply to or affect retransmission consent negotiations that would minimize any adverse impact on small businesses, but which maintain the benefits of our proposals. F. Federal Rules that May Duplicate, Overlap, or Conflict With the Proposed Rule 28. None. 80 See NPRM, ¶ 29 (quoting Comments of The Organization for the Promotion and Advancement of Small Telecommunications Companies et al. at 6). 81 See id. Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 46 STATEMENT OF CHAIRMAN JULIUS GENACHOWSKI Re: Amendment of the Commission’s Rules Related to Retransmission Consent, MB Docket No. 10- 71 I am pleased that the Commission is undertaking, for the first time in more than a decade, an evaluation of its retransmission consent rules. Retransmission consent negotiations have become more contentious recently, and consumers have gotten caught in the middle. Last fall, millions of cable subscribers lost access to baseball playoff and World Series games, and many other viewers have been blindsided by less publicized disputes. Even as we vote this item, there’s a looming retransmission consent impasse between a nationwide satellite TV provider and a large broadcast group with major network affiliates. Consumers have real and completely understandable concerns. There are also legitimate issues on the different sides of the business table. Broadcasters provide valuable content to pay television providers and point to a statutory framework that recognizes broadcasters’ right to seek compensation for carriage. Broadcasters also compete with cable and satellite networks with two revenue streams, but face similar programming costs and the challenges of audience fragmentation -- challenges exacerbated by today’s difficult economic environment. Cable and satellite operators too face a tough economic environment, and are correct that the marketplace has changed significantly since the retransmission framework was first adopted by Congress almost 20 years ago. It’s time to take a fresh look and explore whether there are measures we can take to allow the market-based process contemplated by the retransmission consent laws to operate more smoothly, and serve consumers and the marketplace. The current statutory framework limits the Commission’s tools to respond to retransmission consent impasses. For example, the statute doesn’t give the Commission the authority to order interim carriage of broadcast programming or mandatory arbitration. The jury is still out on whether those measures are necessary or desirable, but if they are, it will require statutory change, and we will serve as a resource to Congress. The Notice we issue today asks whether there are changes within the Commission’s existing authority that can improve the process for companies negotiating commercial deals, while protecting consumers from the uncertainty and disruption they experience when negotiations break down. No one should interpret our initiation of this proceeding as a signal – or an excuse – to drag their feet on reaching retransmission consent agreements. Foot dragging or any bad-faith conduct won’t be tolerated under our existing rules or any new rules we adopt in this proceeding. I’d like to thank Bill Lake and the Media Bureau, as well as Rick Kaplan and Marilyn Sonn, for their excellent work in this important area. Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 47 STATEMENT OF COMMISSIONER MICHAEL J. COPPS Re: Amendment of the Commission’s Rules Related to Retransmission Consent, MB Docket No. 10- 71 Retransmission Consent is a curious animal. Intended originally in 1992 largely to protect consumers by ensuring them cable access to their local TV stations, the issue morphed over the years into a fight between well-financed special interests to see who could best game the rules to their own advantage. The FCC—intended first and foremost to be a consumer protection agency—has maintained it has inadequate authority to do much about it and has settled on statutory ambiguities to vacate the field and let the big guys fight it out. These Retransmission Consent disputes are painful for everyone involved, to be sure, but they are most acutely painful for consumers who can be denied access to programming like the World Series or the Academy Awards while broadcast and cable fight it out for the spoils. When there is a blackout, we hear from the public and Members of Congress clearly and in great numbers, looking for relief. And guess who ends up paying the bill when the dispute is finally settled? We, the people. In 1992, when the Cable Act passed Congress, it was clear that the Retransmission Consent provisions were concerned more with protecting small broadcasters and cable companies than enriching media giants who, at that time, were less powerful and consolidated than they are today. While there are some small players left—who get consistently rolled given their lack of leverage under the current rules— the norm now is big money against big money, with the consumer getting pummeled between two Sumo wrestlers. Ransom notes in the largest newspapers, fear inducing videos before children’s programming, and nasty advertisements everywhere issue from both sides of the battlefield. Today we take a step in the right direction to confront this very difficult situation. We need to know what we can and cannot do under the present statute and if we can do more than we have been doing. Arguably we have been too timid in approaching the statute. Maybe so, maybe no. So parties should weigh in on the legal analysis contained in today’s Notice of Proposed Rulemaking. In the absence of action by Congress to clarify the parameters, the FCC has to take a hard and detailed look at how best to handle these Retransmission Consent impasses and, most importantly, at the harms caused to consumers. So, I am pleased we try to look at issues, such as Early Termination Fees, that influence the ability of consumers to change providers—assuming an alternative provider is even available—to avoid blackouts. There are lots of good questions that are raised in this item. What authority does the Commission have under the “good faith” mandate of the Cable Act? Indeed, what does “good faith” mean in the dog- eat-dog world of big media? We inquire about the impact of stations that are not commonly owned, the LMAs and JSAs, that I have previously raised as problematic, and we ask whether it should be a per se violation if a party with one of those agreements is negotiating on another station’s behalf without being commonly owned. We raise the question of networks negotiating on behalf of the affiliates and how that impacts the negotiation. We have offered up questions on the notification requirements and if there is a way to better inform consumers about the possibility of a disruption. Early notification could help, but improperly done it might merely serve as “a further front” in the Retransmission wars. We have raised questions on the network non-duplication and syndicated exclusivity rules and how these syndex rules impact the negotiations. I am pleased that we also ask how the elimination of those rules would ultimately affect localism. It’s an important question. I look forward to the parties’ response to all of these questions. And I want especially to emphasize the input of all other interested stakeholders—and that surely means consumers and the organizations representing them. The Cable Act also requires us to consider the impact Retransmission Consent has on basic Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 48 service tier rates. So it is important that we examine in this proceeding how these disputes and consent agreements ultimately affect the cable bills of consumers. I also happen to think we should go a step beyond and explore ways to inform consumers just how much—in dollars and cents—they are paying every month to finance these Retransmission Consent agreements. A little ray of sunshine on what consumers have to pay might actually enhance the Retrans process quite considerably. My thanks to the Chairman for bringing this item to us and to the Bureau for all the hard work that went into it. Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 49 STATEMENT OF COMMISSIONER ROBERT M. MCDOWELL Re: Amendment of the Commission’s Rules Related to Retransmission Consent, MB Docket No. 10- 71 When new competitive developments begin to affect negotiations in an existing marketplace, it is not surprising if friction among players results. Change means that participants can no longer rely on the old “settled business expectations” to remain settled – and the communications marketplace of the early 21st Century is certainly nothing if not dynamic. It is against this backdrop that we launch this Notice of Proposed Rulemaking. Congress, through the Cable Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992, gave the Commission a limited role in overseeing some elements of otherwise private negotiations between TV broadcasters and multichannel video programming distributors (“MVPDs”) over the terms of MVPD carriage of local television signals. Now incorporated into the Communications Act, Section 325 provides us with guidance in determining whether, or if, any changes to our retransmission consent rules might be warranted. The statute explicitly directs us to act only to preserve “good faith” in the bargaining process, and does not require any particular outcome. In other words, regardless of any changes in the competitive landscape, the law does not mandate that broadcasters and MVPDs always reach a carriage deal – even though, in the vast majority of cases, agreements are reached in a quiet and timely manner. To the contrary, Section 325 states that television signals may not be carried without the “express” consent of the broadcaster. For this reason, I agree with the conclusion discussed in the Notice that the Commission lacks authority to mandate interim carriage. Similarly, the legal analysis in the Notice makes a strong case that Section 325 and the Administrative Dispute Resolution Act prevent the Commission from ordering parties in a retrans dispute into binding arbitration. The statute also plainly states that merely asking for more money does not constitute bad faith. That said, the Act does authorize the Commission to consider adjustments to our good faith rules if the facts support revisions, and I look forward to reviewing comments on the many concepts the Notice tees up under that rubric. Moreover, Section 325 does not affect our ability to consider the continuing need for regulations that long predate the statutory retrans scheme, such as the network nonduplication and syndicated exclusivity rules. In addition, there may be other separate and distinct regulations that have some bearing on retrans negotiations today, such as tier placement. I welcome the education on these questions that I expect many commenters will be eager to provide. Finally, I want to raise a cautionary flag for all participants in this marketplace, whether they comment in the rulemaking or not. I am somewhat concerned that the mere opening of this proceeding may disrupt – however unintentionally – the momentum behind ongoing negotiations for new or renewed retrans agreements this year. If I am able to convey only one message today on this topic, it’s this: No party should assume that the Commission will act in a particular way, or at a particular time, in this docket. So those of you who are working on retrans deals in 2011 and beyond should stay seated, and engaged, at the bargaining table, and reach a deal on your own. Don’t use the mere existence of this Notice as an excuse to stop negotiating and reaching deals. Please don’t expect the government to resolve any disputes for you. I thank the staffs of the Media Bureau and the Office of General Counsel for their work on the Notice. Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 50 STATEMENT OF COMMISSIONER MIGNON L. CLYBURN Re: Amendment of the Commission’s Rules Related to Retransmission Consent, MB Docket No. 10- 71 The combination of two words can stir passions. Flight and delayed. Redskins and Cowboys. Pop and Quiz. Net and Neutrality. Retransmission and consent. In the worlds of broadcasting and cable, the last two words can get people yelling just as much as the joining of government and shutdown. While retransmission consent disputes that result in disruptions are few and far between, when they do happen, people get angry. And with good reason. When consumers subscribe to and pay for a service, that service is expected: uninterrupted, reliable, and on demand. People have come to expect that delivered service, no matter what entity is providing the programming. And tempers rise when screens go dark. We can all relate to those levels of frustration. While many have been frustrated at one time or another about the inability to watch television because of a power outage or a quick-passing storm, imagine being unable to enjoy the service you have subscribed to for longer periods of time. I for one hope to never hear about another retransmission consent dispute, but I won’t hold my breath. The interruption that ensued following last October’s impasse between Fox and Cablevision reverberated not only throughout the Northeast corridor, but the august corridors inside the Rayburn Building, The Hart Building, The Capitol, and the FCC. People were angry, and who could fault them? When a TV screen goes dark, people blame not only the companies, but the government as well. During blackouts, we hear from a number of aggrieved individuals, who desperately want their favorite show to again grace their screen. But the law here is clear: the Commission holds limited authority via limited methods. However, I am pleased that we are proactively recognizing that further examination into the existing retransmission consent regime is needed and that further comment is essential. Through the NPRM we consider today, points of view are sought on various ways to utilize and reinforce the authority that we do have in weighing-in on retransmission consent disputes. In seeking input on a variety of revisions to the existing rules, we hope to give companies a clearer perspective on how to operate and negotiate in good faith, and what we expect of them in doing so. Refusing to negotiate, using delay tactics, and crying wolf via inflammatory notices are actions that should never take place, and I’m confident that the proposed language in this item will serve to improve the current guidelines. Our good faith framework, including the seven objective standards, is well thought-out and properly directed, and additions to it will only serve to bolster its impact and keep companies mindful of their tactics during negotiations. Through this item, we take worthwhile steps in this regard, seeking feedback on the effects of network veto power over retransmission consent agreements, clarifying what constitutes an unreasonable delay in coming to the negotiation table, and the value and purpose of the most favored nation designation. I truly feel that all of this will allow us to further shape our good faith requirements and assist both MVPDs and broadcasters in knowing what methods we find acceptable – or, more to the point, which ones we feel are unacceptable. Whenever we discuss retransmission consent, our good faith applications thereto, and actions toward improving negotiations between parties, I want us to do so with an eye toward preventing disruptions of any kind, be they two minutes or two weeks. As the item so eloquently states, “in light of the changing marketplace, our proposals in this NPRM are intended to update the good faith rules and Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 51 remedies in order to better utilize the good faith requirement as a consumer protection tool.” However, while the public is not being served when channels go dark due to monetary stand-offs, under current authority given to us by Congress we may not intervene outside of or further than the afore- mentioned good faith considerations. When it first applied retransmission consent to MVPDs in 1992, Congress stated that its intention was “to establish a marketplace for the disposition of the rights to retransmit broadcast signals”, and not to “dictate the outcome of the ensuing marketplace negotiations”. With this understanding in place, we know our boundaries, as they currently exist. I mention that language to not only affirm that I understand what we can and cannot do, but to also make clear that if change is to be made, and further action from the FCC during retransmission consent disputes is desired, then our statutory authority must be addressed not in this hearing room, but farther up Independence Avenue. If Congress chooses to overhaul the retransmission consent and related rules that we use to address retransmission consent battles, then we will react accordingly. Short of that, we will do the best, with what we have. The item seeks comment on a variety of considerations, and I urge all interested parties to seize this opportunity to better inform us. If companies and individuals have thoughts and counsel on where our authority begins and ends, what it does and does not do, and how it can be used, I look forward to hearing from you. Federal Communications Commission FCC 11-31 52 STATEMENT OF COMMISSIONER MEREDITH ATTWELL BAKER Re: Amendment of the Commission’s Rules Related to Retransmission Consent, MB Docket No. 10- 71 Over the last 20 years, local television broadcasters have been engaged in market-based negotiations with MVPDs over the right to retransmit local broadcast signals. I am pleased that these negotiations have been largely unencumbered by government micromanagement, and the results speak for themselves—the vast majority of retransmission consent negotiations are resolved privately, without government intervention, and without the loss of broadcast signals to MVPD subscribers. Congress recognized the effectiveness of the private marketplace when it gave the Commission an extremely limited role in monitoring the retransmission consent market. In the 1992 Cable Act, Congress directed the Commission to monitor retransmission consent negotiations between broadcasters and MVPDs in order “to establish a marketplace for the disposition of the rights to retransmit broadcast signals.” Several years later, Congress provided further guidance, directing the Commission to ensure that the parties in a retransmission consent negotiation were proceeding in good faith. Congress, however, has never deviated from its directive that the Commission avoid “dictat[ing] the outcome of . . . marketplace negotiations” for retransmission consent. Obviously the marketplace has changed significantly since the passage of the Cable Act. We have seen the number of programming networks increase exponentially, from an average of 281 in 2000 to an average of 565 in 2006. The means for viewing these channels have changed as well. When the Cable Act was passed, consumers had virtually no choice in video provider; today, most consumers have several choices for how they receive video programming. As the market has changed, we have seen the development of a generally understood market rate for cable channels such as TNT and ESPN, and I expect that eventually we will see market-based negotiations result in a generally understood market rate for ABC, CBS, Fox and NBC. Against this backdrop of a clear statutory directive and a rapidly evolving marketplace, we initiate this proceeding to consider revisions to our existing rules governing retransmission consent. I am pleased that this item recognizes our limited statutory authority in this area, and instead of pursuing avenues that exceed that authority, the NPRM focuses on what we can do: revisit what constitutes “bad faith” in retransmission consent negotiations to provide more regulatory certainty and facilitate private negotiations. In addition, I am pleased that as part of this review we are taking a fresh look at some old regulations on our books and inquiring as to whether those regulations remain necessary. In keeping with the President’s recent executive order, we should be working to remove outdated regulations that stifle job creation and make our economy less competitive. As we proceed with this rulemaking, I hope that we remain mindful that any steps we decide to take in this proceeding should be limited, should be focused on furtherance of the Congressional directive to facilitate marketplace negotiations, and should concentrate on the protection of consumers.