Federal Communications Commission FCC 21-3 Before the FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION WASHINGTON, D.C. 20554 In the Matter of Hispanic Information and Telecommunications Network, Inc. ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) File No. EB-IHD-19-00029568 NAL/Acct. No. 202132080006 FRN: 0006620348 NOTICE OF APPARENT LIABILITY FOR FORFEITURE Adopted: January 6, 2021 Released: January 7, 2021 By the Commission: Commissioners Rosenworcel and Starks dissenting and issuing separate statements. TABLE OF CONTENTS Heading Paragraph # I. INTRODUCTION 1 II. BACKGROUND 3 A. Legal Framework 5 1. EBS Minimum Educational Use Requirements 5 2. EBS Local Program Committee Requirement 10 B. Factual Background 14 III. DISCUSSION 18 A. The Network Did Not Demonstrate its Compliance with the Minimum Educational Use Requirement for EBS Licensees 18 B. The Network Failed to Maintain Local Program Committees 26 C. Rules in Effect at Time of Violation Govern Conduct in Question 31 D. Proposed Forfeiture 33 IV. ORDERING CLAUSES 38 I. INTRODUCTION 1. Under the Federal Communications Commission’s (FCC or Commission) antecedent rules, an Educational Broadband Service (EBS) licensee that leased its spectrum had to reserve a minimum of 5% of its spectrum capacity and provide 20 hours minimum of educational use per channel per week; 47 CFR § 27.1214(b)(1) (2019). a licensee was also required to establish a Local Program Committee in each community where it did not have a local presence. 47 CFR § 27.1201(a)(4) (2019). Today, the Commission affirms that it will hold EBS licensees accountable for fulfilling these public interest obligations that were an integral part of their authorizations. In this Notice of Apparent Liability for Forfeiture, we propose a forfeiture penalty of $14,013,000 against Hispanic Information and Telecommunications Network, Inc. (HITN or the Network) for its apparently willful violations of the Commission’s EBS rules. 2. While the Commission’s rules permitted EBS licensees to rely on the provision of broadband or video service in fulfilling the 20-hour requirement, See, e.g., 47 CFR § 27.1201(a)(3) (2019). based on our investigation, In July 2019, Commissioner Brendan Carr sent a letter to Hispanic Information and Telecommunications Network, Inc. requesting information regarding its compliance with these requirements for EBS licensees. Letter from Brendan Carr, Commissioner, Federal Communications Commission, to Michael Nieves, President and CEO, Hispanic Information and Telecommunications Network, Inc. (July 24, 2019) (on file in EB-IHD-19-00029568) (Carr Letter). The Enforcement Bureau subsequently issued a Letter of Inquiry to HITN, initiating an investigation into whether it violated the Commission’s rules governing EBS licensing requirements. Letter of Inquiry from Jeffrey J. Gee, Chief, Investigations and Hearings Division, FCC Enforcement Bureau to Michael Nieves, President and CEO, Hispanic Information and Telecommunications Network, Inc. (Aug. 6, 2019) (on file in EB-IHD-19-00029568) (LOI). we find that the Network apparently is unable to demonstrate that the broadband service it offered to educational institutions ultimately met the Commission’s threshold requirement to provide 20 hours per channel per week of educational use. Additionally, the Network apparently failed to comply with the Commission’s long-standing rule requiring the maintenance of a Local Program Committee in each of the non-local communities it serves. In short, the Network appears to have taken on EBS licenses and enjoyed the flexibility afforded by the Commission to lease out most of the licensed spectrum for non-educational purposes—but did not act with the same diligence concerning its educational obligations. Instead, the Network reaped financial benefits from the leasing of its EBS licenses while failing to meet its requirements under the Commission’s rules for holding these licenses. According to the Network, as of 2017 the current value of its combined assets was $141,399,745. Response to Letter of Inquiry, from Jonathan Guerra, General Counsel, Hispanic Information Telecommunications Network, Inc., to Jeffrey J. Gee, Chief, Investigations and Hearings Division, Enforcement Bureau, FCC, at 38 (Oct. 4, 2019) (on file in EB-19-00029568) (HITN Response). Also, the Network reports that approximately $125 million of its assets is directly attributable to EBS revenue. Id. II. BACKGROUND 3. In 1963, the Commission established the Instructional Television Fixed Service (ITFS), the precursor to EBS, to enhance the educational experiences and opportunities for millions of America’s students. See Amendment of Parts 2 and 4 of the Commission Rules and Regulations to Establish a New Class of Educational Television Service for the Transmission of Instructional and Cultural Material to Multiple Receiving Locations on Channels in the 1990-2110 MC/S or 2500-2690 MC/S Frequency Band et al., Report and Order, 39 F.C.C. 846, 852-53, para. 25 (1963) (Educational TV Order), recon. denied, 39 F.C.C. 873 (1964). In creating the ITFS, the Commission envisioned the 2500-2690 MHz band would be used for the transmission of “visual and accompanying aural instructional material to accredited public and private schools, colleges and universities for the formal education of students.” Educational TV Order, 39 F.C.C. at 852-53, para. 25. In 2004, the Commission reorganized the ITFS as the EBS and updated the rules to allow for greater technical flexibility in the use of this spectrum—while retaining specific educational obligations. Amendment of Parts 1, 21, 73, 74 and 101 of the Commission’s Rules to Facilitate the Provision of Fixed and Mobile Broadband Access, Educational and Other Advanced Services in the 2150-2162 and 2500-2690 MHz Bands et al., WT Docket No. 03-66, Report and Order and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 19 FCC Rcd 14165 (2004) (2004 EBS Order). The primary purpose of the service remained to “further the educational mission of accredited public and private schools, colleges and universities providing a formal educational and cultural development to enrolled students” through video, data, or voice transmissions. 47 CFR § 27.1203(b) (2019). 4. The FCC encumbered EBS licenses with unique eligibility and other regulatory requirements to ensure that this spectrum would be used to achieve those educational purposes. To ensure the continuity of the ITFS’s educational purpose, the Commission imposed the existing ITFS requirements upon EBS licensees, including the establishment of a Local Program Committee in each community where the licensee does not have a local presence (the Local Program Committee requirement), See 2004 EBS Order, 19 FCC Rcd at 14222, 14234, paras. 152, 181; see also 47 CFR § 27.1201(a)(4) (2019); Amendment of Part 74 of the Commission’s Rules and Regulations in Regard to the Instructional Television Fixed Service, MM Docket No. 83-523, Second Report and Order, 101 F.C.C.2d 49, 62, paras. 28-29 (1985) (1985 ITFS Report and Order). and the requirement that a licensee entering into any spectrum lease must reserve a minimum of 5% of its spectrum capacity and provide 20 hours minimum of educational use per channel per week (the 20-hour requirement). See 2004 EBS Order, 19 FCC Rcd at 14234, para. 181; see also 47 CFR § 27.1214(b)(1) (2019). Upon obtaining their licenses, EBS licensees took on the responsibility to ensure that the EBS educational mission would be faithfully administered and delivered to the appropriate educational institutions and their students. A. Legal Framework 1. EBS Minimum Educational Use Requirements 5. For over 50 years, from 1963 See Educational TV Order, 39 F.C.C. at 852-53, para. 25. until repeal of the requirement effective April 27, 2020, See Transforming the 2.5 GHz Band, 84 Fed. Reg. 57343 (Oct. 25, 2019) (2.5 GHz Fed. Reg. Notice); see also Transforming the 2.5 GHz Band, WT Docket No. 18-120, Report and Order, 34 FCC Rcd 5446, 5489-90, paras. 117, 124 (2019) (2019 EBS Order). the Commission’s rules imposed an educational use requirement on all EBS licensees (or their ITFS predecessors). When the Commission established ITFS in the 2500-2690 MHz band, See generally Educational TV Order. it envisioned that the band would be used for transmission of instructional material to accredited public and private schools, colleges, and universities for the formal education of students. See Amendment of Parts 2, 21, 74 and 94 of the Commission’s Rules and Regulations in Regard to Frequency Allocation to the Instructional Television Fixed Service, the Multipoint Distribution Service, and the Private Operational Fixed Microwave Service et al., GN Docket No. 80-112, Report and Order, 94 F.C.C.2d 1203, 1208, para. 9 (1983) (1983 R&O) (citing Educational TV Order, 39 F.C.C. at 853, para. 25). The Commission also permitted ITFS licensees to use the channels to transmit cultural and entertainment material to educational institutions, and to transmit instructional material to non-educational institutions such as hospitals, nursing homes, training centers, clinics, rehabilitation centers, commercial and industrial establishments, and professional groups. See id. ITFS licensees were also allowed to use their systems to perform related services directly concerned with formal or informal instruction and training, and to carry administrative traffic when not being used for educational purposes. See id. 6. The Commission expanded the kinds of services that would qualify as “educational use” over the years. For example, in light of the “increasing use of the Internet for educational purposes,” the Commission permitted ITFS/EBS licensees of all types to take advantage of changes in technology, including the introduction of broadband. 2004 EBS Order, 19 FCC Rcd at 14222, para. 151. The Commission similarly no longer limited permitted services to “in-classroom instruction.” Amendment of Parts 1, 21, 73, 74 and 101 of the Commission’s Rules to Facilitate the Provision of Fixed and Mobile Broadband Access, Educational and Other Advanced Services in the 2150-2162 and 2500-2690 MHz Bands, WT Docket No. 03-66, Order on Reconsideration and Fifth Memorandum Opinion and Order and Third Memorandum Opinion and Order and Second Report and Order, 21 FCC Rcd 5606, 5718, para. 273 (2006) (2006 EBS Order); see also 47 CFR § 27.1203(c) (2019); Amendment of Parts 21 and 74 to Enable Multipoint Distribution Service and Instructional Television Fixed Service Licensees to Engage in Fixed Two-Way Transmissions, MM Docket No. 97-217, Report and Order, 13 FCC Rcd 19112, 19154-55, para. 81 (1998) (Two-Way Order). In expanding permitted use, however, the Commission retained its “content restrictions,” and emphasized that the purpose of this spectrum assignment would be to “maintain the traditional educational purposes” of the original ITFS service. 2004 EBS Order, 19 FCC Rcd at 14222, 14234, paras. 152, 181; accord Two-Way Order, 13 FCC Rcd at 19159-60, paras. 89-90. Thus, the Commission continued to require channels to be used to “further the educational mission of accredited schools offering formal educational courses to enrolled students.” 47 CFR § 27.1203(b) (2019); see also Two-Way Order, 13 FCC Rcd at 19154, para. 81 & n.189 (noting that the transmissions also could be in furtherance of the educational mission of “other eligible institution[s]”). The Commission repeatedly reaffirmed the applicability of the educational use requirement as a means of “safeguarding the primary educational purpose” of the spectrum. Two-Way Order, 13 FCC Rcd at 19159-60, paras. 89-90; accord 2006 EBS Order, 21 FCC Rcd at 5701, para. 227; 2004 EBS Order, 19 FCC Rcd at 14222, 14234, paras. 152, 181. 7. In the 2000s, a series of Commission Orders rebranded ITFS to EBS and changed certain technical rules to better reflect the likely use of the band going forward. Amendment of Parts 1, 21, 73, 74 and 101 of the Commission’s Rules to Facilitate the Provision of Fixed and Mobile Broadband Access, Educational and Other Advanced Services in the 2150-2162 and 2500-2690 MHz Bands et al., WT Docket No. 03-66, Third Order on Reconsideration and Sixth Memorandum Opinion and Order and Fourth Memorandum Opinion and Order and Second Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking and Declaratory Ruling, 23 FCC Rcd 5992, 5996 (2008) (2008 EBS Order). See 2004 EBS Order, 19 FCC Rcd at 14169, para. 6; 2006 EBS Order, 21 FCC Rcd at 5612, para. 4. Significant changes were made to the EBS band plan in 2004, in part because the existing band plan had been designed for broadcast services as opposed to broadband. See 2004 EBS Order, 19 FCC Rcd at 14177, 14182-84, paras. 22, 36-39. The Commission explicitly declined to relax the educational requirements or eligibility restrictions then in place, however, citing the public interest in the educational purpose of the band. See id. at 14223, para. 152; see also id. at 14234, para. 181. In 2006, the Commission made further changes to the band plan transition rules and mechanisms but declined to make changes to any educational requirements. See 2006 EBS Order, 21 FCC Rcd at 5699-701, paras. 223-28 (rejecting a proposal to increase the minimum educational use requirements and to provide guidance on meeting those requirements). The Commission again revisited certain issues regarding the band plan transition in 2008, and made a number of other small changes to the rules, but did not amend the educational use requirements. See 2008 EBS Order, 23 FCC Rcd at 6048-50, paras. 146-49. 8. Despite these modifications and revisions to this band, the Commission’s rules included a specific mandate for EBS licensees leasing their excess capacity and using digital transmissions to “provide at least 20 hours per licensed channel per week of EBS educational usage.” 47 CFR § 27.1214(b)(1) (2019). This 20-hour requirement is “appl[ied] spectrally over the licensee’s whole actual service area.” Id. Although the mandate applied “before leasing excess capacity,” i.e., as a prerequisite to any such lease, it extended throughout the lease term as well. See, e.g., id. § 27.1214(b)(2) (2019); 2019 EBS Order, 34 FCC Rcd at 5448, para. 7; Amendment of Parts 1, 21, 73, 74 and 101 of the Commission’s Rules to Facilitate the Provision of Fixed and Mobile Broadband Access, Educational and Other Advanced Services in the 2150-2162 and 2500-2690 MHz Bands et al., WT Docket No. 03-66, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 33 FCC Rcd 4687, 4689, para. 4 (2018); 2004 EBS Order, 19 FCC Rcd at 14234, para. 181. 9. The Commission has long been loath to substitute its judgment for that of educational authorities concerning what content or use is regarded as educational, where such use otherwise complies with Commission requirements. Two-Way Order, 13 FCC Rcd at 19154, para. 81 n.188; see also 1985 ITFS Report and Order, 101 F.C.C.2d at 80, para. 75. The Commission stated that it would rely on the “good-faith efforts” of licensees to ensure compliance with the educational use requirements. Two-Way Order, 13 FCC Rcd at 19162, para. 94; see also 2006 EBS Order, 21 FCC Rcd at 5701, para. 227. The Commission cautioned, however, that licensees may bear the burden of proving compliance with the educational use requirements in audits and other situations. See Two-Way Order, 13 FCC Rcd at 19154, 19162, paras. 81 n.188, 94. In those situations, “licensees must be ready and able to describe and document how they complied with [the educational-use] requirements.” Id. at 19162, para. 94 (emphasis added). The Commission’s rules also recognized that the services required of EBS licensees should be provided “in a manner and in a setting conducive to educational usage.” 47 CFR § 27.1201(a)(3) (2019). 2. EBS Local Program Committee Requirement 10. As part of ensuring that the educational purpose of the ITFS/EBS band was carried out, the Commission limited eligibility for ITFS licenses to entities meeting certain qualifications. The Educational TV Order limited eligibility to “institutional or governmental organization[s] engaged in the formal education of enrolled students or to a nonprofit organization formed for the purpose of providing instructional television material to such institutional or governmental organizations.” See Educational TV Order, 39 F.C.C. at 864; see also id. at 853-54, paras. 27-29. The Commission declined to expand the categories of entities eligible to obtain licenses to include either “commercial organizations such as private vocational schools, professional associations, lang[ua]ge schools, dancing academies, etc.,” or municipal services such as training police officers or public health workers, in order to ensure adequate spectrum availability to meet educational demands. See id. at 854, para. 28. The strong focus on direct education of students was thus a cornerstone of the Commission’s eligibility requirements from the beginning of the ITFS/EBS service. 11. In 1985, the Commission reexamined the eligibility requirements for the band. See 1985 ITFS Report and Order, 101 F.C.C.2d at 62, paras. 28-29. At the time, many commenters asked the Commission to limit eligibility for ITFS licenses to local applicants. Id. at 54, para. 8. The Commission recognized that “[l]ocally based educational entities have been convincingly demonstrated by the comment[e]rs to be the best authorities for evaluating their educational needs and the needs of others they propose to serve in their communities, for designing courses to suit those needs, and for scheduling courses during the school year.” Id. at 56, para. 16. But because the Commission believed that national organizations could “have a significant role to play in the development and delivery of ITFS service,” the Commission did not ban non-local applicants. Id. at para. 17. Instead, recognizing the importance of ensuring adequate educational use of the service, the Commission established special requirements for non-local applicants, including a requirement to provide letters from local accredited educational institutions demonstrating that the applicant’s programming would be incorporated into the institution’s curriculum Id. at 60-62, paras. 25-27. and a requirement to establish a Local Program Committee. Id. at 62, para. 28. 12. The Commission established the Local Program Committee requirement in the 1985 ITFS Report and Order as part of an effort to adequately support and preserve the educational nature of the ITFS band. See id. at 62, paras. 28-29. The rule required that “[n]onlocal applicants, in addition to submitting letters from proposed receive sites, must demonstrate the establishment of a local program committee in each community where they apply.” See id. at 110; 47 CFR § 74.932(a)(5) (1985); 47 CFR § 27.1201(a)(4) (2019). Each receive site letter was required to include confirmation that a member of the institution’s staff would serve on the Local Program Committee and show that the representative would aid in the selection, scheduling, and production of the programming received over the system. See 1985 ITFS Report and Order, 101 F.C.C.2d at 62, para. 29. The Commission established this requirement to ensure that, when a licensee was not an accredited local educational institution, the licensee’s spectrum nonetheless was used for educational purposes appropriate to the local community. See id. at 62, para. 28. 13. The Local Program Committee requirement remained in effect even while other alterations were made to reflect the changed regulatory circumstances of the band. In 2004, the Commission reorganized the original Part 74 rules into Part 27, but made no modifications to the rule text. See 2004 EBS Order, 19 FCC Rcd at 14236, para. 186. When the Commission modified several rules relating to EBS educational requirements in 2008, including certain other requirements for non-local licensees, it did not alter the Local Program Committee requirement. See 2008 EBS Order, 23 FCC Rcd at 6048-50, paras. 146-49. Instead, the Commission modified section 27.1201(a)(3) of the rules to better accommodate both technological and regulatory developments. Id. While the expansion of services available through EBS licenses and spectrum has grown to include broadband and data services, EBS licensees remained obligated to use their channels to “further the educational mission of accredited schools offering formal educational courses to enrolled students.” 47 CFR § 27.1203(b) (2019); see also id. § 27.1201(a)(3) (stating that where broadband or data services are proposed, the receive-site letter “should indicate that the data services will be used in furtherance of the institution’s educational mission and will be provided to enrolled students, faculty and staff in a manner and in a setting conducive to educational usage”). EBS licensees were thus obligated to ensure they were meeting their requirement to deliver the content and educational use that was relevant to the local communities they serve. B. Factual Background 14. Hispanic Information and Telecommunications Network, Inc. is a private New York not-for-profit corporation formed in 1981. HITN Response at 11. Much of the Network’s efforts are dedicated to the provision of EBS spectrum to accredited institutions and government entities for educational use. Id. at 17. Hispanic Information and Telecommunications Network, Inc. has numerous affiliates. Hispanic Information and Telecommunications Network, Inc. is the sole member and manager of four Delaware limited liability companies: HITN-Puerto Rico, LLC, CW Wireless Investment, LLC, HITN Education, LLC, and HITN Spectrum, LLC. Id. at 11. HITN Spectrum, LLC is the sole member and manager of nine Delaware limited liability companies: HITN-Charlottesville, LLC, HITN-Dallas Fort Worth, LLC, HITN-Grand Rapids, LLC, HITN-Maui, LLC, HITN-Mobile, LLC, HITN-New York, NY, LLC, HITN-Stockton LLC, HITN-Tom’s River, LLC, and HITN-Washington, LLC. Id. Further, HITN serves as the sole stockholder of HITN Holdings Corp, a Delaware corporation. Id. at 12. Finally, HITN revealed five entities that it believes “may have been formed as affiliates” of HITN: Hispanic Information & Television, Inc., Puerto Rico Wireless Broadband, LLC, HITN of America, Inc., HITN Spectrum 1, LLC, HITN-SHKNA, LLC. Id. at 12. Hispanic Information and Telecommunications Network, Inc., in conjunction with its affiliates (collectively HITN or the Network), holds 91 EBS licenses. Id. at 23-24. This number is taken from the Network’s own recounting of its licenses, and is corroborated by the Network’s spectrum leasing documentation, although the Network alleges elsewhere that it only maintains 90 EBS licenses. Compare id. at 23-24, 7845-7845 with id. at 2. Hispanic Information and Telecommunications Network, Inc. also maintains four Fixed Satellite licenses and three Microwave Industrial licenses in its own name. Id. at 15-16. The Network was unable to provide copies of all the documentation required under 27.1201(a)(3) of the Commission’s rules for all of its receive sites. See id. at 17-18. The Network maintains that “The rule was implemented as a gating rule requiring new applicants to establish their eligibility before a license would be issued . . . . It is HITN’s good faith belief that that such [letters from educational institutions] were supplied with each of those applications as required by the Commission’s rules.” Id. at 18. The Network has entered into spectrum leasing agreements with 88 of its licenses. Id. at 25-26. The vast majority of the spectrum leasing agreements are with Clearwire Spectrum Holdings, Inc. and its subsidiaries and affiliates. Forty-four of the 88 license spectrum leases are directly with Clearwire Spectrum Holdings III LLC, 17 of the leases are with Clearwire Spectrum Holdings II LLC, 14 of the leases are with Clearwire Spectrum Holdings, LLC, and two of the leases are with Clearwire Hawaii Partners Spectrum, LLC (collectively, Clearwire). Id. at 7845-7848. The remaining 11 leases are either with Puerto Rico Telephone Company, Inc. (nine licenses) or with Fixed Wireless Holdings, LLC (two licenses). Id. Clearwire and Fixed Wireless Holdings, LLC are owned by Sprint Corporation. See Sprint Corp., Annual Report (Form 10K) at Exh. 21 (May 29, 2019), https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/101830/000010183019000022/sprintcorp10-kexhibit21201.htm (last visited Oct. 2, 2020). Fixed Wireless Holdings, LLC is a subsidiary of Clearwire’s parent, Clearwire Corporation, also owned by Sprint. See id. T-Mobile has since acquired Sprint in a merger that was approved by the Commission in 2019.  See Applications of T-Mobile US, Inc., and Sprint Corporation, et al., for Consent to Transfer Control of Licenses and Authorizations, Memorandum Opinion and Order, Declaratory Ruling, and Order of Proposed Modification, 34 FCC Rcd 10578 (2019). According to the Network, as of 2017 the current, total value of its assets was approximately $141,399,745 and its reported revenue was $3,027,591. HITN Response at 8315. While Hispanic Information and Telecommunications Network, Inc. is the “largest holder of EBS spectrum in the United States,” neither its revenue nor expenses is exclusively connected to those licenses. Id. at 8316. The Network also manages a television network serving more than 44 million American households, and manages the HITN GO app that distributes content on-demand to users’ devices. Id. at 69. The Network uses EBS-generated funding to improve its Spanish language cable channel and web applications. It is “proud and unapologetic for utilizing EBS generated funding in this manner.” HITN Response at 9-10. Each lease agreement includes a provision that the lessee reserves a minimum channel capacity for educational use. Id. at 34-35. 15. While its mission is ostensibly educational in nature, the Network does not claim to provide educational programming to its educational institution receive sites. Rather, the Network asserts that it “has endeavored to order and place broadband equipment” and service to those receive sites. Id. at 30; see also id. at 17. The Network “has supplied its substantial service statements from 2011” to support the claim that broadband service and equipment remains available to its receive sites presently. Id. at 30. The Network also provided an incomplete spreadsheet from 2011 listing its EBS receive sites and the devices distributed thereto, along with supplemental, piecemeal 2010 and 2011 correspondence from institutional receive sites “confirming their commitment to use HITN’s educational usage.” Id. at 1457-1691. The Network’s receive sites include secondary schools, colleges, universities, and school districts. Specifically, the Network states that it “enable[s] local schools to make [devices and broadband services] available to students, faculty, and staff.” Id. at 22. The Network does claim that the educational institution receive sites use the Network’s broadband data service “in the furtherance of such receiving institution’s educational mission,” but concedes that the use of the Network’s services are completely end user-driven. Id. Because the anticipated use is ultimately “end-user driven, the Network does not have a good understanding of the content being accessed.” Id. 16. The Network’s lease agreements are silent regarding the 20-hour requirement. 47 CFR § 27.1214(b)(1) (2019). The Network states that it provides “lease related equipment and Sprint service accounts to accredited local schools” that, in turn, “distribute such devices to their enrolled students.” HITN Response at 35 (The Network states that its leases only concern the provision of equipment, and that it in no way “engage[s] in the monitoring of the school’s educational usage.”). The Network notes that it is “unable to chronical [sic.] the dates on which operations started and halted for various reasons” at its receive sites, and admits that “difficulty still arises from time to time with respect to the continuance of service.” Id. at 29, 30. The Network explains that much of its EBS documentation was destroyed when Hurricane Sandy flooded its Brooklyn, New York headquarters; the rest, the Network states, was destroyed through routine document reduction between 2016 and 2018. See id. at 2-3. Nonetheless, even if the Network had been able to produce adequate documentation, the Network admits that it is incapable of confirming whether receive sites take advantage of the service it provides because all purported usage of their EBS offerings are completely end-user driven. Id. at 326 (Denis Tobar, the Legal and Broadband Coordinator of HITN stating in an April 3, 2017 email to Leah Carleton, the School Counselor for the MacArthur Elementary receive site for WLX806: “Once you guys get the devices, they’re a blank slate” and “We don’t monitor how the devices are used, we aren’t even able to if we wanted to.”). 17. The Network, by its own admission, also failed to maintain any Local Program Committees. Id. at 32. The Network states that it must have initially created Local Program Committees for each of its original EBS licenses since those licenses were approved, but lacks any affirmative documentation to verify the initial existence of Local Program Committees. See id. at 31-32. Nonetheless, the Network argues that regulatory changes vacated the legal requirement to maintain Local Program Committees, which is why it refuses to presently maintain them. Id. III. DISCUSSION A. The Network Did Not Demonstrate its Compliance with the Minimum Educational Use Requirement for EBS Licensees 18. Our LOI requested information regarding the status of the Network’s EBS licenses since 2009. See generally LOI. Nonetheless, the statute of limitations for this action is one year, The applicable statute of limitations for these violations is one year. See 47 U.S.C. § 503(b)(6). and accordingly we focus our review on the Network’s EBS license compliance for the period from December 9, 2019 until April 27, 2020 when the rules were eliminated. Although the educational use requirements of section 27.1214(b)(1) of the Commission’s rules were eliminated effective April 27, 2020, HITN and the Enforcement Bureau entered into a tolling agreement regarding the Enforcement Bureau’s investigation into HITN’s EBS practices. See Tolling Agreement Executed between Hispanic Information and Telecommunications Network, Inc. and Federal Communications Commission (executed Oct. 26, 2020) (on file in EB-IHD-19-00029568) (Tolling Agreement).  The Tolling Agreement extended the relevant statute of limitations period for each potential violation for 30 calendar days.  Thus, this Notice of Apparent Liability addresses apparent violations that occurred between December 9, 2019, and April 27, 2020. The Network’s violations, however, appear to extend back several years prior to this review period. During this period, the Commission’s EBS rules gave licensees the flexibility to enter into a spectrum leasing arrangement to transmit material other than educational programming if the licensee: (1) reserved a minimum of 5% of the capacity of its channels for educational uses consistent with section 27.1203(b) and (c) of the Commission’s rules, 47 CFR § 27.1203(b)-(c) (2019). and (2) provided at least 20 hours per licensed channel per week of EBS educational use. Id. § 27.1214(b)(1) (2019). 19. Based on our review of the record, the terms of the Network’s lease agreements, and the information provided by the Network in this investigation, the Network failed to provide sufficient documentation and information describing how it complied with and met the 20-hour requirement for leased spectrum. Id. The Network claims that it fulfilled its 20-hour requirement by providing equipment, such as portable hotspots and routers, and access to data services over the Sprint network to the receive sites located in its licensed areas. HITN Response at 35. The Network further asserts that it fulfilled the 20-hour requirement because the schools actually used the broadband service for a variety of educational purposes. Id. Through its lease agreements with Sprint and its affiliates, the Network “provides lease related equipment and Sprint service accounts to accredited local schools” that distribute those devices and service “in a setting conducive to usage that furthers such school’s educational mission.” Id. Thus, the Network is not purchasing or providing anything that is definitively related to education. Rather, it facilitates the purchase of hardware that it supplies to the educational institutions with insufficient follow-up to either ensure that the equipment is used in furtherance of the site’s educational mission or determine whether any educational value is derived from the provided hardware. 20. The Network’s distribution of hardware only guarantees that the receive sites have equipment capable of receiving service.  It does not guarantee the use of that hardware by the educational institutions complies with the Commission’s 20-hour requirement for EBS licensees that lease out their spectrum. Under HITN’s plan, the access to broadband or data services did not occur unless and until an accredited institution, its enrolled students, faculty or staff took actions to successfully connect to and use the Internet using the Sprint-provided connection devices (e.g., a portable hotspot or router). Under the Commission’s rules, however, it is an educational institution’s actual use of data services, not its mere ability to use them that matters when determining whether an EBS licensee that leases its excess spectrum has satisfied the Commission’s 20-hour requirement. 21. The Network’s apparent failure to demonstrate compliance with the Commission’s 20-hour requirement is clear. The Network, by its own admission, “does not engage in monitoring of the schools educational usage.” Id. Indeed, the Network only claims to communicate “periodically . . . to see if they are having problems” or require updated equipment. Id. True to form, the only records of receive site communications beyond 2011 submitted by the Network concern equipment order requests and receipts. See id. at 200-382. The Network provided records of equipment orders for 15 of its licenses from 2016, 28 of its licenses from 2016, 21 of its licenses from 2017, and one of its licensees from 2018. These records consisted of programmatic equipment order slips from these years detailing the model numbers of equipment to be ordered, shipping information, recipient points of contract, and purchase records numbers. Only once did a receive site inquire whether there was a usage requirement for the ordered devices; the Network replied that there was no such educational use requirement or reporting requirement. Id. at 326 (Denis Tobar of HITN stating “We don’t monitor how the devices are used, we aren’t able to even if we wanted to. . . Once you guys get the devices, they’re a blank slate. . . By distributing these devices to schools we’re effectively satisfying our ‘use for educational purposes’ needs.”). None of the Network’s scant correspondence offers enough detail or documentation to determine whether its receive sites actually use their services or equipment enough to satisfy the 20-hour requirement for any of its 88 licenses subject to a lease agreement. While the record indicates that the Network verified many of its receive sites’ substantial service offerings in 2011, the Network last verified educational use in that year. Id. at 19, 22. The Network incorrectly assumed that “distributing these devices to schools” was sufficient for “effectively satisfying our ‘use for educational purpose needs.’” Id. at 326. The Network’s laissez-faire attitude towards complying with the Commission’s 20-hour requirement has resulted in apparent failures to meet the rule’s benchmark or, more fundamentally, to address the educational needs of the affected students and faculty. 22. Neither the Network’s national television and digital content offerings, nor its individual educational broadcast events satisfy the Network’s license-specific obligation for educational use. While the Network may be “proud and unapologetic” for using its “EBS generated funding” to develop, deploy, and improve its cable television offerings and “web based content and apps,” the Network admittedly “does not track to what degree local educational institutions receive and use the Network’s programming.” Id. at 9-10. Even though the Network describes individual educational simulcasts that were broadcasted nationally or regionally, the Network never indicated which receive sites engaged with the broadcasts, or whether those sites’ use met or exceeded 20 hours during the week of the event. See id. at 6-10, 108. The Network has failed to show that its equipment, its television and content offerings, or its broadcasting events were actually used by its receive sites to further their educational missions. This failure further highlights the Network’s shortcomings in meeting the Commission’s 20-hour requirement at any of the educational institutions located within its 88 leased EBS license areas. 23. The Commission relies on the “good faith efforts” of licensees to comply with its educational use requirements. Two-Way Order, 13 FCC Rcd at 19162, para.94; see also 2006 EBS Order, 21 FCC Rcd at 5701, para.227. But licensees bear the burden of proving compliance with the educational use—and “must be ready and able to describe and document how they complied with [the educational-use] requirements.” Two-Way Order, 13 FCC Rcd at 19162, para. 94 (emphasis added). Without evidence or documentation of any use by the institutions in its licensed areas, the Network was derelict in fulfilling its responsibility to comply with the Commission’s 20-hour requirement. Tthe Network has failed to demonstrate that the schools and other institutions actually used the Sprint-provided equipment to access the Internet or further their educational missions. This further highlights the Network’s failure to meet the Commission’s 20-hour requirement at any of the educational institutions located within its 88 leased EBS license areas. 24. The Commission’s reluctance to substitute its judgment for that of educational authorities concerning what content or use is regarded as educational does not excuse the Network’s conduct here because the Network has not pointed us to any educational content in this case nor has the Network otherwise established that the content or use of the relevant EBS licenses satisfy the Commission’s rules. In fact, the Network’s response indicates that the Network has no idea how much any of the educational institutions in its licensed areas are using its services. In other words, the Network can neither describe nor document actual compliance with the educational-use requirement—and the Network’s failure in this regard appears to confirm its failure to engage in good-faith efforts to ensure compliance with the 20-hour requirement. There may be a case where a question arises about whether particular content does or does not qualify as sufficiently educational in nature, but this does not appear to be one of those cases. 25. The Commission’s rules contemplated that broadband and data services would be used to further the receive site’s educational mission and would be provided to enrolled students, faculty, and staff in a manner and in a setting conducive to educational use. 47 CFR § 27.1201(a)(3) (2019). The Network’s mere distribution of hardware to its educational institution receive sites failed to meet this requirement. It was incumbent upon the Network, as the EBS licensee, to ensure that the hardware was being put towards an educational use that was equivalent to 20 hours of educational programming per channel per week. The Network, however, conducted sporadic and minimal follow-up with its receive sites only when it sought new hardware, or when it reported hardware failures. No such correspondence confirms, or even sought to confirm, educational use. We find that the Network has failed to demonstrate that it provided 20 hours per licensed channel, per week of EBS educational usage, and was therefore in apparent violation of former section 27.1214(b)(1) of the Commission’s rules. Id. § 27.1214(b)(1) (2019). B. The Network Failed to Maintain Local Program Committees 26. Beginning 25 years ago, the Commission’s rules required non-local ITFS applicants to establish a Local Program Committee in each community they proposed to serve. 1985 ITFS Report and Order, 101 F.C.C.2d at 62, para. 28. While the Commission created no “detailed regulatory requirements” concerning the composition of the committees, this did not permit them to dissolve. Id. at para. 29. Instead, the Commission made clear from the beginning that these committees must persist, noting that “[e]ach receive site, however, should have some representation so that its particular programming and scheduling needs will be considered.” Id. Since its adoption in section 74.932(a)(5) note 3, and until recently as section 27.1201(a)(4), the language of the rule required the appointment of a member of the receive site’s staff who “will serve” on the Local Program Committee and “will aid in the selection, scheduling and production of the programming.” 47 CFR § 27.1201(a)(4) (2019); 47 CFR § 74.932(a)(5), note 3 (1985). The Commission relied upon this statement in the future tense, indicating an ongoing and continuing state of affairs, in approving these licenses. Moreover, the rule’s reference to “scheduling” similarly indicates that the Commission intended for the Local Program Committee to provide ongoing assistance throughout the license term. 27. The Network admits that while it did establish Local Program Committees when it applied for each of its receive sites, it “quickly became apparent that that such committees would be useless for entities engaged in the provision of broadband services” due to the “present wording of the rule” in 2019. HITN Response at 31-32. Throughout the years, there have been several modifications to the Commission’s EBS rules including the transition from ITFS to EBS and the addition of broadband services. See generally 2004 EBS Order. Until recently, however, the Commission did not change or eliminate the requirement for Local Program Committees. See 2019 EBS Order, 34 FCC Rcd at 5456, para. 25. Although modifications to the EBS rules in 2008 included adjustments to other requirements for non-local licensees, the Local Program Committee requirement remained intact. See 2008 EBS Order, 23 FCC Rcd at 6048-50, paras. 146-49. The Local Program Committee requirement cannot be “willed away” by the Network or any other licensee because of a self-serving belief that the technological changes in the EBS service obviated an explicit requirement in the Commission’s rules. The responsibility for determining the elimination or modification of a Commission rule lies with the Commission, not a licensee. the Network’s creation of Local Program Committees as part of its original applications did not absolve the Network from its continuing obligation to maintain and convene such committees. 28. The Network’s apparent failure to comply with the Commission’s requirement for Local Program Committees means that the local communities that the Network was supposed to serve via its 91 licenses lacked the mechanism for local input and feedback envisioned by the Commission’s rules. Indeed, were it the case that the Network had maintained Local Program Committees, it is possible that the Network would have also been more careful about its responsibility to confirm that the programming substitute was actually provided to the educational and public institutions, instead of simply being offered without any follow-up. 29. While the use of the spectrum changed from ITFS to EBS, from video to broadband, and analog to digital, the Commission’s Local Program Committee requirement remained constant. Thus, the Network’s failure to maintain Local Program Committees constituted an apparent violation of former section 27.1201(a)(4) of the Commission’s rules. 47 CFR § 27.1201(a)(4) (2019). 30. Finally, the Network’s creation of Local Program Committees as part of its original applications did not absolve the Network from its continuing obligation to maintain and convene such committees. The purpose of the Local Program Committees was to ensure that each educational institution being served would have local representation so that its particular programming and scheduling needs would be considered. The educational content for a school in New York City, for example, may be different than what is useful to a school in Helena, Montana. As technology evolved, the input by members of the local community could have served as a valuable resource to ensure that the educational institution and overall community received services that reflected the needs of the community. At a minimum, Local Program Committees could have informed the Network of the continued availability and quantity of services provided under the licenses—services which, as noted above, the Network cannot substantiate were ever provided during the relevant investigation period. Both the plain language of the rule and the policy justifications underlying adoption of the rule compelled the Network to maintain a connection with its non-local educational institutions throughout the terms of its licenses. C. Rules in Effect at Time of Violation Govern Conduct in Question 31. Commission precedent holds that the rules in effect at the time of an apparent violation govern the conduct in question, even if the rules are later revised. See, e.g., Alarm Devices, Mfg. Co., Order to Show Cause, 49 F.C.C.2d 143, 145, para. 8 (1974); 1993 Annual Access Tariff Filings Phase I et al., CC Docket No. 93-193, Order Terminating Investigation, 20 FCC Rcd 7672, 7693, para. 49 (2005) (1993 Access Tariff Order). The Commission’s rules establish agency policy until such time as they are rescinded or amended in a notice-and-comment rulemaking. 1993 Access Tariff Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 7693, para. 49; see also Adams Telecom, Inc. v. FCC, 38 F.3d 576, 582 (D.C. Cir. 1994) (quoting Reuters Ltd. v. FCC, 781 F.2d 946, 950 (D.C. Cir. 1986) (“[I]t is elementary that an agency must adhere to its own rules and regulations.”)). The agency undertook a significant restructuring of the EBS band in 2019, including a new band plan, updated performance requirements, and a new geographic area licensing system for future licensees. See 2019 EBS Order, 34 FCC Rcd 5446. Under this new plan, incumbents retained their existing channels and service areas. Id. at 5459, para. 36. Additionally, all previous eligibility requirements, including the various educational use requirements and Local Program Committee obligations, ceased being effective on April 27, 2020. Id. at 5450-58, paras. 13-31; see also 2.5 GHz Fed. Reg. Notice, 84 Fed. Reg. at 57365. Until the new rules established in the 2019 EBS Order took effect, however, the Commission’s previous rules governed the actions of EBS licensees. 2.5 GHz Fed. Reg. Notice, 84 Fed. Reg. at 57360. The new EBS rules became effective on April 27, 2020. See 2019 EBS Order, 34 FCC Rcd at 5489, para. 117 (deferring the effective date until six months from the date of the Order’s publication in the Federal Register). 32. The former EBS rules required EBS licensees leasing their excess spectrum to provide “at least 20 hours per licensed channel per week of EBS educational usage” as well as maintain a Local Program Committee in areas where the licensee was considered a non-local applicant. 47 CFR §§ 27.1201(a)(4), 27.1214(b)(1) (2019). As the Commission’s rule changes were forward-looking in nature, a change to the Commission’s rules does not relieve The Network of its original obligations to have complied with the rules in effect before the rule change. Kenai Educational Media, Inc., Consent Decree, 34 FCC Rcd 4865, 4867 n.3 (2019) (“A recent rule change does not relieve a licensee from its obligation to comply with the rule while it is in effect.”). D. Proposed Forfeiture 33. Section 503(b) of the Act authorizes the Commission to impose a forfeiture against any entity that “willfully or repeatedly fail[s] to comply substantially with the terms and conditions of any license, permit, certificate or other instrument or authorization issued by the Commission” 47 U.S.C. § 503(b)(1)(A). as well as against any entity that “willfully or repeatedly fail[s] to comply with any of the provisions of [the Act] or of any rule, regulation, or order issued by the Commission.” Id. § 503(b)(1)(B). Here, section 503(b)(2)(D) of the Act authorizes us to assess a forfeiture against HITN of up to $20,489 for each violation or each day of a continuing violation, up to a statutory maximum of $153,669 for a single act or failure to act. See 47 U.S.C. § 503(b)(2)(D); 47 CFR § 1.80(b)(9); see also Amendment of Section 1.80(b) of the Commission’s Rules, Adjustment of Civil Monetary Penalties to Reflect Inflation, Order, 34 FCC Rcd 12824 (EB 2019). In exercising the Commission’s forfeiture authority, we must consider the “nature, circumstances, extent, and gravity of the violation and, with respect to the violator, the degree of culpability, any history of prior offenses, ability to pay, and such other matters as justice may require.” Id. § 503(b)(2)(E); see also 47 CFR § 1.80(b)(9); The Commission's Forfeiture Policy Statement and Amendment of Section 1.80 of the Rules to Incorporate the Forfeiture Guidelines, CI Docket No. 95-6, Report and Order, 12 FCC Rcd 17087, 17100-01, para. 27 (1997) (Forfeiture Policy Statement), recon. denied, 15 FCC Rcd 303 (1999). 34. In determining a proposed forfeiture amount, the Commission starts with the base forfeiture amount for the apparent violation, as set forth in the Commission’s forfeiture guidelines. See 47 CFR § 1.80, note to para. (b)(9); Forfeiture Policy Statement, 12 FCC Rcd at 17101, para. 27. While section 1.80(b)(9) does not establish a specific base forfeiture amount for a violation of the Commission’s EBS educational use requirement, we find that the base forfeiture amount of $8,000 for a violation of the children’s television commercialization or programming requirements is most analogous to the Commission’s EBS educational use requirement since they govern the amount of children’s programming to be provided within a prescribed time span. If the Commission has not previously established a base forfeiture amount for that particular violation, “it has looked to the base forfeitures established or issued in analogous cases for guidance.”  Cumulus Radio, LLC et al., Notice of Apparent Liability for Forfeiture, 34 FCC Rcd 7289, 7294, para. 14 (2019) (citing Long Distance Direct, Inc., Memorandum Opinion and Order, 15 FCC Rcd 3297, 3304, para. 19 (2000)). Accordingly, we impose a forfeiture of $8,000 for each week that the Network failed to comply with the Commission’s requirement that licensees supply 20 hours of educational use per channel per week. Using December 9, 2019 as the Commission’s starting point until the rules sunset on April 27, 2020, we impose a base forfeiture of $8,000 multiplied by the 19 weeks that the violation occurred ($152,000). We then multiply this by each of the Network’s 88 leased EBS licenses, resulting in a base forfeiture amount of $13,376,000 for the company’s failure to comply with the Commission’s 20-hour requirement. 35. As to the failure to maintain a Local Program Committee, section 1.80(b)(9) does not establish a specific base forfeiture amount for a violation of that requirement. Again, in the absence of a specified base forfeiture, we select a base forfeiture for an analogous violation. We find that the violation is most analogous to a violation of the former main studio rule and will use that amount ($7,000). See 47 CFR § 1.80(b)(9), note to para. (b)(9) (2019); see also id. § 73.1125(a) (2017).  The main studio rule, which was eliminated in 2017, required the licensee of a broadcast station to maintain a main studio in order “to serve the needs and interests of the residents of the station’s community of license.”  Amendment of Sections 73.1125 and 73.1130 of the Commission’s Rules, the Main Studio and Program Origination Rules for Radio and Television Broadcast Stations, MM Docket No. 86-406, Memorandum Opinion and Order, 3 FCC Rcd 5024, 5026, para. 23 (1988) (1988 Main Studio Order); see also Elimination of Main Studio Rule, MB Docket No. 17-106, Report and Order, 32 FCC Rcd 8158, 8160-61, paras. 6-7 (2017).  Among other things, the Commission required each broadcast station to “maintain a meaningful management and staff presence” at the main studio to “help expose stations to community activities, help them identify community needs and interests and thereby meet their community service requirements.”  1988 Main Studio Order, 3 FCC Rcd at 5026, para. 24; see also Amendment of Sections 73.1125 and 73.1130 of the Commission’s Rules, the Main Studio and Program Origination Rules for Radio and Television Broadcast Stations, MM Docket No. 86-406, Report and Order, 2 FCC Rcd 3215, 3218, para. 29 (1987) (stating that “th[e] interaction between the station and the community would foster responsive programming”).    As with the Local Program Committee requirement, the Commission designed the former main studio rule to allow licensees to be responsive to the individual programming needs of their local communities. As the Network holds 91 licenses, none of which maintained a Local Program Committee during the period between December 2019 and April 2020, we impose a base forfeiture of $7,000 for each license that the Network failed to maintain a Local Program Committee, resulting in a base forfeiture amount of $637,000 for failure to comply with the Commission’s Local Program Committee requirement. 36. Based on the facts and record in this case, we have determined that the Network apparently violated former sections 27.1201(a)(4) and 27.1214(b)(1) of the Commission’s rules by: (1) failing to provide at least 20 hours per licensed channel per week of EBS educational use during a 19 week period at each of its 88 leased EBS licenses; and (2) failing to maintaining its Local Program Committee obligations in the service area of each of its 91 EBS licenses. In total, the Network’s apparent violations incurs a cumulative base forfeiture of $14,013,000 37. The Commission may also adjust the total proposed forfeiture by taking into account the nature, circumstances, extent, and gravity of the violation and, with respect to the violator, the degree of culpability, any history of prior offenses, ability to pay, and such other matters as justice may require. 47 U.S.C. § 503(b)(2)(E). Based on the totality of the facts in the record, we have determined to not adjust this amount upwards or downwards. Accordingly, we find HITN apparently liable for a forfeiture of $14,013,000. Any entity that is a “Small Business Concern” as defined in the Small Business Act (Pub. L. 85-536, as amended) may avail itself of rights set forth in that Act, including rights set forth in 15 U.S.C. § 657, “Oversight of Regulatory Enforcement,” in addition to other rights set forth herein. IV. ORDERING CLAUSES 38. Accordingly, IT IS ORDERED that, pursuant to section 503(b) of the Act, and 1.80 of the Commission’s rules, 47 U.S.C. § 503(b); 47 CFR § 1.80. Hispanic Information and Telecommunications Network, Inc., is hereby NOTIFIED of this APPARENT LIABILITY FOR A FORFEITURE in the amount of fourteen million thirteen thousand dollars ($14,013,000) for apparently willfully and repeatedly violating former sections 27.1201(a)(4) and 27.1214(b)(1) of the Commission’s rules. 47 CFR §§ 27.1201(a)(4), 27.1214(b)(1) (2019). 39. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that, pursuant to section 1.80 of the Commission’s rules, Id. § 1.80. within thirty (30) calendar days of the release date of this Notice of Apparent Liability for Forfeiture, Hispanic Information and Telecommunications Network, Inc. SHALL PAY the full amount of the proposed forfeiture or SHALL FILE a written statement seeking reduction or cancellation of the proposed forfeiture consistent with paragraph 42 below. 40. Hispanic Information and Telecommunications Network, Inc., shall send electronic notification of payment to Ryan McDonald, Enforcement Bureau, Federal Communications Commission, at Ryan.McDonald@fcc.gov on the date said payment is made. Payment of the forfeiture must be made by credit card, ACH (Automated Clearing House) debit from a bank account using the Commission’s Fee Filer (the Commission’s online payment system), Payments made using the Commission’s Fee Filer system do not require the submission of an FCC Form 159. or by wire transfer. The Commission no longer accepts forfeiture payments by check or money order. Below are instructions that payors should follow based on the form of payment selected: For questions regarding payment procedures, please contact the Financial Operations Group Help Desk by phone at 1-877-480-3201 (option #6), or by e-mail at ARINQUIRIES@fcc.gov. · Payment by wire transfer must be made to ABA Number 021030004, receiving bank TREAS/NYC, and Account Number 27000001. A completed Form 159 must be faxed to the Federal Communications Commission at 202-418-2843 or e-mailed to RROGWireFaxes@fcc.gov on the same business day the wire transfer is initiated. Failure to provide all required information in Form 159 may result in payment not being recognized as having been received. When completing FCC Form 159, enter the Account Number in block number 23A (call sign/other ID), enter the letters “FORF” in block number 24A (payment type code), and enter in block number 11 the FRN(s) captioned above (Payor FRN). Instructions for completing the form may be obtained at http://www.fcc.gov/Forms/Form159/159.pdf. For additional detail and wire transfer instructions, go to https://www.fcc.gov/licensingdatabases/fees/wire-transfer. · Payment by credit card must be made by using the Commission’s Fee Filer website at https://apps.fcc.gov/FeeFiler/login.cfm. To pay by credit card, log-in using the FRN captioned above. If payment must be split across FRNs, complete this process for each FRN. Next, select “Pay bills” on the Fee Filer Menu, and select the bill number associated with the NAL Account – the bill number is the NAL Account number with the first two digits excluded – and then choose the “Pay by Credit Card” option. Please note that there is a $24,999.99 limit on credit card transactions. · Payment by ACH must be made by using the Commission’s Fee Filer website at https://apps.fcc.gov/FeeFiler/login.cfm. To pay by ACH, log in using the FRN captioned above. If payment must be split across FRNs, complete this process for each FRN. Next, select “Pay bills” on the Fee Filer Menu and then select the bill number associated to the NAL Account – the bill number is the NAL Account number with the first two digits excluded – and choose the “Pay from Bank Account” option. Please contact the appropriate financial institution to confirm the correct Routing Number and the correct account number from which payment will be made and verify with that financial institution that the designated account has authorization to accept ACH transactions. 41. Any request for making full payment over time under an installment plan should be sent to: Chief Financial Officer – Financial Operations, Federal Communications Commission, 45 L Street NE, Washington, D.C. 20554. See 47 CFR § 1.1914.   If you have questions regarding payment procedures, please contact the Financial Operations Group Help Desk by phone, 1-877-480-3201, or by email, ARINQUIRIES@fcc.gov. 42. The written statement seeking reduction or cancellation of the proposed forfeiture, if any, must include a detailed factual statement supported by appropriate documentation and affidavits pursuant to sections 1.16 and 1.80(f)(3) of the Commission’s rules. Id. §§ 1.16, 1.80(f)(3). The written statement must be mailed to Jeffrey J. Gee, Chief, Investigations and Hearings Division, Enforcement Bureau, Federal Communications Commission, 45 L Street NE, Washington, D.C. 20554, and must include the NAL account number referenced in the caption. The written statement shall also be e-mailed to Jeffrey J. Gee at Jeffrey.Gee@fcc.gov and to Ryan McDonald at Ryan.McDonald@fcc.gov. 43. The Commission will not consider reducing or canceling a forfeiture in response to a claim of inability to pay unless the petitioner submits the following documentation: (1) federal tax returns for the past three years; (2) financial statements for the past three years prepared according to generally accepted accounting principles; or (3) some other reliable and objective documentation that accurately reflects the petitioner’s current financial status. 47 U.S.C. § 503(b)(2)(E). Any claim of inability to pay must specifically identify the basis for the claim by reference to the financial documentation. Inability to pay, however, is only one of several factors that the Commission will consider in determining the appropriate forfeiture, and we retain the discretion to decline reducing or canceling the forfeiture if other prongs of 47 U.S.C. § 503(b)(2)(E) support that result. See, e.g., Ocean Adrian Hinson, Surry County, North Carolina, Forfeiture Order, 34 FCC Rcd 7619, 7621, para. 9 & n.21 (2019); Vearl Pennington and Michael Williamson, Forfeiture Order, 34 FCC Rcd 770, paras. 18–21 (2019); Fabrice Polynice, Harold Sido and Veronise Sido, North Miami, Florida, Forfeiture Order, 33 FCC Rcd 6852, 6860–62, paras. 21–25 (2018); Adrian Abramovich, Marketing Strategy Leaders, Inc., and Marketing Leaders, Inc., Forfeiture Order, 33 FCC Rcd 4663, 4678-79, paras. 44-45 (2018); Purple Communications, Inc., Forfeiture Order, 30 FCC Rcd 14892, 14903-904, paras. 32-33 (2015); TV Max, Inc., et al., Forfeiture Order, 29 FCC Rcd 8648, 8661, para. 25 (2014). 44. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that a copy of this Notice of Apparent Liability for Forfeiture and Order shall be sent by first class mail and certified mail, return receipt requested, to Jonathan Guerra, General Counsel for Hispanic Information and Telecommunications Network, Inc., 63 Flushing Avenue, Building 292, Suite 211, Brooklyn, NY 11205. FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION Marlene H. Dortch Secretary 2 STATEMENT OF COMMISSIONER JESSICA ROSENWORCEL DISSENTING Re: In the Matter of Hispanic Information and Telecommunications Network, Inc., Notice of Apparent Liability for Forfeiture, File No. EB-IHD-19-00029568. In this series of enforcement decisions, the Federal Communications Commission proposes novel fines totaling more than $47 million on non-profit organizations for failing to comply with policies the agency eliminated from its rulebooks more than a year ago. These decisions suffer from a number of substantive and procedural infirmities. But most troubling is that the fines imposed here on the North American Catholic Educational Programming Foundation, the Hispanic Information and Telecommunications Network, Northern Arizona University Foundation, and other similar non-profit entities with programs to expand educational internet access lack any appropriate sense of proportion. Moreover, they are an unfortunate commentary on the priorities of this agency. During a pandemic when millions of people are struggling to get the connectivity they need to maintain some semblance of modern life, this is a strange use of agency resources. Instead of taking these unreasonably punitive actions, we should be leading with our humanity and finding ways to connect more people to the broadband services they need in crisis. I dissent. Federal Communications Commission FCC 21-3 STATEMENT OF COMMISSIONER GEOFFREY STARKS DISSENTING Re: In the Matter of Hispanic Information and Telecommunications Network, Inc., Notice of Apparent Liability for Forfeiture, File No. EB-IHD-19-00029568. Today the Commission proposes extraordinary penalties against organizations whose mission is to help those most in need. For fifty years, schools and students around the country have received free communications service through the program that has become the Educational Broadband Service (EBS). Nearly 18 months ago, ignoring calls to reform and revitalize the EBS program, the majority at that time made the spectrum on which the program relies generally available for auction and assignment. Today’s actions double down on that decision, proposing forfeitures that threaten the financial survival of some of the program’s most visible participants. These decisions represent a waste of Commission resources in an unlawful and unfair attack on a program has helped people around the country. As an initial matter, the EBS licensees lacked sufficient notice of the legal interpretations underlying the Notices of Apparent Liability (NALs) to be subject to monetary penalties. Basic principles of administrative law establish that “an agency cannot sanction an individual for violating the agency’s rules unless the individual had ‘fair notice’ of those rules.” SNR Wireless License Co., LLC v. FCC, 868 F.3d 1021, 1043 (D.C. Cir. 2017). Notice is fair when it allows regulated parties to identify, with “ascertainable certainty,” the standards with which the agency expects them to conform. Id. The EBS licensees lacked such fair notice of the majority’s interpretation of the now-eliminated educational use 47 C.F.R. § 27.1214(b)(2) (2019) (licensees must “provide at least 20 hours per licensed channel per week of EBS educational usage”). and Local Programming Committee rules. 47 CFR § 27.1201(a)(4) (2019). When it authorized wireless broadband service for the EBS program, the Commission rejected requests from the EBS community to clarify its educational use rules See Amendment of Parts 1, 21, 73, 74 and 101 of the Commission’s Rules to Facilitate the Provision of Fixed and Mobile Broadband Access, Educational and Other Advanced Services in the 2150-2162 and 2500-2690 MHz Bands, WT Docket No. 03-66, Order on Reconsideration and Fifth Memorandum Opinion and Order and Third Memorandum Opinion and Order and Second Report and Order, 21 FCC Rcd 5606, 5699-701, paras. 223-28 (2006) (rejecting a proposal to provide guidance on meeting the educational use requirements). ; instead, the agency said it would simply rely on the good faith efforts of licensees to “provide . . . educational usage.” Thus, there are no ascertainable standards that EBS licensees could have followed to avoid liability. Similarly, the Commission did not give fair notice of its current interpretation of the local programming committee rules. The plain language of the rules appears to apply only to the formation of a committee for application purposes, yet the NALs conclude that these committees must remain in place after license grant, even though their oversight of “programming” no longer makes sense in the wireless broadband context. Indeed, the NALs’ legal interpretations generally do not make sense when applied to the services at issue. The proposed forfeiture calculations are also fundamentally flawed. First, the NALs are based on the period from December 9, 2019 through April 27, 2020, the effective date of the Commission’s elimination of the rules in question. But the NALs are based on Letters of Inquiry that covered the licensees’ conduct only until August 26, 2019. Thus, we appear to have no evidence about the period subject to forfeiture penalty. Moreover, because there is no base forfeiture for violations of the EBS rules, the NALs refer to the base forfeiture penalties for arguably analogous rules like the children’s programming requirements and the main studio rule. But the NALs apply these penalties in a manner that is completely inconsistent with FCC precedent. Typical enforcement actions for violations of these rules propose forfeitures of hundreds of dollars per violation. In this case, however, the majority proposes penalties of $8,000 per week for each license, resulting in proposed forfeitures ranging from nearly $1.6 million to over $14 million against a group of non-profit entities. These eye-popping forfeitures are not only inconsistent with applicable precedent, but ignore numerous mitigating factors under our statute and rules. In proposing a forfeiture, the Communications Act requires the Commission to consider “the nature, circumstances, extent, and gravity of the violation and, with respect to the violator, the degree of culpability, any history of prior offenses, ability to pay, and such other matters as justice may require. 47 U.S.C. 503(b)(2)(E). See also 47 CFR 1.80(b)(9) (“In determining the amount of the forfeiture penalty, the Commission or its designee will take into account the nature, circumstances, extent and gravity of the violations and, with respect to the violator, the degree of culpability, any history of prior offenses, ability to pay, and such other matters as justice may require.”). While some of the NALs upwardly adjust the forfeitures, none of the items consider any mitigating factors, including the licensees’ respective histories of compliance, the lack of any discernible harm, and the Commission’s finding that the rules at issue no longer serve a good policy purpose. Broadband access has never been more critical, and EBS licensees are on the front lines in our effort to close the digital divide that has become a monstrous COVID-19 divide. The pandemic has forced schools across the country to close, and many students have been engaging in distance learning for months. EBS service allows schools and their students to continue their educational instruction remotely. Targeting these organizations for a legally suspect, unnecessary, and excessive attack undermines their mission to provide an essential service to schools in need of a broadband connection. I dissent. 2