Implementation of Section 203 of the Satellite Television Extension and Localism Act of 2010 (STELA); Amendments to Section 340 of the Communications Act, 72968-72986 [2010-29968]
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 228 / Monday, November 29, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
limits of city/town or the reservation,
station, established area where
stationed’’ and adding ‘‘The location
where the employee regularly performs
his or her duties or an invitational
traveler’s home or regular place of
business. If the employee’s work
involves recurring travel or varies on a
recurring basis, the location where the
work activities of the employee’s
position of record are based is
considered the employee’s official
station’’ in its place.
PART 302–7—TRANSPORTATION AND
TEMPORARY STORAGE OF
HOUSEHOLD GOODS AND
PROFESSIONAL BOOKS, PAPERS,
AND EQUIPMENT (PBP&E)
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 76
[MB Docket No. 10–148; FCC 10–193]
29. The authority citation for 41 CFR
part 302–7 continues to read as follows:
■
§ 302–7.1
Appendix E to Chapter 301 [Amended]
21. Amend Appendix E to Chapter
301, under the heading ‘‘Food and
Drink’’, in the first bulleted entry, by
removing the words ‘‘official duty
stations’’ and adding the words ‘‘official
stations’’ in its place.
■
PART 302–1—GENERAL RULES
22. The authority citation for 41 CFR
part 302–1 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 5738; 20 U.S.C. 905(a).
§ 302–1.1
[Amended]
23. Amend § 302–1.1(a) by removing
the words ‘‘official duty station’’ and
adding the words ‘‘official station’’ in its
place.
■
PART 302–2—EMPLOYEES
ELIGIBILITY REQUIREMENTS
24. The authority citation for 41 CFR
part 302–2 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 5738; 20 U.S.C. 905(a).
[Amended]
25. Amend § 302–2.2 by removing the
words ‘‘official duty station’’ and adding
the words ‘‘official station’’ in its place
wherever it appears in the section
heading and the text.
■
§ 302–2.6
[Amended]
26. Amend § 302–2.6 by removing
from the section heading the words
‘‘official duty station’’ and adding the
words ‘‘official station’’ in its place.
■
■
PART 302–11—ALLOWANCES FOR
EXPENSES INCURRED IN
CONNECTION WITH RESIDENCE
TRANSACTIONS
31. The authority citation for 41 CFR
part 302–11 continues to read as
follows:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 5738 and 20 U.S.C.
905(c).
[Amended]
32. Amend § 302–11.1(a) by removing
the words ‘‘official duty station’’ and
adding the words ‘‘official station’’ in its
place wherever it appears.
■
PART 303–70—AGENCY
REQUIREMENTS FOR PAYMENT OF
EXPENSES CONNECTED WITH THE
DEATH OF CERTAIN EMPLOYEES
33. The authority citation for 41 CFR
part 303–70 continues to read as
follows:
■
[Amended]
34. Amend § 303–70.300 by removing
the words ‘‘official duty station’’ and
adding the words ‘‘official station’’ in its
place.
■
27. The authority citation for 41 CFR
part 302–3 continues to read as follows:
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30. Amend § 302–7.1—
a. In paragraph (a) by removing the
words ‘‘official duty stations’’ and
adding the words ‘‘official stations’’ in
its place.
■ b. In paragraph (b) by removing the
words ‘‘official duty station’’ and adding
the words ‘‘official station’’ in its place.
■
§ 303–70.300
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 5738; 20 U.S.C. 905(a).
[Amended]
[Amended]
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 5721–5738; 5741–
5742; E.O. 11609, 3 CFR, 1971–1975 Comp.,
p. 586.
PART 302–3—RELOCATION
ALLOWANCE BY SPECIFIC TYPE
§ 302–3.312
AGENCY:
§ 302–11.1
■
§ 302–2.2
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 5738; 20 U.S.C. 905(a);
E.O 11609, 36 FR 13747, 3 CFR, 1971–1973
Comp. p. 586.
Implementation of Section 203 of the
Satellite Television Extension and
Localism Act of 2010 (STELA);
Amendments to Section 340 of the
Communications Act
[FR Doc. 2010–29730 Filed 11–26–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6820–14–P
28. Amend § 302–3.312 by removing
from the section heading the words
‘‘official duty station’’ and adding the
words ‘‘official station’’ in its place.
■
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Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
In this document, the
Commission modifies its satellite
television ‘‘significantly viewed’’ rules to
implement Section 203 of the Satellite
Television Extension and Localism Act
of 2010 (STELA). Section 203 of the
STELA amends Section 340 of the
Communications Act, which gives
satellite carriers the authority to offer
out-of-market but ‘‘significantly viewed’’
broadcast television network stations as
part of their local service to subscribers.
The STELA requires the Commission to
promulgate final rules in this
proceeding on or before November 24,
2010.
SUMMARY:
DATES:
Effective December 29, 2010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Evan Baranoff, Evan.Baranoff@fcc.gov,
of the Media Bureau, Policy Division,
(202) 418–2120.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a
summary of the Commission’s Report
and Order and Order on
Reconsideration (Order), FCC 10–193,
adopted on Nov. 22, 2010, and released
on Nov. 23, 2010. The full text of this
document is available electronically via
ECFS at https://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/ecfs/ or
may be downloaded at https://
hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs-public/
attachmatch/FCC–10–130.pdf.
(Documents will be available
electronically in ASCII, Word 97,
and/or Adobe Acrobat.) This document
is also available for public inspection
and copying during regular business
hours in the FCC Reference Center,
Federal Communications Commission,
445 12th Street, SW., CY–A257,
Washington, DC 20554. The complete
text may be purchased from the
Commission’s copy contractor, 445 12th
Street, SW., Room CY–B402,
Washington, DC 20554. Alternative
formats are available for people with
disabilities (Braille, large print,
electronic files, audio format), by
sending an e-mail to fcc504@fcc.gov or
calling the Commission’s Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau at (202)
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 228 / Monday, November 29, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
418–0530 (voice), (202) 418–0432
(TTY).
Summary of the Report and Order and
Order on Reconsideration
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I. Introduction
1. With this Report and Order
(‘‘R&O’’), we modify our satellite
television ‘‘significantly viewed’’ rules to
implement Section 203 of the Satellite
Television Extension and Localism Act
of 2010 (STELA).1 Section 203 of the
STELA amends Section 340 of the
Communications Act of 1934
(‘‘Communications Act’’ or ‘‘Act’’), which
gives satellite carriers the authority to
offer out-of-market but ‘‘significantly
viewed’’ broadcast television stations as
part of their local service to
subscribers.2 We initiated this
proceeding on July 23, 2010 by issuing
a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
(‘‘NPRM’’).3 We received 20 comments
and reply comments (from 17 parties) in
response to our NPRM.4 With this R&O,
we satisfy the STELA’s mandate that the
Commission promulgate final rules in
this proceeding on or before November
24, 2010.5 In addition, in this Order on
Reconsideration, we dispose of the
pending petition for reconsideration of
1 The Satellite Television Extension and Localism
Act of 2010 (STELA) sec. 203, Public Law 111–175,
124 Stat. 1218, 1245 (2010) (sec. 203 codified as
amended at 47 U.S.C. 340, other STELA
amendments codified in scattered sections of 17
and 47 U.S.C.). The STELA was enacted on May 27,
2010 (S. 3333, 111th Cong.). This proceeding to
implement STELA sec. 203 (titled ‘‘Significantly
Viewed Stations’’), 124 Stat. at 1245, and the related
statutory copyright license provisions in STELA
sec. 103 (titled ‘‘Modifications to Statutory License
for Satellite Carriers in Local Markets’’), 124 Stat. at
1227–28, is one of a number of Commission
proceedings that are required to implement the
STELA.
2 47 U.S.C. 340. We note that the nature of SV
carriage under Section 340 is permissive (and not
mandatory), meaning a satellite carrier may choose
to carry an SV station. The statute also requires that
the SV station grant consent in order for its signal
to be carried. Id. 340(d).
3 STELA–Significantly Viewed NPRM, FCC 10–
130, 75 FR 44198, July 28, 2010 (NPRM).
4 We identify the list of commenters and reply
commenters to this docket in Appendix. We also
received ex parte submissions in this docket. All of
the filings made in this docket are available to the
public both online via the Commission’s Electronic
Comment Filing System (‘‘ECFS’’) at https://
www.fcc.gov/cgb/ecfs/ and during regular business
hours in the FCC Reference Center, Federal
Communications Commission, 445 12th Street,
SW., CY–A257, Washington, DC 20554.
5 The STELA requires the Commission to
implement the amendments within 270 days after
the date of the enactment. STELA sec. 203(b). The
STELA establishes February 27, 2010 as its effective
date or ‘‘date of enactment,’’ even though the law
was enacted by Presidential signature on May 27,
2010. STELA sec. 307. Congress passed four shortterm extensions of the distant signal statutory
copyright license (December 19, 2009, March 2,
March 25 and April 15, 2010) before passing STELA
to reauthorize the compulsory license for distant
signal carriage for five years. STELA sec. 107(a).
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the 2005 SHVERA Significantly Viewed
Report and Order.6
2. Significantly viewed (‘‘SV’’) stations
are television broadcast stations that the
Commission has determined have
sufficient over-the-air (i.e., non-cable or
non-satellite) viewing 7 to be considered
local for certain purposes and so are not
constrained by the boundary of the
stations’ local market or Designated
Market Area (‘‘DMA’’).8 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,9 and placement on the SV
List.10 The designation of ‘‘significantly
viewed’’ status allows a station assigned
6 SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report and
Order, FCC 05–187, 70 FR 76504, December 27,
2005. See DIRECTV and EchoStar Satellite L.L.C.
(now Dish) Joint Petition for Reconsideration in MB
Docket No. 05–49 (filed Jan. 26, 2006) (‘‘2006
DIRECTV–EchoStar Joint Petition’’).
7 To qualify for significantly viewed status (i.e.,
for placement on the significantly viewed list or
‘‘SV List,’’ see note 10, infra), an SV station can be
either a ‘‘network’’ station or an ‘‘independent’’
station, with network stations requiring a higher
share of viewing hours. 47 CFR 76.5(i)(1) and (2).
The Commission’s rules define network station as
one of the ‘‘three major national television
networks’’ (i.e., ABC, CBS or NBC). 47 CFR 76.5(j)
and (k). Parties may demonstrate that stations are
significantly viewed either on a community basis or
on a county-wide basis. 47 CFR 76.54(b), (d).
8 See 17 U.S.C. 122(j)(2)(A) (defining ‘‘local
market’’).
9 See 47 CFR 76.5, 76.7, 76.54. A TV station, cable
operator or satellite carrier that wishes to have a
station designated significantly viewed must file a
petition pursuant to the pleading requirements in
47 CFR 76.7(a)(1) and use the method described in
47 CFR 76.54 to demonstrate that the station is
significantly viewed as defined in 47 CFR 76.5(i).
10 The significantly viewed list or ‘‘SV List’’
identifies the list of stations the Commission has
determined to be significantly viewed in specified
counties and communities. The list applies to both
cable and satellite providers. The Commission
updates this list as necessary upon the appropriate
demonstrations by stations or cable or satellite
providers. A station, satellite carrier or cable
operator may petition the Commission, either to
add eligible stations or communities pursuant to 47
CFR 76.54, or to restrict carriage of eligible stations
through application of the Commission’s network
non-duplication or syndicated exclusivity rules in
47 CFR 76.122(a), (j) and 76.123(a), (k). Generally,
a station’s SV status is only challenged when
another station seeks to exercise its rights under the
network non-duplication or syndicated program
exclusivity rules, and the SV station asserts its SV
status, which is an exception to both requirements.
See 47 CFR 76.92(f) (SV exception in cable network
non-duplication rules); 47 CFR 76.106(a) (SV
exception in cable syndicated program exclusivity
rules); 47 CFR 76.122(j) (SV exception in satellite
network non-duplication rules); and 47 CFR
76.123(k) (SV exception to satellite syndicated
program exclusivity rules). If a station’s SV status
is challenged, and it is demonstrated that the
station is no longer significantly viewed in a
particular community or county, the station’s listing
is modified to indicate that it is subject to
programming deletions in those communities or
counties. See SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report
and Order at para. 14. The current SV List is
available on the Media Bureau’s Web site at
https://www.fcc.gov/mb/.
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to one market to be treated as a ‘‘local’’
station with respect to a particular cable
or satellite community 11 in another
market, and, thus, enables it to be
carried by cable or satellite in that
community in the other market.12 In
general, SV status applies to only some
communities or counties in a DMA and
does not apply throughout an entire
DMA. In contrast, the ‘‘local’’ station
designation based on Nielsen’s
assignment to a particular DMA applies
to the entire market.13 Whereas cable
operators have had carriage rights for SV
stations since 1972,14 satellite carriers
have had such authority only since
200415 and may only retransmit SV
network stations to ‘‘eligible’’ satellite
subscribers.16 These satellite subscriber
eligibility restrictions are intended to
prevent satellite carriers from favoring
an SV network station over the inmarket (local) station affiliated with the
same network.17
3. Section 203 of the STELA changes
the restrictions on subscriber eligibility
to receive SV network stations from
11 See 47 CFR 76.5(dd) (defining cable
‘‘community unit’’) and 76.5(gg) (defining a ‘‘satellite
community’’).
12 For copyright purposes, significantly viewed
status means that cable and satellite providers may
carry the out-of-market but SV station with the
reduced copyright payment obligations applicable
to local (in-market) stations. See 17 U.S.C. 111(a),
(c), (d), and (f), as amended by STELA sec. 104
(relating to cable statutory copyright license) and
122(a)(2), as amended by STELA sec. 103 (relating
to satellite statutory copyright license).
13 17 U.S.C. 122(j)(2)(C) (defining DMA as ‘‘a
designated market area, as determined by Nielsen
Media Research and published in the 1999–2000
Nielsen Station Index Directory and Nielsen Station
Index United States Television Household
Estimates or any successor publication’’).
14 See Cable Television Report and Order, FCC
72–108 at para. 83, 37 FR 3252, February 3, 1972
(adopting the concept of ‘‘significantly viewed’’
signals to differentiate between otherwise out-ofmarket television stations ‘‘that have sufficient
audience to be considered local and those that do
not’’).
15 Section 202 of the Satellite Home Viewer
Extension and Reauthorization Act of 2004
(SHVERA) created Section 340 of the
Communications Act, which authorized satellite
carriage of Commission-determined SV stations. See
SHVERA sec. 202, Public Law 108–447, 118 Stat
2809, 3393 (2004) (codified in 47 U.S.C. 340). See
also SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report and
Order.
16 See 47 U.S.C. 340(b) and 47 CFR 76.54(g) and
(h). See also infra para. 8 (for background).
17 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(1) and (2). See SHVERA
Significantly Viewed Report and Order at para. 94.
The Copyright Act’s definitions of ‘‘network station’’
and ‘‘non-network station’’ will apply for purposes
of determining subscriber eligibility to receive an
SV network station. See 47 U.S.C. 339(d) and 47
U.S.C 122(j)(4), as amended, applying the
definitions of such terms in 47 U.S.C 119(d)(2) and
(9). Unlike the definition in the Commission’s rules,
which specifically include only ABC, CBS and NBC
(see supra note 7), the Copyright Act definition of
‘‘network station’’ may include other stations. See
SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report and Order at
paras. 35–36 and n. 102.
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 228 / Monday, November 29, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
satellite carriers.18 To implement the
STELA, we revise our satellite
subscriber eligibility rules as follows:
• We find that the local service
requirement in amended Section
340(b)(1) requires only that a satellite
subscriber receive local-into-local
satellite service as a precondition for
that subscriber to receive SV stations.
We find that the statute no longer
requires a satellite subscriber to receive
the specific local network station as a
precondition for that subscriber to
receive an SV station affiliated with the
same network.
• We find that amended Section
340(b)(2) no longer requires that a
satellite carrier offer ‘‘equivalent
bandwidth’’ to the local and SV network
station pair and instead imposes an ‘‘HD
format’’ requirement. We find that the
HD format requirement in amended
Section 340(b)(2) requires that, in order
to carry an SV station in high definition
(HD) format, a satellite carrier must
carry the local station affiliated with the
same network in HD whenever such
format is available from the local
station.
Æ The HD format requirement
applies only where a satellite carrier
retransmits to a subscriber the SV
station in HD format. This requirement
does not restrict a satellite carrier from
retransmitting to a subscriber the SV
station in standard definition (SD)
format.
Æ For purposes of the HD format
requirement, the corresponding local
(in-market) station will be considered
‘‘available’’ to the satellite carrier when
the station: (1) Elects mandatory
carriage or grants retransmission
consent; (2) provides a good quality
signal to the satellite carrier as required
by Section 76.66(g) of the rules; and (3)
is otherwise in compliance with the
‘‘good faith negotiation’’ and carriage
provisions set forth in Sections 76.65
and 76.66 of the rules. However, the HD
signal of the corresponding local station
will be deemed ‘‘available’’ despite
failure to reach agreement on the terms
of retransmission if the satellite carrier
is not in compliance with Section 76.65.
Æ The HD format requirement
requires satellite carriage of a secondary
HD stream of a local station’s multicast
signal if that stream is affiliated with the
same network as an SV station
retransmitted in HD to satellite
subscribers in the local market.
• We modify the Commission’s 2005
interpretation of the Section 340(b)(3)
exception, which is unchanged by the
STELA, and find that, in the context of
the newly revised statute, this exception
18 47
U.S.C. 340(b)(1) and (2).
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permits a satellite carrier to offer an SV
network station to a subscriber when
there is no local affiliate of the same
network present in the local market,
even if the subscriber does not receive
local-into-local service.
II. Background
4. In May 2010, Congress passed and
the President signed the STELA, which
amends the 1988 copyright laws 19 and
the Communications Act of 1934 20 to
‘‘modernize, improve and simplify the
compulsory copyright licenses
governing the retransmission of distant
and local television signals by cable and
satellite television operators.’’ 21
Congress intended for the STELA to
increase competition between cable and
satellite providers, increase service to
satellite subscribers, and update the law
to reflect the completion of the digital
television (DTV) transition.22 Notably,
19 See 17 U.S.C. 119 and 122. 17 U.S.C. 119
contains the statutory copyright license for satellite
carriage of ‘‘distant’’ network stations (limited to
‘‘unserved households’’) and 17 U.S.C. 122 contains
the statutory copyright license for satellite carriage
of ‘‘local’’ stations (generally defined as stations and
subscribers in the same DMA but which now also
includes SV stations, which are treated as ‘‘local’’ for
copyright royalty purposes, even though such
stations are not in the same DMA as the subscribers
and are not entitled to mandatory carriage). The
STELA also amended 17 U.S.C. 111, the statutory
copyright license for cable carriage of broadcast
stations.
20 See 47 U.S.C. 325, 338, 339 and 340.
21 See House Judiciary Committee Report dated
Oct. 28, 2009, accompanying House Bill, H.R. 3570,
111th Cong. (2009), H.R. Rep. No. 111–319, at 4
(‘‘H.R. 3570 Report’’). See also House Energy and
Commerce Committee Report dated Dec. 12, 2009,
accompanying House Bill, H.R. 2994, 111th Cong.
(2009), H.R. Rep. No. 111–349, at 16 (‘‘H.R. 2994
Report’’); and Senate Judiciary Committee Report
dated Nov. 10, 2009, accompanying Senate Bill, S.
1670, 111th Cong. (2009), H.R. Rep. No. 111–98, at
5 (‘‘S. 1670 Report’’). There was no final Report
issued to accompany the final version of the STELA
bill (S. 3333) as it was enacted. See Senate Bill, S.
3333, 111th Cong. (2010) (enacted). Therefore, for
the relevant legislative history, we look to the
Reports accompanying the various predecessor bills
(e.g., H.R. 3570, H.R. 2994, and S. 1670). These
Reports reflect Congressional intent with respect to
the SV provisions, which were enacted as drafted
in the House and Senate bills. (see STELA secs. 203,
103). Finally, also relevant are certain remarks
made in floor statements in passing the bill (S.
3333). See ‘‘House of Representatives Proceedings
and Debates of the 111st Congress, Second Session,’’
156 Cong. Rec. H3317, H3328–3330 (daily ed. May
12, 2010) (statements of Reps. Conyers and Smith)
(‘‘House Floor Debate’’) and ‘‘Senate Proceedings
and Debates of the 111st Congress, Second Session,’’
156 Cong. Rec. S3435 (daily ed. May 7, 2010)
(statement of Sen. Leahy) (‘‘Senate Floor Debate’’).
We also find relevant certain remarks made in floor
statements in passing the House Bill, H.R. 3570. See
Chairmen Waxman’s and Boucher’s Floor
Statements on the Satellite Home Viewer
Reauthorization Act of 2009, 155 Cong. Rec.
H13428, H13441–13442 (Dec. 2, 2009) (‘‘H.R. 3570
Waxman and/or Boucher Floor Statement(s)’’).
22 See H.R. 3570 Report at 5 and H.R. 2994 Report
at 16. As of the June 12, 2009 statutory DTV
transition deadline, all full-power television
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the STELA reauthorizes the statutory
copyright license for satellite carriage of
SV stations and moves that license from
the distant signal statutory copyright
license provisions to the local signal
statutory copyright license provisions.23
5. The STELA is the fourth in a series
of statutes that address satellite carriage
of television broadcast stations. In the
1988 Satellite Home Viewer Act (‘‘1988
SHVA’’), Congress established a
statutory copyright license to enable
satellite carriers to offer subscribers who
could not receive the over-the-air signal
of a broadcast station access to
broadcast programming via satellite.24
The 1988 SHVA was intended to protect
the role of local broadcasters in
providing over-the-air television by
limiting satellite delivery of network
broadcast programming to subscribers
who were ‘‘unserved’’ by over-the-air
signals. The 1988 SHVA also permitted
satellite carriers to offer distant
‘‘superstations’’ to subscribers.25
6. In the 1999 Satellite Home Viewer
Improvement Act (‘‘SHVIA’’), Congress
expanded satellite carriers’ ability to
retransmit local broadcast television
signals directly to subscribers.26 A key
element of the SHVIA was the grant to
satellite carriers of a statutory copyright
license to retransmit local broadcast
programming, or ‘‘local-into-local’’
service, to subscribers. A satellite carrier
stations stopped broadcasting in analog and are
broadcasting only digital signals. 47 U.S.C.
309(j)(14)(A).
23 STELA sec. 103 (moving the SV signal statutory
copyright license from 17 U.S.C. 119(a)(3) to 17
U.S.C. 122 (a)(2)). In doing so, Congress now
defines SV signals as another type of local signal,
rather than as an exception to distant signals. The
move also means that the SV signal license does not
expire on December 31, 2014, when the distant
signal license will expire. STELA sec. 107(a).
24 The Satellite Home Viewer Act of 1988
(SHVA), Public Law 100–667, 102 Stat. 3935, Title
II (1988) (codified at 17 U.S.C. 111, 119). The 1988
SHVA was enacted on November 16, 1988, as an
amendment to the copyright laws. The 1988 SHVA
gave satellite carriers a statutory copyright license
to offer distant signals to ‘‘unserved’’ households. 17
U.S.C. 119(a).
25 See id. 119(a)(1) (2009). The STELA sec. 102(g)
replaces the term ‘‘superstation’’ with the term ‘‘nonnetwork station.’’ This change in wording has no
substantive impact on our rules. A non-network
station (previously superstation) is defined as a
television station, other than a network station,
licensed by the Commission that is retransmitted by
a satellite carrier. As the term would suggest, nonnetwork stations are still not considered ‘‘network
stations’’ for copyright purposes. See id. 119(d)(9);
see also supra notes 7 and 17.
26 The Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act of
1999 (SHVIA), Public Law 106–113, 113 Stat. 1501
(1999). The SHVIA was enacted on November 29,
1999, 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). In
the SHVIA, Congress amended both the copyright
laws, 17 U.S.C. 119 and 122, and the
Communications Act, 47 U.S.C. 325, 338 and 339.
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 228 / Monday, November 29, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
provides ‘‘local-into-local’’ service when
it retransmits a local television signal
back into the local market of that
television station for reception by
subscribers.27 Generally, a television
station’s ‘‘local market’’ is the DMA in
which it is located.28 Each satellite
carrier providing local-into-local service
pursuant to the statutory copyright
license is generally obligated to carry
any qualified local television station in
the particular DMA that requests
carriage and complies with Commission
rules, 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.29 This is
commonly referred to as the ‘‘carry one,
carry all’’ requirement. The Commission
implemented the SHVIA by adopting
rules for satellite carriers with regard to
carriage of broadcast signals,
retransmission consent, and program
exclusivity that generally paralleled the
requirements for cable service.30
7. In the 2004 Satellite Home Viewer
Extension and Reauthorization Act
(SHVERA), Congress established the
framework for satellite carriage of
‘‘significantly viewed’’ stations.31
27 47
CFR 76.66(a)(6).
17 U.S.C. 122(j)(2)(A); 47 U.S.C. 340(i)(1).
DMAs, which describe each television market in
terms of a unique geographic area, are established
by Nielsen Media Research based on measured
viewing patterns. See 17 U.S.C. 122(j)(2)(A) through
(C).
29 See 47 U.S.C. 338.
30 See SHVIA Signal Carriage Order, 66 FR 7410,
January 23, 2001; OET SHVIA Report, FCC 00–416
(rel. Nov. 29, 2000); SHVIA Satellite Exclusivity
Order, 65 FR 68082, November 14, 2000; SHVIA
Retransmission Consent Enforcement Order; 65 FR
10718, February 29, 2000; SHVIA Good Faith
Retransmission Consent Order, 65 FR 15559, March
23, 2000.
31 The Satellite Home Viewer Extension and
Reauthorization Act of 2004 (SHVERA), Public Law
108–447, 118 Stat 2809 (2004) (codified in scattered
sections of 17 and 47 U.S.C.). The SHVERA was
enacted on December 8, 2004 as title IX of the
‘‘Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2005.’’ The
SHVERA contained additional mandates requiring
Commission action, but not relevant to this
proceeding. See SHVERA Reciprocal Bargaining
Order, 70 FR 40216, July 13, 2005 (imposing a
reciprocal good faith retransmission consent
bargaining obligation on multichannel video
programming distributors); SHVERA Section 210
Order, 70 FR 51658, August 31, 2005 (requiring
satellite carriers to carry local TV broadcast stations
in Alaska and Hawaii); SHVERA Procedural Rules
Order, 70 FR 21669, April 27, 2005 (adopting
procedural rules concerning satellite carriers’
notifications to TV broadcast stations and
obligations to conduct signal testing);
Retransmission Consent and Exclusivity Rules:
Report to Congress Pursuant to Section 208 of the
Satellite Home Viewer Extension and
Reauthorization Act of 2004, dated Sept. 8, 2005,
available at https://www.fcc.gov/mb/policy/
shvera.html (Report analyzing comments received
in MB Docket No. 05–28 and addressing impact of
certain rules and statutory provisions on
competition in the television marketplace).
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28 See
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Specifically, the SHVERA expanded the
statutory copyright license to allow
satellite carriers to retransmit an out-ofmarket network station as part of their
local service to subscribers where the
Commission determined that distant
station to be ‘‘significantly viewed’’
(based on over-the-air viewing).32 In
providing this authority to satellite
carriers, Congress sought to create parity
with cable operators, who had already
had such authority to offer SV stations
to subscribers for more than 38 years.33
The Commission implemented the
SHVERA’s significantly viewed
provisions by publishing a list of SV
stations 34 and adopting rules in the
satellite context for stations to attain
eligibility for significantly viewed status
and for subscribers to receive SV
stations from satellite carriers.35 The
SHVERA mandated that the
Commission apply the same station
eligibility requirements (i.e., rules and
procedures for parties to show that a
station qualifies for significantly viewed
status) to satellite carriers that already
applied to cable operators.36 However,
to prevent a satellite carrier from
favoring SV stations over traditional
local market stations, the SHVERA also
imposed subscriber eligibility
requirements that applied only to
satellite carriers.37
32 In the SHVERA, Congress again amended both
the Communications Act, 47 U.S.C. 325, 338, 339
and 340, and the copyright laws, 17 U.S.C. 119 and
122. In creating a statutory copyright license for
satellite carriers to offer significantly viewed
stations to subscribers, Congress distinguished
between out-of-market stations that had significant
over-the-air viewership in another market (i.e.,
significantly viewed stations) and truly ‘‘distant’’
stations.
33 See SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report and
Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 17280–1, para. 2. In 1972, the
Commission adopted the concept of ‘‘significantly
viewed’’ stations for cable television to differentiate
between out-of-market television stations ‘‘that have
sufficient audience to be considered local and those
that do not.’’ 1972 Cable R&O, 36 FCC 2d at 174,
para. 83. The Commission concluded at that time
that it would not be reasonable if choices on cable
were more limited than choices over-the-air, and
gave cable carriage rights to stations in communities
where they had significant over-the-air (non-cable)
viewing. Id.
34 See supra note 10 (for background on SV List).
35 See 47 CFR 76.5(ee) (revised), 76.5(gg) (added),
76.54(a) through (c) (revised), 76.54(e) through (k)
(added), 76.122(a) and (j) (revised), and 76.123(a)
and (k) (revised).
36 See 47 U.S.C. 340(a). As mandated by the
SHVERA, the Commission required satellite carriers
or broadcast stations seeking SV status for satellite
carriage to follow the same petition process now in
place for cable carriage. See 47 CFR 76.5, 76.7 and
76.54(a) through (d).
37 47 U.S.C. 340(b) (2004). The eligibility
requirements also addressed the different carriage
requirements that apply to cable (i.e., ‘‘must carry’’
for all cable systems) as compared with satellite
(i.e., ‘‘carry one, carry all’’). In the cable context,
where mandatory carriage rules apply as opposed
to satellite’s carry one, carry all requirements, it was
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8. The SHVERA limited subscribers’
eligibility to receive SV digital
television stations from satellite carriers
in two key ways. First, the SHVERA
allowed a satellite carrier to offer SV
stations only to subscribers that
received the carrier’s ‘‘local-into-local’’
service (the ‘‘local service’’
requirement).38 The Commission
interpreted this local service
requirement to further require that the
subscriber receive the local station
affiliated with a particular network (as
part of the carrier’s ‘‘local-into-local’’
service) in order for that subscriber to
also receive an SV station affiliated with
the same network (the ‘‘same network
affiliate’’ requirement).39 Second, the
SHVERA allowed a satellite carrier to
offer an SV digital station to a subscriber
only if the carrier also provided to that
subscriber the local station affiliated
with the same network in a format that
used either (1) an ‘‘equivalent’’ amount
of bandwidth for the local and SV
network station pair, or (2) the ‘‘entire’’
bandwidth of the local station (the
‘‘equivalent or entire bandwidth’’
requirement).40 The Commission
interpreted this provision to require an
objective comparison of each station’s
use of its bandwidth in terms of
not necessary to include subscriber eligibility
requirements, as it was presumed that all cable
subscribers receive local broadcast stations as part
of their cable package.
38 The Commission found that ‘‘subscriber receipt
of ‘local-into-local’ service [was] unambiguously
required by the statute.’’ SHVERA Significantly
Viewed Report and Order at para. 68.
39 Id. at para. 76 (discussing digital service
limitations). The SHVERA’s language differed with
respect to the analog and digital service limitations.
In 2004, television stations were transitioning from
analog to digital service and most stations were
broadcasting both analog and digital signals.
Consequently, the SHVERA specified that certain
provisions applied to analog signals and other,
often different, provisions applied to digital signals.
See 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(1) (analog service limitations)
and 47 U.S.C. 340 (b)(2)(A) (digital service
limitations) (2004). The Commission noted that,
‘‘[u]nlike the ambiguity in its sister analog provision
[of 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(1) (2004)], Section 340(b)(2)(A)
of the Act, 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(2)(A) (2004), is clear in
requiring a subscriber to receive ‘‘the digital signal
of a network station in the subscriber’s local market
that is affiliated with the same television network.’’
Id. See also id. at 17305, para. 70 (discussing analog
service limitations).
40 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(2)(B) (2004) (‘‘With respect to
a signal that originates as a digital signal of a
network station, this section shall apply only if—
* * * (B) either—(i) the retransmission of the local
network station occupies at least the equivalent
bandwidth as the digital signal retransmitted
pursuant to this section; or (ii) the retransmission
of the local network station is comprised of the
entire bandwidth of the digital signal broadcast by
such local network station.’’). Congress sought to
prevent satellite carriers from offering the local
network station’s digital signal ‘‘in a less robust
format’’ than the significantly viewed affiliate
station’s digital signal). SHVERA Significantly
Viewed Report and Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 17314,
para. 94.
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megabits per second (mbps) or bit rate.41
The SHVERA provided for two
exceptions to the local service
limitations, contained in 47 U.S.C.
340(b)(3) and (b)(4). Section 340(b)(3)
allows satellite carriage of an SV
network station to a subscriber when
there is no local station affiliated with
the same television network as the SV
station present in the local market.
Section 340(b)(4) allows a satellite
carrier to negotiate privately with the
local network station to obtain a waiver
of the subscriber eligibility restrictions
in Sections 340(b)(1) and 340(b)(2).
III. Discussion
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9. We adopt rules in this R&O to
implement the STELA’s amendments to
Section 340(b) of the Communications
Act. Our discussion below addresses the
two substantive changes to Section
340(b)(1) and (b)(2), as well as how
these amended provisions will work
with the existing statutory exceptions in
Section 340(b)(3) and (b)(4). We decline
to address here the merits of Dish’s
petition for further rulemaking filed
with its comments, as those issues are
beyond the scope of this proceeding.42
Finally, we adopt some non-substantive,
‘‘housecleaning’’ rule changes.
10. The STELA amended Section
340(b) to read as follows: 43
(1) Service Limited to Subscribers
Taking Local-Into-Local Service.—This
section shall apply only to
retransmissions to subscribers of a
satellite carrier who receive
retransmissions of a signal from that
satellite carrier pursuant to section 338.
(2) Service Limitations.—A satellite
carrier may retransmit to a subscriber in
high definition format the signal of a
station determined by the Commission
to be significantly viewed under
subsection (a) only if such carrier also
retransmits in high definition format the
signal of a station located in the local
market of such subscriber and affiliated
with the same network whenever such
format is available from such station.
(3) The limitations in paragraphs (1)
and (2) shall not prohibit a
retransmission under this section to a
subscriber located in a local market in
which there are no network stations
affiliated with the same television
network as the station whose signal is
41 See SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report and
Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 17315, para. 96.
42 Dish requested the Commission to undertake a
rulemaking to revise the retransmission consent
rules as they apply to carriage of SV stations. See
Dish Comments (Petition) at 9.
43 47 U.S.C. 340(b) (2010), as amended by the
STELA sec. 203(a). See also 17 U.S.C. 122(a)(2), as
amended by STELA sec. 103(b).
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being retransmitted pursuant to this
section.
(4) Paragraphs (1) and (2) shall not
prohibit a retransmission of a network
station to a subscriber if and to the
extent that the network station in the
local market in which the subscriber is
located, and that is affiliated with the
same television network, has privately
negotiated and affirmatively granted a
waiver from the requirements of
paragraph (1) and (2) to such satellite
carrier with respect to retransmission of
the significantly viewed station to such
subscriber.
11. These amendments simplify the
significantly viewed provisions in
Section 340(b) of the Communications
Act to make it easier for satellite carriers
to offer SV stations to subscribers.44
Specifically, the STELA made two key
changes to Section 340(b).45 First, the
STELA eliminated the language in
Section 340(b)(2)(A) that had required
that subscribers receive the same local
network affiliate and, instead, retains
only the language requiring that the
subscriber receive local-into-local
satellite service in order to be eligible to
receive SV stations.46 Second, the
STELA replaces the ‘‘equivalent or
entire bandwidth’’ requirement
applicable to digital service, which was
previously contained in Section
340(b)(2)(B), with an ‘‘HD format’’
requirement. The STELA did not amend
the statutory exceptions in Sections
340(b)(3) and (b)(4) to the subscriber
eligibility restrictions in Sections
340(b)(1) and (2).
44 See
H.R. 3570 Report at 4.
sec. 203(a) (amendments to be codified
at 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(1) and (2)). We note that the
subscriber eligibility limitations in 47 U.S.C.
340(b)(1) and (2), which are amended by the STELA
sec. 203, do not apply to cable subscribers. We do
not substantively amend our significantly viewed
rules and procedures that satellite carriers share
with cable operators. See 47 CFR 76.54(a) through
(d). Furthermore, we note that the STELA sec. 203
does not amend the significantly viewed provisions
in the Communications Act governing the eligibility
of a television broadcast station to qualify for
‘‘significantly viewed’’ status. See 47 U.S.C. 340(a),
(c) through (g). We do not make any substantive
(non-‘‘housecleaning’’) changes to our rules and
procedures implementing the significantly viewed
station eligibility requirements. See 47 CFR 76.54(a)
through (f), (j) and (k). See infra Section III.F.
(discussing housecleaning changes).
46 Section 340(b)(1) as amended retains the
reference to ‘‘a’’ signal carried pursuant to Section
338 and the explanatory heading referring to
‘‘subscribers taking local-into-local service.’’
Congress removed from this section the phrase ‘‘that
originates as an analog signal of a local network
station’’ following the word ‘‘signal.’’ See DIRECTV
Reply at 5.
45 STELA
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A. The STELA Directs the Commission
To Create a Workable Framework That
Will Enable Satellite Carriers To Offer
Both the SV and Local Stations to
Consumers
12. We find that, in the STELA,
Congress intended that the Commission
create a workable framework for the
satellite carriage of SV stations.47
Congress intended the 2004 SHVERA to
promote parity with cable,48 while
protecting localism by preventing
satellite carriers from favoring an SV
network station over the local in-market
station affiliated with the same TV
network.49 However, very few SV
stations made their way into the living
rooms of satellite TV consumers.50 The
Satellite Carriers attribute this to the
Commission’s ‘‘restrictive’’
interpretation of Section 340(b) in the
2005 SHVERA Significantly Viewed
Report and Order,51 which they
maintain made satellite carriage of SV
47 See STELA–Significantly Viewed NPRM, supra
note 3, at paras. 2, 11.
48 See, e.g., 2004 House Commerce Committee
Report dated July 22, 2004, accompanying House
Bill, H.R. 4501, 108th Cong. (2004), H.R. Rep. No.
108–634, at 1 and 9 (2004) (‘‘2004 House Commerce
Committee Report’’) (noting purpose of the SHVERA
included ‘‘increasing regulatory parity by extending
to satellite carriers the same type of authority cable
operators already have to carry ‘significantly
viewed’ signals into a market’’). See also, e.g., House
of Representatives Floor Debate on the Satellite
Home Viewer Extension and Reauthorization Act of
2004, House Bill H.R. 4518, 150 Cong. Rec. H8210,
H8217–8219 (dated Oct. 6, 2004) (‘‘H.R. 4518 Floor
Debate’’). In a statement in the floor debate, Rep. Joe
Barton (Chairman, House Energy and Commerce
Committee) stated: ‘‘The bill [H.R. 4518] would
extend to satellite operators the authority to carry
such significantly viewed signals on comparable
terms as cable operators.’’ Id. at H8219. See also The
Honorable Joe Barton, Chairman, House Energy and
Commerce Committee, ‘‘Floor Statement’’ on the
Satellite Home Viewer Extension and
Reauthorization Act of 2004, House Bill H.R. 4518,
(dated Oct. 6, 2004) (‘‘Barton Floor Statement’’) (‘‘In
implementing Section 340, the [Commission]
should treat satellite operators in a comparable
fashion to cable operators to the greatest extent
possible with respect to carriage of significantly
viewed stations, in terms of both current and future
significantly viewed rulings.’’)
49 See 2004 House Commerce Committee Report
at 12 (noting that former ‘‘Section 340(b)(2)(B)
prevents the satellite operator from retransmitting a
local affiliate’s digital signal in a less robust format
than a significantly viewed digital signal of a
distant affiliate of the same network, such as by
down-converting the local affiliate’s signal but not
the distant affiliate’s signal from high-definition
digital format to analog or standard definition
digital format’’).
50 See DIRECTV Comments at 2 (noting that it has
‘‘offered only a handful’’ of SV stations since
satellite carriage of such stations was authorized by
SHVERA) and Dish Reply at 5 (noting that ‘‘when
permitted to do so, Dish offered SV stations in
certain counties of only seven DMAs’’).
51 DIRECTV Comments at 1–2 and Dish Reply at
5 (noting that ‘‘the SV program that Congress
spearheaded has not succeeded’’).
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stations impractical or technically
infeasible.52
13. Congress seemed to agree. As
stated in one House Report:
The Commission’s implementation of
section 340, including its interpretation
of the ‘‘equivalent bandwidth’’
requirement, has generally served to
discourage satellite carriers from using
section 340 to provide significantly
viewed signals to qualified
households.53
To achieve more widespread carriage
of SV stations, the STELA amends
Sections 340(b). As discussed below,
Congress eliminated both the former
Section 340(b)(2)(A), which required
that digital local service subscribers
receive the same network affiliate, and
the former Section 340(b)(2)(B), which
contained the ‘‘equivalent or entire
bandwidth’’ requirement.54 Based on
these changes to the statutory text,
Congress intended more than merely to
fix a technical implementation issue
with the equivalent bandwidth
requirement, as the Broadcaster
Associations contend,55 but rather
sought to simplify the law and increase
service to satellite subscribers by
encouraging SV carriage.56 In
reauthorizing the SHVERA and mostly
retaining its framework for the carriage
of SV stations, the STELA also retains
the key goals of its predecessor statute
–to foster localism and promote parity
between cable and satellite service.57
14. The STELA’s relocation of the
statutory copyright license for SV
stations into the ‘‘local’’ license
provisions of the Copyright Act
indicates that Congress considered the
SV compulsory license to be more like
the local license than like the distant
52 DIRECTV and Dish ex parte (dated Sept. 22,
2010) Significantly Viewed Talking Points
Appendix at 1 (‘‘DIRECTV and Dish Sept. 22 SV
Talking Points’’) (expressing concern that the
Commission might adopt rules for SV carriage ‘‘that
make it impractical to offer such stations’’).
53 H.R. 2994 Report at 16. The use of the word
‘‘including’’ implies that Congress’ dissatisfaction
with the Commission’s prior implementation of
Section 340 was not limited to the ‘‘equivalent
bandwidth’’ requirement.
54 See 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(2)(A) and (B). See infra
Sections III.B. and III.C.
55 Broadcaster Associations Comments at 4
(arguing STELA’s statutory changes only ‘‘address a
technical implementation concern’’ with the
‘‘equivalent or entire bandwidth’’ requirement).
56 See H.R. 3570 Report at 4 (noting STELA’s
general intent to ‘‘increase competition and service
to satellite and cable consumers’’).
57 See e.g., H.R. 2994 Report at 15 (noting that
‘‘the ‘significantly viewed’ provision was adopted in
SHVERA to create parity with cable operators’’) and
also H.R. 3570 Report at 10. See SHVERA
Significantly Viewed Report and Order, 20 FCC Rcd
at 17306–7, paras. 71–2 (noting statutory intent ‘‘to
protect localism’’ by citing to the 2004 House
Commerce Committee Report).
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signal license, recognizing that the SV
station is ‘‘local’’ to the community in
which it is significantly viewed.58 SV
stations have SV status because they
have been viewed over-the-air by a
sufficient number of households in the
community in the relevant market. The
Senate Report notes that the SV
provision ‘‘relates to the ability to
receive locally-oriented
programming.’’ 59 Furthermore, satellite
TV consumers deserve access to the
same locally-oriented programming—
including SV stations—as their cablesubscribing neighbors.60 Moreover,
providing satellite carriers parity with
cable was a core goal of the SHVERA in
2004 and it remains one today in the
STELA.61 Therefore, our
58 See S. 1670 Report at 5 (noting ‘‘The [STELA]
moves locally-oriented provisions out of the distant
signal license and places them into the permanent
local license. These provisions include significantly
viewed, special exception, and low-power stations.
Shifting these provisions into the local license will
ensure that the distant signal license is focused
purely on providing truly distant signals to
consumers unserved by their local broadcasters.’’).
This makes sense given STELA’s intent to create
parity with cable, which characterizes SV signals as
those with ‘‘sufficient audience to be considered
local.’’ See 1972 Cable R&O, 36 FCC 2d at 174, para.
83. But see H.R. 3570 Report at 10 (stating ‘‘Since
significantly viewed signals are by definition a
subset of distant signals, SHVERA included this
provision in Section 119, the distant signal license.
However, since significantly viewed signals do not
incur royalties, the Committee believes it should be
moved to Section 122, which governs all other
royalty-free satellite transmissions under the
compulsory license. The bill accordingly
incorporates the significantly viewed provision,
previously in Section 119(a)(3), into Section
122(a).’’). The Broadcaster Associations argue that
this statement means STELA considers SV signals
to be distant by definition. See Broadcaster
Associations Reply at 18. We disagree that these
Congressional characterizations are necessarily at
odds. The context of the H.R. 3570 Report referred
to SHVERA’s treatment of SV signals. In contrast,
STELA intended to treat SV signals like ‘‘all other
royalty-free satellite transmissions,’’ i.e., like local
signals. The change in license and treatment is also
consistent with the statutory copyright license for
cable retransmission of SV signals, which also treats
them, for royalty purposes, as local signals. See 17
U.S.C. 111(a), (c), (d), and (f), as amended by
STELA sec. 104.
59 See S. 1670 Report at 4. See also DIRECTV
Reply at 1, n.4; Dish Reply at 6.
60 See, e.g., H.R. 4518 Floor Debate (on SHVERA
bill), supra note 48, at H8223 (in which Rep.
Conyers states that the SHVERA bill [H.R. 4518]
‘‘address[ed] the desires of consumers in that it
permits the satellite companies to retransmit a
significantly viewed local signal to a customer’’); Id.
at H8217 (in which Rep. Sensenbrenner states that
the SHVERA bill, H.R. 4518, ‘‘changes both the
copyright and communications acts to ensure, first,
that consumers will have greater choice in
programming; second, that satellite providers will
have greater freedom to deliver the content
consumers desire’’); and Id. at H8219 (in which Rep.
Barton states that ‘‘[b]y extending the expiring
provisions, increasing parity, and promoting further
competition, this legislation [H.R. 4518] will
continue to enhance service to consumers.’’)
61 See, e.g., H.R. 3570 Waxman Floor Statement
(on STELA bill), supra note 21, at H13441 (calling
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implementation of the statutory changes
to Section 340(b) focuses on enabling
satellite TV consumers to receive both
the local in-market and SV stations from
their carriers, as is the plain intent of
Section 340.62 To achieve this objective,
our interpretation of the statute reflects
the practical realities of satellite local
carriage, in accordance with Congress’s
intent to remove barriers to SV
carriage.63
15. In the STELA, Congress directs us
to implement Section 340 in a practical
way that will better enable satellite
carriers to offer SV stations to their
subscribers. We find that carriage of
both the SV and local in-market stations
will best foster localism and promote
parity with cable, and so, in
implementing the law we must balance
protection of local in-market stations
against the cost of making SV carriage
technically infeasible or impractical.
B. The STELA Eliminates the
Requirement To Receive a Local Station
Affiliated With the Same Network as the
SV Station and Requires Instead That
Subscribers Receive Local-Into-Local
Service
16. We adopt our proposal to
eliminate the requirement that a
subscriber receive the local station
affiliated with a specific network in
order for that subscriber to also receive
an SV station affiliated with the same
network, and require instead that the
subscriber receive local-into-local
satellite service.64 We clarify, however,
that a satellite carrier must comply with
Section 76.65 of our rules, which
codifies the requirement for good faith
in retransmission consent negotiations,
the bill [H.R. 3570] ‘‘an important step forward for
consumers,’’ Chairman Waxman notes, among other
things, that the ‘‘bill makes changes to the existing
rules on ‘significantly viewed’ signals in an effort
to promote competition between satellite and cable
companies’’); and H.R. 4518 Floor Debate (on 2004
SHVERA bill), supra note 48, at H8223 (in which
Rep. Dingell states that the bill [H.R. 4518] will not
only ‘‘increase regulatory parity between cable and
satellite providers’’ but that such ‘‘increased parity
should help spur greater competition between cable
and satellite providers and ultimately benefit
consumers in the form of lower prices and better
service’’). Contrary to the Broadcaster Associations’
argument, there is nothing in the record to suggest
that cable carriage of SV stations has harmed
localism over more than 30 years. See NAB ex parte
(dated Oct. 7, 2010) Significantly Viewed Talking
Points Appendix at 3 (‘‘NAB Oct. 7 SV Talking
Points’’) (claiming the Satellite Carriers ignore
STELA’s goal to protect localism).
62 As discussed above in supra para. 1, the
purpose of Section 340 is to give satellite carriers
the authority to offer SV stations as part of their
local service to their subscribers.
63 See DIRECTV and Dish ex parte (dated Sept.
20, 2010) Significantly Viewed Talking Points
Appendix at 1 (‘‘DIRECTV and Dish Sept. 20 SV
Talking Points’’).
64 STELA-Significantly Viewed NPRM, supra
note 3, at para. 14.
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in order for it to carry an SV station. In
the record, the Satellite Carriers support
our proposal, while the Broadcaster
Associations oppose it.65
17. In the 2004 SHVERA, Congress
authorized satellite carriers to offer SV
stations to subscribers, but crafted
Sections 340(b)(1) and 340(b)(2)(A) of
the Act to protect localism by requiring
that these subscribers also receive the
local network affiliate (called the ‘‘local
service’’ requirement).66 These two
provisions, however, contained different
language. Whereas the analog local
service requirement in Section
340(b)(1) 67 required only that the
subscriber receive local service
‘‘pursuant to Section 338’’—referring to
the ‘‘carry one, carry all’’ carriage
requirements that pertain to local
stations,68 the digital local service
requirement in Section 340(b)(2)(A) 69
contained additional language that
expressly required the subscriber to
receive the local digital station that was
‘‘affiliated with the same television
network’’ as the SV station (hereinafter
referred to as the ‘‘same network
affiliate’’ language). Thus, while each of
these provisions explicitly required a
subscriber to at least receive the satellite
carrier’s local-into-local service before
that subscriber could receive an SV
station, it was unclear (when
considering the two provisions together)
whether Section 340(b)(1) also required
a subscriber to receive the specific local
analog network station before that
subscriber could receive the SV station
affiliated with the same network.70 For
65 Broadcaster Associations Comments at 7 and
Reply at 6; DIRECTV Comments at 3 and Reply at
3; Dish Comments at 4 and Reply at 7.
66 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(1) and (b)(2)(A) (2004).
Congress intended for these provisions to protect
localism ‘‘by helping ensure that the satellite
operator cannot retransmit into a market a
significantly viewed digital signal of a network
broadcast station from a distant market without also
retransmitting into the market a digital signal of any
local affiliate from the same network.’’ SHVERA
Significantly Viewed Report and Order, 20 FCC Rcd
at 17306–7, paras. 71–2.
67 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(1) (2004), as enacted in 2004,
stated: ‘‘With respect to a signal that originates as
an analog signal of a network station, this section
shall apply only to retransmissions to subscribers
of a satellite carrier who receive retransmissions of
a signal that originates as an analog signal of a local
network station from that satellite carrier pursuant
to section 338.’’
68 47 U.S.C. 338. See also supra para. 6
(discussing the ‘‘carry one, carry all’’ requirement).
69 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(2)(A) (2004), as enacted in
2004, stated: ‘‘With respect to a signal that
originates as a digital signal of a network station,
this section shall apply only if—(A) the subscriber
receives from the satellite carrier pursuant to
section 338 the retransmission of the digital signal
of a network station in the subscriber’s local market
that is affiliated with the same television network.
* * *’’
70 SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report and
Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 17304–8, paras. 68, 70–73.
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example, it was unclear how the statute
applied where there was a local network
analog station, but such station failed to
request local carriage, refused to grant
retransmission consent, or was
otherwise ineligible for local carriage.71
18. In the 2005 SHVERA Significantly
Viewed Report and Order, the
Commission interpreted former Sections
340(b)(1) and 340(b)(2)(A) to require
that the subscriber receive the specific
local station that is affiliated with the
same network as the SV station, whether
the station’s signal was analog or
digital.72 Although former Section
340(b)(1) lacked the express ‘‘same
network affiliate’’ language as that
contained in its digital counterpart, the
Commission interpreted the two
provisions together and read the ‘‘same
network affiliate’’ requirement into
former Section 340(b)(1), based largely
on the concept that Congress intended
the two provisions to achieve similar
ends.73 Accordingly, the Commission
adopted Section 76.54(g) of the rules,
based on the ‘‘same network affiliate’’
language in former Section
340(b)(2)(A).74
19. As we tentatively concluded in
the NPRM, new Section 340(b)(1)
requires only that the subscriber receive
local-into-local satellite service and no
longer requires carriage of the local
affiliate of the same network.75 New
Section 340(b)(1) applies ‘‘only to
71 See
id. at 17304, para. 67.
at 17305 and 17308, paras. 70 and 76. In the
2006 DIRECTV-EchoStar Joint Petition, the Satellite
Carriers challenged the Commission’s interpretation
of the analog service limitation provision in 47
U.S.C. 340(b)(1). With the end of analog full-power
broadcasting, this issue is now moot. See infra
Section III.G. (discussing Order on
Reconsideration).
73 See SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report and
Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 17307, para. 72. We note that
the Commission also stated that its interpretation of
Section 340(b)(1) was necessary to give meaning to
the statutory exceptions in Sections 340(b)(3) and
(4); see supra para. 10 (for statutory text). As
discussed, infra, in paras. 46–47 and note 167, we
find the statutory exceptions remain meaningful to,
and are consistent with, our interpretation of
Section 340(b)(1) as amended by STELA.
74 47 CFR 76.54(g) states: ‘‘(g) Signals of analog or
digital significantly viewed television broadcast
stations may not be retransmitted by satellite
carriers to subscribers who do not receive localinto-local service, including a station affiliated with
the same network as the significantly viewed
station, pursuant to § 76.66 of this chapter; except
that a satellite carrier may retransmit a significantly
viewed signal of a television broadcast station to a
subscriber who receives local-into-local service but
does not receive a local station affiliated with the
same network as the significantly viewed station, if:
(1) There is no station affiliated with the same
television network as the station whose signal is
significantly viewed; or (2) The station affiliated
with the same television network as the station
whose signal is significantly viewed has granted a
waiver in accordance with 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(4).’’
75 STELA-Significantly Viewed NPRM, supra
note 3, at para. 14.
72 Id.
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retransmissions to subscribers of a
satellite carrier who receive
retransmissions of a signal from that
satellite carrier pursuant to Section
338.’’ 76 By providing simply that a
subscriber must receive ‘‘a’’ signal from
the satellite carrier pursuant to Section
338 before receiving a SV signal, the
statute removes any precondition that a
subscriber receive ‘‘the’’ local affiliate of
the same network as the SV station. In
drafting new Section 340(b)(1) for the
STELA, Congress eliminated the ‘‘same
network affiliate’’ language that
appeared in the provision enacted as
part of the SHVERA in 2004.77 Our
interpretation that the new Section
340(b)(1) requires only that the
subscriber receive local-into-local
service is also consistent with the
provision’s heading: ‘‘Service Limited
To Subscribers Taking Local-Into-Local
Service,’’ as well as with the statutory
copyright license for SV stations, which
allows a satellite carrier to retransmit
SV stations to subscribers that receive
signals pursuant to the statutory
copyright license for local signals but
says nothing about the subscriber
having to receive the signal of the local
affiliate of the same network.78
20. Based on the language of the
amended text, Congress’ purposes of
facilitating SV carriage and achieving
closer parity between cable and satellite
providers, and the shift of the SV
copyright license from the distant
license to the local license,79 we
conclude that the best interpretation of
new Section 340(b)(1) is that the
subscriber need only receive a local
station pursuant to Section 338 in order
76 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(1) (referring to retransmissions
‘‘pursuant to 47 U.S.C. 338’’). Each satellite carrier
providing a local station pursuant to the statutory
copyright license is generally obligated to carry any
qualified local television station in the same DMA
that has requested carriage. 47 U.S.C. 338.
77 In STELA, Congress eliminated most references
distinguishing the treatment of ‘‘analog’’ versus
‘‘digital’’ signals or stations in light of the
completion of the digital television transition for
full power stations. In Section 340, Congress
eliminated the text of the digital provision (former
section 340(b)(2)(A), which had said: ‘‘With respect
to a signal that originates as a digital signal of a
network station, this section shall apply only if—
(A) the subscriber receives from the satellite carrier
pursuant to section 338 of this title the
retransmission of the digital signal of a network
station in the subscriber’s local market that is
affiliated with the same television network; and’’
(B) the retransmission complies with either the
(i) equivalent or (ii) entire bandwidth requirement.’’
(Emphasis added.)
78 17 U.S.C. 122(a)(2)(A) (providing a statutory
copyright license to support satellite carriage of SV
stations provided the subscriber is receiving
stations pursuant to the statutory copyright license
for local stations). See 17 U.S.C. 122(a)(1).
79 We note that SV stations are treated as ‘‘local’’
for copyright purposes in 17 U.S.C. 111 (the cable
copyright license). See supra note 58.
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to be eligible to receive SV stations, and
that it need not receive the network
affiliate affiliated with the same network
as the SV station.80 The Broadcaster
Associations disagree with the NPRM’s
interpretation of new Section 340(b)(1)
and argue that the Commission should
retain the interpretation it applied to the
SHVERA, notwithstanding the change
in the statutory language as enacted in
the STELA.81 They note that, in
implementing the SHVERA in 2005, the
Commission interpreted the former
analog local service provision in former
Section 340(b)(1) and the former digital
local service provision in former Section
340(b)(2)(A) to require that a satellite
subscriber must receive the local
affiliate of a specific network in order to
be eligible to receive the SV station
affiliated with the same network.82 The
SHVERA, in contrast to the STELA,
included language expressly requiring
receipt of the ‘‘same network affiliate’’ in
the provision applying to eligibility for
a digital SV station.83 The Commission,
relying on the language in the former
digital provision, applied the
requirement to subscriber eligibility for
both analog and digital SV stations.84
The Broadcaster Associations contend
that we should retain the former
interpretation and apply it to the new
STELA provision despite the removal of
the old language.85 They argue that
nothing has materially changed with
respect to the local service requirement,
other than the completion of the DTV
transition and, therefore, that the
Commission’s prior interpretation of
Section 340(b)(1) should not change.86
They argue that Congress ‘‘re-enacted’’
the Commission’s 2005 interpretation of
former Section 340(b)(1) because it did
not substantively change that provision,
thereby giving its ‘‘implicit approval’’ of
that interpretation.87 We reject these
arguments as they ignore that the
80 This conclusion affirms our tentative
conclusion in the NPRM at paras. 14–17. See also
DIRECTV Comments at 3–4 and Reply at 3–8; Dish
Comments at 2 and Reply at 7.
81 Broadcaster Associations Comments at 8
(arguing that the ‘‘prior Section 340(b)(1) never
contained the ‘same network affiliate’ requirement’’
and, therefore, ‘‘the same interpretation and the
same result must apply here.’’).
82 See Broadcaster Associations Comments at 8.
See also SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report and
Order at paras. 71–3.
83 See 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(2)(A).
84 See SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report and
Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 17306–7, paras. 71–2.
85 See Broadcaster Associations Comments at 9.
86 Id. at 8–11 (arguing ‘‘the only substantive
change to the provision is the removal of references
to ‘analog signal’’’).
87 Id. at 12 (arguing that ‘‘Congress’s failure to
expressly amend the statute to alter that
interpretation * * * is tantamount to a legislative
re-enactment of that interpretation.’’).
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STELA does, in fact, materially change
the SHVERA’s local service
requirements.88
21. The Broadcaster Associations
assert that we must presume that
Congress was aware of the
Commission’s prior interpretation of the
local service provision.89 By the same
reasoning, however, we must also
presume that Congress was aware of the
basis for that interpretation: Namely, the
‘‘same network affiliate’’ language in the
former digital local service requirement
in former Section 340(b)(2)(A). Congress
intentionally removed that requirement
when it chose to strike that language in
favor of the former analog local service
limitation language. As we said in the
NPRM, Congress chose to discard the
‘‘same network affiliate’’ language in the
former digital local service requirement
in Section 340(b)(2)(A), which the
Commission had relied upon for its
more restrictive interpretation of the
former analog local service requirement
in Section 340(b)(1).90 As Dish notes:
‘‘Congress’ eraser is no less dispositive
than its pen.’’ 91 Moreover, our
interpretation is consistent with
Congress’ intent to facilitate carriage
and availability of SV stations for more
satellite subscribers, and, thereby, to
achieve closer parity with cable carriage
of SV stations.
22. The Broadcaster Associations also
argue that because both the former and
new Section 340(b)(2) contain the ‘‘same
network affiliate’’ language, the need to
reconcile these two provisions
remains.92 Moreover, they argue that
because three out of four of the Section
340(b) provisions contain the ‘‘same
network affiliate’’ language, we should
read that language into the one that does
not: The new local service
requirement.93 We reject both claims.
New Section 340(b)(2) is a different
requirement from the other provisions
of Section 340(b), and addresses only
when a satellite carrier may provide the
HD signal of an SV station.94 Moreover,
contrary to the Broadcaster
88 See
DIRECTV Reply at 5–6; Dish Reply at 7–
8.
89 Broadcaster
Associations Comments at 12.
NPRM at para. 16 See NPRM at ¶ 16
(quoting Russello v. United States, 464 U.S. 16, 23
(1983) (‘‘[Where] Congress includes particular
language in one section of a statute but omits it in
another section of the same Act, it is generally
presumed that Congress acts intentionally and
purposely in the disparate inclusion or exclusion.’’).
91 Dish Reply at 10.
92 Broadcaster Associations Comments at 8
(claiming ‘‘[t]hat requirement appeared in prior
Section 340(b)(2), and that very same requirement
still appears in new Section 340(b)(2).’’).
93 Broadcaster Associations Reply at 9–10
(‘‘Congress maintained the ‘same network affiliate’
language in three of the four subparagraphs’’).
94 Dish Reply at 9.
90 See
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72975
Associations’ assertion, we find that
Congress’s inclusion of the ‘‘same
network affiliate’’ language in three out
of four of the Section 340(b) provisions
and not in the amended digital local
service provision indicates that such
exclusion was intentional.95
23. We recognize that there may be
tension in some circumstances between
the goals of protecting localism, on the
one hand, and achieving closer parity
between pay television providers and
increasing SV carriage, on the other.
Specifically, our interpretation below of
the STELA’s amendments to Sections
340(b)(1) and (b)(2) makes it possible for
a satellite carrier to carry an SV network
station, even in HD format, without also
carrying the corresponding local inmarket affiliate if that local station has
not granted retransmission consent. The
Broadcaster Associations argue that this
undermines local service.96 However,
because SV status generally applies to
only some areas in a DMA and not
throughout an entire DMA, we find it
unlikely that an SV station could
permanently substitute for a local inmarket station, even in the provision of
network programming to the market.97
Moreover, because most viewers want to
watch their local stations, we do not
think that carriage of only SV stations
would satisfy most subscribers for an
extended time. Furthermore, as the
Broadcaster Associations have noted in
a different proceeding, retransmission
consent impasses resulting in loss of a
local station are relatively rare 98 and,
when they do occur, they are usually
short-lived. Although the Broadcaster
Associations do provide a few examples
of markets where they have concerns
that satellite carriers could rely on
95 See, e.g., Duncan v. Walker, 533 U.S. 167, 173
(2001) (quoting Bates v. U.S., 522 U.S. 23, 29–30
(1997)) (‘‘where Congress includes particular
language in one section of a statute but omits it in
another section of the same Act, it is generally
presumed that Congress acts intentionally and
purposely in the disparate inclusion or exclusion’’).
See also supra note 90.
96 See Broadcaster Associations Reply at 14. The
Commission recognized in the SHVERA
Significantly Viewed Report and Order that ‘‘the
legislative history repeatedly reflects Congressional
concern that the amendments permitting carriage of
out-of-market significantly viewed signals not
detract from localism.’’ See SHVERA Significantly
Viewed Report and Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 17306–
7, paras. 71–2 (noting statutory intent ‘‘to protect
localism’’ by citing to the 2004 House Commerce
Committee Report).
97 See DIRECTV and Dish Sept. 20 SV Talking
Points.
98 See, e.g., Opposition of the Broadcaster
Associations in MB Docket No. 10–71 (dated May
18, 2010) at vii and 43, n. 148 (citing Bernstein
Research, Cable and Satellite: Asymmetrical
‘‘Retrans’’ Leverage Favors Cable over Satellite and
Telcos (Mar. 21, 2006) (finding that ‘‘negotiating
impasses that cause interruptions in access to
broadcast signals are extremely rare’’).
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carriage of an SV station to the
exclusion of the local in-market station,
the record does not reflect instances in
which an SV station has supplanted an
in-market station in the cable or satellite
context.99 Therefore, we will monitor
how the rules adopted in this order are
working to determine if there are
abuses, unintended consequences, or
misuse of the rules that might lead to
violations of the good faith requirements
associated with retransmission consent
negotiations.100 Now that we have
established a practical framework for
satellite carriage of SV stations, we
expect Satellite Carriers to offer SV
stations to consumers wherever
possible. However, if our
implementation of Section 340(b)
results in satellite carriers using SV
stations to supplant, rather than
supplement, their carriage of local inmarket stations, we will reexamine our
rules and our statutory analysis here in
light of Congress’ goals. In light of our
conclusion that the new language in the
STELA no longer requires subscriber
receipt of a specific local station, we
revise Section 76.54(g).101 The amended
rule requires that a subscriber receive
the satellite carrier’s local-into-local
service as a precondition for the
subscriber to receive SV stations.
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C. The STELA Eliminates the
‘‘Equivalent or Entire Bandwidth’’
Requirement and Replaces it with an
‘‘HD Format’’ Requirement
24. We adopt our proposal to
eliminate the ‘‘equivalent or entire
bandwidth’’ requirement and to provide,
in its place, that a satellite carrier may
retransmit the HD signal of an SV
station to a subscriber only if such
carrier also retransmits the HD signal of
the local station affiliated with the same
network whenever that signal is
available in HD format. Both the
Broadcaster Associations and Satellite
Carriers agree with this conclusion. The
commenters disagree, however, how to
interpret and implement the new ‘‘HD
format’’ requirement.
25. In the 2004 SHVERA, Congress
enacted the ‘‘equivalent or entire’’
bandwidth requirement to prevent a
satellite carrier from using technological
99 See NAB ex parte (dated Oct. 22, 2010) at 1,
3–6 (‘‘NAB Oct. 22 ex parte’’) (suggesting local
stations in four DMAs—Dayton, OH; Hartford-New
Haven, CT; Lansing, MI; and Sherman, TX-Ada,
OK—are at risk of being overshadowed by a SV
station from an adjacent, larger market). In its ex
parte, NAB provided staff with tables ‘‘reflecting the
extent to which out-of-market duplicating network
stations are ‘significantly viewed’ in several local
markets.’’ Id.
100 See 47 CFR 76.65 (requiring broadcasters and
MVPDs to negotiate in good faith).
101 See Appendix B final rule 47 CFR 76.54(g)(1).
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means to discriminate against a local
network station in favor of the SV
network affiliate.102 The Commission
codified these requirements in Section
76.54(h) of the rules, which tracks the
language of SHVERA.103 In
implementing that provision, the
Commission strictly interpreted the
statutory requirement for ‘‘equivalent
bandwidth.’’ As a result, satellite
carriers have been required to ensure
equality between the satellite
bandwidth allocated to carriage of the
local station and the SV stations on
virtually a minute-by-minute basis,
making carriage of SV stations so
burdensome that they are rarely
carried.104
26. The STELA eliminated the
‘‘equivalent or entire bandwidth’’
requirement from the statute,105 and
replaced it with ‘‘HD format.’’ 106 In
doing so, Congress intended to facilitate
satellite carriage of SV stations, which
Congress thought was thwarted by the
Commission’s implementation of the
predecessor provision.107 The legislative
history also shows that Congress wanted
to simplify the law and increase service
102 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(2)(B) (2004). The law reflects
Congress’ intent to prevent a satellite carrier from
offering the local digital station ‘‘in a less robust
format’’ than the SV digital station). SHVERA
Significantly Viewed Report and Order, 20 FCC Rcd
at 17314, para. 94.
103 47 CFR 76.54(h) states: ‘‘Signals of
significantly viewed network stations that originate
as digital signals may not be retransmitted to
subscribers unless the satellite carrier retransmits
the digital signal of the local network station, which
is affiliated with the same television network as the
network station whose signal is significantly
viewed, in either (1) at least the equivalent
bandwidth of the significantly viewed station or (2)
the entire bandwidth of the digital signal broadcast
by such local station.’’
104 See supra para. 13 (quoting H.R. 2994 Report
at 16). See also Testimony of Bob Gabrielli, Senior
Vice President, Broadcasting Operations and
Distribution, DIRECTV, Inc., before the U.S. House
of Representatives Subcommittee on
Communications, Technology and the Internet,
Hearing on Reauthorization of the of the Satellite
Home Viewer Extension and Reauthorization Act, at
9 (Feb. 24, 2009) (‘‘Gabrielli Testimony’’) (asserting
that it is ‘‘infeasible’’ for DIRECTV to ‘‘carry local
stations in the same format as SV stations every
moment of the day’’).
105 In the 2006 DIRECTV–EchoStar Joint Petition,
the Satellite Carriers challenged the Commission’s
interpretation of the ‘‘equivalent bandwidth’’
requirement. Because the STELA eliminates this
requirement, this issue is now moot. See infra
Section III.G. (discussing Order on
Reconsideration).
106 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(2) (2010), as amended by the
STELA sec. 203(a).
107 H.R. 2994 Report at 16 (noting that the
Commission’s implementation of Section 340,
including its interpretation of the ‘‘equivalent
bandwidth’’ requirement, has generally served to
discourage satellite carriers from using Section 340
to provide significantly viewed signals to qualified
households). See also Gabrielli Testimony at 9
(‘‘Fixing the ‘Significantly Viewed Rules’ will
Rescue Congress’s Good Idea from the FCC’s
Implementation Mistakes’’).
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to satellite consumers.108 Congress’
principal concern was simply to clarify
that a satellite carrier may provide an
SV station in HD format as long as the
carrier also carries the corresponding
local network affiliate in HD format if it
is available in HD format.109
27. Accordingly, we revise Section
76.54(h) to eliminate the ‘‘equivalent or
entire bandwidth’’ requirement and to
provide that a satellite carrier may
retransmit the HD signal of an SV
station to a subscriber only if such
carrier also retransmits the HD signal of
the local station affiliated with the same
network whenever that signal is
available in HD format.110 This part of
the rule tracks the amended statutory
language.111 In addition, as discussed
below, we adopt additional rules to
interpret and implement the new ‘‘HD
format’’ requirement.
1. ‘‘HD Format’’ Requirement Applies
Only Where a Satellite Carrier
Retransmits the SV Station in HD
Format
28. We adopt our tentative conclusion
in the NPRM that the ‘‘HD format’’
requirement in Section 340(b)(2) applies
only where a satellite carrier retransmits
the SV station in HD format and does
not restrict satellite carriage of the SV
station in SD format.112 The Satellite
Carriers support this conclusion, while
the Broadcaster Associations oppose
it.113
29. The Broadcaster Associations
object to the additional language in our
proposed Section 76.54(g)(2) clarifying
that the ‘‘HD format’’ requirement does
not apply to satellite carriage of an SV
station in SD format.114 They argue that
the statute requires satellite carriage of
a local station in SD format if the
satellite carrier retransmits the SV
station in SD format. We disagree. As
discussed above, the amended local
service requirement in Section 340(b)(1)
now requires only that a satellite
subscriber receive the satellite carrier’s
local-into-local service as a precondition
for the subscriber to receive SV
stations.115 Moreover, the express
108 See
H.R. 3570 Report at 4–5.
2994 Report at 16.
110 See Appendix B final rule 47 CFR 76.54(g)(2).
We renumber former Section 76.54(h) as 76.54(g)(2).
111 Id.
112 NPRM at para. 12. We clarify that this
requirement is separate from the local service
requirement in Section 340(b)(1), which imposes
restrictions on the satellite carriage of an SV station,
regardless of format.
113 Broadcaster Associations Comments at 14;
DIRECTV Comments at 4 and Reply at 8; Dish
Comments at 2.
114 Broadcaster Associations Comments at 14–15.
115 See supra para. 16. See also DIRECTV Reply
at 8.
109 H.R.
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language of the HD format requirement
in Section 340(b)(2) applies only when
a satellite carrier transmits an SV station
in HD format. Therefore, in order for a
satellite carrier to retransmit to a
subscriber an SV station in SD format,
the statute does not require satellite
carriage of the local station affiliated
with the same network in SD format.
30. Accordingly, we adopt our
tentative conclusion that Section
340(b)(2) only limits satellite carriage of
an SV station in HD format and does not
apply if the satellite carrier only carries
the SV station in SD format, and we
adopt this requirement in new Section
76.54(g)(2).116 We also adopt our
proposal that, for purposes of this
provision, ‘‘HD format’’ refers to a
picture quality resolution of 720p,
1080i, or higher.117 We received no
opposition to this proposal.
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2. ‘‘HD Format’’ Requirement Applies
When a Local Station Makes Itself
Technically and Legally ‘‘Available’’ to
Satellite Carrier
31. We conclude that, for a local (inmarket) station to be ‘‘available’’ for
purposes of the ‘‘HD format’’
requirement in Section 340(b)(2), the
local station must: (1) Timely request
carriage (i.e., elect mandatory carriage or
grant retransmission consent); (2)
provide a good quality HD signal to the
satellite carrier’s local receive facility
(LRF) in accordance with Section
76.66(g) of the Commission’s rules; and
(3) otherwise comply with Sections
76.65 and 76.66.118 We believe that the
statute’s use of the term ‘‘available,’’
instead of ‘‘broadcast’’ or ‘‘transmitted,’’
signifies that Congress did not intend a
narrow technical meaning and affords
us discretion to create a workable
framework for satellite carriage of SV
stations. Our conclusion is supported by
Dish and DIRECTV,119 while the
Broadcaster Associations oppose it.120
32. The STELA establishes the new
‘‘HD format’’ requirement in Section
116 See Appendix B final rule 47 CFR
76.54(g)(2)(i).
117 See Appendix B final rule 47 CFR
76.54(g)(2)(ii). NPRM at para. 12 (citing, e.g., Local
Broadcast Signal Carriage First Report and Order,
66 FR 16533, March 26, 2001 (discussing several
formats that are considered ‘‘high definition’’); Local
Broadcast Signal Carriage Second Report and
Order, 73 FR 24502, May 5, 2008. See also, e.g.,
Newton’s Telecom Dictionary definition of HDTV at
389 (20th ed. 2004) and the Commission’s ‘‘DTV
Shopping Guide’’ for consumers at https://
www.dtv.gov/shopgde.html).
118 See 47 CFR 76.65 and 76.66. These rules
govern, inter alia, requirements to negotiate in good
faith, procedures for requesting carriage, carriage of
stations that substantially duplicate, and other
matters related to satellite carriage of local stations.
119 See Dish Comments at 7 and DIRECTV and
Dish Sept. 22 SV Talking Points at 3.
120 Broadcaster Associations Reply at 14–16.
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340(b)(2) to permit a satellite carrier to
retransmit an SV network station in HD
‘‘only if such carrier also retransmits in
high definition format the signal of a
station located in the local market of
such subscriber and affiliated with the
same network whenever such format is
available from such station.’’ 121 In the
NPRM, we sought comment on the
significance of this language. We also
sought comment on whether satellite
carriers would face any technical
problems in complying with our
proposed rules.
33. The STELA does not define the
term ‘‘available’’ for purposes of Section
340.122 The legislative history likewise
does not explain the meaning of the
term. The Satellite Carriers and
Broadcaster Associations offer
competing interpretations as to what
‘‘available’’ should mean in this context.
Dish argues that we should interpret
this language to mean that, ‘‘if the local
station has not elected must carry and
has not signed a retransmission consent
agreement, or fails to provide a good
quality signal in accordance with
[Section] 76.66(g), then the signal
should be deemed not available for
purposes of the [‘‘HD format’’
requirement], and the satellite carrier
should be able to supply the SV station
in HD.’’ 123 Dish argues that this
interpretation is necessary to prevent a
local station from depriving satellite
subscribers of both the local and the SV
station in the event of an impasse in
retransmission negotiations, which they
assert would be ‘‘a result directly at odds
with Congress’ express intent to make
SV stations more available to satellite
subscribers.’’ 124 The Broadcaster
Associations oppose Dish’s proposal,
asserting that the Satellite Carriers’
interpretations of the new ‘‘HD format’’
requirement ‘‘are motivated by a desire
to affect retransmission consent
negotiations.’’ 125
34. The Broadcaster Associations
argue that the term ‘‘available’’ should
121 See 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(2) (2010), as amended by
the STELA sec. 203(a).
122 The STELA amendments to the
Communications Act use the word ‘‘available’’ with
respect to a signal in three different contexts: (1) In
Section 340 with respect to an HD signal; (2) in
Section 339 in reference to whether the satellite
carrier is retransmitting the local station to a
subscriber as part of the local-into-local service
package, see 47 U.S.C. 339(a)(2)(A)(i)(I), (2)(B)(i)(I)
and (II), (2)(C)(i) and (ii), (2)(D)(iii), (2)(E), and
(2)(H); and (3) ‘‘availability’’ in Section 342 with
respect to a satellite carrier’s ‘‘good quality signal,’’
see 47 U.S.C. 342(e)(2)(A)(i). As discussed, infra,
only Section 339 offers a definition of ‘‘available’’
but expressly limits this definition: ‘‘for purposes of
this paragraph,’’ that is, to Section 339(a).
123 Dish Comments at 7–8.
124 Id. at 8.
125 Broadcaster Associations Reply at 12.
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mean ‘‘whenever the television station is
transmitting or broadcasting the
relevant channel in HD format.’’ 126
They argue that this interpretation is
most consistent with other parts of the
statute, such as Sections 339 127 and
342 128 of the Act.129 We disagree. The
Sections cited by the Broadcaster
Associations pertain to a different use of
the term ‘‘available’’ in different contexts
and are expressly limited to those
contexts. Moreover, even if we were to
rely on the definition of ‘‘available’’ in
Section 339 or the reference to
‘‘availability’’ in Section 342, the term
‘‘available’’ in the context of SV carriage
would remain ambiguous. Section 339
relates to whether a satellite carrier’s
local-into-local package is ‘‘available’’ to
a subscriber. If so, the subscriber is not
eligible for distant signals (i.e., ‘‘no
distant, where local’’). In the context of
HD signal availability in Section 340,
ascribing this meaning to the term
‘‘available’’ could support either the
Satellite Carriers’ interpretation that the
HD signal is not available if the local
station does not grant consent for
retransmission or the Broadcaster
Associations’ interpretation that the HD
signal is available if broadcast.130
Similarly, Section 342 refers to the
‘‘availability level’’ of a satellite signal as
a means of defining ‘‘good quality
satellite signal’’ for purposes of a
satellite carrier’s eligibility for
certification as a ‘‘qualified carrier.’’ 131
We do not see the relevance of satellite
signal coverage in the context of Section
342 to the interpretation of Section 340.
Moreover, here again, even by strained
analogy, signal availability could mean
the physical presence of the signal, as
126 Id.
at 15.
339(a)(2)(H) of the Act defines the
term ‘‘available’’ in this limited context (i.e., ‘‘no
distant where local’’):
(H) Available defined. For purposes of this
paragraph, a satellite carrier makes available a local
signal to a subscriber or person if the satellite
carrier offers that local signal to other subscribers
who reside in the same zip code as that subscriber
or person.
47 U.S.C. 339(a)(2)(H). See also Broadcaster
Associations Reply at 14–15 (citing 47 U.S.C.
339(a)(2)(C)(i)).
128 The Broadcaster Associations also argue that,
in the qualified satellite carrier certification context
in Section 342 of the Act, the ‘‘availability level of
a satellite signal’’ ‘‘means that the satellite carrier is
retransmitting the satellite signal in a manner to
satisfy the ‘good quality satellite signal’
requirements.’’ Broadcaster Associations Reply at 15
(citing 47 U.S.C. 342(e)(2)(A)(i)).
129 Id. at 15.
130 For example, the definition in Section 339
does not shed light on whether the term ‘‘available’’
takes into account practical considerations or
whether it is sufficient for a signal simply to be
theoretically available.
131 47 U.S.C. 342 (describing the process and
grounds for the Commission to issue a ‘‘qualified
carrier’’ certification pursuant to 17 U.S.C. 119(g)).
127 Section
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the Broadcaster Associations argue, or
the ability to receive and use the signal,
as the satellite carriers contend.
35. In contrast to the Broadcaster
Associations’ attempt to import uses of
the word from other contexts, the
Satellite Carriers describe the
circumstances in which the HD format
requirement is intended to apply: When
the satellite carrier receives a station’s
HD signal and the permission to
retransmit it but chooses not to
retransmit the HD version and instead
converts the HD signal to a standard
definition (‘‘SD’’) signal.132 We believe
that this interpretation is most
consistent with common usage of the
term ‘‘available.’’ In contrast, we think it
strains the common meaning of the term
to consider ‘‘available’’ a signal that the
satellite carrier is legally barred from
carrying.
36. The Satellite Carriers also address
the practical impact of defining the term
‘‘available’’ as suggested by the
Broadcaster Associations. They explain
that they offer local service in some
markets only in HD.133 Therefore, an SV
station originating from such a market
would have one HD feed covering both
the station’s local market and SV area
and there would be no technical way for
the satellite carrier to down-convert the
HD feed signal to SD only in the SV
area. Moreover, a satellite carrier would
likely not have the capacity on its spot
beam to add a duplicative, SD version
of the station.134 Therefore, if a local
station withholds retransmission
consent, the Satellite Carriers would
have to either down-convert the SV
station from HD to SD in its own local
market or not carry it as an SV station,
frustrating the intent of the statute.135
37. The question then is whether an
HD signal is ‘‘available’’ for purposes of
the statute any time a broadcaster is
transmitting an HD signal, or whether
the term ‘‘available’’ takes into account
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132 DIRECTV
and Dish Sept. 22 SV Talking Points
at 1. ‘‘Every broadcast station that has an HD feed
and is carried by a satellite carrier makes the HD
feed ‘available’ to the satellite carrier—even if the
satellite carrier does not retransmit the HD format
of that station to its subscribers. This is because, as
a technical matter, the satellite carrier offers [SD]
service in such situations by taking the HD signal
and downrezzing it to [SD]. Thus, the HD signal is
‘available to the satellite carrier,’ but the satellite
carrier does not ‘retransmit to a subscriber in [HD]
format the signal of [such] station’—exactly the
situation in which Congress meant to restrict the
format of [SV] importation. So, if a satellite carrier
offered an entire market in SD format only, it could
not import a [SV] station in HD format because the
HD format of the in-market station is ‘available to’
it.’’ ‘‘Downrezzing’’ refers to reducing the resolution
from high definition to standard definition.
133 See DIRECTV and Dish Sept. 20 SV Talking
Points.
134 See id. at 4.
135 DIRECTV Comments 4–5; Reply at 12.
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practical and legal considerations, such
as whether the broadcaster is delivering
a ‘‘good quality signal’’ to the satellite
carrier 136 and the satellite carrier is
legally permitted to carry it (i.e., the
broadcaster has elected mandatory
carriage or granted retransmission
consent).137 We believe the term is
ambiguous 138 and thus should be
defined in a manner that best effectuates
the text, history and purposes of the
statute.139 As discussed above, we
believe the overriding goal of the
legislative changes made in Section 340
is to facilitate satellite carriage of SV
stations and remove the obstacles to
carriage created by our interpretation of
SHVERA.140 With this goal in mind, we
find that the term ‘‘available’’ within the
context of Section 340(b)(2) is best
interpreted by taking into account
whether the satellite carrier has the legal
authority to transmit the local
broadcaster’s signal and has been
provided a ‘‘good quality’’ signal, and we
believe that this interpretation is most
consistent with common usage of the
term.
38. We agree with the Broadcaster
Associations that our rules must protect
localism,141 but disagree that we must
protect the in-market station at the cost
of making satellite carriage of the SV
136 See
47 U.S.C. 338(b).
47 U.S.C. 325(b).
138 See, e.g., Natural Resources Defense Council v.
EPA, 571 F.3d 1245 (DC Cir. 2009) (term
‘‘reasonably available’’ is ambiguous where statute
did not specify how to define the term, so agency
is permitted to reasonably interpret statute); State
of Hawaii ex rel. Atty. Gen. v. FEMA, 294 F.3d 1152,
1161–1162 (9th Cir. 2002) (observing that ‘‘[a]s the
dictionary definitions of the word reveal, the term
‘available’ is ambiguous in the current context.
* * * Under the first definition, ‘available’ takes
into account practical considerations * * *; under
the second definition, the term suggests instead a
more abstract or theoretical concept without regard
for cost, risk or uncertainty’’). We note that the court
finds ambiguous the definition from the dictionary
on which the Broadcaster Associations rely on as
being clear. Broadcaster Associations Reply at 15
(citing to American Heritage Dictionary of the
English Language at 127 (3d ed. 1996) (defining
available as ‘‘1. Present and ready for use; at hand;
accessible * * * 2. Capable of being gotten;
obtainable’’).
139 See Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources
Defense Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837 (1984) (where
statute’s plain terms do not directly address precise
question at issue and statute is ambiguous on the
point, courts are required to defer to the
implementing agency’s reasonable construction);
see also National Cable and Telecommunications
Ass’n v. Brand X Internet Services, 545 U.S. 967,
980 (2005) (ambiguities in statutes within an
agency’s jurisdiction to administer are delegations
of authority to the agency to fill the statutory gap
in a reasonable fashion); Verizon Comm’ns Inc. v.
FCC, 535 U.S. 467, 539 (2002) (under Chevron
doctrine, courts generally defer to agency’s
reasonable interpretation of an ambiguous provision
in its enabling statute).
140 See supra para. 15.
141 See, e.g., Broadcaster Associations Comments
at iv.
137 See
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station impractical.142 The Broadcaster
Associations’ argument fails to take into
account that the SV station is generally
not significantly viewed throughout an
entire market. Indeed, the Satellite
Carriers contend that stations that are
significantly viewed outside of their
own markets are generally significantly
viewed only in small portions of
neighboring markets, making it unlikely
that satellite carriers could use SV
stations to replace local stations in other
markets.143 As noted above, we also find
it unlikely that an SV station could
permanently substitute for a local inmarket station to the satisfaction of
subscribers throughout the market.144
39. We are persuaded that, if we were
to adopt the Broadcaster Associations’
interpretation that a station’s HD signal
is ‘‘available’’ even when it has not
granted retransmission consent or is not
providing a ‘‘good quality’’ signal, the
satellite carrier in many cases will have
to downconvert the SV station or not
carry the SV station at all due to limited
satellite capacity,145 and Congressional
intent will, again, be thwarted. If, on the
other hand, we were to conclude that a
station’s HD signal is not ‘‘available’’
unless the carrier has the legal right to
carry the station and a ‘‘good quality’’
signal is being provided, the satellite
carrier will be able to carry an SV
station and, in the overwhelming
majority of cases, will continue to have
the incentive to reach a retransmission
consent agreement with the local
station. Thus, this interpretation will
likely result in carriage of both the SV
and local stations. We acknowledge that
this interpretation may affect
retransmission consent negotiations in
some situations by giving a satellite
carrier the opportunity to provide
network programming to some
subscribers through the SV station. This
interpretation may also affect the local
142 See, e.g., NAB ex parte (dated Oct. 7, 2010)
Significantly Viewed Talking Points Appendix at 3
(‘‘NAB Oct. 7 SV Talking Points’’).
143 DIRECTV and Dish Sept. 22 SV Talking Points
at 1. But see NAB Oct. 22 ex parte at 1, 3–6 (the
Broadcaster Associations disagree, and contend that
there are some small markets in which there is
substantial ‘‘overshadowing’’ by a SV station from
an adjacent, larger market (e.g., Dayton, OH;
Hartford-New Haven, CT; Lansing, MI; and
Sherman, TX–Ada, OK DMAs)). Neither side
quantifies the prevalence of (or potential for)
overshadowing. We agree that overshadowing is a
concern, but the potential for overshadowing
already exists in the cable context, and there is no
evidence that overshadowing is currently a problem
in the cable context or would be more prevalent in
the satellite context.
144 See supra para. 23.
145 DIRECTV and Dish Sept. 20 SV Talking Points
at 2 (‘‘explaining that under the Broadcaster
Associations’ interpretation, ‘‘in the event of a
retrans dispute, the satellite carrier must downrez
or black out the SV station’’).
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station’s leverage in negotiations
because in certain areas of the DMA it
would no longer be the only source of
programming from that network to some
satellite subscribers. We conclude,
however, that this is the best
interpretation of the statutory language
because it ensures that the overall intent
of the statutory provisions to promote
SV carriage is carried out.146
40. Therefore, we find that Section
340(b)(2) is best interpreted to enable
satellite TV consumers to receive both
the SV and in-market stations as part of
their carrier’s local service package.147
Accordingly, we amend Section
76.54(g)(2).148 We note, however, that
our interpretation here assumes that
both parties are negotiating in good faith
in compliance with our rules.149 If the
local station is willing to grant consent
and make its HD signal available, but
the satellite carrier is not negotiating for
retransmission consent in good faith, as
required by Section 76.65, then the local
station’s HD signal will be deemed
available. The amended Section
76.54(g)(2) includes this condition.150
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3. ‘‘HD Format’’ Requirement Applies to
a Local Station’s HD Multicast Signal
41. We find that the ‘‘HD format’’
requirement is best interpreted to
require carriage of any HD signal of a
local station affiliated with the same
network as the SV station, regardless of
whether the local station broadcasts the
HD signal as a primary or as a secondary
multicast stream.151 The Broadcaster
Associations and Dish debate whether
the statute’s use of the term ‘‘signal’’
includes a multicast stream, with the
Broadcaster Associations arguing it does
and Dish arguing it does not.
42. In the NPRM, we sought comment
on how the ‘‘HD format’’ requirement in
Section 340(b)(2) should apply in the
event a satellite carrier wants to
retransmit an SV network affiliate in HD
and there is an in-market (local) station
that is broadcasting multiple streams of
programming (‘‘multicasting’’) and more
than one of the streams is in HD format
146 DIRECTV and Dish Sept. 22 SV Talking Points
at 1 (‘‘Treating satellite carriers like cable operators
with respect to significantly viewed service would
not give satellite carriers undue leverage in
retransmission consent negotiations’’).
147 DIRECTV Reply at 3, 11; DIRECTV Comments
at 5. DIRECTV agreed with Dish’s proposal in their
joint ex parte presentations. See, e.g., DIRECTV and
Dish Sept. 20 SV Talking Points. This interpretation
of ‘‘available’’ applies only with respect to the SV
provisions in STELA and not to other provisions in
STELA, including Section 339 (47 U.S.C. 339).
148 See Appendix B final rule 47 CFR 76.54(g)(2).
149 See 47 CFR 76.65(a).
150 See Appendix B final rule 47 CFR
76.54(g)(2)(iii).
151 A station may be affiliated with more than one
network.
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and affiliated with a network. We asked
whether the satellite carrier is required
to carry the secondary stream in HD in
order to be permitted to retransmit an
SV station affiliated with the same
network in HD, notwithstanding that the
in-market station’s primary stream is
affiliated with a different network. In
other words, would a satellite carrier be
required to carry more than one HD
programming stream of an in-market
station if the in-market station is
multicasting HD streams that are
affiliated with different networks in
order for the satellite carrier to carry an
SV station affiliated with each network
in HD? We also considered whether we
could address this situation on a caseby-case basis. In their comments, both
the Broadcaster Associations and the
Satellite Carriers seek a Commission
decision on the multicast question.152
43. We conclude that the statute’s use
of the term ‘‘signal’’ in this context does
not differentiate between streams that
are primary or secondary.153 For
purposes of carriage of SV signals in
HD, the question is whether there is an
in-market station affiliated with the
same network as the SV station that
makes its HD signal available to the
satellite carrier. If so, the satellite carrier
may not carry the SV station in HD
format unless it carries the local station
affiliated with the same network in HD
format. Dish argues that Section
340(b)(2) does not expressly use the
term ‘‘multicast stream,’’ but, as noted by
the Broadcaster Associations, this
section also does not expressly use the
term ‘‘primary stream.’’ 154 Dish notes
that, for purposes of the broadcast
carriage requirements, a satellite carrier
is generally only required to carry the
stream that a station deems its ‘‘primary’’
stream if the station elects mandatory
carriage.155 That carriage requirement,
152 See Broadcaster Associations Comments at 16
and Dish Reply at 11. The Broadcaster Associations
contend that case-by-case multicast determinations
would be discriminatory and would violate the
STELA. Broadcaster Associations Comments at 16.
153 DIRECTV at 5; Broadcaster Associations Reply
at 10. For example, a local station may be affiliated
with two different networks and broadcast
programming from both networks using its digital
signal capacity to air two or more signal streams
simultaneously. If the local station makes an HD
signal affiliated with a network available to the
satellite carrier, and that carrier wishes to carry the
HD signal of an SV station affiliated with the same
network, Section 340(b)(2) requires carriage of the
local station’s HD signal, as discussed, infra. We
conclude that it is irrelevant whether the local
affiliate’s broadcast of the HD signal is aired on a
primary or secondary multicast stream, as long as
the HD signal is available to the satellite carrier.
154 Dish Comments at 6; Broadcaster Associations
Comments at 16.
155 47 CFR 76.66(b). Dish Reply at 12–13. Satellite
carriers are required to carry multicast streams only
in Alaska and Hawaii. See 47 CFR 76.66(b)(2).
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however, is not determinative of which
signal a satellite carrier is required to
carry in order to carry a particular SV
station in HD format under Section
340(b)(2). As stated above, when an SV
station is carried in HD, we interpret
Section 340(b)(2) as requiring carriage of
any available HD signal of a local station
affiliated with the same network as the
SV station. We amend Section
76.54(g)(2) accordingly.156
44. Though appearing to acknowledge
that the ‘‘HD format’’ requirement
applies to multicast channels, DIRECTV
expresses concern that applying the HD
format requirement to multicast streams
would make carriage of SV stations
technically problematic because of what
it calls the ‘‘mushroom’’ problem; that is,
‘‘if a new, [HD] network affiliate
suddenly appeared on the multicast
stream of an existing station, [DIRECTV]
would have to drop or downrez the [SV]
station until [DIRECTV] could negotiate
carriage and make room for the ‘new’
local station.’’ 157 We believe our
definition of ‘‘available’’ in the HD
format requirement may alleviate this
‘‘mushroom’’ problem in many cases
because a new HD multicast stream
would not be available to the satellite
carrier until the station grants
retransmission consent for that stream.
Additionally, if the new HD multicast
stream is a new station, our existing
satellite carriage rules already recognize
that satellite carriers may face technical
issues associated with commencing
carriage of new broadcast signals in a
local market.158 We recognize, however,
that a satellite carrier may nonetheless
face a ‘‘mushroom’’ problem where a
new HD multicast stream is introduced
by an existing station in the local market
and such station has previously granted
carriage consent. Furthermore, the
satellite carrier may not be able to
accommodate the new HD multicast
stream in the market on its spot beam.
Therefore, to minimize consumer
disruption, we recognize that satellite
carriers may need additional time to
come into compliance with the HD
format rule without having to drop an
156 See
Appendix B final rule 47 CFR 76.54(g)(2).
Comments at 4–5. DIRECTV
explains that, from its perspective, ‘‘a new multicast
network affiliate can appear as quickly as a
mushroom on the lawn after a rainy night.’’
DIRECTV Reply at 12 (explaining ‘‘the moment a
new multicast network affiliate appeared, DIRECTV
would either have to carry it in HD or drop an SV
station affiliated with the same network that it had
been carrying’’).
158 See 47 CFR 76.66(d)(3)(iii) (providing 90 days
for the satellite carrier to commence carriage of a
new station). See also 47 CFR 76.66(d)(2)(iv)
(requiring satellite carriage within 90 days of
receiving a mandatory carriage request in a new
local-into-local market or upon commencing localinto-local service).
157 DIRECTV
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existing SV station while they make the
technical adjustments necessary to carry
a new HD format network stream.159 We
will consider special circumstances on
a case-by-case basis, considering when
the satellite carrier was informed of the
introduction of a multicast stream
containing HD signals in relation to the
existing HD carriage of an SV station
affiliated with the same network, as well
as the carrier’s compliance with its
notice requirements with respect to
carriage of SV signals.160
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D. Statutory Exceptions to the
Subscriber Eligibility Limitations
45. While the STELA revises the
subscriber eligibility limitations on
receipt of SV service in Sections
340(b)(1) and 340(b)(2), it does not
amend the statutory exceptions to those
limitations in Sections 340(b)(3) and
340(b)(4).161 As noted above, the
Section 340(b)(3) exception permits a
satellite carrier to offer an SV network
station to a subscriber when there is no
local network affiliate present in the
local market,162 and the Section
340(b)(4) exception permits a satellite
carrier to privately negotiate with the
local network station to obtain a waiver
of the eligibility restrictions.163 The
Broadcaster Associations argue that if
Section 340(b)(1) were construed simply
to require receipt of some local-intolocal service, rather than local-into-local
carriage of the local affiliate of the same
network as the SV station, that reading
would render superfluous the
exceptions to Section 340(b)(1)
contained in Sections 340(b)(3) and
(b)(4).164 To support their argument, the
Broadcaster Associations rely on the
Commission’s 2005 decision that the
‘‘best reading’’ of the SHVERA version of
Section 340(b)(1) required receipt of the
159 We recognize that the HD format rule may
require a satellite carrier to drop an existing SV
station if it is not able to accommodate the new HD
signal in the market on its spot beam. In such cases,
the satellite carrier will be afforded a reasonable
amount of time to inform its subscribers that it will
be dropping the SV station.
160 See 47 CFR 76.66(d)(3)(iii) and 47 CFR
76.54(e) (requiring satellite carriers that intend to
carry SV stations to provide written 60 days notice
to all TV stations assigned to the same local
market).
161 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(3) and (4). We note that the
STELA § 103 does amend the waiver provision in
the corresponding satellite statutory copyright
license in 17 U.S.C. 122(a)(2) to eliminate the now
out-dated ‘‘sunset’’ provision and replace the term
‘‘superstation’’ with ‘‘non-network station,’’
consistent with other references in the statute (see
supra note 25).
162 Id. at 340(b)(3). See supra para. 10 (for
statutory text).
163 Id. at 340(b)(4). See supra para. 10 (for
statutory text).
164 See NAB ex parte (dated Nov. 18, 2010) at
4–5 (‘‘NAB Nov. 18 ex parte’’).
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local affiliate of the same network
because, under any other reading, ‘‘there
would be no need’’ for the Section
340(b)(3) or (b)(4) exceptions to Section
340(b)(1).165 We reject the Broadcaster
Associations’ argument and find that
our 2005 interpretation was not
necessary to give effect to the Section
340(b)(3) and (b)(4) exceptions.166
Giving effect to the most natural reading
of Section 340(b)(1)—which lacks the
‘‘same network affiliate’’ language found
elsewhere in Section 340 and simply
requires receipt of some local-into-local
service as a condition of retransmitting
SV stations—does not render either
Section 340(b)(3) or Section 340(b)(4)
superfluous. For example, in a situation
where a satellite carrier does not offer a
local-into-local package and thus
Section 340(b)(1) would otherwise
prohibit retransmission of any SV
network station, Section 340(b)(3)
would allow retransmission of an SV
station to subscribers where there is no
local station affiliated with the same
television network as the SV station in
the market (e.g., an SV station that is an
ABC affiliate could be retransmitted if
there is no local ABC affiliate).
Likewise, if a subscriber does not
receive the local-into-local package,
thereby failing to meet the requirements
of Section 340(b)(1), retransmission of
an SV station to that subscriber would
nonetheless be permissible under
Section (b)(4) if the local station
affiliated with the same network as the
SV station grants a waiver from the
requirements of Section 340(b)(1) (e.g.,
the local ABC affiliate permits the
satellite carrier to retransmit an SV
station that is an ABC affiliate). These
examples show that the exceptions of
(b)(3) and (b)(4) have meaning even
when we read (b)(1) simply to require
receipt of some local-into-local service
as a condition of retransmitting SV
stations. Further, we reject the
Broadcaster Associations’ argument that
because Congress did not amend
Sections 340(b)(3) and (b)(4) when it
adopted the STELA in 2010, the
Commission may not depart from its
2005 interpretation of Section
340(b)(1).167 This argument ignores that
an agency is free within the limits of
reasoned interpretation to change course
so long as it adequately justifies the
165 Broadcaster Associations Comments at 10–11;
NAB Nov. 18 ex parte at 4–5 (citing SHVERA
Significantly Viewed Report and Order, 20 FCC Rcd
at 17305–17306, paras. 70–71).
166 The Satellite Carriers support changing the
interpretation to comport with the literal language
of 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(1) and (b)(3). DIRECTV
Comments at 4 and Reply at 8; Dish Comments at
2.
167 NAB Nov. 18 ex parte at 6.
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change.168 In 2005, the Commission
construed what it found to be an
ambiguous provision in Section
340(b)(1) by adopting a reading that the
Commission believed would best
harmonize Section 340(b)(1) with
Sections 340(b)(2), (b)(3) and (b)(4).169
Given the modifications to Sections
340(b)(1) and (b)(2) enacted in STELA
and Congress’s intent to ease carriage of
SV stations, nothing in that legislation
suggests that Congress intended to lock
in the Commission’s 2005 interpretation
of Section 340(b)(1) or restrict the
Commission’s discretion to interpret the
revised eligibility requirements. As
explained above, we now conclude that
our earlier reading was not in fact
necessary to harmonize the various
provisions of Section 340(b). Moreover,
our reading of Section 340(b)(1) here
better serves the STELA’s goals of
improving service options for satellite
subscribers by allowing SV carriage in
additional situations.
46. In the 2005 SHVERA Significantly
Viewed Report and Order, the
Commission interpreted the Section
340(b)(3) exception to allow a satellite
carrier to retransmit an SV station to a
subscriber when there is no local
affiliate of the same network present in
that market, provided that the
subscriber subscribes to and receives the
carrier’s local-into-local service.170
Under our new interpretation of the
subscriber eligibility limitations in
Section 340(b)(1) and (2), the Section
340(b)(3) exception permits a subscriber
to receive an SV network affiliate, even
if he or she does not subscribe to localinto-local service, if there is no affiliate
of that network in his or her local
market.171 In other words, Section
340(b)(3) operates as an exception to
any limitations on subscriber eligibility
to receive a SV station if there is no
affiliate of the same network as the SV
station in the local market. Because it
gives effect to the language of Section
168 See National Cable and Telecommunications
Association v. Brand X Internet Services, 545 U.S.
967, 980–981 (2005).
169 Compare SHVERA Significantly Viewed
Report and Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 17305, para. 70
(‘‘Subscriber receipt of ‘local-into-local’ service is
unambiguously required by the statute’’) with id.
(‘‘Subscriber receipt of a specific local network
affiliate * *ensp;* is the best reading of 47 U.S.C.
340(b)(1) in the overall context of Section 340’’).
170 SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report and
Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 17309, para. 80.
171 For example, the statutory exceptions in 47
U.S.C. 340(b)(3) and (4) would still apply where
local-into-local service is not available to a
subscriber for technical reasons (such as the spot
beam does not cover the entire DMA or its reception
is blocked for an individual subscriber by terrain or
foliage) or if local-into-local service is not yet
offered by the satellite carrier to a subscriber’s
market. See STELA–Significantly Viewed NPRM,
supra note 3, at para. 18.
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340(b)(3), as well as the amended
language of the statute’s subscriber
eligibility limitations, and will serve the
STELA’s overarching goal of fostering
SV carriage while protecting localism,
we conclude that our new interpretation
represents the best reading of Section
340(b)(3) in the context of the statute as
a whole.
47. In this respect, we modify the
Commission’s 2005 interpretation of
Section 340 and decline to adopt our
tentative conclusion in the NPRM that
the statutory exceptions should
continue to apply as before. Section
340(b)(3) allows a satellite subscriber to
receive an SV station notwithstanding
the restrictions imposed by Sections
340(b)(1) and (b)(2) if there are no
network stations affiliated with the
same network as the SV station. Thus,
even if the subscriber does not subscribe
to local-into-local service, as would
otherwise be required by Section
340(b)(1), the subscriber can receive an
SV station if there is no local station
affiliated with the same network as that
SV station. We recognize that the
compulsory copyright license, now in
17 U.S.C. 122(a)(2), limits SV service to
markets in which local-into-local
service is offered. However, we disagree
that this requires us to read a
requirement into the Communications
Act that is not there. The compulsory
copyright license in 17 U.S.C. 122(a)(2)
permits waivers and automatically
grants them if the in-market station
affiliated with the same network as the
out-of-market SV station does not
respond to the satellite carrier’s waiver
request.172 As a practical matter, if there
is no affiliate in the market, then there
is no affiliate who can respond to a
waiver request or grant a waiver under
Section 122(a)(2). Thus, the satellite
carrier could ultimately offer the SV
station because the waiver request
would, inevitably, go unanswered.173
Accordingly, we interpret the Section
340(b)(3) in accordance with its express
language. We find it unnecessary to
change the text of the rule that
corresponds to the Section 340(b)(3)
exception because the rule uses the
172 See
17 U.S.C. 122(a)(2)(B).
a practical matter, we also agree with the
Satellite Carriers that there would be no aggrieved
party by this interpretation. DIRECTV Reply at 9
(noting that ‘‘if the same-network broadcaster grants
a waiver, it has determined that it would benefit
from the delivery of the neighboring station* * *.
If there is no such broadcaster, there is nobody to
be harmed even in theory.’’). Our interpretation,
however, is limited to the provisions of the
Communications Act. We do not intend to render
any opinion with respect to a party’s rights under
the Copyright Act. See 17 U.S.C. 122(a)(2)(B).
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173 As
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statutory language and is consistent
with the interpretation adopted here.174
E. Dish Petition for Further Rulemaking
48. We decline to consider here Dish’s
petition for further rulemaking (filed
with its comments in this docket) as it
is not within the scope of this
proceeding.175 The Dish petition seeks
two changes to the Commission’s
rules.176 First, Dish asks the
Commission to adopt a rule ‘‘that tying
retransmission consent to restrictions on
SV station carriage’’ violates the
requirement that parties negotiate
retransmission consent in good faith.177
Dish’s first proposal to change the
retransmission consent rules could have
been filed in our open proceeding on
retransmission consent issues in MB
Docket No. 10–71.178 Second, Dish
seeks to amend the Commission’s rules
for determining when a station qualifies
for ‘‘significantly viewed’’ status in order
to address the ‘‘orphan county’’ problem,
which refers to the situation in which a
county in one State is assigned to a
neighboring State’s DMA and there are
few, if any, stations assigned to that
DMA which are licensed to
communities located in the State in
which the county is located.179 This
proposal is better addressed in our
proceeding to implement Section 304 of
the STELA.180 We also note, as the
Broadcaster Associations point out,181
174 See Appendix B final rule 47 CFR 76.54(g)(3)
and (g)(4). We renumber Sections 76.54(g)(1) and
(g)(2) as Sections 76.54(g)(3) and (g)(4), as well as
make some other non-substantive changes to these
rules.
175 See Broadcaster Associations Reply at 17 and
23.
176 See Dish Comments (Petition) at 9.
177 Id. at 9. Section 76.65 of our rules requires TV
stations and satellite carriers ‘‘to negotiate in good
faith the terms and conditions of retransmission
consent.’’ 47 CFR 76.65(a). For example, Dish argues
that it is not good faith if a local station conditions
the grant of its retransmission consent in its local
market on a concession from the satellite carrier
that it will not carry an SV station affiliated with
the same network in the local market. Id.
178 See Broadcaster Associations Reply at 17.
179 Id. at 11. Dish seeks changes to Sections
76.5(i) (definition of ‘‘significantly viewed’’) and
76.54 (rules for demonstrating a station qualifies for
‘‘significantly viewed’’ status). 47 CFR 76.5(i) and
76.54. Several government representatives and
citizens from southwest Colorado filed comments in
support of Dish’s proposals and any other ways for
viewers in the counties of La Plata and Montezuma,
CO, to receive in-state programming (such as from
the Denver, CO DMA). See Appendix. The counties
of La Plata and Montezuma, CO are assigned to the
Albuquerque-Santa Fe, NM DMA.
180 Section 304 of the STELA requires the
Commission to produce a ‘‘Report on In-State
Broadcast Programming,’’ due to Congress in August
2011, to address the concerns, such as those voiced
by the southwest Colorado group, that in some
DMAs, some subscribers are not able to receive
stations licensed to communities in their state via
satellite. STELA sec. 304.
181 See Broadcaster Associations Reply at 24.
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that any changes to the Commission’s
existing rules for determining
significantly viewed status would be
inconsistent with the statute’s
requirement that we use the same rules
for making significantly viewed
determinations that were in effect for
cable operators as of April 15, 1976.182
F. Housecleaning Rule Changes
49. In this section, we make nonsubstantive changes to update our
significantly viewed rules. In the NPRM,
we sought comment on these rule
changes. The Broadcaster Associations
and Satellite Carriers support these
changes. Accordingly, we adopt the
NPRM’s proposed housecleaning rule
changes.
50. Section 76.5(i). We amend Section
76.5(i) of the rules to replace its
references to the term ‘‘non-cable’’ with
the term ‘‘over-the-air.’’ 183 In the 2005
SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report
and Order, the Commission made this
change to Section 76.54 to reflect the
rule’s true meaning, that being to
indicate over-the-air viewing.184 The
Commission explained that, in the 1972
Order, the concept of significant
viewing was adopted to apply to overthe-air households, which at the time
essentially meant households without
cable (i.e., non-cable households).185
Thus, amending Section 76.5(i) to
change ‘‘non-cable’’ to ‘‘over-the-air’’
reflects the true intent of the rule as it
was in 1976, and is more consistent
with the STELA’s intent to establish
parity between cable and satellite.
51. Section 76.54(c). We amend
Section 76.54(c) of the rules to strike the
outdated reference to the analog Grade
B contour.186 In the 2004 SHVERA
Significantly Viewed Report and Order,
the Commission revised this rule to add
the appropriate service contour relevant
for a station’s digital signal—that being
the noise limited service contour
(‘‘NLSC’’).187 With the completion of the
transition, we now can eliminate the
reference to the Grade B contour.
182 17 U.S.C. 122(a)(2), as amended by STELA
(which retained the SHVERA’s requirement in the
statutory copyright license for SV stations
(previously 17 U.S.C. 119(a)(3)) that the
Commission use the same rules established for
cable operators that were in effect as of April 15,
1976.
183 See Appendix B final rule change to 47 CFR
76.5(i).
184 SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report and
Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 17292–3, para. 32.
185 Id. (citing to 1972 Cable R&O, 36 FCC 2d_at
175–6, paras. 83–6).
186 See Appendix B final rule change to 47 CFR
76.54(c).
187 SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report and
Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 17292, para. 31. (The digital
NLSC is defined in 47 CFR 73.622(e).)
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G. Order on Reconsideration Dismisses
Pending Petition as Moot
52. In this Order on Reconsideration,
we dismiss as moot the petition for
reconsideration filed jointly by
DIRECTV and Dish of the Commission’s
SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report
and Order.188 The petition seeks
reconsideration of two decisions in the
SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report
and Order.
53. First, the petition challenges the
Commission’s interpretation that the
analog ‘‘local service’’ requirement in
former Section 340(b)(1) also contains
the ‘‘same network affiliate’’
requirement.189 The STELA eliminates
former Sections 340(b)(1) and
(b)(2)(A).190 The R&O accompanying
this Order on Reconsideration revises
the satellite television significantly
viewed rules to eliminate the analog
local service requirement, as well as the
digital ‘‘same network affiliate’’
requirement.191 Accordingly, this issue
is moot.
54. Second, the petition challenges
the Commission’s interpretation of the
digital service ‘‘equivalent bandwidth’’
requirement in former Section
340(b)(2)(B).192 The STELA eliminates
the ‘‘equivalent bandwidth’’ requirement
in former Section 340(b)(2)(B) 193 and, in
the R&O accompanying this Order, we
revise the satellite television
significantly viewed rules to eliminate
this requirement.194 Accordingly, this
issue is also moot and we dismiss the
petition.
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IV. Conclusion
55. In this R&O, we implement the
STELA amendments to the SV
provisions that apply to satellite
carriers. We have been mindful that
Congress amended the SV provisions to
create a more workable framework to
facilitate satellite carriage of SV stations
and thereby provide satellite subscribers
with greater choice of programming and
to improve parity and competition
between satellite and cable carriage of
188 2006 DIRECTV–EchoStar Joint Petition, at
supra note 6.
189 2006 DIRECTV–EchoStar Joint Petition at 9.
The petition does not challenge the Commission’s
interpretation that the digital requirement in former
Section 340(b)(2)(A) contains the ‘‘same network
affiliate’’ requirement, essentially conceding the
plain meaning of that provision.
190 See supra notes 66 and 68 (for former statutory
text).
191 See supra Section III.B. (for discussion of new
Section 340(b)(1)).
192 2006 DIRECTV–EchoStar Joint Petition at 2.
193 See supra notes 66 and 68 (for former statutory
text).
194 See supra Section III.C. (for discussion of new
Section 340(b)(2)). See also supra note 40 (for
former statutory text).
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broadcast stations. We have also
considered the importance of localism
and balanced access to SV stations with
the benefits of continued carriage of
local stations. The rules adopted by this
Order will advance these goals for the
benefit of consumers and the
competitive market for video
distribution.
V. Procedural Matters
A. Final Regulatory Flexibility Act
Analysis
56. As required by the Regulatory
Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended
(‘‘RFA’’) 195 the Commission has
prepared this present Final Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (‘‘FRFA’’) relating to
this Report and Order. As required by
the RFA, an Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (‘‘IRFA’’) was
incorporated in the Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (‘‘NPRM’’) to this
proceeding.196 The Commission sought
written public comment on the
proposals in the NPRM, including
comment on the IRFA.197 The
Commission received no comments on
the IRFA. This present FRFA conforms
to the RFA.198
1. Need for, and Objectives of, the Final
Rule Changes
57. This document adopts changes to
the Commission’s satellite television
‘‘significantly viewed’’ rules to
implement Section 203 of the Satellite
Television Extension and Localism Act
of 2010 (STELA).199 We initiated this
proceeding on July 23, 2010 by issuing
a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
(NPRM). With this R&O, we satisfy the
STELA’s mandate that the Commission
adopt final rules in this proceeding on
or before November 24, 2010.
58. Section 203 of the STELA amends
Section 340 of the Communications Act,
which gives satellite carriers the
authority to offer out-of-market but
‘‘significantly viewed’’ broadcast
television stations as part of their local
service to subscribers.200 The
designation of ‘‘significantly viewed’’
195 See 5 U.S.C. 603. The RFA, see 5 U.S.C. 601
et. seq., has been amended by the Contract With
America Advancement Act of 1996, Public Law
104–121, 110 Stat. 847 (1996) (CWAAA). Title II of
the CWAAA is the Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (SBREFA).
196 STELA–Significantly Viewed NPRM, supra
note 3, at app. B.
197 Id.
198 See 5 U.S.C. 604.
199 The Satellite Television Extension and
Localism Act of 2010 (STELA) sec. 203, Public Law
111–175, 124 Stat 1218, 1245 (2010) (sec. 203
codified as amended at 47 U.S.C. 340, other STELA
amendments codified in scattered sections of 17
and 47 U.S.C.).
200 47 U.S.C. 340.
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status allows a station assigned to one
DMA to be treated as a ‘‘local’’ station
with respect to a particular cable or
satellite community in another DMA,
and, thus, enables cable or satellite
carriage into said community in that
other DMA. Whereas cable operators
have had carriage rights for
‘‘significantly viewed’’ (‘‘SV’’) stations
since 1972, satellite carriers have had
such authority only since the 2004
Satellite Home Viewer Extension and
Reauthorization Act of 2004 (SHVERA)
and may only retransmit SV network
stations to ‘‘eligible’’ satellite
subscribers. The satellite subscriber
eligibility rules impose conditions on
when satellite carriers may retransmit
SV stations to subscribers. These
conditions are intended to prevent
satellite carriers from favoring an SV
network station over the in-market
(local) station affiliated with the same
network. We note that the nature of SV
carriage under Section 340 is permissive
(and not mandatory), meaning the
statute applies when a satellite carrier
chooses to carry an SV station and has
obtained retransmission consent from
such SV station.201
59. Section 203 of the STELA changes
the restrictions on subscriber eligibility
to receive SV network stations from
satellite carriers. To implement the
STELA, we revise our satellite
subscriber eligibility rules as follows:
• We find that the local service
requirement in amended Section
340(b)(1) requires only that a satellite
subscriber receive local-into-local
satellite service as a precondition for
that subscriber to receive SV stations.
We find that the statute no longer
requires a satellite subscriber to receive
the specific local network station as a
precondition for that subscriber to
receive an SV station affiliated with the
same network.
• We find that amended Section
340(b)(2) no longer requires that a
satellite carrier offer ‘‘equivalent
bandwidth’’ to the local and SV network
station pair and instead imposes an ‘‘HD
format’’ requirement. We find that the
HD format requirement in amended
Section 340(b)(2) requires that, in order
to carry an SV station in high definition
(HD) format, a satellite carrier must
carry the local station affiliated with the
same network in HD whenever such
format is available from the local
station.
Æ The HD format requirement applies
only where a satellite carrier retransmits
to a subscriber the SV station in HD
format. This requirement does not
restrict a satellite carrier from
201 Id.
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retransmitting to a subscriber the SV
station in standard definition (SD)
format.
Æ For purposes of the HD format
requirement, the corresponding local
(in-market) station will be considered
‘‘available’’ to the satellite carrier when
the station: (1) Elects mandatory
carriage or grants retransmission
consent; (2) provides a good quality
signal to the satellite carrier as required
by Section 76.66(g) of the rules; and (3)
is otherwise in compliance with the
‘‘good faith negotiation’’ and carriage
provisions set forth in Sections 76.65
and 76.66 of the rules. However, the HD
signal of the corresponding local station
will be deemed ‘‘available’’ despite
failure to reach agreement on the terms
of retransmission if the satellite carrier
is not in compliance with Section 76.65.
Æ The HD format requirement requires
satellite carriage of a secondary HD
stream of a local station’s multicast
signal if that stream is affiliated with the
same network as an SV station
retransmitted in HD to satellite
subscribers in the local market.
• We modify the Commission’s 2005
interpretation of the Section 340(b)(3)
exception, which is unchanged by the
STELA, and find that, in the context of
the newly revised statute, this exception
permits a satellite carrier to offer an SV
network station to a subscriber when
there is no local affiliate of the same
network present in the local market,
even if the subscriber does not receive
local-into-local service.
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2. Summary of Significant Issues Raised
by Public Comments in Response to the
IRFA
60. There were no comments filed
that specifically addressed the rules and
policies proposed in the IRFA.
3. Description and Estimate of the
Number of Small Entities to Which the
Rules Will Apply
61. 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.202 The
RFA generally defines the term ‘‘small
entity’’ as having the same meaning as
the terms ‘‘small business,’’ ‘‘small
organization,’’ and ‘‘small governmental
jurisdiction.’’ 203 In addition, the term
‘‘small business’’ has the same meaning
as the term ‘‘small business concern’’
under the Small Business Act.204 A
202 5
U.S.C. 603(b)(3).
U.S.C. 601(6).
204 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
203 5
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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
Small Business Administration
(‘‘SBA’’).205 Below, we provide a
description of such small entities, as
well as an estimate of the number of
such small entities, where feasible.
62. Satellite Carriers. The term
‘‘satellite carrier’’ means an entity that
uses the facilities of a satellite or
satellite service licensed under Part 25
of the Commission’s rules to operate in
the Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS)
service or Fixed-Satellite Service (FSS)
frequencies.206 As a general practice
(not mandated by any regulation), DBS
licensees usually own and operate their
own satellite facilities as well as
package the programming they offer to
their subscribers. In contrast, satellite
carriers using FSS facilities often lease
capacity from another entity that is
licensed to operate the satellite used to
provide service to subscribers. These
entities package their own programming
and may or may not be Commission
licensees themselves. In addition, a
third situation may include an entity
using a non-U.S. licensed satellite to
provide programming to subscribers in
the United States pursuant to a blanket
earth station license.207 In the SHVERA
Significantly Viewed Report and Order,
the Commission concluded that the
definition of ‘‘satellite carrier’’ includes
all three of these types of entities.208
63. 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
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).
205 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.
206 The Communications Act defines the term
‘‘satellite carrier’’ by reference to the definition in
the copyright laws in title 17. See 47 U.S.C.
340(i)(1) and 338(k)(3); 17 U.S.C. 119(d)(6). Part 100
of the Commission’s rules was eliminated in 2002
and now both FSS and DBS satellite facilities are
licensed under Part 25 of the rules. Policies and
Rules for the Direct Broadcast Satellite Service, 67
FR 51110, August 7, 2002; 47 CFR 25.148.
207 See, e.g., DIRECTV 5 Blanket Earth Station
License, DA 04–2526, August 12, 2004.
208 SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report and
Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 17302–3, paras. 59–60.
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the SBA’s broad economic census
category, ‘‘Wired Telecommunications
Carriers,’’ 209 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.210 However, the data
we have available as a basis for
estimating the number of such small
entities were gathered under a
superseded SBA small business size
standard formerly titled ‘‘Cable and
Other Program Distribution.’’ The
definition of Cable and Other Program
Distribution provided that a small entity
was one with $12.5 million or less in
annual receipts.211 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).212 Each currently offer
subscription services. DIRECTV 213 and
EchoStar 214 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
209 See 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517110
(2007). The 2007 North American Industry
Classification System (‘‘NAICS’’) defines the
category of ‘‘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 and
infrastructure that they operate are included in this
industry.’’ (Emphasis added to text relevant to
satellite services.) U.S. Census Bureau, 2007 NAICS
Definitions, ‘‘517110 Wired Telecommunications
Carriers’’; https://www.census.gov/naics/2007/def/
ND517110.HTM.
210 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517110 (2007).
211 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517510 (2002).
212 See Thirteenth Annual Cable/MVPD
Competition Report, 74 FR 11102, March 16, 2009.
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).
213 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 id. at 687, Table B–3.
214 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. As of June 2006, Dominion served
fewer than 500,000 subscribers, which may now be
receiving ‘‘Sky Angel’’ service from DISH Network.
See id. at 581, para. 76.
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entity as defined by the SBA would
have the financial wherewithal to
become a DBS service provider. We seek
comments that have data on the annual
revenues and number of employees of
DBS service providers.
64. Fixed-Satellite Service (‘‘FSS’’).
The FSS is a radiocommunication
service between earth stations at a
specified fixed point or between any
fixed point within specified areas and
one or more satellites.215 The FSS,
which utilizes many earth stations that
communicate with one or more space
stations, may be used to provide
subscription video service. FSS, by
exception, is now included in the SBA’s
broad economic census category, ‘‘Wired
Telecommunications Carriers,’’ 216
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.217
However, the data we have available as
a basis for estimating the number of
such small entities were gathered under
a superseded SBA small business size
standard formerly titled ‘‘Cable and
Other Program Distribution.’’ The
definition of Cable and Other Program
Distribution provided that a small entity
was one with $12.5 million or less in
annual receipts.218 Although a number
of entities are licensed in the FSS, not
all such licensees use FSS frequencies
to provide subscription services. The
two DBS licensees (EchoStar and
DIRECTV) have indicated interest in
using FSS frequencies to broadcast
signals to subscribers. It is possible that
other entities could similarly use FSS
frequencies, although we are not aware
of any entities that might do so.
65. 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.219 Business concerns included
in this industry are those ‘‘primarily
engaged in broadcasting images together
with sound.’’ 220 The Commission has
215 See
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216 See
47 CFR 2.1(c).
13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517110
(2007).
217 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517110 (2007).
218 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517510 (2002).
219 See 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS Code 515120
(2007).
220 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
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estimated the number of licensed
commercial television stations to be
1,392.221 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 stations 222
(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 to
be 390.223 We note, however, that, in
assessing whether a business concern
qualifies as small under the above
definition, business (control)
affiliations 224 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.
66. 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.
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.
221 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 https://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/
edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-296538A1.pdf.
222 We recognize that this total differs slightly
from that contained in Broadcast Station Totals,
supra, note 33; however, we are using BIA’s
estimate for purposes of this revenue comparison.
223 See Broadcast Station Totals, supra, note 33.
224 ‘‘[Business concerns] are affiliates of each
other when one concern controls or has the power
to control the other or a third party or parties
controls or has to power to control both.’’ 13 CFR
121.103(a)(1).
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67. 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 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,’’ 225 which was developed for
small wireline firms.226 Under this
category, the SBA deems a wireline
business to be small if it has 1,500 or
fewer employees.227 However, the data
we have available as a basis for
estimating the number of such small
entities were gathered under a
superseded SBA small business size
standard formerly titled ‘‘Cable and
Other Program Distribution.’’ The
definition of Cable and Other Program
Distribution provided that a small entity
was one with $12.5 million or less in
annual receipts.228 As of June 2004,
there were approximately 135 members
in the Independent Multi-Family
Communications Council (IMCC), the
trade association that represents
PCOs.229 The IMCC indicates that, as of
June 2006, PCOs serve about 1 to 2
percent of the multichannel video
programming distributors (MVPD)
marketplace.230 Individual PCOs often
serve approximately 3,000–4,000
subscribers, but the larger operations
serve as many as 15,000–55,000
subscribers. In total, as of June 2006,
PCOs serve approximately 900,000
subscribers.231 Because these operators
are not rate regulated, they are not
required to file financial data with the
Commission. Furthermore, we are not
aware of any privately published
financial information regarding these
operators. Based on the estimated
number of operators and the estimated
number of units served by the largest 10
PCOs, we believe that a substantial
number of PCOs may have been
225 See 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517110
(2007).
226 Although SMATV systems often use DBS
video programming as part of their service package
to subscribers, they are not included in Section
340’s definition of ‘‘satellite carrier.’’ See 47 U.S.C.
340(i)(1) and 338(k)(3); 17 U.S.C. 119(d)(6).
227 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517110 (2007).
228 13 CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517510 (2002).
229 See Eleventh Annual Cable/MVPD
Competition Report, FCC 05–13 (rel. Feb. 4, 2005).
230 See Thirteenth Annual Cable/MVPD
Competition Report.
231 Id.
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 228 / Monday, November 29, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
categorized as small entities under the
now superseded SBA small business
size standard for Cable and Other
Program Distribution.232
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4. Description of Projected Reporting,
Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance
Requirements
68. The final rules do not impose any
new reporting, recordkeeping or other
compliance requirements.
5. Steps Taken to Minimize Significant
Economic Impact on Small Entities, and
Significant Alternatives Considered
69. 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.233
70. In the NPRM, we invited comment
on whether there were any alternatives
we should consider to our proposed
implementation of the statutory
amendments to Section 340(b) that
would minimize any adverse impact on
small businesses, but which are
consistent with the statute and its goals
and also maintain the benefits of our
proposals. We explained that STELA’s
amendments to Section 340(b) intend to
facilitate satellite carriage of SV stations,
with the expectation that this will
increase satellite TV service to
consumers and promote regulatory
parity between cable and satellite
service.234 We tentatively concluded
that our proposed rule changes
implement the statute in the way that is
most consistent with the plain language
of the statute.235 We also noted that the
plain language of the statute did not
appear to give us discretion to treat
small entities differently from larger
ones, but sought comment on this
question. We received no comments to
the IRFA in the NPRM. We, therefore,
affirm our conclusions in the NPRM’s
IRFA.
71. We find in the R&O that Congress
amended the SV provisions to create a
232 13
CFR 121.201, NAICS code 517510 (2002).
U.S.C. 603(c)(1) through (c)(4).
234 See H.R. 3570 Report at 4–5; H.R. 2994 Report
at 16.
235 Our proposed rules are based on, and largely
track, the amended language of the statute.
233 5
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Jkt 223001
more workable framework to facilitate
satellite carriage of SV stations and,
thus, improve parity and competition
between satellite and cable. Satellite
carriers, and the SV stations which they
would carry,236 will certainly benefit
from the opportunity for increased TV
service afforded by the STELA’s changes
to the SV program. Furthermore,
consumers of satellite TV service will
benefit from greater choice of
programming. We find that any adverse
impact to these entities is unlikely
because SV carriage under Section 340
is permissive (and not mandatory); that
is, the satellite carrier chooses to carry
an SV station and the SV station must
grant its consent to be carried.237
72. While we have included this
complete FRFA, we note that we could
have certified that this rulemaking will
not have a ‘‘significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities.’’ 238 The rules impose
compliance requirements only on the
two DBS service providers, neither of
which qualify as a small entity.239
6. Report to Congress
73. The Commission will send a copy
of this R&O, including this FRFA, in a
report to be sent to Congress pursuant
to the Congressional Review Act.240 In
addition, the Commission will send a
copy of the R&O, including the FRFA,
to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
SBA. A copy of the R&O and FRFA (or
summaries thereof) will also be
published in the Federal Register.241
B. Final Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 Analysis
74. This Report and Order has been
analyzed with respect to the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (‘‘PRA’’),242 and
does not contain any new or modified
information collection requirements.243
In addition, therefore, it does not
contain any new or modified
‘‘information collection burden for small
business concerns with fewer than 25
employees,’’ pursuant to the Small
236 For example, small broadcast stations will
benefit from the opportunity to be delivered as an
SV station to more viewers.
237 See 47 U.S.C. 340(d).
238 See 5 U.S.C. 605(b).
239 See supra section VIII.A.3.
240 See 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
241 See id. 604(b).
242 The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(‘‘PRA’’), Public Law 104–13, 109 Stat 163 (1995)
(codified in Chapter 35 of title 44 U.S.C.).
243 The Commission does not modify the existing
information collections that relate to the
Commission’s significantly viewed rules and
procedures. See OMB Control Nos. 3060–0311 (47
CFR 76.54), 3060–0960 (47 CFR 76.122, 76.123,
76.124, 76.127), and 3060–0888 (47 CFR 76.7). The
Commission will maintain these collections.
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Fmt 4700
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72985
Business Paperwork Relief Act of
2002.244
C. Congressional Review Act
75. The Commission will send a copy
of this Report and Order in a report to
be sent to Congress and the Government
Accountability Office, pursuant to the
Congressional Review Act.245
D. Additional Information
76. For more information on this
Report and Order, please contact Evan
Baranoff, Evan.Baranoff@fcc.gov, of the
Media Bureau, Policy Division, (202)
418–2120.
VI. Ordering Clauses
77. Accordingly, it is ordered that
pursuant to Section 203 of the Satellite
Television Extension and Localism Act
of 2010 (STELA), and Sections 1, 4(i)
and (j), and 340 of the Communications
Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 151,
154(i) and (j), and 340, this Report and
Order IS adopted, and the Commission’s
rules are hereby amended as set forth in
the final rule changes appendix
(Appendix B) attached to this Report
and Order.
78. It is also ordered that, pursuant to
the authority contained in Sections
203(b) and 307 of the STELA, STELA
secs. 203(b) and 307, the rules adopted
in this Report and Order are adopted
and will be effective 30 days after date
of publication in the Federal Register.
79. It is also ordered that, pursuant to
Sections 1, 4(i) and (j), and 340 of the
Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 154(i) and (j),
and 340; and Section 1.429 of our rules,
47 CFR 1.429, the petition for
reconsideration in MB Docket No. 05–49
which was filed jointly by DIRECTV and
Dish (formerly Echostar) is dismissed as
moot.
80. It is further ordered that, pursuant
to the Congressional Review Act, 5
U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A), the Commission will
send a copy of this Report and Order in
a report to Congress and the General
Accounting Office.
81. It is further ordered that the
Commission’s Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau, Reference
Information Center, will send a copy of
this Report and Order, including the
Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, to
the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration.
244 The Small Business Paperwork Relief Act of
2002 (‘‘SBPRA’’), Public Law 107–198, 116 Stat 729
(2002) (codified in Chapter 35 of title 44 U.S.C.); see
44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(4).
245 See 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 228 / Monday, November 29, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 76
Satellite television.
Marlene H. Dortch,
Secretary, Federal Communications
Commission.
Final Rules
For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, the FCC amends 47 CFR part
76 as follows:
■
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 § 76.5(i) by removing the
words ‘‘other than cable television’’ and
adding in their place the words ‘‘overthe-air’’ and in the Note following
paragraph (i) remove the word
‘‘noncable’’ each place it appears and
add in its place the words ‘‘over-the-air’’.
■ 3. Amend § 76.54 by revising the first
sentence in paragraph (c), revising
paragraph (g), removing and reserving
paragraph (h), and revising paragraph
(i), to read as follows:
■
§ 76.54 Significantly viewed signals;
method to be followed for special
showings.
mstockstill on DSKB9S0YB1PROD with RULES
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Notice of a survey to be made
pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section
shall be served on all licensees or
permittees of television broadcast
stations within whose predicted noise
limited service contour, as defined in
§ 73.622(e) of this chapter, the cable or
satellite community or communities are
located, in whole or in part, and on all
other system community units,
franchisees, and franchise applicants in
the cable community or communities at
least (30) days prior to the initial survey
period. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
(g) Limitations on satellite subscriber
eligibility. A satellite carrier may
retransmit a significantly viewed
network station to a subscriber,
provided the conditions in paragraphs
(g)(1) and (g)(2) of this section are
satisfied or one of the two exceptions to
these conditions provided in paragraphs
(g)(3) and (g)(4) of this section apply.
(1) Local service requirement. A
satellite carrier may retransmit to a
subscriber the signal of a significantly
viewed station if:
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Jkt 223001
(i) Such subscriber receives local-intolocal service pursuant to § 76.66; and
(ii) Such satellite carrier is in
compliance with § 76.65 with respect to
the stations located in the local market
into which the significantly viewed
station will be retransmitted.
(2) HD format requirement. Subject to
the conditions in paragraphs (g)(2)(i)
through (iv) of this section, a satellite
carrier may retransmit to a subscriber in
high definition (HD) format the signal of
a significantly viewed station only if
such carrier also retransmits in HD
format the signal of a station located in
the local market of such subscriber and
affiliated with the same network
whenever such format is available from
such station, including when the HD
signal is broadcast on a multicast
stream.
(i) The requirement in paragraph
(g)(2) of this section applies only where
a satellite carrier retransmits to a
subscriber the significantly viewed
station in HD format, and does not
restrict a satellite carrier from
retransmitting to a subscriber a
significantly viewed station in standard
definition (SD) format.
(ii) For purposes of paragraph (g)(2) of
this section, the term ‘‘HD format’’ refers
to a picture quality resolution of 720p,
1080i, or higher.
(iii) For purposes of paragraph (g)(2)
of this section, the local station’s HD
signal will be considered ‘‘available’’ to
the satellite carrier when the station:
(A) Elects mandatory carriage or
grants retransmission consent;
(B) Provides a good quality HD signal
to the satellite carrier’s local receive
facility (LRF); and
(C) Complies with the requirements of
§§ 76.65 and 76.66.
(iv) Notwithstanding the provisions of
paragraph (g)(2)(iii) of this section, if the
local station is willing to grant
retransmission consent and make its HD
signal available to the satellite carrier,
but the satellite carrier does not
negotiate with the local station in good
faith, as required by § 76.65, then the
local station’s HD signal will be deemed
‘‘available’’ for purposes of paragraph
(g)(2) of this section.
(3) Exception if no network affiliate in
local market. The limitations in
paragraphs (g)(1) and (g)(2) of this
section will not prohibit a satellite
carrier from retransmitting a
significantly viewed network station to
a subscriber located in a local market in
which there are no network stations
affiliated with the same television
network as the significantly viewed
station.
(4) Exception if waiver granted by
local station. The limitations in
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 9990
paragraphs (g)(1) and (g)(2) of this
section will not apply if, and to the
extent that, the local network station
affiliated with the same television
network as the significantly viewed
station has granted a waiver in
accordance with 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(4).
*
*
*
*
*
(i) For purposes of paragraph (g) of
this section, television network and
network station are as defined in 47
U.S.C. 339(d).
*
*
*
*
*
Note: The following Appendix will not be
included in the Code of Federal Regulations.
Appendix: List of Commenters
Comments:
1. Atkinson, Ronald; resident of Durango,
Colorado
2. Brown, Marilyn T.; League of Women
Voters of La Plata County
3. Bruen, Elizabeth; resident of Durango,
Colorado
4. Calahan, Michael; Citizens For Colorado
TV Access
5. City of Durango; City Manager
6. DIRECTV, Inc. (‘‘DIRECTV’’)
7. DISH Network L.L.C. (‘‘Dish’’)
8. Dulson, Laurie; resident of southwest
Colorado
9. Flatten, Ann; resident of La Plata County,
Colorado
10. La Plata County, Colorado; Board of
County Commissioners
11. National Association of Broadcasters
(‘‘NAB’’) and the ABC, CBS, FBC (Fox),
and NBC Television Affiliates
Associations (joint comments) (jointly,
the ‘‘Broadcaster Associations’’)
12. Necchik, Elayne and John; residents of
Durango, Colorado
13. Roberts, Ellen; Colorado State
Representative, House District 59
14. Salazar, John T.; U.S. House
Representative, 3rd District of Colorado
15. Schafer, Marie L.; resident of southwest
Colorado
16. Staby, Paul and Carolyn; residents of
Durango, Colorado
17. Whitehead, Bruce T.; Colorado State
Senator, Senate District 6
Reply Comments:
1. Broadcaster Associations
2. DIRECTV
3. Dish
[FR Doc. 2010–29968 Filed 11–23–10; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 228 (Monday, November 29, 2010)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 72968-72986]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-29968]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 76
[MB Docket No. 10-148; FCC 10-193]
Implementation of Section 203 of the Satellite Television
Extension and Localism Act of 2010 (STELA); Amendments to Section 340
of the Communications Act
AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In this document, the Commission modifies its satellite
television ``significantly viewed'' rules to implement Section 203 of
the Satellite Television Extension and Localism Act of 2010 (STELA).
Section 203 of the STELA amends Section 340 of the Communications Act,
which gives satellite carriers the authority to offer out-of-market but
``significantly viewed'' broadcast television network stations as part
of their local service to subscribers. The STELA requires the
Commission to promulgate final rules in this proceeding on or before
November 24, 2010.
DATES: Effective December 29, 2010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Evan Baranoff, Evan.Baranoff@fcc.gov,
of the Media Bureau, Policy Division, (202) 418-2120.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Commission's Report
and Order and Order on Reconsideration (Order), FCC 10-193, adopted on
Nov. 22, 2010, and released on Nov. 23, 2010. The full text of this
document is available electronically via ECFS at https://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/ecfs/ or may be downloaded at https://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs-public/attachmatch/FCC-10-130.pdf. (Documents
will be available electronically in ASCII, Word 97, and/or Adobe
Acrobat.) This document is also available for public inspection and
copying during regular business hours in the FCC Reference Center,
Federal Communications Commission, 445 12th Street, SW., CY-A257,
Washington, DC 20554. The complete text may be purchased from the
Commission's copy contractor, 445 12th Street, SW., Room CY-B402,
Washington, DC 20554. Alternative formats are available for people with
disabilities (Braille, large print, electronic files, audio format), by
sending an e-mail to fcc504@fcc.gov or calling the Commission's
Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau at (202)
[[Page 72969]]
418-0530 (voice), (202) 418-0432 (TTY).
Summary of the Report and Order and Order on Reconsideration
I. Introduction
1. With this Report and Order (``R&O''), we modify our satellite
television ``significantly viewed'' rules to implement Section 203 of
the Satellite Television Extension and Localism Act of 2010 (STELA).\1\
Section 203 of the STELA amends Section 340 of the Communications Act
of 1934 (``Communications Act'' or ``Act''), which gives satellite
carriers the authority to offer out-of-market but ``significantly
viewed'' broadcast television stations as part of their local service
to subscribers.\2\ We initiated this proceeding on July 23, 2010 by
issuing a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (``NPRM'').\3\ We received 20
comments and reply comments (from 17 parties) in response to our
NPRM.\4\ With this R&O, we satisfy the STELA's mandate that the
Commission promulgate final rules in this proceeding on or before
November 24, 2010.\5\ In addition, in this Order on Reconsideration, we
dispose of the pending petition for reconsideration of the 2005 SHVERA
Significantly Viewed Report and Order.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The Satellite Television Extension and Localism Act of 2010
(STELA) sec. 203, Public Law 111-175, 124 Stat. 1218, 1245 (2010)
(sec. 203 codified as amended at 47 U.S.C. 340, other STELA
amendments codified in scattered sections of 17 and 47 U.S.C.). The
STELA was enacted on May 27, 2010 (S. 3333, 111th Cong.). This
proceeding to implement STELA sec. 203 (titled ``Significantly
Viewed Stations''), 124 Stat. at 1245, and the related statutory
copyright license provisions in STELA sec. 103 (titled
``Modifications to Statutory License for Satellite Carriers in Local
Markets''), 124 Stat. at 1227-28, is one of a number of Commission
proceedings that are required to implement the STELA.
\2\ 47 U.S.C. 340. We note that the nature of SV carriage under
Section 340 is permissive (and not mandatory), meaning a satellite
carrier may choose to carry an SV station. The statute also requires
that the SV station grant consent in order for its signal to be
carried. Id. 340(d).
\3\ STELA-Significantly Viewed NPRM, FCC 10-130, 75 FR 44198,
July 28, 2010 (NPRM).
\4\ We identify the list of commenters and reply commenters to
this docket in Appendix. We also received ex parte submissions in
this docket. All of the filings made in this docket are available to
the public both online via the Commission's Electronic Comment
Filing System (``ECFS'') at https://www.fcc.gov/cgb/ecfs/ and during
regular business hours in the FCC Reference Center, Federal
Communications Commission, 445 12th Street, SW., CY-A257,
Washington, DC 20554.
\5\ The STELA requires the Commission to implement the
amendments within 270 days after the date of the enactment. STELA
sec. 203(b). The STELA establishes February 27, 2010 as its
effective date or ``date of enactment,'' even though the law was
enacted by Presidential signature on May 27, 2010. STELA sec. 307.
Congress passed four short-term extensions of the distant signal
statutory copyright license (December 19, 2009, March 2, March 25
and April 15, 2010) before passing STELA to reauthorize the
compulsory license for distant signal carriage for five years. STELA
sec. 107(a).
\6\ SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report and Order, FCC 05-187, 70
FR 76504, December 27, 2005. See DIRECTV and EchoStar Satellite
L.L.C. (now Dish) Joint Petition for Reconsideration in MB Docket
No. 05-49 (filed Jan. 26, 2006) (``2006 DIRECTV-EchoStar Joint
Petition'').
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2. Significantly viewed (``SV'') stations are television broadcast
stations that the Commission has determined have sufficient over-the-
air (i.e., non-cable or non-satellite) viewing \7\ to be considered
local for certain purposes and so are not constrained by the boundary
of the stations' local market or Designated Market Area (``DMA'').\8\
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,\9\ and placement on
the SV List.\10\ 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 \11\
in another market, and, thus, enables it to be carried by cable or
satellite in that community in the other market.\12\ In general, SV
status applies to only some communities or counties in a DMA and does
not apply throughout an entire DMA. In contrast, the ``local'' station
designation based on Nielsen's assignment to a particular DMA applies
to the entire market.\13\ Whereas cable operators have had carriage
rights for SV stations since 1972,\14\ satellite carriers have had such
authority only since 2004\15\ and may only retransmit SV network
stations to ``eligible'' satellite subscribers.\16\ These satellite
subscriber eligibility restrictions are intended to prevent satellite
carriers from favoring an SV network station over the in-market (local)
station affiliated with the same network.\17\
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\7\ To qualify for significantly viewed status (i.e., for
placement on the significantly viewed list or ``SV List,'' see note
10, infra), an SV station can be either a ``network'' station or an
``independent'' station, with network stations requiring a higher
share of viewing hours. 47 CFR 76.5(i)(1) and (2). The Commission's
rules define network station as one of the ``three major national
television networks'' (i.e., ABC, CBS or NBC). 47 CFR 76.5(j) and
(k). Parties may demonstrate that stations are significantly viewed
either on a community basis or on a county-wide basis. 47 CFR
76.54(b), (d).
\8\ See 17 U.S.C. 122(j)(2)(A) (defining ``local market'').
\9\ See 47 CFR 76.5, 76.7, 76.54. A TV station, cable operator
or satellite carrier that wishes to have a station designated
significantly viewed must file a petition pursuant to the pleading
requirements in 47 CFR 76.7(a)(1) and use the method described in 47
CFR 76.54 to demonstrate that the station is significantly viewed as
defined in 47 CFR 76.5(i).
\10\ The significantly viewed list or ``SV List'' identifies the
list of stations the Commission has determined to be significantly
viewed in specified counties and communities. The list applies to
both cable and satellite providers. The Commission updates this list
as necessary upon the appropriate demonstrations by stations or
cable or satellite providers. A station, satellite carrier or cable
operator may petition the Commission, either to add eligible
stations or communities pursuant to 47 CFR 76.54, or to restrict
carriage of eligible stations through application of the
Commission's network non-duplication or syndicated exclusivity rules
in 47 CFR 76.122(a), (j) and 76.123(a), (k). Generally, a station's
SV status is only challenged when another station seeks to exercise
its rights under the network non-duplication or syndicated program
exclusivity rules, and the SV station asserts its SV status, which
is an exception to both requirements. See 47 CFR 76.92(f) (SV
exception in cable network non-duplication rules); 47 CFR 76.106(a)
(SV exception in cable syndicated program exclusivity rules); 47 CFR
76.122(j) (SV exception in satellite network non-duplication rules);
and 47 CFR 76.123(k) (SV exception to satellite syndicated program
exclusivity rules). If a station's SV status is challenged, and it
is demonstrated that the station is no longer significantly viewed
in a particular community or county, the station's listing is
modified to indicate that it is subject to programming deletions in
those communities or counties. See SHVERA Significantly Viewed
Report and Order at para. 14. The current SV List is available on
the Media Bureau's Web site at https://www.fcc.gov/mb/.
\11\ See 47 CFR 76.5(dd) (defining cable ``community unit'') and
76.5(gg) (defining a ``satellite community'').
\12\ For copyright purposes, significantly viewed status means
that cable and satellite providers may carry the out-of-market but
SV station with the reduced copyright payment obligations applicable
to local (in-market) stations. See 17 U.S.C. 111(a), (c), (d), and
(f), as amended by STELA sec. 104 (relating to cable statutory
copyright license) and 122(a)(2), as amended by STELA sec. 103
(relating to satellite statutory copyright license).
\13\ 17 U.S.C. 122(j)(2)(C) (defining DMA as ``a designated
market area, as determined by Nielsen Media Research and published
in the 1999-2000 Nielsen Station Index Directory and Nielsen Station
Index United States Television Household Estimates or any successor
publication'').
\14\ See Cable Television Report and Order, FCC 72-108 at para.
83, 37 FR 3252, February 3, 1972 (adopting the concept of
``significantly viewed'' signals to differentiate between otherwise
out-of-market television stations ``that have sufficient audience to
be considered local and those that do not'').
\15\ Section 202 of the Satellite Home Viewer Extension and
Reauthorization Act of 2004 (SHVERA) created Section 340 of the
Communications Act, which authorized satellite carriage of
Commission-determined SV stations. See SHVERA sec. 202, Public Law
108-447, 118 Stat 2809, 3393 (2004) (codified in 47 U.S.C. 340). See
also SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report and Order.
\16\ See 47 U.S.C. 340(b) and 47 CFR 76.54(g) and (h). See also
infra para. 8 (for background).
\17\ 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(1) and (2). See SHVERA Significantly
Viewed Report and Order at para. 94. The Copyright Act's definitions
of ``network station'' and ``non-network station'' will apply for
purposes of determining subscriber eligibility to receive an SV
network station. See 47 U.S.C. 339(d) and 47 U.S.C 122(j)(4), as
amended, applying the definitions of such terms in 47 U.S.C
119(d)(2) and (9). Unlike the definition in the Commission's rules,
which specifically include only ABC, CBS and NBC (see supra note 7),
the Copyright Act definition of ``network station'' may include
other stations. See SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report and Order at
paras. 35-36 and n. 102.
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3. Section 203 of the STELA changes the restrictions on subscriber
eligibility to receive SV network stations from
[[Page 72970]]
satellite carriers.\18\ To implement the STELA, we revise our satellite
subscriber eligibility rules as follows:
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\18\ 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(1) and (2).
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We find that the local service requirement in amended
Section 340(b)(1) requires only that a satellite subscriber receive
local-into-local satellite service as a precondition for that
subscriber to receive SV stations. We find that the statute no longer
requires a satellite subscriber to receive the specific local network
station as a precondition for that subscriber to receive an SV station
affiliated with the same network.
We find that amended Section 340(b)(2) no longer requires
that a satellite carrier offer ``equivalent bandwidth'' to the local
and SV network station pair and instead imposes an ``HD format''
requirement. We find that the HD format requirement in amended Section
340(b)(2) requires that, in order to carry an SV station in high
definition (HD) format, a satellite carrier must carry the local
station affiliated with the same network in HD whenever such format is
available from the local station.
[cir] The HD format requirement applies only where a satellite
carrier retransmits to a subscriber the SV station in HD format. This
requirement does not restrict a satellite carrier from retransmitting
to a subscriber the SV station in standard definition (SD) format.
[cir] For purposes of the HD format requirement, the corresponding
local (in-market) station will be considered ``available'' to the
satellite carrier when the station: (1) Elects mandatory carriage or
grants retransmission consent; (2) provides a good quality signal to
the satellite carrier as required by Section 76.66(g) of the rules; and
(3) is otherwise in compliance with the ``good faith negotiation'' and
carriage provisions set forth in Sections 76.65 and 76.66 of the rules.
However, the HD signal of the corresponding local station will be
deemed ``available'' despite failure to reach agreement on the terms of
retransmission if the satellite carrier is not in compliance with
Section 76.65.
[cir] The HD format requirement requires satellite carriage of a
secondary HD stream of a local station's multicast signal if that
stream is affiliated with the same network as an SV station
retransmitted in HD to satellite subscribers in the local market.
We modify the Commission's 2005 interpretation of the
Section 340(b)(3) exception, which is unchanged by the STELA, and find
that, in the context of the newly revised statute, this exception
permits a satellite carrier to offer an SV network station to a
subscriber when there is no local affiliate of the same network present
in the local market, even if the subscriber does not receive local-
into-local service.
II. Background
4. In May 2010, Congress passed and the President signed the STELA,
which amends the 1988 copyright laws \19\ and the Communications Act of
1934 \20\ to ``modernize, improve and simplify the compulsory copyright
licenses governing the retransmission of distant and local television
signals by cable and satellite television operators.'' \21\ Congress
intended for the STELA to increase competition between cable and
satellite providers, increase service to satellite subscribers, and
update the law to reflect the completion of the digital television
(DTV) transition.\22\ Notably, the STELA reauthorizes the statutory
copyright license for satellite carriage of SV stations and moves that
license from the distant signal statutory copyright license provisions
to the local signal statutory copyright license provisions.\23\
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\19\ See 17 U.S.C. 119 and 122. 17 U.S.C. 119 contains the
statutory copyright license for satellite carriage of ``distant''
network stations (limited to ``unserved households'') and 17 U.S.C.
122 contains the statutory copyright license for satellite carriage
of ``local'' stations (generally defined as stations and subscribers
in the same DMA but which now also includes SV stations, which are
treated as ``local'' for copyright royalty purposes, even though
such stations are not in the same DMA as the subscribers and are not
entitled to mandatory carriage). The STELA also amended 17 U.S.C.
111, the statutory copyright license for cable carriage of broadcast
stations.
\20\ See 47 U.S.C. 325, 338, 339 and 340.
\21\ See House Judiciary Committee Report dated Oct. 28, 2009,
accompanying House Bill, H.R. 3570, 111th Cong. (2009), H.R. Rep.
No. 111-319, at 4 (``H.R. 3570 Report''). See also House Energy and
Commerce Committee Report dated Dec. 12, 2009, accompanying House
Bill, H.R. 2994, 111th Cong. (2009), H.R. Rep. No. 111-349, at 16
(``H.R. 2994 Report''); and Senate Judiciary Committee Report dated
Nov. 10, 2009, accompanying Senate Bill, S. 1670, 111th Cong.
(2009), H.R. Rep. No. 111-98, at 5 (``S. 1670 Report''). There was
no final Report issued to accompany the final version of the STELA
bill (S. 3333) as it was enacted. See Senate Bill, S. 3333, 111th
Cong. (2010) (enacted). Therefore, for the relevant legislative
history, we look to the Reports accompanying the various predecessor
bills (e.g., H.R. 3570, H.R. 2994, and S. 1670). These Reports
reflect Congressional intent with respect to the SV provisions,
which were enacted as drafted in the House and Senate bills. (see
STELA secs. 203, 103). Finally, also relevant are certain remarks
made in floor statements in passing the bill (S. 3333). See ``House
of Representatives Proceedings and Debates of the 111st Congress,
Second Session,'' 156 Cong. Rec. H3317, H3328-3330 (daily ed. May
12, 2010) (statements of Reps. Conyers and Smith) (``House Floor
Debate'') and ``Senate Proceedings and Debates of the 111st
Congress, Second Session,'' 156 Cong. Rec. S3435 (daily ed. May 7,
2010) (statement of Sen. Leahy) (``Senate Floor Debate''). We also
find relevant certain remarks made in floor statements in passing
the House Bill, H.R. 3570. See Chairmen Waxman's and Boucher's Floor
Statements on the Satellite Home Viewer Reauthorization Act of 2009,
155 Cong. Rec. H13428, H13441-13442 (Dec. 2, 2009) (``H.R. 3570
Waxman and/or Boucher Floor Statement(s)'').
\22\ See H.R. 3570 Report at 5 and H.R. 2994 Report at 16. As of
the June 12, 2009 statutory DTV transition deadline, all full-power
television stations stopped broadcasting in analog and are
broadcasting only digital signals. 47 U.S.C. 309(j)(14)(A).
\23\ STELA sec. 103 (moving the SV signal statutory copyright
license from 17 U.S.C. 119(a)(3) to 17 U.S.C. 122 (a)(2)). In doing
so, Congress now defines SV signals as another type of local signal,
rather than as an exception to distant signals. The move also means
that the SV signal license does not expire on December 31, 2014,
when the distant signal license will expire. STELA sec. 107(a).
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5. The STELA is the fourth in a series of statutes that address
satellite carriage of television broadcast stations. In the 1988
Satellite Home Viewer Act (``1988 SHVA''), Congress established a
statutory copyright license to enable satellite carriers to offer
subscribers who could not receive the over-the-air signal of a
broadcast station access to broadcast programming via satellite.\24\
The 1988 SHVA was intended to protect the role of local broadcasters in
providing over-the-air television by limiting satellite delivery of
network broadcast programming to subscribers who were ``unserved'' by
over-the-air signals. The 1988 SHVA also permitted satellite carriers
to offer distant ``superstations'' to subscribers.\25\
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\24\ The Satellite Home Viewer Act of 1988 (SHVA), Public Law
100-667, 102 Stat. 3935, Title II (1988) (codified at 17 U.S.C. 111,
119). The 1988 SHVA was enacted on November 16, 1988, as an
amendment to the copyright laws. The 1988 SHVA gave satellite
carriers a statutory copyright license to offer distant signals to
``unserved'' households. 17 U.S.C. 119(a).
\25\ See id. 119(a)(1) (2009). The STELA sec. 102(g) replaces
the term ``superstation'' with the term ``non-network station.''
This change in wording has no substantive impact on our rules. A
non-network station (previously superstation) is defined as a
television station, other than a network station, licensed by the
Commission that is retransmitted by a satellite carrier. As the term
would suggest, non-network stations are still not considered
``network stations'' for copyright purposes. See id. 119(d)(9); see
also supra notes 7 and 17.
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6. In the 1999 Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act (``SHVIA''),
Congress expanded satellite carriers' ability to retransmit local
broadcast television signals directly to subscribers.\26\ A key element
of the SHVIA was the grant to satellite carriers of a statutory
copyright license to retransmit local broadcast programming, or
``local-into-local'' service, to subscribers. A satellite carrier
[[Page 72971]]
provides ``local-into-local'' service when it retransmits a local
television signal back into the local market of that television station
for reception by subscribers.\27\ Generally, a television station's
``local market'' is the DMA in which it is located.\28\ Each satellite
carrier providing local-into-local service pursuant to the statutory
copyright license is generally obligated to carry any qualified local
television station in the particular DMA that requests carriage and
complies with Commission rules, 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.\29\ This is commonly
referred to as the ``carry one, carry all'' requirement. The Commission
implemented the SHVIA by adopting rules for satellite carriers with
regard to carriage of broadcast signals, retransmission consent, and
program exclusivity that generally paralleled the requirements for
cable service.\30\
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\26\ The Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act of 1999 (SHVIA),
Public Law 106-113, 113 Stat. 1501 (1999). The SHVIA was enacted on
November 29, 1999, 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). In the SHVIA, Congress amended both the copyright laws,
17 U.S.C. 119 and 122, and the Communications Act, 47 U.S.C. 325,
338 and 339.
\27\ 47 CFR 76.66(a)(6).
\28\ See 17 U.S.C. 122(j)(2)(A); 47 U.S.C. 340(i)(1). DMAs,
which describe each television market in terms of a unique
geographic area, are established by Nielsen Media Research based on
measured viewing patterns. See 17 U.S.C. 122(j)(2)(A) through (C).
\29\ See 47 U.S.C. 338.
\30\ See SHVIA Signal Carriage Order, 66 FR 7410, January 23,
2001; OET SHVIA Report, FCC 00-416 (rel. Nov. 29, 2000); SHVIA
Satellite Exclusivity Order, 65 FR 68082, November 14, 2000; SHVIA
Retransmission Consent Enforcement Order; 65 FR 10718, February 29,
2000; SHVIA Good Faith Retransmission Consent Order, 65 FR 15559,
March 23, 2000.
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7. In the 2004 Satellite Home Viewer Extension and Reauthorization
Act (SHVERA), Congress established the framework for satellite carriage
of ``significantly viewed'' stations.\31\ Specifically, the SHVERA
expanded the statutory copyright license to allow satellite carriers to
retransmit an out-of-market network station as part of their local
service to subscribers where the Commission determined that distant
station to be ``significantly viewed'' (based on over-the-air
viewing).\32\ In providing this authority to satellite carriers,
Congress sought to create parity with cable operators, who had already
had such authority to offer SV stations to subscribers for more than 38
years.\33\ The Commission implemented the SHVERA's significantly viewed
provisions by publishing a list of SV stations \34\ and adopting rules
in the satellite context for stations to attain eligibility for
significantly viewed status and for subscribers to receive SV stations
from satellite carriers.\35\ The SHVERA mandated that the Commission
apply the same station eligibility requirements (i.e., rules and
procedures for parties to show that a station qualifies for
significantly viewed status) to satellite carriers that already applied
to cable operators.\36\ However, to prevent a satellite carrier from
favoring SV stations over traditional local market stations, the SHVERA
also imposed subscriber eligibility requirements that applied only to
satellite carriers.\37\
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\31\ The Satellite Home Viewer Extension and Reauthorization Act
of 2004 (SHVERA), Public Law 108-447, 118 Stat 2809 (2004) (codified
in scattered sections of 17 and 47 U.S.C.). The SHVERA was enacted
on December 8, 2004 as title IX of the ``Consolidated Appropriations
Act, 2005.'' The SHVERA contained additional mandates requiring
Commission action, but not relevant to this proceeding. See SHVERA
Reciprocal Bargaining Order, 70 FR 40216, July 13, 2005 (imposing a
reciprocal good faith retransmission consent bargaining obligation
on multichannel video programming distributors); SHVERA Section 210
Order, 70 FR 51658, August 31, 2005 (requiring satellite carriers to
carry local TV broadcast stations in Alaska and Hawaii); SHVERA
Procedural Rules Order, 70 FR 21669, April 27, 2005 (adopting
procedural rules concerning satellite carriers' notifications to TV
broadcast stations and obligations to conduct signal testing);
Retransmission Consent and Exclusivity Rules: Report to Congress
Pursuant to Section 208 of the Satellite Home Viewer Extension and
Reauthorization Act of 2004, dated Sept. 8, 2005, available at
https://www.fcc.gov/mb/policy/shvera.html (Report analyzing comments
received in MB Docket No. 05-28 and addressing impact of certain
rules and statutory provisions on competition in the television
marketplace).
\32\ In the SHVERA, Congress again amended both the
Communications Act, 47 U.S.C. 325, 338, 339 and 340, and the
copyright laws, 17 U.S.C. 119 and 122. In creating a statutory
copyright license for satellite carriers to offer significantly
viewed stations to subscribers, Congress distinguished between out-
of-market stations that had significant over-the-air viewership in
another market (i.e., significantly viewed stations) and truly
``distant'' stations.
\33\ See SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report and Order, 20 FCC
Rcd at 17280-1, para. 2. In 1972, the Commission adopted the concept
of ``significantly viewed'' stations for cable television to
differentiate between out-of-market television stations ``that have
sufficient audience to be considered local and those that do not.''
1972 Cable R&O, 36 FCC 2d at 174, para. 83. The Commission concluded
at that time that it would not be reasonable if choices on cable
were more limited than choices over-the-air, and gave cable carriage
rights to stations in communities where they had significant over-
the-air (non-cable) viewing. Id.
\34\ See supra note 10 (for background on SV List).
\35\ See 47 CFR 76.5(ee) (revised), 76.5(gg) (added), 76.54(a)
through (c) (revised), 76.54(e) through (k) (added), 76.122(a) and
(j) (revised), and 76.123(a) and (k) (revised).
\36\ See 47 U.S.C. 340(a). As mandated by the SHVERA, the
Commission required satellite carriers or broadcast stations seeking
SV status for satellite carriage to follow the same petition process
now in place for cable carriage. See 47 CFR 76.5, 76.7 and 76.54(a)
through (d).
\37\ 47 U.S.C. 340(b) (2004). The eligibility requirements also
addressed the different carriage requirements that apply to cable
(i.e., ``must carry'' for all cable systems) as compared with
satellite (i.e., ``carry one, carry all''). In the cable context,
where mandatory carriage rules apply as opposed to satellite's carry
one, carry all requirements, it was not necessary to include
subscriber eligibility requirements, as it was presumed that all
cable subscribers receive local broadcast stations as part of their
cable package.
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8. The SHVERA limited subscribers' eligibility to receive SV
digital television stations from satellite carriers in two key ways.
First, the SHVERA allowed a satellite carrier to offer SV stations only
to subscribers that received the carrier's ``local-into-local'' service
(the ``local service'' requirement).\38\ The Commission interpreted
this local service requirement to further require that the subscriber
receive the local station affiliated with a particular network (as part
of the carrier's ``local-into-local'' service) in order for that
subscriber to also receive an SV station affiliated with the same
network (the ``same network affiliate'' requirement).\39\ Second, the
SHVERA allowed a satellite carrier to offer an SV digital station to a
subscriber only if the carrier also provided to that subscriber the
local station affiliated with the same network in a format that used
either (1) an ``equivalent'' amount of bandwidth for the local and SV
network station pair, or (2) the ``entire'' bandwidth of the local
station (the ``equivalent or entire bandwidth'' requirement).\40\ The
Commission interpreted this provision to require an objective
comparison of each station's use of its bandwidth in terms of
[[Page 72972]]
megabits per second (mbps) or bit rate.\41\ The SHVERA provided for two
exceptions to the local service limitations, contained in 47 U.S.C.
340(b)(3) and (b)(4). Section 340(b)(3) allows satellite carriage of an
SV network station to a subscriber when there is no local station
affiliated with the same television network as the SV station present
in the local market. Section 340(b)(4) allows a satellite carrier to
negotiate privately with the local network station to obtain a waiver
of the subscriber eligibility restrictions in Sections 340(b)(1) and
340(b)(2).
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\38\ The Commission found that ``subscriber receipt of `local-
into-local' service [was] unambiguously required by the statute.''
SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report and Order at para. 68.
\39\ Id. at para. 76 (discussing digital service limitations).
The SHVERA's language differed with respect to the analog and
digital service limitations. In 2004, television stations were
transitioning from analog to digital service and most stations were
broadcasting both analog and digital signals. Consequently, the
SHVERA specified that certain provisions applied to analog signals
and other, often different, provisions applied to digital signals.
See 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(1) (analog service limitations) and 47 U.S.C.
340 (b)(2)(A) (digital service limitations) (2004). The Commission
noted that, ``[u]nlike the ambiguity in its sister analog provision
[of 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(1) (2004)], Section 340(b)(2)(A) of the Act, 47
U.S.C. 340(b)(2)(A) (2004), is clear in requiring a subscriber to
receive ``the digital signal of a network station in the
subscriber's local market that is affiliated with the same
television network.'' Id. See also id. at 17305, para. 70
(discussing analog service limitations).
\40\ 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(2)(B) (2004) (``With respect to a signal
that originates as a digital signal of a network station, this
section shall apply only if--* * * (B) either--(i) the
retransmission of the local network station occupies at least the
equivalent bandwidth as the digital signal retransmitted pursuant to
this section; or (ii) the retransmission of the local network
station is comprised of the entire bandwidth of the digital signal
broadcast by such local network station.''). Congress sought to
prevent satellite carriers from offering the local network station's
digital signal ``in a less robust format'' than the significantly
viewed affiliate station's digital signal). SHVERA Significantly
Viewed Report and Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 17314, para. 94.
\41\ See SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report and Order, 20 FCC
Rcd at 17315, para. 96.
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III. Discussion
9. We adopt rules in this R&O to implement the STELA's amendments
to Section 340(b) of the Communications Act. Our discussion below
addresses the two substantive changes to Section 340(b)(1) and (b)(2),
as well as how these amended provisions will work with the existing
statutory exceptions in Section 340(b)(3) and (b)(4). We decline to
address here the merits of Dish's petition for further rulemaking filed
with its comments, as those issues are beyond the scope of this
proceeding.\42\ Finally, we adopt some non-substantive,
``housecleaning'' rule changes.
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\42\ Dish requested the Commission to undertake a rulemaking to
revise the retransmission consent rules as they apply to carriage of
SV stations. See Dish Comments (Petition) at 9.
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10. The STELA amended Section 340(b) to read as follows: \43\
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\43\ 47 U.S.C. 340(b) (2010), as amended by the STELA sec.
203(a). See also 17 U.S.C. 122(a)(2), as amended by STELA sec.
103(b).
(1) Service Limited to Subscribers Taking Local-Into-Local
Service.--This section shall apply only to retransmissions to
subscribers of a satellite carrier who receive retransmissions of a
signal from that satellite carrier pursuant to section 338.
(2) Service Limitations.--A satellite carrier may retransmit to a
subscriber in high definition format the signal of a station determined
by the Commission to be significantly viewed under subsection (a) only
if such carrier also retransmits in high definition format the signal
of a station located in the local market of such subscriber and
affiliated with the same network whenever such format is available from
such station.
(3) The limitations in paragraphs (1) and (2) shall not prohibit a
retransmission under this section to a subscriber located in a local
market in which there are no network stations affiliated with the same
television network as the station whose signal is being retransmitted
pursuant to this section.
(4) Paragraphs (1) and (2) shall not prohibit a retransmission of a
network station to a subscriber if and to the extent that the network
station in the local market in which the subscriber is located, and
that is affiliated with the same television network, has privately
negotiated and affirmatively granted a waiver from the requirements of
paragraph (1) and (2) to such satellite carrier with respect to
retransmission of the significantly viewed station to such subscriber.
11. These amendments simplify the significantly viewed provisions
in Section 340(b) of the Communications Act to make it easier for
satellite carriers to offer SV stations to subscribers.\44\
Specifically, the STELA made two key changes to Section 340(b).\45\
First, the STELA eliminated the language in Section 340(b)(2)(A) that
had required that subscribers receive the same local network affiliate
and, instead, retains only the language requiring that the subscriber
receive local-into-local satellite service in order to be eligible to
receive SV stations.\46\ Second, the STELA replaces the ``equivalent or
entire bandwidth'' requirement applicable to digital service, which was
previously contained in Section 340(b)(2)(B), with an ``HD format''
requirement. The STELA did not amend the statutory exceptions in
Sections 340(b)(3) and (b)(4) to the subscriber eligibility
restrictions in Sections 340(b)(1) and (2).
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\44\ See H.R. 3570 Report at 4.
\45\ STELA sec. 203(a) (amendments to be codified at 47 U.S.C.
340(b)(1) and (2)). We note that the subscriber eligibility
limitations in 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(1) and (2), which are amended by the
STELA sec. 203, do not apply to cable subscribers. We do not
substantively amend our significantly viewed rules and procedures
that satellite carriers share with cable operators. See 47 CFR
76.54(a) through (d). Furthermore, we note that the STELA sec. 203
does not amend the significantly viewed provisions in the
Communications Act governing the eligibility of a television
broadcast station to qualify for ``significantly viewed'' status.
See 47 U.S.C. 340(a), (c) through (g). We do not make any
substantive (non-``housecleaning'') changes to our rules and
procedures implementing the significantly viewed station eligibility
requirements. See 47 CFR 76.54(a) through (f), (j) and (k). See
infra Section III.F. (discussing housecleaning changes).
\46\ Section 340(b)(1) as amended retains the reference to ``a''
signal carried pursuant to Section 338 and the explanatory heading
referring to ``subscribers taking local-into-local service.''
Congress removed from this section the phrase ``that originates as
an analog signal of a local network station'' following the word
``signal.'' See DIRECTV Reply at 5.
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A. The STELA Directs the Commission To Create a Workable Framework That
Will Enable Satellite Carriers To Offer Both the SV and Local Stations
to Consumers
12. We find that, in the STELA, Congress intended that the
Commission create a workable framework for the satellite carriage of SV
stations.\47\ Congress intended the 2004 SHVERA to promote parity with
cable,\48\ while protecting localism by preventing satellite carriers
from favoring an SV network station over the local in-market station
affiliated with the same TV network.\49\ However, very few SV stations
made their way into the living rooms of satellite TV consumers.\50\ The
Satellite Carriers attribute this to the Commission's ``restrictive''
interpretation of Section 340(b) in the 2005 SHVERA Significantly
Viewed Report and Order,\51\ which they maintain made satellite
carriage of SV
[[Page 72973]]
stations impractical or technically infeasible.\52\
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\47\ See STELA-Significantly Viewed NPRM, supra note 3, at
paras. 2, 11.
\48\ See, e.g., 2004 House Commerce Committee Report dated July
22, 2004, accompanying House Bill, H.R. 4501, 108th Cong. (2004),
H.R. Rep. No. 108-634, at 1 and 9 (2004) (``2004 House Commerce
Committee Report'') (noting purpose of the SHVERA included
``increasing regulatory parity by extending to satellite carriers
the same type of authority cable operators already have to carry
`significantly viewed' signals into a market''). See also, e.g.,
House of Representatives Floor Debate on the Satellite Home Viewer
Extension and Reauthorization Act of 2004, House Bill H.R. 4518, 150
Cong. Rec. H8210, H8217-8219 (dated Oct. 6, 2004) (``H.R. 4518 Floor
Debate''). In a statement in the floor debate, Rep. Joe Barton
(Chairman, House Energy and Commerce Committee) stated: ``The bill
[H.R. 4518] would extend to satellite operators the authority to
carry such significantly viewed signals on comparable terms as cable
operators.'' Id. at H8219. See also The Honorable Joe Barton,
Chairman, House Energy and Commerce Committee, ``Floor Statement''
on the Satellite Home Viewer Extension and Reauthorization Act of
2004, House Bill H.R. 4518, (dated Oct. 6, 2004) (``Barton Floor
Statement'') (``In implementing Section 340, the [Commission] should
treat satellite operators in a comparable fashion to cable operators
to the greatest extent possible with respect to carriage of
significantly viewed stations, in terms of both current and future
significantly viewed rulings.'')
\49\ See 2004 House Commerce Committee Report at 12 (noting that
former ``Section 340(b)(2)(B) prevents the satellite operator from
retransmitting a local affiliate's digital signal in a less robust
format than a significantly viewed digital signal of a distant
affiliate of the same network, such as by down-converting the local
affiliate's signal but not the distant affiliate's signal from high-
definition digital format to analog or standard definition digital
format'').
\50\ See DIRECTV Comments at 2 (noting that it has ``offered
only a handful'' of SV stations since satellite carriage of such
stations was authorized by SHVERA) and Dish Reply at 5 (noting that
``when permitted to do so, Dish offered SV stations in certain
counties of only seven DMAs'').
\51\ DIRECTV Comments at 1-2 and Dish Reply at 5 (noting that
``the SV program that Congress spearheaded has not succeeded'').
\52\ DIRECTV and Dish ex parte (dated Sept. 22, 2010)
Significantly Viewed Talking Points Appendix at 1 (``DIRECTV and
Dish Sept. 22 SV Talking Points'') (expressing concern that the
Commission might adopt rules for SV carriage ``that make it
impractical to offer such stations'').
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13. Congress seemed to agree. As stated in one House Report:
The Commission's implementation of section 340, including its
interpretation of the ``equivalent bandwidth'' requirement, has
generally served to discourage satellite carriers from using section
340 to provide significantly viewed signals to qualified
households.\53\
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\53\ H.R. 2994 Report at 16. The use of the word ``including''
implies that Congress' dissatisfaction with the Commission's prior
implementation of Section 340 was not limited to the ``equivalent
bandwidth'' requirement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To achieve more widespread carriage of SV stations, the STELA
amends Sections 340(b). As discussed below, Congress eliminated both
the former Section 340(b)(2)(A), which required that digital local
service subscribers receive the same network affiliate, and the former
Section 340(b)(2)(B), which contained the ``equivalent or entire
bandwidth'' requirement.\54\ Based on these changes to the statutory
text, Congress intended more than merely to fix a technical
implementation issue with the equivalent bandwidth requirement, as the
Broadcaster Associations contend,\55\ but rather sought to simplify the
law and increase service to satellite subscribers by encouraging SV
carriage.\56\ In reauthorizing the SHVERA and mostly retaining its
framework for the carriage of SV stations, the STELA also retains the
key goals of its predecessor statute -to foster localism and promote
parity between cable and satellite service.\57\
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\54\ See 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(2)(A) and (B). See infra Sections
III.B. and III.C.
\55\ Broadcaster Associations Comments at 4 (arguing STELA's
statutory changes only ``address a technical implementation
concern'' with the ``equivalent or entire bandwidth'' requirement).
\56\ See H.R. 3570 Report at 4 (noting STELA's general intent to
``increase competition and service to satellite and cable
consumers'').
\57\ See e.g., H.R. 2994 Report at 15 (noting that ``the
`significantly viewed' provision was adopted in SHVERA to create
parity with cable operators'') and also H.R. 3570 Report at 10. See
SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report and Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 17306-7,
paras. 71-2 (noting statutory intent ``to protect localism'' by
citing to the 2004 House Commerce Committee Report).
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14. The STELA's relocation of the statutory copyright license for
SV stations into the ``local'' license provisions of the Copyright Act
indicates that Congress considered the SV compulsory license to be more
like the local license than like the distant signal license,
recognizing that the SV station is ``local'' to the community in which
it is significantly viewed.\58\ SV stations have SV status because they
have been viewed over-the-air by a sufficient number of households in
the community in the relevant market. The Senate Report notes that the
SV provision ``relates to the ability to receive locally-oriented
programming.'' \59\ Furthermore, satellite TV consumers deserve access
to the same locally-oriented programming--including SV stations--as
their cable-subscribing neighbors.\60\ Moreover, providing satellite
carriers parity with cable was a core goal of the SHVERA in 2004 and it
remains one today in the STELA.\61\ Therefore, our implementation of
the statutory changes to Section 340(b) focuses on enabling satellite
TV consumers to receive both the local in-market and SV stations from
their carriers, as is the plain intent of Section 340.\62\ To achieve
this objective, our interpretation of the statute reflects the
practical realities of satellite local carriage, in accordance with
Congress's intent to remove barriers to SV carriage.\63\
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\58\ See S. 1670 Report at 5 (noting ``The [STELA] moves
locally-oriented provisions out of the distant signal license and
places them into the permanent local license. These provisions
include significantly viewed, special exception, and low-power
stations. Shifting these provisions into the local license will
ensure that the distant signal license is focused purely on
providing truly distant signals to consumers unserved by their local
broadcasters.''). This makes sense given STELA's intent to create
parity with cable, which characterizes SV signals as those with
``sufficient audience to be considered local.'' See 1972 Cable R&O,
36 FCC 2d at 174, para. 83. But see H.R. 3570 Report at 10 (stating
``Since significantly viewed signals are by definition a subset of
distant signals, SHVERA included this provision in Section 119, the
distant signal license. However, since significantly viewed signals
do not incur royalties, the Committee believes it should be moved to
Section 122, which governs all other royalty-free satellite
transmissions under the compulsory license. The bill accordingly
incorporates the significantly viewed provision, previously in
Section 119(a)(3), into Section 122(a).''). The Broadcaster
Associations argue that this statement means STELA considers SV
signals to be distant by definition. See Broadcaster Associations
Reply at 18. We disagree that these Congressional characterizations
are necessarily at odds. The context of the H.R. 3570 Report
referred to SHVERA's treatment of SV signals. In contrast, STELA
intended to treat SV signals like ``all other royalty-free satellite
transmissions,'' i.e., like local signals. The change in license and
treatment is also consistent with the statutory copyright license
for cable retransmission of SV signals, which also treats them, for
royalty purposes, as local signals. See 17 U.S.C. 111(a), (c), (d),
and (f), as amended by STELA sec. 104.
\59\ See S. 1670 Report at 4. See also DIRECTV Reply at 1, n.4;
Dish Reply at 6.
\60\ See, e.g., H.R. 4518 Floor Debate (on SHVERA bill), supra
note 48, at H8223 (in which Rep. Conyers states that the SHVERA bill
[H.R. 4518] ``address[ed] the desires of consumers in that it
permits the satellite companies to retransmit a significantly viewed
local signal to a customer''); Id. at H8217 (in which Rep.
Sensenbrenner states that the SHVERA bill, H.R. 4518, ``changes both
the copyright and communications acts to ensure, first, that
consumers will have greater choice in programming; second, that
satellite providers will have greater freedom to deliver the content
consumers desire''); and Id. at H8219 (in which Rep. Barton states
that ``[b]y extending the expiring provisions, increasing parity,
and promoting further competition, this legislation [H.R. 4518] will
continue to enhance service to consumers.'')
\61\ See, e.g., H.R. 3570 Waxman Floor Statement (on STELA
bill), supra note 21, at H13441 (calling the bill [H.R. 3570] ``an
important step forward for consumers,'' Chairman Waxman notes, among
other things, that the ``bill makes changes to the existing rules on
`significantly viewed' signals in an effort to promote competition
between satellite and cable companies''); and H.R. 4518 Floor Debate
(on 2004 SHVERA bill), supra note 48, at H8223 (in which Rep.
Dingell states that the bill [H.R. 4518] will not only ``increase
regulatory parity between cable and satellite providers'' but that
such ``increased parity should help spur greater competition between
cable and satellite providers and ultimately benefit consumers in
the form of lower prices and better service''). Contrary to the
Broadcaster Associations' argument, there is nothing in the record
to suggest that cable carriage of SV stations has harmed localism
over more than 30 years. See NAB ex parte (dated Oct. 7, 2010)
Significantly Viewed Talking Points Appendix at 3 (``NAB Oct. 7 SV
Talking Points'') (claiming the Satellite Carriers ignore STELA's
goal to protect localism).
\62\ As discussed above in supra para. 1, the purpose of Section
340 is to give satellite carriers the authority to offer SV stations
as part of their local service to their subscribers.
\63\ See DIRECTV and Dish ex parte (dated Sept. 20, 2010)
Significantly Viewed Talking Points Appendix at 1 (``DIRECTV and
Dish Sept. 20 SV Talking Points'').
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15. In the STELA, Congress directs us to implement Section 340 in a
practical way that will better enable satellite carriers to offer SV
stations to their subscribers. We find that carriage of both the SV and
local in-market stations will best foster localism and promote parity
with cable, and so, in implementing the law we must balance protection
of local in-market stations against the cost of making SV carriage
technically infeasible or impractical.
B. The STELA Eliminates the Requirement To Receive a Local Station
Affiliated With the Same Network as the SV Station and Requires Instead
That Subscribers Receive Local-Into-Local Service
16. We adopt our proposal to eliminate the requirement that a
subscriber receive the local station affiliated with a specific network
in order for that subscriber to also receive an SV station affiliated
with the same network, and require instead that the subscriber receive
local-into-local satellite service.\64\ We clarify, however, that a
satellite carrier must comply with Section 76.65 of our rules, which
codifies the requirement for good faith in retransmission consent
negotiations,
[[Page 72974]]
in order for it to carry an SV station. In the record, the Satellite
Carriers support our proposal, while the Broadcaster Associations
oppose it.\65\
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\64\ STELA-Significantly Viewed NPRM, supra note 3, at para. 14.
\65\ Broadcaster Associations Comments at 7 and Reply at 6;
DIRECTV Comments at 3 and Reply at 3; Dish Comments at 4 and Reply
at 7.
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17. In the 2004 SHVERA, Congress authorized satellite carriers to
offer SV stations to subscribers, but crafted Sections 340(b)(1) and
340(b)(2)(A) of the Act to protect localism by requiring that these
subscribers also receive the local network affiliate (called the
``local service'' requirement).\66\ These two provisions, however,
contained different language. Whereas the analog local service
requirement in Section 340(b)(1) \67\ required only that the subscriber
receive local service ``pursuant to Section 338''--referring to the
``carry one, carry all'' carriage requirements that pertain to local
stations,\68\ the digital local service requirement in Section
340(b)(2)(A) \69\ contained additional language that expressly required
the subscriber to receive the local digital station that was
``affiliated with the same television network'' as the SV station
(hereinafter referred to as the ``same network affiliate'' language).
Thus, while each of these provisions explicitly required a subscriber
to at least receive the satellite carrier's local-into-local service
before that subscriber could receive an SV station, it was unclear
(when considering the two provisions together) whether Section
340(b)(1) also required a subscriber to receive the specific local
analog network station before that subscriber could receive the SV
station affiliated with the same network.\70\ For example, it was
unclear how the statute applied where there was a local network analog
station, but such station failed to request local carriage, refused to
grant retransmission consent, or was otherwise ineligible for local
carriage.\71\
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\66\ 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(1) and (b)(2)(A) (2004). Congress intended
for these provisions to protect localism ``by helping ensure that
the satellite operator cannot retransmit into a market a
significantly viewed digital signal of a network broadcast station
from a distant market without also retransmitting into the market a
digital signal of any local affiliate from the same network.''
SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report and Order, 20 FCC Rcd at 17306-7,
paras. 71-2.
\67\ 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(1) (2004), as enacted in 2004, stated:
``With respect to a signal that originates as an analog signal of a
network station, this section shall apply only to retransmissions to
subscribers of a satellite carrier who receive retransmissions of a
signal that originates as an analog signal of a local network
station from that satellite carrier pursuant to section 338.''
\68\ 47 U.S.C. 338. See also supra para. 6 (discussing the
``carry one, carry all'' requirement).
\69\ 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(2)(A) (2004), as enacted in 2004, stated:
``With respect to a signal that originates as a digital signal of a
network station, this section shall apply only if--(A) the
subscriber receives from the satellite carrier pursuant to section
338 the retransmission of the digital signal of a network station in
the subscriber's local market that is affiliated with the same
television network. * * *''
\70\ SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report and Order, 20 FCC Rcd at
17304-8, paras. 68, 70-73.
\71\ See id. at 17304, para. 67.
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18. In the 2005 SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report and Order, the
Commission interpreted former Sections 340(b)(1) and 340(b)(2)(A) to
require that the subscriber receive the specific local station that is
affiliated with the same network as the SV station, whether the
station's signal was analog or digital.\72\ Although former Section
340(b)(1) lacked the express ``same network affiliate'' language as
that contained in its digital counterpart, the Commission interpreted
the two provisions together and read the ``same network affiliate''
requirement into former Section 340(b)(1), based largely on the concept
that Congress intended the two provisions to achieve similar ends.\73\
Accordingly, the Commission adopted Section 76.54(g) of the rules,
based on the ``same network affiliate'' language in former Section
340(b)(2)(A).\74\
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\72\ Id. at 17305 and 17308, paras. 70 and 76. In the 2006
DIRECTV-EchoStar Joint Petition, the Satellite Carriers challenged
the Commission's interpretation of the analog service limitation
provision in 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(1). With the end of analog full-power
broadcasting, this issue is now moot. See infra Section III.G.
(discussing Order on Reconsideration).
\73\ See SHVERA Significantly Viewed Report and Order, 20 FCC
Rcd at 17307, para. 72. We note that the Commission also stated that
its interpretation of Section 340(b)(1) was necessary to give
meaning to the statutory exceptions in Sections 340(b)(3) and (4);
see supra para. 10 (for statutory text). As discussed, infra, in
paras. 46-47 and note 167, we find the statutory exceptions remain
meaningful to, and are consistent with, our interpretation of
Section 340(b)(1) as amended by STELA.
\74\ 47 CFR 76.54(g) states: ``(g) Signals of analog or digital
significantly viewed television broadcast stations may not be
retransmitted by satellite carriers to subscribers who do not
receive local-into-local service, including a station affiliated
with the same network as the significantly viewed station, pursuant
to Sec. 76.66 of this chapter; except that a satellite carrier may
retransmit a significantly viewed signal of a television broadcast
station to a subscriber who receives local-into-local service but
does not receive a local station affiliated with the same network as
the significantly viewed station, if: (1) There is no station
affiliated with the same television network as the station whose
signal is significantly viewed; or (2) The station affiliated with
the same television network as the station whose signal is
significantly viewed has granted a waiver in accordance with 47
U.S.C. 340(b)(4).''
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19. As we tentatively concluded in the NPRM, new Section 340(b)(1)
requires only that the subscriber receive local-into-local satellite
service and no longer requires carriage of the local affiliate of the
same network.\75\ New Section 340(b)(1) applies ``only to
retransmissions to subscribers of a satellite carrier who receive
retransmissions of a signal from that satellite carrier pursuant to
Section 338.'' \76\ By providing simply that a subscriber must receive
``a'' signal from the satellite carrier pursuant to Section 338 before
receiving a SV signal, the statute removes any precondition that a
subscriber receive ``the'' local affiliate of the same network as the
SV station. In drafting new Section 340(b)(1) for the STELA, Congress
eliminated the ``same network affiliate'' language that appeared in the
provision enacted as part of the SHVERA in 2004.\77\ Our interpretation
that the new Section 340(b)(1) requires only that the subscriber
receive local-into-local service is also consistent with the
provision's heading: ``Service Limited To Subscribers Taking Local-
Into-Local Service,'' as well as with the statutory copyright license
for SV stations, which allows a satellite carrier to retransmit SV
stations to subscribers that receive signals pursuant to the statutory
copyright license for local signals but says nothing about the
subscriber having to receive the signal of the local affiliate of the
same network.\78\
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\75\ STELA-Significantly Viewed NPRM, supra note 3, at para. 14.
\76\ 47 U.S.C. 340(b)(1) (referring to retransmissions
``pursuant to 47 U.S.C. 338''). Each satellite carrier providing a
local station pursuant to the statutory copyright license is
generally obligated to carry any qualified local television station
in the same DMA that has requested carriage. 47 U.S.C. 338.
\77\ In STELA, Congress eliminated most references
distinguishing the treatment of ``analog'' versus ``digital''
signals or stations in light of the completion of the digital
television transition for full power stations. In Section 340,
Congress eliminated the text of the digital provision (former
section 340(b)(2)(A), which had said: ``With respect to a signal
that originates as a digital signal of a network station, this
section shall apply only if--(A) the subscriber receives from the
satellite carrier pursuant to section 338 of this title the
retransmission of the digital signal of a network station in the
subscriber's local market that is affiliated with the same
television network; and'' (B) the retransmission complies with
either the (i) equivalent or (ii) entire bandwidth requirement.''
(Emphasis added.)
\78\ 17 U.S.C. 122(a)(2)(A) (providing a statutory copyright
license to support satellite carriage of SV stations provided the
subscriber is receiving stations pursuant to the statutory copyright
license for local stations). See 17 U.S.C. 122(a)(1).
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20. Based on the language of the amended text, Congress' purposes
of facilitating SV carriage and achieving closer parity between cable
and satellite providers, and the shift of the SV copyright license from
the distant license to the local license,\79\ we conclude that the best
interpretation of new Section 340(b)(1) is that the subscriber need
only receive a local station pursuant to Section 338 in order
[[Page 72975]]
to be eligible to receive SV stations, and that it need not receive the
network affiliate affiliated with the same network as the SV
station.\80\ The Broadcaster Associations disagree with the NPRM's
interpretation of new Section 340(b)(1) and argue that the Commission
should retain the interpretation it applied to the SHVERA,
notwithstanding the change in the statutory language as enacted in the
STELA.\81\ They note that, in implementing the SHVERA in 2005, the
Commission interpreted the former analog local service provision in
former Section 340(b)(1) and the former digital local service provision
in former Section 340(b)(2)(A) to require that a satellite subscriber
must receive the local affiliate of a specific network in order to be
eligible to receive the SV station affiliated with the same
network.\82\ The SHVERA, in contrast to the STELA, included language
expressly requiring receipt of the ``same network affiliate'' in the
provision applying to eligibility for a digital SV station.\83\ The
Commission, relying on the language in the former digital provision,
applied the requirement to subscriber eligibility for both analog and
digital SV stations.\84\ The Broadcaster Associations contend that we
should retain the former interpretation and apply it to the new STELA
provision despite the removal of the old language.\85\ They argue that
nothing has materially changed with respect to the local service
requirement, other than the completion of the DTV transition and,
therefore, that the Commiss