Auction of FM Broadcast Construction Permits Rescheduled for April 27, 2011; Notice and Filing Requirements, Minimum Opening Bids, Upfront Payments, and Other Procedures for Auction 91, 3892-3906 [2011-1375]
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 14 / Friday, January 21, 2011 / Notices
implementation of section 255 of the
Telecommunications Act of 1996, which
seeks to ensure that telecommunications
equipment and services are available to
all Americans, including those
individuals with disabilities. As with
any complaint procedure, a certain
number of regulatory and information
burdens are necessary to ensure
compliance with FCC rules. The
information collection requirements
also give full effect to the accessibility
policies embodied in section 255. They
do so by requiring telecommunications
equipment manufacturers and service
providers to make end-user product
documentation available in alternate
formats, including providing contact
information to request such
documentation, and by requiring them
to demonstrate how they considered
accessibility during product
development.
Federal Communications Commission.
Bulah P. Wheeler,
Deputy Manager, Office of the Secretary,
Office of Managing Director.
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
Notice of Public Information
Collection(s) Being Reviewed by the
Federal Communications Commission,
Comments Requested
January 11, 2011.
The Federal Communications
Commission, as part of its continuing
effort to reduce paperwork burden
invites the general public and other
Federal agencies to take this
opportunity to comment on the
following information collection(s), as
required by the Paperwork Reduction
Act (PRA) of 1995, 44 U.S.C. 3501–3520.
Comments are requested concerning: (a)
Whether the proposed collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
Commission, including whether the
information shall have practical utility;
(b) the accuracy of the Commission’s
burden estimate; (c) ways to enhance
the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information collected; (d) ways to
minimize the burden of the collection of
information on the respondents,
including the use of automated
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology, and (e) ways to
further reduce the information
collection burden on small business
concerns with fewer than 25 employees.
The FCC may not conduct or sponsor
a collection of information unless it
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For
further information on this collection
contact Cathy Williams on (202) 418–
2918.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
[FR Doc. 2011–1208 Filed 1–20–11; 8:45 am]
SUMMARY:
displays a currently valid control
number. No person shall be subject to
any penalty for failing to comply with
a collection of information subject to the
Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) that
does not display a currently valid OMB
control number.
DATES: Written Paperwork Reduction
Act (PRA) comments should be
submitted on or before March 22, 2011.
If you anticipate that you will be
submitting PRA comments, but find it
difficult to do so within the period of
time allowed by this notice, you should
advise the FCC contact listed below as
soon as possible.
ADDRESSES: Direct all PRA comments to
Cathy Williams, Federal
Communications Commission, via email to PRA@fcc.gov and
Cathy.Williams@fcc.gov.
OMB Control Number: 3060–xxxx.
Title: Satellite Digital Audio Radio
Service (SDARS).
Form No.: Not applicable.
Type of Review: New information
collection.
Respondents: Business and other forprofit.
Number of Respondents/Responses:
1 respondent; 74 responses.
Estimated Time per Response: 4–12
hours per response.
Frequency of Response: On occasion
reporting requirement; recordkeeping
requirement: Third party disclosure
requirement.
Obligation to Respond: Required to
obtain or retain benefits. The statutory
authority for this collection is contained
in Sections 47 U.S.C. 701–744; Sections
4, 301, 302, 303, 307, 309, and 332 of
the Communications Act, as amended,
47 U.S.C. 154, 301, 302a, 303, 307, 309,
and 332.
Total Annual Burden: 400 hours.
Annual Cost Burden: $175,020.
Privacy Act Impact Assessment: No
impact(s).
Nature and Extent of Confidentiality:
In general, there is no need for
confidentiality with this collection of
information.
Needs and Uses: The Federal
Communications Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) is requesting approval
from the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) to establish a new
information collection titled, ‘‘Satellite
Digital Audio Radio Service (SDARS),
Rule Sections: 25.144(e)(3), (e)(8), (e)(9);
25.263(b), (c).’’
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The Commission released a Second
Report and Order (FCC 10–82; IB Docket
No. 95–91) on May 20, 2010, in which
the agency accomplished three goals:
(1) Adopted technical rules governing
the operation of SDARS repeaters that
will not constrain their function or
deployment but will limit the potential
for harmful interference to adjacent
Wireless Communications Service
(WCS) spectrum users by requiring
SDARS licensees to notify WCS
licensees prior to the deployment of
new or modified SDARS terrestrial
repeaters; (2) established a blanketlicensing regime for repeaters up to 12
kilowatts (kW) average equivalent
isotropically radiated power (EIRP) to
facilitate the flexible deployment of
SDARS repeaters while ensuring that
such repeater operations comply with
the Commission’s rules regarding RF
safety, antenna marking and lighting,
equipment authorization and
international agreements; and, (3)
established site-by-site licensing regime
for repeaters operating above 12 kW
(average) EIRP, or otherwise not in
compliance with the rules adopted for
SDARS terrestrial repeater operations.
The information collection
requirements accounted for in this
collection are necessary to determine
the technical and legal qualifications of
SDARS applicants or licensees to
operate a station, transfer or assign a
license, and to determine whether the
authorization is in the public interest,
convenience and necessity. Without
such information, the Commission
could not determine whether to permit
respondents to provide SDARS services
in the U.S. Therefore, the Commission
would be unable to fulfill its statutory
responsibilities in accordance with the
Communications Act of 1934, as
amended.
Bulah P. Wheeler,
Deputy Manager, Office of the Secretary,
Office of Managing Director, Federal
Communications Commission.
[FR Doc. 2011–1210 Filed 1–20–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
[AU Docket No. 10–183; DA 10–2253]
Auction of FM Broadcast Construction
Permits Rescheduled for April 27,
2011; Notice and Filing Requirements,
Minimum Opening Bids, Upfront
Payments, and Other Procedures for
Auction 91
Federal Communications
Commission.
AGENCY:
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 14 / Friday, January 21, 2011 / Notices
ACTION:
I. General Information
Notice.
This document announces the
procedures and minimum opening bids
for the upcoming auction of certain FM
Broadcast construction permits. This
document is intended to familiarize
prospective bidders with the procedures
and minimum opening bids for the
auction. This auction, which is
designated as Auction 91, is now
scheduled to start on April 27, 2011.
SUMMARY:
Applications to participate in
Auction 91 must be filed prior to 6 p.m.
Eastern Time (ET) on February 10, 2011.
Bidding for construction permits in
Auction 91 is scheduled to begin on
April 27, 2011.
DATES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Wireless Telecommunications Bureau,
Auctions and Spectrum Access Division:
For legal questions: Lynne Milne or
Howard Davenport at (202) 418–0660.
For general auction questions: Roy
Knowles or Linda Sanderson at (717)
338–2829. Media Bureau, Audio
Division: For licensing information and
service rule questions: Lisa Scanlan or
Tom Nessinger at (202) 418–2700. To
request materials in accessible formats
(Braille, large print, electronic files or
audio format) for people with
disabilities, send an e-mail to
fcc504@fcc.gov or call the Consumer
and Governmental Affairs Bureau at
(202) 418–0530 or (202) 418–0432
(TTY).
This is a
summary of the Auction 91 Procedures
Public Notice, which was released on
December 3, 2010. The complete text of
the Auction 91 Procedures Public
Notice, including attachments, as well
as related Commission documents, are
available for public inspection and
copying from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. ET
Monday through Thursday and from 8
a.m. to 11:30 a.m. ET on Friday in the
FCC Reference Information Center, 445
12th Street, SW., Room CY–A257,
Washington, DC 20554. The Auction 91
Procedures Public Notice and related
Commission documents may also be
purchased from the Commission’s
duplicating contractor, Best Copy and
Printing, Inc. (BCPI), Portals II, 445 12th
Street, SW., Room CY–B402,
Washington, DC 20554, telephone 202–
488–5300, facsimile 202–488–5563, or
Web site: https://www.BCPIWEB.com,
using document number DA 10–2253
for the Auction 91 Procedures Public
Notice. The Auction 91 Procedures
Public Notice and related documents are
also available on the Internet at the
Commission’s Web site: https://
wireless.fcc.gov/auctions/91/.
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SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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A. Introduction
1. The Wireless Telecommunications
and the Media Bureaus (collectively, the
Bureaus) announce a new start date and
pre-auction deadlines for the upcoming
auction of certain FM broadcast
construction permits and establish the
procedures and minimum opening bid
amounts for the auction. On September
21, 2010, the Bureaus released a public
notice seeking comment on competitive
bidding procedures to be used in
Auction 91. Five parties submitted five
comments in response to the Auction 91
Comment Public Notice, 75 FR 61752,
October 6, 2010, and two entities
submitted filings by the reply comment
deadline.
i. Construction Permits in Auction 91
2. Auction 91 will offer 144
construction permits in the FM
broadcast service as listed in
Attachment A of the Auction 91
Procedures Public Notice. The
construction permits to be auctioned are
for 144 new FM allotments, including
37 construction permits that were
offered but not sold in Auction 79.
These construction permits are for
vacant FM allotments, reflecting FM
channels assigned to the FM Table of
Allotments (Table), pursuant to the
Commission’s established rulemaking
procedures, and are designated for use
in the indicated communities.
3. Attachment A to the Auction 91
Procedures Public Notice reflects certain
changes to the list of construction
permits that were proposed for
inclusion in this auction in the Auction
91 Comment Public Notice. The Bureaus
removed three construction permits that
were listed in Attachment A to the
Auction 91 Comment Public Notice: (1)
MM–FM767–C1 on Channel 250C1 at
Tuba City, Arizona; (2) MM–FM859–A
on Channel 285A at Union Gap,
Washington; and (3) MM–FM807–C2 on
Channel 254C2 at Ennis, Montana. The
correct listing for the Ennis vacant FM
allotment is MM–FM411–C2. In
addition, the correct allotment
coordinates for MM–FM797–A, Adams,
Massachusetts, Channel 255A are listed
in Attachment A to the Auction 91
Procedures Public Notice. The Bureaus
will not offer allotments sought to be
added by two commenters and will
instead make them available in an
upcoming auction of FM broadcast
construction permits.
4. Applicants may apply for any
vacant FM allotment listed in
Attachment A of the Auction 91
Procedures Public Notice. When two or
more short-form applications (FCC Form
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175) specifying the same FM allotment
are accepted for filing, mutual
exclusivity (MX) exists for auction
purposes, and thus, that construction
permit for the FM allotment will be
awarded by competitive bidding
procedures. Once mutual exclusivity
exists for auction purposes, even if only
one applicant for a particular
construction permit submits an upfront
payment, that applicant is required to
submit a bid in order to obtain the
construction permit.
5. One commenter contends that the
Commission’s rules should be revised to
automatically delete allotments that are
offered at auction but receive no bids.
The commenter suggests that such
vacant allotments may hinder efforts by
existing licensees to change channels or
cities of license. The commenter also
argues that, in the event that only one
applicant places a bid on a permit, that
applicant should not be required to
submit a payment for the permit.
Adoption of this proposal would require
reversal of the Commission’s
determination that mutual exclusivity is
determined in the auction context by
the filing of short-form applications for
the same permit. These proposed
changes would require amendment of
the Commission’s rules and are thus
outside of the scope of this proceeding,
which is confined to establishing
procedures for the conduct of this
auction of FM construction permits.
Because these proposals are outside of
the scope of this proceeding, the
Bureaus are unable to consider them
here.
B. Rules and Disclaimers
i. Relevant Authority
6. Prospective applicants must
familiarize themselves thoroughly with
the Commission’s general competitive
bidding rules, including recent
amendments and clarifications, as well
as Commission decisions in proceedings
regarding competitive bidding
procedures, application requirements,
and obligations of Commission
licensees. Broadcasters should also
familiarize themselves with the
Commission’s rules relating to the FM
broadcast service contained in 47 CFR
73.201–73.333 and 73.1001–73.5009.
Prospective bidders must also be
familiar with the rules relating to
broadcast auctions and competitive
bidding proceedings contained in 47
CFR 1.2101–1.2112 and 73.5000–
73.5009. Prospective bidders must also
be thoroughly familiar with the
procedures, terms and conditions
contained in the Auction 91 Procedures
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Public Notice, and the authorities cited
therein.
7. The terms contained in the
Commission’s rules, relevant orders,
and public notices are not negotiable.
The Commission may amend or
supplement the information contained
in the Bureaus public notices at any
time, and will issue public notices to
convey any new or supplemental
information to applicants. It is the
responsibility of all applicants to remain
current with all Commission rules and
with all public notices pertaining to this
auction.
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ii. Prohibited Communications and
Compliance With Antitrust Laws
8. To ensure the competitiveness of
the auction process, 47 CFR 1.2105(c)
prohibits auction applicants for
construction permits in any of the same
geographic license areas from
communicating with each other about
bids, bidding strategies, or settlements
unless such applicants have identified
each other on their short-form
applications (FCC Form 175) as parties
with whom they have entered into
agreements pursuant to 47 CFR
1.2105(a)(2)(viii).
a. Entities Subject to Section 1.2105
9. 47 CFR 1.2105(c)’s prohibition on
certain communications will apply to
any applicants that submit short-form
applications seeking to participate in a
Commission auction for construction
permits in the same geographic license
area. Thus, unless they have identified
each other on their short-form
applications as parties with whom they
have entered into agreements under 47
CFR 1.2105(a)(2)(viii), applicants for
any of the same geographic license areas
must affirmatively avoid all
communications with or disclosures to
each other that affect or have the
potential to affect bids or bidding
strategy. In some instances, this
prohibition extends to communications
regarding the post-auction market
structure. This prohibition applies to all
applicants regardless of whether such
applicants become qualified bidders or
actually bid. In broadcast services, the
geographic license area is the market
designation of the particular service. For
the FM service, the market designation
is the particular vacant FM allotment
(e.g., Whitehall, Montana, Channel
274A, MM–FM185A). In Auction 91,
this rule would apply to applicants
designating on the short-form
application any of the same FM
allotments.
10. Applicants are also reminded that,
for purposes of this prohibition on
certain communications, 47 CFR
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1.2105(c)(7)(i) defines applicant as
including all officers and directors of
the entity submitting a short-form
application to participate in the auction,
all controlling interests of that entity, as
well as all holders of partnership and
other ownership interests and any stock
interest amounting to 10 percent or
more of the entity, or outstanding stock,
or outstanding voting stock of the entity
submitting a short-form application. For
example, where an individual served as
an officer for two or more applicants,
the Bureaus have found that the bids
and bidding strategies of one applicant
are necessarily conveyed to the other
applicant, and, absent a disclosed
bidding agreement, an apparent
violation of 47 CFR 1.2105(c) occurs.
11. Individuals and entities subject to
47 CFR 1.2105(c) should take special
care in circumstances where their
employees may receive information
directly or indirectly from a competing
applicant relating to any competing
applicant’s bids or bidding strategies.
The Bureaus have not addressed
situations where non-principals (i.e.,
those who are not officers or directors
and thus not considered to be the
applicant) receive information regarding
a competing applicant’s bids or bidding
strategies and whether that information
might be deemed to necessarily convey
to the applicant. An exception to the
prohibition on certain communications
allows non-controlling interest holders
to obtain interests in more than one
competing applicant without violating
47 CFR 1.2105(c) provided specified
conditions are met (including a
certification that no prohibited
communications have occurred or will
occur), but that exception does not
extend to controlling interest holders.
12. Moreover, Auction 91 applicants
are encouraged not to use the same
individual as an authorized bidder. A
violation of 47 CFR 1.2105(c) could
occur if an individual acts as the
authorized bidder for two or more
competing applicants, and conveys
information concerning the substance of
bids or bidding strategies between such
applicants. Also, if the authorized
bidders are different individuals
employed by the same organization
(e.g., law firm or engineering firm or
consulting firm), a violation similarly
could occur. In such a case, at a
minimum, applicants should certify on
their applications that precautionary
steps have been taken to prevent
communication between authorized
bidders and that applicants and their
bidding agents will comply with 47 CFR
1.2105(c).
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b. Prohibition Applies Until Down
Payment Deadline
13. The 47 CFR 1.2105(c) prohibition
on certain communications begins at the
short-form application filing deadline
and ends at the down payment deadline
after the auction, which will be
announced in a future public notice.
c. Prohibited Communications
14. Applicants should note that they
must not communicate directly or
indirectly about bids or bidding strategy
to other applicants in this auction. 47
CFR 1.2105(c) prohibits not only a
communication about an applicant’s
own bids or bidding strategy, but also a
communication of another applicant’s
bids or bidding strategy. While 47 CFR
1.2105(c) does not prohibit non-auctionrelated business negotiations among
auction applicants, applicants must
remain vigilant so as not to
communicate directly or indirectly
information that affects, or could affect,
bids or bidding strategy, or the
negotiation of settlement agreements.
15. The Commission remains vigilant
about prohibited communications
taking place in other situations. Public
disclosure of information relating to
bids, or bidding strategies, or to post
auction market structures, may violate
47 CFR 1.2105(c). For example, the
Commission has warned that prohibited
communications concerning bids and
bidding strategies may include
communications regarding capital calls
or requests for additional funds in
support of bids or bidding strategies to
the extent such communications convey
information concerning the bids and
bidding strategies directly or indirectly.
The use of the Commission’s bidding
system to disclose an applicant’s
bidding strategy or market information
will not be tolerated. Similarly, an
applicant’s public statement of intent
not to participate in bidding in this
auction also could violate this rule.
d. Disclosure of Bidding Agreements
and Arrangements
16. The Commission’s rules do not
prohibit applicants from entering into
otherwise lawful bidding agreements
before filing their short-form
applications, as long as they disclose the
existence of the agreement(s) in their
short-form applications. If parties agree
in principle on all material terms prior
to the short-form application filing
deadline, each party to the agreement
must identify the other party or parties
to the agreement on its short-form
application under 47 CFR 1.2105(c),
even if the agreement has not been
reduced to writing. If the parties have
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not agreed in principle by the shortform filing deadline, they should not
include the names of parties to
discussions on their applications, and
they may not continue negotiation,
discussion or communication with any
other applicants after the short-form
application filing deadline.
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e. Section 1.2105(c) Certification
17. By electronically submitting a
short-form application, each applicant
in Auction 91 certifies its compliance
with 47 CFR 1.2105(c) and 73.5002.
However, the Bureau cautions that
merely filing a certifying statement as
part of an application will not outweigh
specific evidence that a prohibited
communication has occurred, nor will it
preclude the initiation of an
investigation when warranted. The
Commission has stated that it intends to
scrutinize carefully any instances in
which bidding patterns suggest that
collusion may be occurring. Any
applicant found to have violated 47 CFR
1.2105(c) may be subject to sanctions.
f. Duty To Report Prohibited
Communications: Reporting Procedure
18. 47 CFR 1.2105(c)(6) provides that
any applicant that makes or receives a
communication that appears to violate
47 CFR 1.2105(c) must report such
communication in writing to the
Commission immediately, and in no
case later than five business days after
the communication occurs. The
Commission has clarified that each
applicant’s obligation to report any such
communication continues beyond the
five-day period after the communication
is made, even if the report is not made
within the five-day period.
19. In addition, 47 CFR 1.65 requires
an applicant to maintain the accuracy
and completeness of information
furnished in its pending application and
to notify the Commission of any
substantial change that may be of
decisional significance to that
application. Thus, 47 CFR 1.65 requires
an auction applicant to notify the
Commission of any substantial change
to the information or certifications
included in its pending short-form
application. An applicant is therefore
required by 47 CFR 1.65 to report to the
Commission any communication the
applicant has made to or received from
another applicant after the short-form
application filing deadline that affects
or has the potential to affect bids or
bidding strategy, unless such
communication is made to or received
from a party to an agreement identified
under 47 CFR 1.2105(a)(2)(viii).
20. 47 CFR 1.65(a) and 1.2105(c)
require applicants in competitive
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bidding proceedings to furnish
additional or corrected information
within five days of a significant
occurrence, or to amend their short-form
applications no more than five days
after the applicant becomes aware of the
need for amendment. These rules are
intended to facilitate the auction
process by making the information
available promptly to all participants
and to enable the Bureaus to act
expeditiously on those changes when
such action is necessary.
21. A party reporting any
communication pursuant to 47 CFR
1.65, 1.2105(a)(2), or 1.2105(c)(6) must
take care to ensure that any report of a
prohibited communication does not
itself give rise to a violation of 47 CFR
1.2105(c). For example, a party’s report
of a prohibited communication could
violate the rule by communicating
prohibited information to other
applicants through the use of
Commission filing procedures that
would allow such materials to be made
available for public inspection.
22. 47 CFR 1.2105(c) requires parties
to file only a single report concerning
such communication and to file that
report with Commission personnel
expressly charged with administering
the Commission’s auctions. This rule is
designed to minimize the risk of
inadvertent dissemination of
information in such reports. Pursuant to
the amended rule, any reports required
by 47 CFR 1.2105(c) must be filed
consistent with the instructions set forth
in the Auction 91 Procedures Public
Notice. For Auction 91, such reports
must be filed with the Chief of the
Auctions and Spectrum Access
Division, Wireless Telecommunications
Bureau, by the most expeditious means
available. Specifically, any such report
must be submitted by e-mail to
auction91@fcc.gov or delivered to the
following address: Margaret W. Wiener,
Chief, Auctions and Spectrum Access
Division, Wireless Telecommunications
Bureau, Federal Communications
Commission, 445 12th Street, SW.,
Room 6423, Washington, DC 20554.
23. A party seeking to report such a
prohibited communication should
consider submitting its report with a
request that the report or portions of the
submission be withheld from public
inspection pursuant to 47 CFR 0.459.
Such parties also are encouraged to
coordinate with the Auctions and
Spectrum Access Division staff if they
have any questions about the
procedures for submitting such reports.
The Auction 91 Procedures Public
Notice provides additional guidance on
procedures for submitting applicationrelated information.
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g. Winning Bidders Must Disclose
Terms of Agreements
24. Applicants that are winning
bidders will be required to disclose in
their long-form applications the specific
terms, conditions, and parties involved
in any bidding consortia, joint venture,
partnership, or agreement,
understanding, or other arrangement
entered into relating to the competitive
bidding process, including any
agreement relating to the post-auction
market structure. Applicants must be
aware that failure to comply with the
Commission’s rules can result in
enforcement action.
h. Additional Information Concerning
Rule Prohibiting Certain
Communications
25. A summary listing of documents
issued by the Commission and the
Bureaus addressing the application of
47 CFR 1.2105(c) may be found in
Attachment D of the Auction 91
Procedures Public Notice.
i. Antitrust Laws
26. Applicants are also reminded that,
regardless of compliance with the
Commission’s rules, they remain subject
to the antitrust laws, which are designed
to prevent anticompetitive behavior in
the marketplace. Compliance with the
disclosure requirements of 47 CFR
1.2105(c) will not insulate a party from
enforcement of the antitrust laws. For
instance, a violation of the antitrust
laws could arise out of actions taking
place well before any party submitted a
short-form application. If an applicant is
found to have violated the antitrust laws
or the Commission’s rules in connection
with its participation in the competitive
bidding process, it may be subject to
forfeiture of its upfront payment, down
payment, or full bid amount and may be
prohibited from participating in future
auctions, among other sanctions. See 47
CFR 1.2109(d).
ii. Due Diligence
27. Potential applicants are reminded
that they are solely responsible for
investigating and evaluating all
technical and marketplace factors that
may have a bearing on the value of the
construction permits for broadcast
facilities they are seeking in this
auction. Bidders are responsible for
assuring themselves that, if they win a
construction permit, they will be able to
build and operate facilities in
accordance with the Commission’s
rules. The FCC makes no
representations or warranties about the
use of this spectrum for particular
services. Applicants should be aware
that an FCC auction represents an
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opportunity to become an FCC
construction permittee in a broadcast
service, subject to certain conditions
and regulations. An FCC auction does
not constitute an endorsement by the
FCC of any particular service,
technology, or product, nor does an FCC
construction permit or license constitute
a guarantee of business success.
28. Applicants should perform their
individual due diligence before
proceeding, as they would with any new
business venture. In particular, potential
applicants are strongly encouraged to
review all underlying Commission
orders, such as the specific report and
order amending the FM Table of
Allotments and allotting the FM
channel(s) on which they plan to bid.
Reports and orders adopted in FM
allotment rulemaking proceedings often
include restrictions, including site
restrictions or expense reimbursement
requirements. Additionally, potential
bidders should perform technical
analyses or refresh their previous
analyses to assure themselves that,
should they be a winning bidder for any
Auction 91 construction permit, they
will be able to build and operate
facilities that will fully comply with the
Commission’s technical and legal
requirements. Applicants are strongly
encouraged to inspect any prospective
transmitter sites located in, or near, the
service area for which they plan to bid,
confirm the availability of such sites,
and also to familiarize themselves with
the Commission’s rules regarding the
National Environmental Policy Act at 47
CFR chapter 1, part 1, subpart I.
29. Applicants are strongly
encouraged to conduct their own
research prior to Auction 91 in order to
determine the existence of any pending
administrative or judicial proceedings,
including pending allocation
rulemaking proceedings that might
affect their decision to participate in the
auction. Participants in Auction 91 are
strongly encouraged to continue such
research throughout the auction. The
due diligence considerations mentioned
in the Auction 91 Procedures Public
Notice do not comprise an exhaustive
list of steps that should be undertaken
prior to participating in this auction. As
always, the burden is on the potential
bidder to determine how much research
to undertake, depending upon specific
facts and circumstances.
30. Applicants should also be aware
that certain pending and future
proceedings before the Commission—
including applications, applications for
modification, petitions for rulemaking,
requests for special temporary authority,
waiver requests, petitions to deny,
petitions for reconsideration, informal
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objections, and applications for
review—may relate to particular
applicants, incumbent permittees,
incumbent licensees, or the construction
permits available in Auction 91. In
addition, pending and future judicial
proceedings may relate to particular
applicants, incumbent permittees,
incumbent licensees, or the construction
permits available in Auction 91.
Prospective applicants are responsible
for assessing the likelihood of the
various possible outcomes and for
considering their potential impact on
construction permits available in this
auction.
31. Applicants should perform due
diligence to identify and consider all
proceedings that may affect the
construction permits being auctioned
and that could have an impact on the
availability of spectrum for Auction 91.
In addition, although the Commission
may continue to act on various pending
applications, informal objections,
petitions, and other requests for
Commission relief, some of these
matters may not be resolved by the
beginning of bidding in the auction.
Applicants are solely responsible for
identifying associated risks and for
investigating and evaluating the degree
to which such matters may affect their
ability to bid on, otherwise acquire, or
make use of the construction permits
available in Auction 91.
32. The Commission makes no
representations or guarantees regarding
the accuracy or completeness of
information in its databases or any third
party databases, including for example,
court docketing systems. To the extent
the Commission’s databases may not
include all information deemed
necessary or desirable by an applicant,
applicants may obtain or verify such
information from independent sources
or assume the risk of any
incompleteness or inaccuracy in said
databases. Furthermore, the
Commission makes no representations
or guarantees regarding the accuracy or
completeness of information that has
been provided by incumbent licensees
and incorporated into its databases.
33. A commenter contended that the
Bureaus should provide additional
information in the Auction 91 public
notices about the history of the
allotments being offered and suggests
that the Media Bureau’s Consolidated
Data Base System (CDBS) should
contain information as to whether a
permit was previously offered at
auction, as well as details concerning
cancellation of a permit due to a failure
to construct or licensee default. The
Bureaus noted that Attachment A to the
Auction 91 Procedures Public Notice
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indicates whether a permit was
previously offered at auction. Further,
the Commission makes various
databases and other sources of
information, including CDBS, the
auctions databases and copies of
Commission decisions, available to the
public without charge. Potential bidders
may research the background of
allotments using this information as
well as other sources, just as this
commenter has done. The Bureaus
rejected this commenter’s claim that
absent the affirmative disclosure of such
background information, the
Commission fails to meet a due
diligence obligation. It is the
responsibility of each potential bidder
to undertake research to ensure that any
permits won in this auction will be
suitable for its business plans and
needs. Each potential bidder must
undertake its own assessment of the
relevance and importance of
information gathered as part of its due
diligence efforts.
iii. Use of Integrated Spectrum Auction
System
34. The Commission will make
available a browser-based bidding
system to allow bidders to participate in
Auction 91 over the Internet using the
Commission’s Integrated Spectrum
Auction System (ISAS or FCC Auction
System). The Commission makes no
warranty whatsoever with respect to the
FCC Auction System. In no event shall
the Commission, or any of its officers,
employees, or agents, be liable for any
damages whatsoever (including, but not
limited to, loss of business profits,
business interruption, loss of business
information, or any other loss) arising
out of or relating to the existence,
furnishing, functioning, or use of the
FCC Auction System that is accessible
to qualified bidders in connection with
this auction. Moreover, no obligation or
liability will arise out of the
Commission’s technical, programming,
or other advice or service provided in
connection with the FCC Auction
System.
iv. Environmental Review Requirements
35. Permittees or licensees must
comply with the Commission’s rules
regarding implementation of the
National Environmental Policy Act and
other Federal environmental statutes.
The construction of a broadcast facility
is a Federal action and the permittee or
licensee must comply with the
Commission’s environmental rules for
each such facility. Additional
information about such Commission
requirements is provided in the Auction
91 Procedures Public Notice.
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C. Auction Specifics
i. Auction Start Date
36. Bidding in Auction 91 has been
rescheduled and will begin on
Wednesday, April 27, 2011. The
Bureaus have postponed the originally
scheduled start of the auction for
reasons of administrative and bidder
convenience. Although one commenter
requested a later starting date, the
Bureaus concluded that rescheduling
the starting date for Auction 91 from
March 29, 2011 to April 27, 2011, will
help ensure optimum participation and
an efficient auction process, as well as
provide prospective applicants with
additional time for planning and
preparation.
37. The initial schedule for bidding
rounds will be announced by public
notice at least one week before the start
of the auction. Moreover, unless
otherwise announced, bidding on all
construction permits will be conducted
on each business day until bidding has
stopped on all construction permits.
ii. Bidding Methodology
38. The bidding methodology for
Auction 91 will be simultaneous
multiple round bidding. The
Commission will conduct this auction
over the Internet using the FCC Auction
System, and telephonic bidding will be
available as well. Qualified bidders are
permitted to bid electronically via the
Internet or by telephone. All telephone
calls are recorded.
iii. Pre-Auction Dates and Deadlines
39. The following dates and deadlines
apply:
Auction Tutorial Available (via
Internet)—January 31, 2011
Short-Form Application (FCC Form 175)
Filing Window Opens—January 31,
2011; 12 noon ET
Short-Form Application (FCC Form 175)
Filing Window Deadline—February
10, 2011; prior to 6 p.m. ET
Upfront Payments (via wire transfer)—
March 21, 2011; 6 p.m. ET
Mock Auction—April 25, 2011
Auction Begins—April 27, 2011
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II. Short-Form Application (FCC Form
175) Requirements
A. General Information Regarding
Short-Form Applications
40. An application to participate in an
FCC auction, referred to as a short-form
application or FCC Form 175, provides
information used in determining
whether the applicant is legally,
technically, and financially qualified to
participate in Commission auctions for
licenses or permits. The short-form
application is the first part of the
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Commission’s two-phased auction
application process. In the first phase of
this process, parties desiring to
participate in the auction must file
streamlined, short-form applications in
which they certify under penalty of
perjury as to their qualifications. Each
applicant must take seriously its duties
and responsibilities and carefully
determine before filing an application
that the applicant has the legal,
technical and financial resources to
participate in Auction 91, as well as
construct and operate an FM station if
the auction applicant becomes a
licensee as a result of its participation
in this auction. Eligibility to participate
in bidding is based on the applicants’
short-form applications and
certifications as well as their upfront
payments. In the second phase of the
process, winning bidders must file more
comprehensive long-form applications.
41. Entities and individuals seeking
construction permits available in
Auction 91 must file a short-form
application electronically via the FCC
Auction System prior to 6 p.m. ET on
February 10, 2011, following the
procedures prescribed in Attachment B
to the Auction 91 Procedures Public
Notice. If an applicant claims eligibility
for a bidding credit, the information
provided in its FCC Form 175 will be
used in determining whether the
applicant is eligible for the claimed
bidding credit. Beginning on the
application filing deadline, applicants
filing a short-form application are
subject to 47 CFR 1.2105(c) and 73.5002.
42. Applicants bear full responsibility
for submitting accurate, complete and
timely short-form applications. All
applicants must certify on their shortform applications under penalty of
perjury that they are legally, technically,
financially and otherwise qualified to
hold a license. Applicants should read
carefully the instructions set forth in
Attachment B to the Auction 91
Procedures Public Notice and should
consult the Commission’s rules to
ensure that all information and
materials required in that public notice
and under the Commission’s rules is
included within their short-form
applications.
43. An individual or entity may not
submit more than one short-form
application for a single auction. If a
party submits multiple short-form
applications, only one application may
be accepted for filing.
44. Applicants also should note that
submission of a short-form application
(and any amendments thereto)
constitutes a representation by the
certifying official that he or she is an
authorized representative of the
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3897
applicant, that he or she has read the
form’s instructions and certifications,
and that the contents of the application,
its certifications, and any attachments
are true and correct. Applicants are not
permitted to make major modifications
to their applications; such
impermissible changes include a change
of the certifying official to the
application. Submission of a false
certification to the Commission may
result in penalties, including monetary
forfeitures, license forfeitures,
ineligibility to participate in future
auctions, and/or criminal prosecution.
B. Permit Selection
45. An applicant must select the
construction permits on which it wants
to bid from the Eligible Permits list on
its short-form application. To assist
applicants in identifying construction
permits of interest that will be available
in Auction 91, the FCC Auction System
includes a filtering mechanism that
allows an applicant to filter the Eligible
Permits list. The applicant will make
selections for one or more of the filter
criteria and the system will produce a
list of construction permits satisfying
the specified criteria. The applicant may
select all the construction permits in the
customized list or select individual
construction permits from the list.
Applicants also will be able to select
construction permits from one
customized list and then create
additional customized lists to select
additional construction permits.
46. Applicants interested in
participating in Auction 91 must have
selected construction permit(s) available
in this auction by the short-form
application filing deadline. Applicants
must review and verify their
construction permit selections before
the deadline for submitting short-form
applications. Applicants will not be able
to change their construction permit
selections after the short-form
application filing deadline. The FCC
Auction System will not accept bids
from an applicant on construction
permits that the applicant has not
selected on its short-form application.
C. New Entrant Bidding Credit
47. Under the tiered New Entrant
Bidding Credit for broadcast auction
applicants with no, or very few, other
media interests, the interests of the
applicant, and of any individuals or
entities with an attributable interest in
the applicant, in other media of mass
communications are considered when
determining an applicant’s eligibility for
the New Entrant Bidding Credit. In
Auction 91, the bidder’s attributable
interests are determined as of the short-
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form application filing deadline. Thus,
the applicant’s maximum new entrant
bidding credit eligibility will be
determined as of the short-form
application filing deadline. Applicants
intending to divest a media interest or
make any other ownership changes,
such as resignation of positional
interests, in order to avoid attribution
for purposes of qualifying for the New
Entrant Bidding Credit must have
consummated such divestment
transactions or have completed such
ownership changes by no later than the
short-form filing deadline. Prospective
bidders are reminded, however, that
events occurring after the short-form
filing deadline, such as the acquisition
of attributable interests in media of mass
communications, may cause
diminishment or loss of the bidding
credit, and must be reported
immediately.
48. Under traditional broadcast
attribution rules, those entities or
individuals with an attributable interest
in a bidder include: (1) All officers and
directors of a corporate bidder; (2) Any
owner of 5 percent or more of the voting
stock of a corporate bidder; (3) All
partners and limited partners of a
partnership bidder, unless the limited
partners are sufficiently insulated; and
(4) All members of a limited liability
company, unless sufficiently insulated.
49. In cases where an applicant’s
spouse or close family member holds
other media interests, such interests are
not automatically attributable to the
bidder. The Commission decides
attribution issues in this context based
on certain factors traditionally
considered relevant. Applicants should
note that the mass media attribution
rules were revised in 1999.
50. The Commission further refined
the eligibility standards for the New
Entrant Bidding Credit, judging it
appropriate to attribute the media
interests held by very substantial
investors in, or creditors of, an applicant
claiming new entrant status.
Specifically, the attributable mass media
interests held by an individual or entity
with an equity and/or debt interest in an
applicant shall be attributed to that
bidder for purposes of determining its
eligibility for the New Entrant Bidding
Credit, if the equity and debt interests,
in the aggregate, exceed 33 percent of
the total asset value of the applicant,
even if such an interest is non-voting.
51. The Commission relaxed the
equity/debt plus (EDP) attribution
standard, to allow for higher investment
opportunities in entities meeting the
definition of eligible entities. An eligible
entity is defined in Note 2(i) of 47 CFR
73.3555. The Commission allows the
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holder of an equity or debt interest in
the applicant to exceed the above-noted
33 percent threshold without triggering
attribution provided (1) the combined
equity and debt in the eligible entity is
less than 50 percent; or (2) the total debt
in the eligible entity does not exceed 80
percent of the asset value, and the
interest holder does not hold any equity
interest, option, or promise to acquire
an equity interest in the eligible entity
or any related entity.
52. Generally, media interests will be
attributable for purposes of the New
Entrant Bidding Credit to the same
extent that such other media interests
are considered attributable for purposes
of the broadcast multiple ownership
rules. However, attributable interests
held by a winning bidder in existing
low power television, television
translator or FM translator facilities will
not be counted among the bidder’s other
mass media interests in determining its
eligibility for a New Entrant Bidding
Credit. Any bidder asserting new
entrant bidding status must have de
facto as well as de jure control of the
entity claiming the bidding credit. See
47 CFR 73.5007.
D. Application Requirements
53. In addition to the ownership
information required pursuant to 47
CFR 1.2112, applicants seeking a New
Entrant Bidding Credit are required to
establish on their short-form
applications that they satisfy the
eligibility requirements to qualify for
the bidding credit. In those cases, a
certification under penalty of perjury
must be provided in completing the
applicant’s short-form application. An
applicant claiming that it qualifies for a
35 percent New Entrant Bidding Credit
must certify that neither it nor any of its
attributable interest holders have any
attributable interests in any other media
of mass communications. An applicant
claiming that it qualifies for a 25 percent
New Entrant Bidding Credit must certify
that neither it nor any of its attributable
interest holders has any attributable
interests in more than three media of
mass communications, and must
identify and describe such media of
mass communications. A medium of
mass communications is defined in 47
CFR 73.5008(b). Full service
noncommercial educational stations, on
both reserved and nonreserved
channels, are included among media of
mass communications as defined in 47
CFR 73.5008(b).
E. Bidding Credits
54. Applicants that qualify for the
New Entrant Bidding Credit, as
specified in the applicable rule, are
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eligible for a bidding credit that
represents the amount by which a
bidder’s winning bid is discounted. The
size of a New Entrant Bidding Credit
depends on the number of ownership
interests in other media of mass
communications that are attributable to
the bidder-entity and its attributable
interest-holders. A 35 percent bidding
credit will be given to a winning bidder
if it, and/or any individual or entity
with an attributable interest in the
winning bidder, has no attributable
interest in any other media of mass
communications, as defined in 47 CFR
73.5008. A 25 percent bidding credit
will be given to a winning bidder if it,
and/or any individual or entity with an
attributable interest in the winning
bidder, has an attributable interest in no
more than three mass media facilities, as
defined in 47 CFR 73.5008. No bidding
credit will be given if any of the
commonly owned mass media facilities
serve the same area as the broadcast
permit proposed in the auction, as
defined in 47 CFR 73.5007(b), or if the
winning bidder, and/or any individual
or entity with an attributable interest in
the winning bidder, has attributable
interests in more than three mass media
facilities. For purposes of determining
whether a broadcast permit identified
for bidding in the auction is in the same
area as an applicant’s existing mass
media facilities, the coverage area of the
to-be-auctioned facility is calculated
using maximum class facilities at the
allotment reference coordinates, NOT
applicant-specified preferred site
coordinates.
55. Bidding credits are not
cumulative; qualifying applicants
receive either the 25 percent or the 35
percent bidding credit, but not both.
Attributable interests are defined in 47
CFR 73.3555 and note 2 of that section.
Applicants should note that unjust
enrichment provisions apply to a
winning bidder that utilizes a bidding
credit and subsequently seeks to assign
or transfer control of its license or
construction permit to an entity not
qualifying for the same level of bidding
credit.
F. Disclosure of Bidding Arrangements
56. Applicants will be required to
identify in their short-form application
all parties with whom they have entered
into any agreements, arrangements, or
understandings of any kind relating to
the construction permits being
auctioned, including any agreements
relating to post-auction market
structure.
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G. Ownership Disclosure Requirements
57. All applicants to participate in a
broadcast auction must comply with the
uniform Part 1 ownership disclosure
standards and provide information
required by 47 CFR 1.2105 and 1.2112.
Specifically, in completing the shortform application, applicants will be
required to fully disclose information on
the real party- or parties-in-interest and
ownership structure of the applicant,
including both direct and indirect
ownership interests of 10 percent or
more. The ownership disclosure
standards for the short-form application
are prescribed in 47 CFR 1.2105 and
1.2112. Each applicant is responsible for
information submitted in its short-form
application being complete and
accurate.
58. Each applicant is responsible for
ensuring that the information submitted
in its short-form application for Auction
91 is complete and accurate. In certain
circumstances, an applicant’s most
current ownership information on file
with the Commission, if in an electronic
format compatible with the short-form
application (FCC Form 175) (such as
information submitted in an on-line
FCC Form 602 or in an FCC Form 175
filed for a previous auction using ISAS)
will automatically be entered into the
applicant’s short-form application.
Applicants should carefully review any
information automatically entered to
confirm that it is complete and accurate
as of the deadline for filing the shortform application.
WReier-Aviles on DSKGBLS3C1PROD with NOTICES
H. Provisions Regarding Former and
Current Defaulters
59. Current defaulters or delinquents
are not eligible to participate in Auction
91, but former defaulters or delinquents
can participate so long as they are
otherwise qualified and make upfront
payments that are 50 percent more than
the normal upfront payment amounts.
An applicant is considered a current
defaulter or a current delinquent when
it, any of its affiliates, any of its
controlling interests, or any of the
affiliates of its controlling interests, is in
default on any payment for any
Commission construction permit or
license (including a down payment) or
is delinquent on any non-tax debt owed
to any Federal agency as of the filing
deadline for short-form applications. An
applicant is considered a former
defaulter or a former delinquent when
it, any of its affiliates, any of its
controlling interests, or any of the
affiliates of its controlling interests,
have defaulted on any Commission
construction permit or license or been
delinquent on any non-tax debt owed to
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any Federal agency, but have since
remedied all such defaults and cured all
of the outstanding non-tax
delinquencies.
60. On the short-form application, an
applicant must certify under penalty of
perjury that it, its affiliates, its
controlling interests, and the affiliates of
its controlling interests, as defined by 47
CFR 1.2110, are not in default on any
payment for a Commission construction
permit or license (including down
payments) and that it is not delinquent
on any non-tax debt owed to any
Federal agency. Each applicant must
also state under penalty of perjury
whether it, its affiliates, its controlling
interests, and the affiliates of its
controlling interests, have ever been in
default on any Commission construction
permit or license or have ever been
delinquent on any non-tax debt owed to
any Federal agency. Prospective
applicants are reminded that
submission of a false certification to the
Commission is a serious matter that may
result in severe penalties, including
monetary forfeitures, license
revocations, exclusion from
participation in future auctions, and/or
criminal prosecution. These statements
and certifications are prerequisites to
submitting an application to participate
in an FCC auction.
61. The Auction 91 Procedures Public
Notice also reviews the Bureaus’
previous guidance on default and
delinquency disclosure requirements in
the context of the short-form application
process.
62. The Commission considers
outstanding debts owed to the United
States Government, in any amount, to be
a serious matter. The Commission
adopted rules, including a provision
referred to as the red light rule, that
implement the Commission’s
obligations under the Debt Collection
Improvement Act of 1996, which
governs the collection of claims owed to
the United States. Under the red light
rule, the Commission will not process
applications and other requests for
benefits filed by parties that have
outstanding debts owed to the
Commission. In the same rulemaking
order, the Commission explicitly
declared, however, that the
Commission’s competitive bidding rules
are not affected by the red light rule. As
a consequence, the Commission’s
adoption of the red light rule does not
alter the applicability of any of the
Commission’s competitive bidding
rules, including the provisions and
certifications of 47 CFR 1.2105 and
1.2106, with regard to current and
former defaults or delinquencies.
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63. Applicants are reminded,
however, that the Commission’s Red
Light Display System, which provides
information regarding debts currently
owed to the Commission, may not be
determinative of an auction applicant’s
ability to comply with the default and
delinquency disclosure requirements of
47 CFR 1.2105. Thus, while the red light
rule ultimately may prevent the
processing of long-form applications by
auction winners, an auction applicant’s
lack of current red light status is not
necessarily determinative of its
eligibility to participate in an auction or
of its upfront payment obligation.
64. Moreover, prospective applicants
in Auction 91 should note that any longform applications filed after the close of
bidding will be reviewed for compliance
with the Commission’s red light rule,
and such review may result in the
dismissal of a winning bidder’s longform application. Applicants that have
their long-form applications dismissed
will be deemed to have defaulted and
will be subject to the default payments
under 47 CFR 1.2104(g) and 1.2109(c).
I. Optional Applicant Status
Identification
65. Applicants owned by members of
minority groups and/or women, as
defined in 47 CFR 1.2110(c)(3), and
rural telephone companies, as defined
in 47 CFR 1.2110(c)(4), may identify
themselves regarding this status in
filling out their short-form applications.
This applicant status information is
collected for statistical purposes only
and assists the Commission in
monitoring the participation of
designated entities in its auctions.
J. Noncommercial Educational Status
Election
66. In the NCE Second Report and
Order, 68 FR 26220, May 15, 2003, the
Commission held that applications for
noncommercial educational (NCE) FM
stations on nonreserved spectrum, filed
during an FM auction filing window,
will be returned as unacceptable for
filing if mutually exclusive with any
application for a commercial station. If
an FCC Form 175 filed during the
Auction 91 filing window identifying
the application’s proposed station as
noncommercial educational is mutually
exclusive with any application filed
during that window for a commercial
station, the former will be returned as
unacceptable for filing. For this reason,
each prospective applicant in this
auction should consider carefully if the
applicant wishes to propose operation
for any NCE FM station acquired in this
auction. This NCE election cannot be
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reversed after the initial application
filing deadline.
K. Minor Modifications to Short-Form
Applications
67. After the deadline for filing initial
applications, an Auction 91 applicant is
permitted to make only minor changes
to its application. Permissible minor
changes include, among other things,
deletion and addition of authorized
bidders (to a maximum of three) and
revision of addresses and telephone
numbers of the applicants and their
contact persons. An applicant is not
permitted to make a major modification
to its application (e.g., change of
construction permit selection, change
control of the applicant, change the
certifying official, claim eligibility for a
higher percentage of bidding credit, or
change the identification of the
application’s proposed facilities as
noncommercial educational) after the
initial application filing deadline. Thus,
any change in control of an applicant,
resulting from a merger for example,
will be considered a major modification
to the applicant’s application, which
will consequently be dismissed. The
Bureaus reiterated that, even if an
applicant’s short-form application is
dismissed, the application will remain
subject to 47 CFR 1.2105(c)’s
prohibition on certain communications
until the down payment deadline,
which will be established after the
auction closes.
68. If an applicant wishes to make
permissible minor changes to its shortform application, such changes should
be made electronically to its short-form
application using the FCC Auction
System whenever possible. Applicants
are reminded to click on the SUBMIT
button in the FCC Auction System for
the change to be submitted and
considered by the Commission. After
the revised application has been
submitted, a confirmation page will be
displayed that states the submission
time, submission date, and a unique file
number. The Bureaus advise applicants
to print and retain a copy of the
confirmation page.
69. An applicant cannot use the FCC
Auction System outside of the initial
and resubmission filing windows to
make changes to its short-form
application other than administrative
changes (e.g. changing certain contact
information or the name of an
authorized bidder). If these or other
permissible minor changes need to be
made outside of these windows, the
applicant must submit a letter briefly
summarizing the changes and
subsequently update its short-form
application in ISAS once the system is
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available. Moreover, after the filing
window has closed, ISAS will not
permit applicants to make certain
changes, such as the applicant’s legal
classification and the identification of
the application’s proposed facilities as
noncommercial educational.
70. Any letter describing changes to
an applicant’s short-form application
should be submitted by e-mail to
auction91@fcc.gov. The e-mail
summarizing the changes must include
a subject or caption referring to Auction
91 and the name of the applicant.
71. According to 47 CFR 1.917, any
application amendment and related
statements of fact must be certified by
(1) the applicant, if the applicant is an
individual; (2) one of the partners if the
applicant is a partnership; (3) an officer,
director, or duly authorized employee, if
the applicant is a corporation; (4) a
member who is an officer, if the
applicant is an unincorporated
association; (5) the trustee, if the
applicant is an amateur radio service
club; or (6) a duly elected or appointed
official who is authorized to make such
certifications under the laws of the
applicable jurisdiction, if the applicant
is a governmental entity.
72. Applicants must not submit
application-specific material through
the Commission’s Electronic Comment
Filing System, which was used for
submitting comments regarding Auction
91.
L. Maintaining Current Information in
Short-Form Applications
73. 47 CFR 1.65 and 1.2105(b) require
an applicant to maintain the accuracy
and completeness of information
furnished in its pending application and
in competitive bidding proceedings to
furnish additional or corrected
information to the Commission within
five days of a significant occurrence, or
to amend a short form application no
more than five days after the applicant
becomes aware of the need for the
amendment. Changes that cause a loss
of or reduction in the percentage of
bidding credit specified on the
originally submitted application must
be reported immediately, and no later
than five business days after the change
occurs. For example, if ownership
changes result in the attribution of new
interest holders that affect the
applicant’s qualifications for a new
entrant bidding credit, such information
must be clearly stated in the bidder’s
amendment. Events occurring after the
application filing deadline, such as the
acquisition of attributable interests in
media of mass communications, also
may cause diminishment or loss of the
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bidding credit, and must be reported
immediately.
74. If an amendment reporting
substantial changes is a major
amendment, as defined by 47 CFR
1.2105, the major amendment will not
be accepted and may result in the
dismissal of the application. After the
application filing deadline, applicants
may make only minor changes to their
applications.
75. Applicants must click on the
Submit button in the FCC Auction
System for the changes to be submitted
and considered by the Commission. If
47 CFR 1.65 submissions are needed
after the initial filing and resubmission
windows close, applicants must submit
a letter, briefly summarizing the
changes, by e-mail to
auction91@fcc.gov. The e-mail
summarizing the changes must include
a subject or caption referring to Auction
91 and the name of the applicant.
III. Pre-Auction Procedures
A. Online Auction Tutorial—Available
January 31, 2011
76. On Monday, January 31, 2011, the
Commission will post an educational
auction tutorial on the Auction 91 web
page for prospective bidders to
familiarize themselves with the auction
process. This online tutorial will
provide information about pre-auction
procedures, completing short-form
applications, auction conduct, the FCC
Auction Bidding System, auction rules,
and broadcast services rules. The
tutorial will also provide an avenue to
ask FCC staff questions about the
auction, auction procedures, filing
requirements, and other matters related
to this auction. The online tutorial will
be accessible using a web browser with
Adobe Flash Player from the FCC’s
Auction 91 Web page at https://
wireless.fcc.gov/auctions/91/ through an
Auction Tutorial link.
B. Short-Form Applications—Due Prior
to 6:00 p.m. ET on February 10, 2011
77. In order to be eligible to bid in this
auction, applicants must follow the
procedures set forth in Attachment B to
the Auction 91 Procedures Public Notice
to submit a short-form application (FCC
Form 175) electronically via the FCC
Auction System. This short-form
application must be submitted through
the FCC Auction System prior to 6 p.m.
ET on February 10, 2011. Late
applications will not be accepted.
Applicants are strongly encouraged to
file early and are responsible for
allowing adequate time for filing their
applications. An applicant always must
click on the SUBMIT button on the
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certify and submit screen to successfully
submit its FCC Form 175 and any
modifications; otherwise the application
or changes to the application will not be
received or reviewed. There is no
application fee required when filing an
FCC Form 175, but an applicant must
submit a timely upfront payment to be
eligible to bid. Any applicant that
submits a short-form application but
fails to timely submit an upfront
payment will retain its status as an
applicant in Auction 91 and will remain
subject to the Commission’s rules
prohibiting certain communications, 47
CFR 1.2105(c) and 73.5002(d), but,
having purchased no bidding eligibility,
will be not be eligible to bid.
C. Application Processing and Minor
Corrections
78. After the deadline for filing FCC
Form 175 applications, the Commission
will process all timely submitted
applications to determine which are
complete, and subsequently will issue a
public notice identifying (1) those
applications that are complete; (2) those
applications that are rejected; and (3)
those applications that are incomplete
because of minor defects that may be
corrected. The public notice will
include the deadline for resubmitting
corrected applications.
79. Applications specifying the same
FM station construction permit are
considered mutually exclusive. Nonmutually exclusive applications will be
listed in a subsequent public notice to
be released by the Bureaus. Such
applications will not proceed to auction,
but will proceed in accordance with
instructions set forth in that public
notice. All mutually exclusive
applications will be considered under
the relevant procedures for conflict
resolution. Mutually exclusive
applications proposing commercial
stations will proceed to auction.
80. Commission staff will
communicate only with an applicant’s
contact person or certifying official, as
designated on the applicant’s short-form
application, unless the applicant’s
certifying official or contact person
notifies the Commission in writing that
applicant’s counsel or other
representative is authorized to speak on
its behalf. Authorizations may be sent
by e-mail to auction91@fcc.gov.
D. Upfront Payments—Due March 21,
2011
81. In order to be eligible to bid in this
auction, applicants must submit an
upfront payment accompanied by an
FCC Remittance Advice Form (FCC
Form 159). After completing its shortform application, an applicant will have
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access to an electronic version of the
FCC Form 159 that can be printed and
sent by fax to the Commission’s auction
payment lockbox bank, the U.S. Bank in
St. Louis, Missouri. All upfront
payments must be made as instructed in
the Auction 91 Procedures Public Notice
and must be received in the proper
account at U.S. Bank before 6 p.m. ET
on March 21, 2011. All payments must
be made in U.S. dollars. All payments
must be made by wire transfer. An
applicant must initiate the wire transfer
through its bank, authorizing the bank
to wire funds from the applicant’s
account to the U.S. Bank in St. Louis,
Missouri. Upfront payments for Auction
91 go to a lockbox number different
from the lockboxes used in previous
FCC auctions. Failure to deliver a
sufficient upfront payment, as
instructed, by the deadline on March 21,
2011 will result in dismissal of the
short-form application and
disqualification from participation in
the auction.
i. Making Upfront Payments by Wire
Transfer
82. Wire transfer payments must be
received before 6 p.m. ET on March 21,
2011. No other payment method is
acceptable. The Commission will not
accept checks, credit cards, or
automated clearing house payments.
83. At least one hour before placing
the order for the wire transfer (but on
the same business day), applicants must
fax a completed FCC Form 159 (Revised
2/03) to U.S. Bank at (314) 418–4232.
On the fax cover sheet, applicants must
write Wire Transfer—Auction Payment
for Auction 91. In order to meet the
Commission’s upfront payment
deadline, an applicant’s payment must
be credited to the Commission’s account
for Auction 91 before the deadline.
84. Each applicant is responsible for
ensuring timely submission of its
upfront payment and for timely filing of
an accurate and complete FCC Form
159. To avoid untimely payments, an
applicant should coordinate with its
financial institution well ahead of the
due date regarding its wire transfer,
including a discussion of bank closing
schedules, and allow sufficient time for
the transfer to be initiated and
completed prior to the deadline. The
Commission repeatedly has cautioned
auction participants about the
importance of planning ahead to
prepare for unforeseen last-minute
difficulties in making payments by wire
transfer. Each applicant also is
responsible for obtaining confirmation
from its financial institution that its
wire transfer to U.S. Bank was
successful and from Commission staff
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3901
that the Commission has timely
received the applicant’s upfront
payment and deposited it into the
proper account.
ii. FCC Form 159
85. A completed FCC Form 159
(Revised 2/03) must be faxed to U.S.
Bank to accompany each upfront
payment. Proper completion of FCC
Form 159 is critical to ensuring correct
crediting of upfront payments. Detailed
instructions for completion of FCC Form
159 are included in Attachment C to the
Auction 91 Procedures Public Notice.
An electronic pre-filled version of the
FCC Form 159 is available after
submitting the FCC Form 175. Payers
using the pre-filled FCC Form 159 are
responsible for ensuring that all of the
information on the form, including
payment amounts, is accurate. The FCC
Form 159 can be completed
electronically, but must be filed with
U.S. Bank by fax.
iii. Upfront Payments and Bidding
Eligibility
86. The Commission has delegated to
the Bureaus the authority and discretion
to determine appropriate upfront
payments for each auction. Upfront
payments help deter frivolous or
insincere bidding, and provide the
Commission with a source of funds in
the event that the bidder incurs liability
during the auction.
87. Applicants that are former
defaulters must pay upfront payments
50 percent greater than non-former
defaulters. For purposes of this
calculation, the applicant includes the
applicant itself, its affiliates, its
controlling interests, and affiliates of its
controlling interests, as defined by 47
CFR 1.2110.
88. Applicants must make upfront
payments sufficient to obtain bidding
eligibility on the construction permits
on which they will bid. The amount of
the upfront payment determines a
bidder’s initial bidding eligibility, the
maximum number of bidding units on
which a bidder may place bids. In order
to bid on a particular construction
permit, a qualified bidder must have
selected the construction permit on its
FCC Form 175 and must have a current
eligibility level that meets or exceeds
the number of bidding units assigned to
that construction permit. At a
minimum, therefore, an applicant’s total
upfront payment must be enough to
establish eligibility to bid on at least one
of the construction permits selected on
its FCC Form 175, or else the applicant
will not be eligible to participate in the
auction. An applicant does not have to
make an upfront payment to cover all
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construction permits the applicant
selected on its FCC Form 175, but only
enough to cover the maximum number
of bidding units that are associated with
construction permits on which the
bidder wishes to place bids and hold
provisionally winning bids in any given
round. (Provisionally winning bids are
bids that would become final winning
bids if the auction were to close after the
given round.) A bidder’s total upfront
payment does not affect the total dollar
amount the bidder may bid on any given
construction permit.
89. The Bureaus adopted upfront
payments and bidding units for each
construction permit in Auction 91.
Upfront payment amounts and bidding
units are set forth in Attachment A of
the Auction 91 Procedures Public
Notice.
90. In calculating its upfront payment
amount, an applicant should determine
the maximum number of bidding units
on which it may wish to be active (bid
on or hold provisionally winning bids
on) in any single round, and submit an
upfront payment amount covering that
number of bidding units. In order to
make this calculation, an applicant
should add together the bidding units
for all construction permits on which it
seeks to be active in any given round.
Applicants should check their
calculations carefully, as there is no
provision for increasing a bidder’s
eligibility after the upfront payment
deadline.
91. If an applicant is a former
defaulter, according to 47 CFR
1.2106(a), it must calculate its upfront
payment for all of its identified
construction permits by multiplying the
number of bidding units on which it
wishes to be active by 1.5. In order to
calculate the number of bidding units to
assign to former defaulters, the
Commission will divide the upfront
payment received by 1.5 and round the
result up to the nearest bidding unit. If
a former defaulter fails to submit a
sufficient upfront payment to establish
eligibility to bid on at least one of its
construction permits selected on its FCC
Form 175, the applicant will not be
eligible to participate in the auction.
E. Applicant’s Wire Transfer
Information for Purposes of Refunds of
Upfront Payments
92. To ensure that refunds of upfront
payments are processed in an
expeditious manner, the Commission is
requesting that all pertinent information
be supplied. Applicants can provide the
information electronically during the
initial short-form application filing
window after the form has been
submitted. (Applicants are reminded
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that information submitted as part of an
FCC Form 175 will be available to the
public; for that reason, wire transfer
information should not be included in
an FCC Form 175.) Wire Transfer
Instructions can also be manually faxed
to the FCC, Financial Operations,
Auctions Accounting Group, Attn: Gail
Glasser, at (202) 418–2843 (fax). All
refunds will be returned to the payer of
record as identified on the FCC Form
159 unless the payer submits written
authorization instructing otherwise.
F. Auction Registration
93. Approximately ten days before the
auction, the Bureaus will issue a public
notice announcing all qualified bidders
for the auction. Qualified bidders are
those applicants with submitted FCC
Form 175 applications that are deemed
timely-filed, accurate, and complete,
provided that such applicants have
timely submitted an upfront payment
that is sufficient to qualify them to bid.
94. All qualified bidders are
automatically registered for the auction.
Registration materials will be
distributed prior to the auction by
overnight mail. The mailing will be sent
only to the contact person at the contact
address listed in the FCC Form 175 and
will include the SecurID® tokens that
will be required to place bids, the
Integrated Spectrum Auction System
(ISAS) Bidder’s Guide, and the Auction
Bidder Line phone number.
95. Qualified bidders that do not
receive this registration mailing will not
be able to submit bids. Therefore, any
qualified bidder that has not received
this mailing by noon on Wednesday,
April 20, 2011, should call (717) 338–
2868. Receipt of this registration mailing
is critical to participating in the auction,
and each applicant is responsible for
ensuring it has received all of the
registration material.
96. In the event that SecurID® tokens
are lost or damaged, only a person who
has been designated as an authorized
bidder, the contact person, or the
certifying official on the applicant’s
short-form application may request
replacements. Qualified bidders
requiring the replacement of these items
must call Technical Support at (877)
480–3201, option nine; (202) 414–1250;
or (202) 414–1255 (TTY).
G. Remote Electronic Bidding
97. The Commission will conduct this
auction over the Internet, and
telephonic bidding will be available as
well. Only qualified bidders are
permitted to bid. Each applicant should
indicate its bidding preference—
electronic or telephonic—on its FCC
Form 175. In either case, each
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authorized bidder must have its own
SecurID® token, which the Commission
will provide at no charge. Each
applicant with one authorized bidder
will be issued two SecurID® tokens,
while applicants with two or three
authorized bidders will be issued three
tokens. For security purposes, the
SecurID® tokens, the telephonic bidding
telephone number, and the Integrated
Spectrum Auction System (ISAS)
Bidder’s Guide are only mailed to the
contact person at the contact address
listed on the FCC Form 175. Each
SecurID® token is tailored to a specific
auction. SecurID® tokens issued for
other auctions or obtained from a source
other than the FCC will not work for
Auction 91.
H. Mock Auction—April 25, 2011
98. All qualified bidders will be
eligible to participate in a mock auction
on Monday, April 25, 2011. The mock
auction will enable qualified bidders to
become familiar with the FCC Auction
System prior to the auction.
Participation by all bidders is strongly
recommended. Details will be
announced by public notice.
IV. Auction
99. The first round of bidding for
Auction 91 will begin on Wednesday,
April 27, 2011. The initial bidding
schedule will be announced in a public
notice listing the qualified bidders,
which is to be released approximately
10 days before the start of the auction.
A. Auction Structure
i. Simultaneous Multiple Round
Auction
100. All construction permits in
Auction 91 will be auctioned in a single
auction using the Commission’s
standard simultaneous multiple-round
auction format. This type of auction
offers every construction permit for bid
at the same time and consists of
successive bidding rounds in which
eligible bidders may place bids on
individual construction permits. A
bidder may bid on, and potentially win,
any number of construction permits.
Unless otherwise announced, bids will
be accepted on all construction permits
in each round of the auction until
bidding stops on every construction
permit.
ii. Eligibility and Activity Rules
101. The Bureaus will use upfront
payments to determine each bidder’s
initial (maximum) eligibility (as
measured in bidding units) for Auction
91. The amount of the upfront payment
submitted by a bidder determines initial
bidding eligibility, the maximum
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number of bidding units on which a
bidder may be active. Each construction
permit was assigned a specific number
of bidding units as listed in Attachment
A of the Auction 91 Procedures Public
Notice. Bidding units for a given
construction permit do not change as
prices rise during the auction. A
bidder’s upfront payment is not
attributed to specific construction
permits. Rather, a bidder may place bids
on any of the construction permits
selected on its FCC Form 175 as long as
the total number of bidding units
associated with those construction
permits does not exceed its current
eligibility.
102. In order to ensure that an auction
closes within a reasonable period of
time, an activity rule requires bidders to
bid actively throughout the auction,
rather than wait until late in the auction
before participating. Bidders are
required to be active on a specific
percentage of their current bidding
eligibility during each round of the
auction.
103. A bidder’s activity level in a
round is the sum of the bidding units
associated with any construction
permits covered by new and
provisionally winning bids. A bidder is
considered active on a construction
permit in the current round if it is either
the provisionally winning bidder at the
end of the previous bidding round or if
it submits a bid in the current round.
104. Failure to maintain the requisite
activity level will result in the use of an
activity rule waiver, if any remain, or a
reduction in the bidder’s eligibility,
possibly curtailing or eliminating the
bidder’s ability to place additional bids
in the auction.
iii. Auction Stages
105. Auction 91 will be conducted in
two stages and employ an activity rule.
A bidder desiring to maintain its current
bidding eligibility is required to be
active on construction permits
representing at least 75 percent of its
current bidding eligibility, during each
round of Stage One, and at least 95
percent of its current bidding eligibility
in Stage Two. The Bureaus retain the
discretion to alter the activity
requirements before and/or during the
auction as circumstances warrant.
106. Stage One: During the first stage
of the auction, a bidder desiring to
maintain its current bidding eligibility
will be required to be active on
construction permits representing at
least 75 percent of its current bidding
eligibility in each bidding round.
Failure to maintain the required activity
level will result in the use of an activity
rule waiver or, if the bidder has no
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activity rule waivers remaining, a
reduction in the bidder’s bidding
eligibility in the next round. During
Stage One, reduced eligibility for the
next round will be calculated by
multiplying the bidder’s current round
activity (the sum of bidding units of the
bidder’s provisionally winning bids and
bids during the current round) by fourthirds (4⁄3).
107. Stage Two: During the second
stage of the auction, a bidder desiring to
maintain its current bidding eligibility
is required to be active on 95 percent of
its current bidding eligibility. Failure to
maintain the required activity level will
result in the use of an activity rule
waiver or, if the bidder has no activity
rule waivers remaining, a reduction in
the bidder’s bidding eligibility in the
next round. During Stage Two, reduced
eligibility for the next round will be
calculated by multiplying the bidder’s
current round activity (the sum of
bidding units of the bidder’s
provisionally winning bids and bids
during the current round) by twentynineteenths (20/19).
108. CAUTION: Since activity
requirements increase in Stage Two,
bidders must carefully check their
activity during the first round following
a stage transition to ensure that they are
meeting the increased activity
requirement. This is especially critical
for bidders that have provisionally
winning bids and do not plan to submit
new bids. In past auctions, some bidders
have inadvertently lost bidding
eligibility or used an activity rule
waiver because they did not re-verify
their activity status at stage transitions.
Bidders may check their activity against
the required activity level by logging
into the FCC Auction System.
iv. Stage Transitions
109. The auction will start in Stage
One. The Bureaus will regulate the pace
of the auction by announcement. The
Bureaus retain the discretion to change
the activity requirements during the
auction, including transition the auction
from Stage One to Stage Two, to add an
additional stage with a higher activity
requirement, not to transition to Stage
Two, and to transition to Stage Two
with an activity requirement that is
higher or lower than 95 percent. This
determination will be based on a variety
of measures of auction activity,
including, but not limited to, the
number of new bids and the percentages
of construction permits (as measured in
bidding units) on which there are new
bids.
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v. Activity Rule Waivers
110. Each bidder in the auction will
be provided with three activity rule
waivers. Bidders may use an activity
rule waiver in any round during the
course of the auction. Use of an activity
rule waiver preserves the bidder’s
eligibility despite the bidder’s activity
in the current round being below the
required minimum activity level. An
activity rule waiver applies to an entire
round of bidding and not to a particular
construction permit. Activity rule
waivers can be either proactive or
automatic and are principally a
mechanism for auction participants to
avoid the loss of bidding eligibility in
the event that exigent circumstances
prevent them from placing a bid in a
particular round.
111. The FCC Auction System
assumes that bidders with insufficient
activity would prefer to apply an
activity rule waiver (if available) rather
than lose bidding eligibility. Therefore,
the system will automatically apply a
waiver at the end of any bidding round
where a bidder’s activity level is below
the minimum required unless (1) there
are no activity rule waivers available or
(2) the bidder overrides the automatic
application of a waiver by reducing
eligibility. If a bidder has no waivers
remaining and does not satisfy the
activity requirement, the FCC Auction
System will permanently reduce the
bidder’s eligibility, possibly curtailing
or eliminating the bidder’s ability to
place additional bids in the auction.
112. A bidder with insufficient
activity that wants to reduce its bidding
eligibility rather than use an activity
rule waiver must affirmatively override
the automatic waiver mechanism during
the bidding round by using the reduce
eligibility function in the FCC Auction
System. In this case, the bidder’s
eligibility is permanently reduced to
bring the bidder into compliance with
the activity rule. Once eligibility has
been reduced, a bidder will not be
permitted to regain its lost bidding
eligibility even if the round has not yet
ended.
113. Finally, a bidder may apply an
activity rule waiver proactively as a
means to keep the auction open without
placing a bid. If a bidder proactively
applies an activity waiver (using the
apply waiver function in the FCC
Auction System) during a bidding round
in which no bids are placed the auction
will remain open and the bidder’s
eligibility will be preserved. However,
an automatic waiver applied by the FCC
Auction System in a round in which
there are no new bids or proactive
waivers will not keep the auction open.
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A bidder cannot submit a proactive
waiver after submitting a bid in a round,
and submitting a proactive waiver will
preclude a bidder from placing any bids
in that round. It is important for bidders
to understand that applying a waiver is
irreversible. Once a bidder submits a
proactive waiver, the bidder cannot
unsubmit the waiver even if the round
has not yet ended.
vi. Auction Stopping Rules
114. For Auction 91, the Bureaus will
employ a simultaneous stopping rule
approach. A simultaneous stopping rule
means that all construction permits
remain available for bidding until
bidding closes simultaneously on all
construction permits. More specifically,
bidding will close simultaneously on all
construction permits after the first
round in which no bidder submits any
new bids or applies a proactive waiver.
115. As explained in the Auction 91
Procedures Public Notice, the Bureaus
retain the discretion to exercise any
alternative version of the simultaneous
stopping rule for Auction 91 with or
without prior announcement during the
auction. For example, under Option 1,
the auction would close for all
construction permits after the first
round in which no bidder applies a
waiver or places any new bids on any
construction permit on which it is not
the provisionally winning bidder. Thus,
absent any other bidding activity, a
bidder placing a new bid on a
construction permit for which it is the
provisionally winning bidder would not
keep the auction open under this
modified stopping rule. Under Option 2,
the auction would close for all
construction permits after the first
round in which no bidder applies a
waiver or places any new bids on any
construction permit that is not FCC
held. Thus, absent any other bidding
activity, a bidder placing a new bid on
a construction permit that does not
already have a provisionally winning
bid (an FCC-held construction permit)
would not keep the auction open under
this modified stopping rule. Under
Option 3, the auction would close using
a modified version of the simultaneous
stopping rule that combines Option 1
and Option 2. Under Option 4, the
auction would end after a specified
number of additional rounds. If the
Bureaus invoke this special stopping
rule, it will accept bids in the specified
final round(s) and the auction will
close. Under Option 5, the auction
would remain open even if no bidder
places any new bids or applies a waiver.
In this event, the effect will be the same
as if a bidder had applied a waiver.
Thus, the activity rule will apply as
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usual, and a bidder with insufficient
activity will either lose bidding
eligibility or use a waiver.
vii. Auction Delay, Suspension, or
Cancellation
116. The Bureaus, by public notice or
by announcement during the auction,
may delay, suspend, or cancel the
auction in the event of natural disaster,
technical obstacle, administrative or
weather necessity, evidence of an
auction security breach or unlawful
bidding activity, or for any other reason
that affects the fair and efficient conduct
of competitive bidding. In such cases,
the Bureaus, in their sole discretion,
may elect to resume starting from the
beginning of the current round, resume
the auction starting from some previous
round, or cancel the auction in its
entirety. Network interruption may
cause the Bureaus to delay or suspend
the auction. The Bureaus emphasize
that exercise of this authority is solely
within the discretion of the Bureaus,
and its use is not intended to be a
substitute for situations in which
bidders may wish to apply their activity
rule waivers.
B. Bidding Procedures
i. Round Structure
117. The initial schedule of bidding
rounds will be announced in the public
notice listing the qualified bidders,
which is released approximately 10
days before the start of the auction. Each
bidding round is followed by the release
of round results. Multiple bidding
rounds may be conducted in a given
day.
118. The Bureaus have the discretion
to change the bidding schedule in order
to foster an auction pace that reasonably
balances speed with the bidders’ need to
study round results and adjust their
bidding strategies. The Bureaus may
increase or decrease the amount of time
for the bidding rounds, the amount of
time between rounds, or the number of
rounds per day, depending upon
bidding activity and other factors.
ii. Reserve Price and Minimum Opening
Bids
119. There will be no reserve price for
the construction permits offered in
Auction 91. After consideration of one
commenter’s request for a reduction of
the proposed minimum opening bid for
the FM station construction permit for
Blanket, Texas, Channel 284A, the
Bureaus adopted a minimum opening
bid for MM–FM837–A, Blanket, Texas,
of $7,500. After further consideration of
the specific circumstances concerning
the FM station construction permit at
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Charlo, Montana, Channel 251C3, as
presented by a second commenter, the
Bureaus adopted a minimum opening
bid of $5,000 for MM–FM808–C3,
Charlo, Montana.
120. Another commenter contended
that generally the minimum opening
bids for re-auctioned allotments are too
high, and that those allotments that
were unsold in previous auctions
should all be assigned a uniform
minimum opening bid of $1,000.
Similarly, a fourth commenter suggests
an across-the-board decrease of 75
percent of the minimum opening bids
proposed in the Auction 91 Comment
Public Notice. The Bureaus declined to
adopt for minimum opening bids in this
auction either the proposed across-theboard 75 percent reduction or the
proposed uniform minimum bid amount
for all permits because those proposals
do not take into account the various
factors that were used in developing
these amounts.
121. The specific minimum opening
bid amounts adopted by the Bureaus for
the construction permits available in
Auction 91 are set forth in Attachment
A of the Auction 91 Procedures Public
Notice.
iii. Bid Amounts
122. In each round of Auction 91,
eligible bidders will be able to place a
bid on a given construction permit in
any of up to nine different amounts, if
the bidder has sufficient eligibility to
place a bid on the particular
construction permit. The FCC Auction
System interface will list the nine
acceptable bid amounts for each
construction permit.
123. The first of the acceptable bid
amounts is called the minimum
acceptable bid amount. The minimum
acceptable bid amount for a
construction permit will be equal to its
minimum opening bid amount until
there is a provisionally winning bid on
the construction permit. After there is a
provisionally winning bid for a permit,
the minimum acceptable bid amount
will be a percentage higher. That is, the
minimum acceptable bid amount will be
calculated by multiplying the
provisionally winning bid amount times
one plus the minimum acceptable bid
percentage. For example, if the
minimum acceptable bid percentage is
10 percent, the minimum acceptable bid
amount will equal (provisionally
winning bid amount) * (1.10), rounded.
124. The Bureaus will begin the
auction with a minimum acceptable bid
percentage of 10 percent. The eight
additional bid amounts are calculated
using the minimum acceptable bid
amount and a bid increment percentage.
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The Bureaus will begin the auction with
a bid increment percentage of 5 percent.
The first additional acceptable bid
amount equals the minimum acceptable
bid amount times one plus the bid
increment percentage, rounded. With a
bid increment percentage is 5 percent,
the calculation is (minimum acceptable
bid amount) * (1 + 0.05), rounded, or
(minimum acceptable bid amount) *
1.05, rounded; the second additional
acceptable bid amount equals the
minimum acceptable bid amount times
one plus two times the bid increment
percentage, rounded, or (minimum
acceptable bid amount) * 1.10, rounded;
the third additional acceptable bid
amount equals the minimum acceptable
bid amount times one plus three times
the bid increment percentage, rounded,
or (minimum acceptable bid amount) *
1.15, rounded; etc. The Bureaus will
round the results of these calculations
using the standard rounding procedures
for auctions. The Bureaus retain the
discretion to change the minimum
acceptable bid amounts, the minimum
acceptable bid percentage, the bid
increment percentage, and the number
of acceptable bid amounts if the Bureaus
determine that circumstances so dictate.
Further, the Bureaus retain the
discretion to do so on a construction
permit-by-construction permit basis.
The Bureaus also retain the discretion to
limit (a) the amount by which a
minimum acceptable bid for a
construction permit may increase
compared with the corresponding
provisionally winning bid, and (b) the
amount by which an additional bid
amount may increase compared with
the immediately preceding acceptable
bid amount. For example, the Bureaus
could set a $10,000 limit on increases in
minimum acceptable bid amounts over
provisionally winning bids. Thus, if
calculating a minimum acceptable bid
using the minimum acceptable bid
percentage results in a minimum
acceptable bid amount that is $12,000
higher than the provisionally winning
bid on a construction permit, the
minimum acceptable bid amount would
instead be capped at $10,000 above the
provisionally winning bid. If the
Bureaus exercise this discretion, they
will alert bidders by announcement in
the FCC Auction System during the
auction.
iv. Provisionally Winning Bids
125. At the end of each bidding
round, a provisionally winning bid will
be determined based on the highest bid
amount received for each construction
permit. A provisionally winning bid
will remain the provisionally winning
bid until there is a higher bid on the
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13:45 Jan 20, 2011
Jkt 223001
same construction permit at the close of
a subsequent round. Provisionally
winning bids at the end of the auction
become the winning bids. Bidders are
reminded that provisionally winning
bids count toward activity for purposes
of the activity rule.
126. The Bureaus will use a random
number generator to select a single
provisionally winning bid in the event
of identical high bid amounts being
submitted on a construction permit in a
given round (i.e., tied bids). The FCC
Auction System will assign a random
number to each bid upon submission.
The tied bid with the highest random
number wins the tiebreaker, and
becomes the provisionally winning bid.
Bidders, regardless of whether they hold
a provisionally winning bid, can submit
higher bids in subsequent rounds.
However, if the auction were to end
with no other bids being placed, the
winning bidder would be the one that
placed the provisionally winning bid.
v. Bidding
127. All bidding will take place
remotely either through the FCC
Auction System or by telephonic
bidding. There will be no on-site
bidding during Auction 91. Telephonic
bid assistants are required to use a script
when entering bids placed by telephone.
Telephonic bidders were reminded to
allow sufficient time to bid by placing
their calls well in advance of the close
of a round. The length of a call to place
a telephonic bid may vary; applicants
should allow a minimum of ten
minutes.
128. A bidder’s ability to bid on
specific construction permits is
determined by two factors: (1) The
construction permits selected on the
bidder’s FCC Form 175 and (2) the
bidder’s eligibility. The bid submission
screens will allow bidders to submit
bids on only those construction permits
the bidder selected on its FCC Form
175.
129. In order to access the bidding
function of the FCC Auction System,
bidders must be logged in during the
bidding round using the passcode
generated by the SecurID® token and a
personal identification number (PIN)
created by the bidder. Bidders are
strongly encouraged to print a round
summary for each round after they have
completed all of their activity for that
round.
130. In each round, eligible bidders
will be able to place bids on a given
construction permit in any of up to nine
pre-defined bid amounts, if the bidder
has sufficient eligibility to place a bid
on the particular construction permit.
For each construction permit, the FCC
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3905
Auction System will list the acceptable
bid amounts in a drop-down box.
Bidders use the drop-down box to select
from among the acceptable bid amounts.
The FCC Auction System also includes
an upload function that allows bidders
to upload text files containing bid
information.
131. Until a bid has been placed on
a construction permit, the minimum
acceptable bid amount for that
construction permit will be equal to its
minimum opening bid amount. Once
there are bids on a construction permit,
minimum acceptable bids for a
construction permit for the following
round will be determined.
132. During a round, an eligible
bidder may submit bids for as many
construction permits as it wishes
(providing that it is eligible to bid),
remove bids placed in the current
bidding round, or permanently reduce
eligibility. If a bidder submits multiple
bids for the same construction permit in
the same round, the system takes the
last bid entered as that bidder’s bid for
the round. Bidders should note that the
bidding units associated with
construction permits for which the
bidder has removed bids do not count
towards the bidder’s current activity.
vi. Bid Removal and Bid Withdrawal
133. In Auction 91, each bidder has
the option of removing any bids placed
in a round provided that such bids are
removed before the close of that bidding
round. By using the remove bids
function in the FCC Auction System, a
bidder may effectively unsubmit any bid
placed within that round. A bidder
removing a bid placed in the same
round is not subject to withdrawal
payments. Removing a bid will affect a
bidder’s activity for the round in which
it is removed, i.e., a bid that is removed
does not count toward bidding activity.
Once a round closes, a bidder may no
longer remove a bid.
134. In the Auction 91 Comment
Public Notice, the Bureaus proposed to
prohibit bidders from withdrawing any
bids after the round in which the bids
were placed has closed. The Bureaus
declined to adopt one commenter’s
proposal to allow, on a case-by-case
basis, a bidder in this auction to
withdraw a bid where the bidder has a
legitimate reason and is not encouraging
unethical process that would result in
personal gains for the bidder or
disqualifying of eligible bidders.
135. The Bureaus will prohibit bid
withdrawals in Auction 91. Bidders are
cautioned to select bid amounts
carefully because no bid withdrawals
will be allowed in Auction 91, even if
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a bid was mistakenly or erroneously
made.
vii. Round Results
136. Reports reflecting bidders’
identities for Auction 91 will be
available before and during the auction.
Thus, bidders will know in advance of
this auction the identities of the bidders
against which they are bidding.
137. Bids placed during a round will
not be made public until the conclusion
of that round. After a round closes, the
Bureaus will compile and post for
public access reports of all bids placed,
current provisionally winning bids, new
minimum acceptable bid amounts for
the following round, whether the
construction permit is FCC held, and
bidder eligibility status (bidding
eligibility and activity rule waivers),
and post the reports for public access.
viii. Auction Announcements
138. The Commission will use auction
announcements to report necessary
information such as schedule changes.
All auction announcements will be
available by clicking a link in the FCC
Auction System.
V. Post-Auction Procedures
139. Shortly after bidding has ended,
the Commission will issue a public
notice declaring the auction closed,
identifying the winning bidders, and
establishing the deadlines for
submitting down payments, final
payments, and the long-form
applications (FCC Forms 301).
A. Down Payments
140. Within ten business days after
release of the auction closing public
notice, each winning bidder must
submit sufficient funds (in addition to
its upfront payment) to bring its total
amount of money on deposit with the
Commission for Auction 91 to 20
percent of the net amount of its winning
bids (gross bids less any applicable new
entrant bidding credits).
B. Final Payments
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141. Each winning bidder will be
required to submit the balance of the net
amount of its winning bids within ten
business days after the applicable
deadline for submitting down payments.
C. Long-Form Application (FCC Form
301)
142. The Commission’s rules
currently provide that within thirty days
after release of the auction closing
notice, winning bidders must
electronically submit a properly
completed long-form application (FCC
Form 301, Application for Construction
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13:45 Jan 20, 2011
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Permit for Commercial Broadcast
Station), and required exhibits for each
construction permit won through
Auction 91. Winning bidders claiming
new entrant status must include an
exhibit demonstrating their eligibility
for the bidding credit. Further
instructions on these and other filing
requirements will be provided to
winning bidders in the auction closing
public notice.
Federal Communications Commission.
Gary D. Michaels,
Deputy Chief, Auction and Spectrum Access
Division, WTB.
D. Default and Disqualification
Sunshine Act Meeting
143. Any winning bidder that defaults
or is disqualified after the close of the
auction (i.e., fails to remit the required
down payment within the prescribed
period of time, fails to submit a timely
long-form application, fails to make full
payment, or is otherwise disqualified)
will be subject to the payments
described in 47 CFR 1.2104(g)(2). The
payments include both a deficiency
payment, equal to the difference
between the amount of the bidder’s bid
and the amount of the winning bid the
next time a construction permit
covering the same spectrum is won in
an auction, plus an additional payment
equal to a percentage of the defaulter’s
bid or of the subsequent winning bid,
whichever is less. The Bureaus set the
additional default payment for this
auction at twenty percent of the
applicable bid.
144. Finally, if a default or
disqualification involves gross
misconduct, misrepresentation, or bad
faith by an applicant, the Commission
may declare the applicant and its
principals ineligible to bid in future
auctions, and may take any other action
that it deems necessary, including
institution of proceedings to revoke any
existing authorizations held by the
applicant.
Pursuant to the provisions of the
‘‘Government in the Sunshine Act’’ (5
U.S.C. 552b), notice is hereby given that
at 4:10 p.m. on Tuesday, January 18,
2011, the Board of Directors of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
met in closed session to consider
matters related to the Corporation’s
supervision, corporate and resolution
activities.
In calling the meeting, the Board
determined, on motion of Director John
E. Bowman (Acting Director, Office of
Thrift Supervision), seconded by
Director Thomas J. Curry (Appointive),
concurred in by Vice Chairman Martin
J. Gruenberg, Director John G. Walsh
(Acting Comptroller of the Currency),
and Chairman Sheila C. Bair, that
Corporation business required its
consideration of the matters which were
to be the subject of this meeting on less
than seven days’ notice to the public;
that no earlier notice of the meeting was
practicable; that the public interest did
not require consideration of the matters
in a meeting open to public observation;
and that the matters could be
considered in a closed meeting by
authority of subsections (c)(2), (c)(4),
(c)(6), (c)(8), (c)(9)(A)(ii), (c)(9)(B), and
(c)(10) of the ‘‘Government in the
Sunshine Act’’ (5 U.S.C. 552b(c)(2),
(c)(4), (c)(6), (c)(8), (c)(9)(A)(ii), (c)(9)(B),
and (c)(10)).
The meeting was held in the Board
Room of the FDIC Building located at
550 17th Street, NW., Washington, DC.
E. Refund of Remaining Upfront
Payment Balance
145. After the auction, applicants that
are not winning bidders or are winning
bidders whose upfront payment
exceeded the total net amount of their
winning bids may be entitled to a
refund of some or all of their upfront
payment. All refunds will be returned to
the payer of record, as identified on the
FCC Form 159, unless the payer submits
written authorization instructing
otherwise. Bidders that drop out of the
auction completely (have exhausted all
of their activity rule waivers and have
no remaining bidding eligibility) may
request a refund of their upfront
payments before the close of the
auction.
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[FR Doc. 2011–1375 Filed 1–20–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION
Dated: January 18, 2011.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Robert E. Feldman,
Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2011–1315 Filed 1–19–11; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE P
FEDERAL MARITIME COMMISSION
Sunshine Act Meeting
Federal
Maritime Commission.
TIME AND DATE: January 26, 2011–10 a.m.
AGENCY HOLDING THE MEETING:
E:\FR\FM\21JAN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 14 (Friday, January 21, 2011)]
[Notices]
[Pages 3892-3906]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-1375]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
[AU Docket No. 10-183; DA 10-2253]
Auction of FM Broadcast Construction Permits Rescheduled for
April 27, 2011; Notice and Filing Requirements, Minimum Opening Bids,
Upfront Payments, and Other Procedures for Auction 91
AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
[[Page 3893]]
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document announces the procedures and minimum opening
bids for the upcoming auction of certain FM Broadcast construction
permits. This document is intended to familiarize prospective bidders
with the procedures and minimum opening bids for the auction. This
auction, which is designated as Auction 91, is now scheduled to start
on April 27, 2011.
DATES: Applications to participate in Auction 91 must be filed prior to
6 p.m. Eastern Time (ET) on February 10, 2011. Bidding for construction
permits in Auction 91 is scheduled to begin on April 27, 2011.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Wireless Telecommunications Bureau,
Auctions and Spectrum Access Division: For legal questions: Lynne Milne
or Howard Davenport at (202) 418-0660. For general auction questions:
Roy Knowles or Linda Sanderson at (717) 338-2829. Media Bureau, Audio
Division: For licensing information and service rule questions: Lisa
Scanlan or Tom Nessinger at (202) 418-2700. To request materials in
accessible formats (Braille, large print, electronic files or audio
format) for people with disabilities, send an e-mail to fcc504@fcc.gov
or call the Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau at (202) 418-0530
or (202) 418-0432 (TTY).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Auction 91
Procedures Public Notice, which was released on December 3, 2010. The
complete text of the Auction 91 Procedures Public Notice, including
attachments, as well as related Commission documents, are available for
public inspection and copying from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. ET Monday
through Thursday and from 8 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. ET on Friday in the FCC
Reference Information Center, 445 12th Street, SW., Room CY-A257,
Washington, DC 20554. The Auction 91 Procedures Public Notice and
related Commission documents may also be purchased from the
Commission's duplicating contractor, Best Copy and Printing, Inc.
(BCPI), Portals II, 445 12th Street, SW., Room CY-B402, Washington, DC
20554, telephone 202-488-5300, facsimile 202-488-5563, or Web site:
https://www.BCPIWEB.com, using document number DA 10-2253 for the
Auction 91 Procedures Public Notice. The Auction 91 Procedures Public
Notice and related documents are also available on the Internet at the
Commission's Web site: https://wireless.fcc.gov/auctions/91/.
I. General Information
A. Introduction
1. The Wireless Telecommunications and the Media Bureaus
(collectively, the Bureaus) announce a new start date and pre-auction
deadlines for the upcoming auction of certain FM broadcast construction
permits and establish the procedures and minimum opening bid amounts
for the auction. On September 21, 2010, the Bureaus released a public
notice seeking comment on competitive bidding procedures to be used in
Auction 91. Five parties submitted five comments in response to the
Auction 91 Comment Public Notice, 75 FR 61752, October 6, 2010, and two
entities submitted filings by the reply comment deadline.
i. Construction Permits in Auction 91
2. Auction 91 will offer 144 construction permits in the FM
broadcast service as listed in Attachment A of the Auction 91
Procedures Public Notice. The construction permits to be auctioned are
for 144 new FM allotments, including 37 construction permits that were
offered but not sold in Auction 79. These construction permits are for
vacant FM allotments, reflecting FM channels assigned to the FM Table
of Allotments (Table), pursuant to the Commission's established
rulemaking procedures, and are designated for use in the indicated
communities.
3. Attachment A to the Auction 91 Procedures Public Notice reflects
certain changes to the list of construction permits that were proposed
for inclusion in this auction in the Auction 91 Comment Public Notice.
The Bureaus removed three construction permits that were listed in
Attachment A to the Auction 91 Comment Public Notice: (1) MM-FM767-C1
on Channel 250C1 at Tuba City, Arizona; (2) MM-FM859-A on Channel 285A
at Union Gap, Washington; and (3) MM-FM807-C2 on Channel 254C2 at
Ennis, Montana. The correct listing for the Ennis vacant FM allotment
is MM-FM411-C2. In addition, the correct allotment coordinates for MM-
FM797-A, Adams, Massachusetts, Channel 255A are listed in Attachment A
to the Auction 91 Procedures Public Notice. The Bureaus will not offer
allotments sought to be added by two commenters and will instead make
them available in an upcoming auction of FM broadcast construction
permits.
4. Applicants may apply for any vacant FM allotment listed in
Attachment A of the Auction 91 Procedures Public Notice. When two or
more short-form applications (FCC Form 175) specifying the same FM
allotment are accepted for filing, mutual exclusivity (MX) exists for
auction purposes, and thus, that construction permit for the FM
allotment will be awarded by competitive bidding procedures. Once
mutual exclusivity exists for auction purposes, even if only one
applicant for a particular construction permit submits an upfront
payment, that applicant is required to submit a bid in order to obtain
the construction permit.
5. One commenter contends that the Commission's rules should be
revised to automatically delete allotments that are offered at auction
but receive no bids. The commenter suggests that such vacant allotments
may hinder efforts by existing licensees to change channels or cities
of license. The commenter also argues that, in the event that only one
applicant places a bid on a permit, that applicant should not be
required to submit a payment for the permit. Adoption of this proposal
would require reversal of the Commission's determination that mutual
exclusivity is determined in the auction context by the filing of
short-form applications for the same permit. These proposed changes
would require amendment of the Commission's rules and are thus outside
of the scope of this proceeding, which is confined to establishing
procedures for the conduct of this auction of FM construction permits.
Because these proposals are outside of the scope of this proceeding,
the Bureaus are unable to consider them here.
B. Rules and Disclaimers
i. Relevant Authority
6. Prospective applicants must familiarize themselves thoroughly
with the Commission's general competitive bidding rules, including
recent amendments and clarifications, as well as Commission decisions
in proceedings regarding competitive bidding procedures, application
requirements, and obligations of Commission licensees. Broadcasters
should also familiarize themselves with the Commission's rules relating
to the FM broadcast service contained in 47 CFR 73.201-73.333 and
73.1001-73.5009. Prospective bidders must also be familiar with the
rules relating to broadcast auctions and competitive bidding
proceedings contained in 47 CFR 1.2101-1.2112 and 73.5000-73.5009.
Prospective bidders must also be thoroughly familiar with the
procedures, terms and conditions contained in the Auction 91 Procedures
[[Page 3894]]
Public Notice, and the authorities cited therein.
7. The terms contained in the Commission's rules, relevant orders,
and public notices are not negotiable. The Commission may amend or
supplement the information contained in the Bureaus public notices at
any time, and will issue public notices to convey any new or
supplemental information to applicants. It is the responsibility of all
applicants to remain current with all Commission rules and with all
public notices pertaining to this auction.
ii. Prohibited Communications and Compliance With Antitrust Laws
8. To ensure the competitiveness of the auction process, 47 CFR
1.2105(c) prohibits auction applicants for construction permits in any
of the same geographic license areas from communicating with each other
about bids, bidding strategies, or settlements unless such applicants
have identified each other on their short-form applications (FCC Form
175) as parties with whom they have entered into agreements pursuant to
47 CFR 1.2105(a)(2)(viii).
a. Entities Subject to Section 1.2105
9. 47 CFR 1.2105(c)'s prohibition on certain communications will
apply to any applicants that submit short-form applications seeking to
participate in a Commission auction for construction permits in the
same geographic license area. Thus, unless they have identified each
other on their short-form applications as parties with whom they have
entered into agreements under 47 CFR 1.2105(a)(2)(viii), applicants for
any of the same geographic license areas must affirmatively avoid all
communications with or disclosures to each other that affect or have
the potential to affect bids or bidding strategy. In some instances,
this prohibition extends to communications regarding the post-auction
market structure. This prohibition applies to all applicants regardless
of whether such applicants become qualified bidders or actually bid. In
broadcast services, the geographic license area is the market
designation of the particular service. For the FM service, the market
designation is the particular vacant FM allotment (e.g., Whitehall,
Montana, Channel 274A, MM-FM185A). In Auction 91, this rule would apply
to applicants designating on the short-form application any of the same
FM allotments.
10. Applicants are also reminded that, for purposes of this
prohibition on certain communications, 47 CFR 1.2105(c)(7)(i) defines
applicant as including all officers and directors of the entity
submitting a short-form application to participate in the auction, all
controlling interests of that entity, as well as all holders of
partnership and other ownership interests and any stock interest
amounting to 10 percent or more of the entity, or outstanding stock, or
outstanding voting stock of the entity submitting a short-form
application. For example, where an individual served as an officer for
two or more applicants, the Bureaus have found that the bids and
bidding strategies of one applicant are necessarily conveyed to the
other applicant, and, absent a disclosed bidding agreement, an apparent
violation of 47 CFR 1.2105(c) occurs.
11. Individuals and entities subject to 47 CFR 1.2105(c) should
take special care in circumstances where their employees may receive
information directly or indirectly from a competing applicant relating
to any competing applicant's bids or bidding strategies. The Bureaus
have not addressed situations where non-principals (i.e., those who are
not officers or directors and thus not considered to be the applicant)
receive information regarding a competing applicant's bids or bidding
strategies and whether that information might be deemed to necessarily
convey to the applicant. An exception to the prohibition on certain
communications allows non-controlling interest holders to obtain
interests in more than one competing applicant without violating 47 CFR
1.2105(c) provided specified conditions are met (including a
certification that no prohibited communications have occurred or will
occur), but that exception does not extend to controlling interest
holders.
12. Moreover, Auction 91 applicants are encouraged not to use the
same individual as an authorized bidder. A violation of 47 CFR
1.2105(c) could occur if an individual acts as the authorized bidder
for two or more competing applicants, and conveys information
concerning the substance of bids or bidding strategies between such
applicants. Also, if the authorized bidders are different individuals
employed by the same organization (e.g., law firm or engineering firm
or consulting firm), a violation similarly could occur. In such a case,
at a minimum, applicants should certify on their applications that
precautionary steps have been taken to prevent communication between
authorized bidders and that applicants and their bidding agents will
comply with 47 CFR 1.2105(c).
b. Prohibition Applies Until Down Payment Deadline
13. The 47 CFR 1.2105(c) prohibition on certain communications
begins at the short-form application filing deadline and ends at the
down payment deadline after the auction, which will be announced in a
future public notice.
c. Prohibited Communications
14. Applicants should note that they must not communicate directly
or indirectly about bids or bidding strategy to other applicants in
this auction. 47 CFR 1.2105(c) prohibits not only a communication about
an applicant's own bids or bidding strategy, but also a communication
of another applicant's bids or bidding strategy. While 47 CFR 1.2105(c)
does not prohibit non-auction-related business negotiations among
auction applicants, applicants must remain vigilant so as not to
communicate directly or indirectly information that affects, or could
affect, bids or bidding strategy, or the negotiation of settlement
agreements.
15. The Commission remains vigilant about prohibited communications
taking place in other situations. Public disclosure of information
relating to bids, or bidding strategies, or to post auction market
structures, may violate 47 CFR 1.2105(c). For example, the Commission
has warned that prohibited communications concerning bids and bidding
strategies may include communications regarding capital calls or
requests for additional funds in support of bids or bidding strategies
to the extent such communications convey information concerning the
bids and bidding strategies directly or indirectly. The use of the
Commission's bidding system to disclose an applicant's bidding strategy
or market information will not be tolerated. Similarly, an applicant's
public statement of intent not to participate in bidding in this
auction also could violate this rule.
d. Disclosure of Bidding Agreements and Arrangements
16. The Commission's rules do not prohibit applicants from entering
into otherwise lawful bidding agreements before filing their short-form
applications, as long as they disclose the existence of the
agreement(s) in their short-form applications. If parties agree in
principle on all material terms prior to the short-form application
filing deadline, each party to the agreement must identify the other
party or parties to the agreement on its short-form application under
47 CFR 1.2105(c), even if the agreement has not been reduced to
writing. If the parties have
[[Page 3895]]
not agreed in principle by the short-form filing deadline, they should
not include the names of parties to discussions on their applications,
and they may not continue negotiation, discussion or communication with
any other applicants after the short-form application filing deadline.
e. Section 1.2105(c) Certification
17. By electronically submitting a short-form application, each
applicant in Auction 91 certifies its compliance with 47 CFR 1.2105(c)
and 73.5002. However, the Bureau cautions that merely filing a
certifying statement as part of an application will not outweigh
specific evidence that a prohibited communication has occurred, nor
will it preclude the initiation of an investigation when warranted. The
Commission has stated that it intends to scrutinize carefully any
instances in which bidding patterns suggest that collusion may be
occurring. Any applicant found to have violated 47 CFR 1.2105(c) may be
subject to sanctions.
f. Duty To Report Prohibited Communications: Reporting Procedure
18. 47 CFR 1.2105(c)(6) provides that any applicant that makes or
receives a communication that appears to violate 47 CFR 1.2105(c) must
report such communication in writing to the Commission immediately, and
in no case later than five business days after the communication
occurs. The Commission has clarified that each applicant's obligation
to report any such communication continues beyond the five-day period
after the communication is made, even if the report is not made within
the five-day period.
19. In addition, 47 CFR 1.65 requires an applicant to maintain the
accuracy and completeness of information furnished in its pending
application and to notify the Commission of any substantial change that
may be of decisional significance to that application. Thus, 47 CFR
1.65 requires an auction applicant to notify the Commission of any
substantial change to the information or certifications included in its
pending short-form application. An applicant is therefore required by
47 CFR 1.65 to report to the Commission any communication the applicant
has made to or received from another applicant after the short-form
application filing deadline that affects or has the potential to affect
bids or bidding strategy, unless such communication is made to or
received from a party to an agreement identified under 47 CFR
1.2105(a)(2)(viii).
20. 47 CFR 1.65(a) and 1.2105(c) require applicants in competitive
bidding proceedings to furnish additional or corrected information
within five days of a significant occurrence, or to amend their short-
form applications no more than five days after the applicant becomes
aware of the need for amendment. These rules are intended to facilitate
the auction process by making the information available promptly to all
participants and to enable the Bureaus to act expeditiously on those
changes when such action is necessary.
21. A party reporting any communication pursuant to 47 CFR 1.65,
1.2105(a)(2), or 1.2105(c)(6) must take care to ensure that any report
of a prohibited communication does not itself give rise to a violation
of 47 CFR 1.2105(c). For example, a party's report of a prohibited
communication could violate the rule by communicating prohibited
information to other applicants through the use of Commission filing
procedures that would allow such materials to be made available for
public inspection.
22. 47 CFR 1.2105(c) requires parties to file only a single report
concerning such communication and to file that report with Commission
personnel expressly charged with administering the Commission's
auctions. This rule is designed to minimize the risk of inadvertent
dissemination of information in such reports. Pursuant to the amended
rule, any reports required by 47 CFR 1.2105(c) must be filed consistent
with the instructions set forth in the Auction 91 Procedures Public
Notice. For Auction 91, such reports must be filed with the Chief of
the Auctions and Spectrum Access Division, Wireless Telecommunications
Bureau, by the most expeditious means available. Specifically, any such
report must be submitted by e-mail to auction91@fcc.gov or delivered to
the following address: Margaret W. Wiener, Chief, Auctions and Spectrum
Access Division, Wireless Telecommunications Bureau, Federal
Communications Commission, 445 12th Street, SW., Room 6423, Washington,
DC 20554.
23. A party seeking to report such a prohibited communication
should consider submitting its report with a request that the report or
portions of the submission be withheld from public inspection pursuant
to 47 CFR 0.459. Such parties also are encouraged to coordinate with
the Auctions and Spectrum Access Division staff if they have any
questions about the procedures for submitting such reports. The Auction
91 Procedures Public Notice provides additional guidance on procedures
for submitting application-related information.
g. Winning Bidders Must Disclose Terms of Agreements
24. Applicants that are winning bidders will be required to
disclose in their long-form applications the specific terms,
conditions, and parties involved in any bidding consortia, joint
venture, partnership, or agreement, understanding, or other arrangement
entered into relating to the competitive bidding process, including any
agreement relating to the post-auction market structure. Applicants
must be aware that failure to comply with the Commission's rules can
result in enforcement action.
h. Additional Information Concerning Rule Prohibiting Certain
Communications
25. A summary listing of documents issued by the Commission and the
Bureaus addressing the application of 47 CFR 1.2105(c) may be found in
Attachment D of the Auction 91 Procedures Public Notice.
i. Antitrust Laws
26. Applicants are also reminded that, regardless of compliance
with the Commission's rules, they remain subject to the antitrust laws,
which are designed to prevent anticompetitive behavior in the
marketplace. Compliance with the disclosure requirements of 47 CFR
1.2105(c) will not insulate a party from enforcement of the antitrust
laws. For instance, a violation of the antitrust laws could arise out
of actions taking place well before any party submitted a short-form
application. If an applicant is found to have violated the antitrust
laws or the Commission's rules in connection with its participation in
the competitive bidding process, it may be subject to forfeiture of its
upfront payment, down payment, or full bid amount and may be prohibited
from participating in future auctions, among other sanctions. See 47
CFR 1.2109(d).
ii. Due Diligence
27. Potential applicants are reminded that they are solely
responsible for investigating and evaluating all technical and
marketplace factors that may have a bearing on the value of the
construction permits for broadcast facilities they are seeking in this
auction. Bidders are responsible for assuring themselves that, if they
win a construction permit, they will be able to build and operate
facilities in accordance with the Commission's rules. The FCC makes no
representations or warranties about the use of this spectrum for
particular services. Applicants should be aware that an FCC auction
represents an
[[Page 3896]]
opportunity to become an FCC construction permittee in a broadcast
service, subject to certain conditions and regulations. An FCC auction
does not constitute an endorsement by the FCC of any particular
service, technology, or product, nor does an FCC construction permit or
license constitute a guarantee of business success.
28. Applicants should perform their individual due diligence before
proceeding, as they would with any new business venture. In particular,
potential applicants are strongly encouraged to review all underlying
Commission orders, such as the specific report and order amending the
FM Table of Allotments and allotting the FM channel(s) on which they
plan to bid. Reports and orders adopted in FM allotment rulemaking
proceedings often include restrictions, including site restrictions or
expense reimbursement requirements. Additionally, potential bidders
should perform technical analyses or refresh their previous analyses to
assure themselves that, should they be a winning bidder for any Auction
91 construction permit, they will be able to build and operate
facilities that will fully comply with the Commission's technical and
legal requirements. Applicants are strongly encouraged to inspect any
prospective transmitter sites located in, or near, the service area for
which they plan to bid, confirm the availability of such sites, and
also to familiarize themselves with the Commission's rules regarding
the National Environmental Policy Act at 47 CFR chapter 1, part 1,
subpart I.
29. Applicants are strongly encouraged to conduct their own
research prior to Auction 91 in order to determine the existence of any
pending administrative or judicial proceedings, including pending
allocation rulemaking proceedings that might affect their decision to
participate in the auction. Participants in Auction 91 are strongly
encouraged to continue such research throughout the auction. The due
diligence considerations mentioned in the Auction 91 Procedures Public
Notice do not comprise an exhaustive list of steps that should be
undertaken prior to participating in this auction. As always, the
burden is on the potential bidder to determine how much research to
undertake, depending upon specific facts and circumstances.
30. Applicants should also be aware that certain pending and future
proceedings before the Commission--including applications, applications
for modification, petitions for rulemaking, requests for special
temporary authority, waiver requests, petitions to deny, petitions for
reconsideration, informal objections, and applications for review--may
relate to particular applicants, incumbent permittees, incumbent
licensees, or the construction permits available in Auction 91. In
addition, pending and future judicial proceedings may relate to
particular applicants, incumbent permittees, incumbent licensees, or
the construction permits available in Auction 91. Prospective
applicants are responsible for assessing the likelihood of the various
possible outcomes and for considering their potential impact on
construction permits available in this auction.
31. Applicants should perform due diligence to identify and
consider all proceedings that may affect the construction permits being
auctioned and that could have an impact on the availability of spectrum
for Auction 91. In addition, although the Commission may continue to
act on various pending applications, informal objections, petitions,
and other requests for Commission relief, some of these matters may not
be resolved by the beginning of bidding in the auction. Applicants are
solely responsible for identifying associated risks and for
investigating and evaluating the degree to which such matters may
affect their ability to bid on, otherwise acquire, or make use of the
construction permits available in Auction 91.
32. The Commission makes no representations or guarantees regarding
the accuracy or completeness of information in its databases or any
third party databases, including for example, court docketing systems.
To the extent the Commission's databases may not include all
information deemed necessary or desirable by an applicant, applicants
may obtain or verify such information from independent sources or
assume the risk of any incompleteness or inaccuracy in said databases.
Furthermore, the Commission makes no representations or guarantees
regarding the accuracy or completeness of information that has been
provided by incumbent licensees and incorporated into its databases.
33. A commenter contended that the Bureaus should provide
additional information in the Auction 91 public notices about the
history of the allotments being offered and suggests that the Media
Bureau's Consolidated Data Base System (CDBS) should contain
information as to whether a permit was previously offered at auction,
as well as details concerning cancellation of a permit due to a failure
to construct or licensee default. The Bureaus noted that Attachment A
to the Auction 91 Procedures Public Notice indicates whether a permit
was previously offered at auction. Further, the Commission makes
various databases and other sources of information, including CDBS, the
auctions databases and copies of Commission decisions, available to the
public without charge. Potential bidders may research the background of
allotments using this information as well as other sources, just as
this commenter has done. The Bureaus rejected this commenter's claim
that absent the affirmative disclosure of such background information,
the Commission fails to meet a due diligence obligation. It is the
responsibility of each potential bidder to undertake research to ensure
that any permits won in this auction will be suitable for its business
plans and needs. Each potential bidder must undertake its own
assessment of the relevance and importance of information gathered as
part of its due diligence efforts.
iii. Use of Integrated Spectrum Auction System
34. The Commission will make available a browser-based bidding
system to allow bidders to participate in Auction 91 over the Internet
using the Commission's Integrated Spectrum Auction System (ISAS or FCC
Auction System). The Commission makes no warranty whatsoever with
respect to the FCC Auction System. In no event shall the Commission, or
any of its officers, employees, or agents, be liable for any damages
whatsoever (including, but not limited to, loss of business profits,
business interruption, loss of business information, or any other loss)
arising out of or relating to the existence, furnishing, functioning,
or use of the FCC Auction System that is accessible to qualified
bidders in connection with this auction. Moreover, no obligation or
liability will arise out of the Commission's technical, programming, or
other advice or service provided in connection with the FCC Auction
System.
iv. Environmental Review Requirements
35. Permittees or licensees must comply with the Commission's rules
regarding implementation of the National Environmental Policy Act and
other Federal environmental statutes. The construction of a broadcast
facility is a Federal action and the permittee or licensee must comply
with the Commission's environmental rules for each such facility.
Additional information about such Commission requirements is provided
in the Auction 91 Procedures Public Notice.
[[Page 3897]]
C. Auction Specifics
i. Auction Start Date
36. Bidding in Auction 91 has been rescheduled and will begin on
Wednesday, April 27, 2011. The Bureaus have postponed the originally
scheduled start of the auction for reasons of administrative and bidder
convenience. Although one commenter requested a later starting date,
the Bureaus concluded that rescheduling the starting date for Auction
91 from March 29, 2011 to April 27, 2011, will help ensure optimum
participation and an efficient auction process, as well as provide
prospective applicants with additional time for planning and
preparation.
37. The initial schedule for bidding rounds will be announced by
public notice at least one week before the start of the auction.
Moreover, unless otherwise announced, bidding on all construction
permits will be conducted on each business day until bidding has
stopped on all construction permits.
ii. Bidding Methodology
38. The bidding methodology for Auction 91 will be simultaneous
multiple round bidding. The Commission will conduct this auction over
the Internet using the FCC Auction System, and telephonic bidding will
be available as well. Qualified bidders are permitted to bid
electronically via the Internet or by telephone. All telephone calls
are recorded.
iii. Pre-Auction Dates and Deadlines
39. The following dates and deadlines apply:
Auction Tutorial Available (via Internet)--January 31, 2011
Short-Form Application (FCC Form 175) Filing Window Opens--January 31,
2011; 12 noon ET
Short-Form Application (FCC Form 175) Filing Window Deadline--February
10, 2011; prior to 6 p.m. ET
Upfront Payments (via wire transfer)--March 21, 2011; 6 p.m. ET
Mock Auction--April 25, 2011
Auction Begins--April 27, 2011
II. Short-Form Application (FCC Form 175) Requirements
A. General Information Regarding Short-Form Applications
40. An application to participate in an FCC auction, referred to as
a short-form application or FCC Form 175, provides information used in
determining whether the applicant is legally, technically, and
financially qualified to participate in Commission auctions for
licenses or permits. The short-form application is the first part of
the Commission's two-phased auction application process. In the first
phase of this process, parties desiring to participate in the auction
must file streamlined, short-form applications in which they certify
under penalty of perjury as to their qualifications. Each applicant
must take seriously its duties and responsibilities and carefully
determine before filing an application that the applicant has the
legal, technical and financial resources to participate in Auction 91,
as well as construct and operate an FM station if the auction applicant
becomes a licensee as a result of its participation in this auction.
Eligibility to participate in bidding is based on the applicants'
short-form applications and certifications as well as their upfront
payments. In the second phase of the process, winning bidders must file
more comprehensive long-form applications.
41. Entities and individuals seeking construction permits available
in Auction 91 must file a short-form application electronically via the
FCC Auction System prior to 6 p.m. ET on February 10, 2011, following
the procedures prescribed in Attachment B to the Auction 91 Procedures
Public Notice. If an applicant claims eligibility for a bidding credit,
the information provided in its FCC Form 175 will be used in
determining whether the applicant is eligible for the claimed bidding
credit. Beginning on the application filing deadline, applicants filing
a short-form application are subject to 47 CFR 1.2105(c) and 73.5002.
42. Applicants bear full responsibility for submitting accurate,
complete and timely short-form applications. All applicants must
certify on their short-form applications under penalty of perjury that
they are legally, technically, financially and otherwise qualified to
hold a license. Applicants should read carefully the instructions set
forth in Attachment B to the Auction 91 Procedures Public Notice and
should consult the Commission's rules to ensure that all information
and materials required in that public notice and under the Commission's
rules is included within their short-form applications.
43. An individual or entity may not submit more than one short-form
application for a single auction. If a party submits multiple short-
form applications, only one application may be accepted for filing.
44. Applicants also should note that submission of a short-form
application (and any amendments thereto) constitutes a representation
by the certifying official that he or she is an authorized
representative of the applicant, that he or she has read the form's
instructions and certifications, and that the contents of the
application, its certifications, and any attachments are true and
correct. Applicants are not permitted to make major modifications to
their applications; such impermissible changes include a change of the
certifying official to the application. Submission of a false
certification to the Commission may result in penalties, including
monetary forfeitures, license forfeitures, ineligibility to participate
in future auctions, and/or criminal prosecution.
B. Permit Selection
45. An applicant must select the construction permits on which it
wants to bid from the Eligible Permits list on its short-form
application. To assist applicants in identifying construction permits
of interest that will be available in Auction 91, the FCC Auction
System includes a filtering mechanism that allows an applicant to
filter the Eligible Permits list. The applicant will make selections
for one or more of the filter criteria and the system will produce a
list of construction permits satisfying the specified criteria. The
applicant may select all the construction permits in the customized
list or select individual construction permits from the list.
Applicants also will be able to select construction permits from one
customized list and then create additional customized lists to select
additional construction permits.
46. Applicants interested in participating in Auction 91 must have
selected construction permit(s) available in this auction by the short-
form application filing deadline. Applicants must review and verify
their construction permit selections before the deadline for submitting
short-form applications. Applicants will not be able to change their
construction permit selections after the short-form application filing
deadline. The FCC Auction System will not accept bids from an applicant
on construction permits that the applicant has not selected on its
short-form application.
C. New Entrant Bidding Credit
47. Under the tiered New Entrant Bidding Credit for broadcast
auction applicants with no, or very few, other media interests, the
interests of the applicant, and of any individuals or entities with an
attributable interest in the applicant, in other media of mass
communications are considered when determining an applicant's
eligibility for the New Entrant Bidding Credit. In Auction 91, the
bidder's attributable interests are determined as of the short-
[[Page 3898]]
form application filing deadline. Thus, the applicant's maximum new
entrant bidding credit eligibility will be determined as of the short-
form application filing deadline. Applicants intending to divest a
media interest or make any other ownership changes, such as resignation
of positional interests, in order to avoid attribution for purposes of
qualifying for the New Entrant Bidding Credit must have consummated
such divestment transactions or have completed such ownership changes
by no later than the short-form filing deadline. Prospective bidders
are reminded, however, that events occurring after the short-form
filing deadline, such as the acquisition of attributable interests in
media of mass communications, may cause diminishment or loss of the
bidding credit, and must be reported immediately.
48. Under traditional broadcast attribution rules, those entities
or individuals with an attributable interest in a bidder include: (1)
All officers and directors of a corporate bidder; (2) Any owner of 5
percent or more of the voting stock of a corporate bidder; (3) All
partners and limited partners of a partnership bidder, unless the
limited partners are sufficiently insulated; and (4) All members of a
limited liability company, unless sufficiently insulated.
49. In cases where an applicant's spouse or close family member
holds other media interests, such interests are not automatically
attributable to the bidder. The Commission decides attribution issues
in this context based on certain factors traditionally considered
relevant. Applicants should note that the mass media attribution rules
were revised in 1999.
50. The Commission further refined the eligibility standards for
the New Entrant Bidding Credit, judging it appropriate to attribute the
media interests held by very substantial investors in, or creditors of,
an applicant claiming new entrant status. Specifically, the
attributable mass media interests held by an individual or entity with
an equity and/or debt interest in an applicant shall be attributed to
that bidder for purposes of determining its eligibility for the New
Entrant Bidding Credit, if the equity and debt interests, in the
aggregate, exceed 33 percent of the total asset value of the applicant,
even if such an interest is non-voting.
51. The Commission relaxed the equity/debt plus (EDP) attribution
standard, to allow for higher investment opportunities in entities
meeting the definition of eligible entities. An eligible entity is
defined in Note 2(i) of 47 CFR 73.3555. The Commission allows the
holder of an equity or debt interest in the applicant to exceed the
above-noted 33 percent threshold without triggering attribution
provided (1) the combined equity and debt in the eligible entity is
less than 50 percent; or (2) the total debt in the eligible entity does
not exceed 80 percent of the asset value, and the interest holder does
not hold any equity interest, option, or promise to acquire an equity
interest in the eligible entity or any related entity.
52. Generally, media interests will be attributable for purposes of
the New Entrant Bidding Credit to the same extent that such other media
interests are considered attributable for purposes of the broadcast
multiple ownership rules. However, attributable interests held by a
winning bidder in existing low power television, television translator
or FM translator facilities will not be counted among the bidder's
other mass media interests in determining its eligibility for a New
Entrant Bidding Credit. Any bidder asserting new entrant bidding status
must have de facto as well as de jure control of the entity claiming
the bidding credit. See 47 CFR 73.5007.
D. Application Requirements
53. In addition to the ownership information required pursuant to
47 CFR 1.2112, applicants seeking a New Entrant Bidding Credit are
required to establish on their short-form applications that they
satisfy the eligibility requirements to qualify for the bidding credit.
In those cases, a certification under penalty of perjury must be
provided in completing the applicant's short-form application. An
applicant claiming that it qualifies for a 35 percent New Entrant
Bidding Credit must certify that neither it nor any of its attributable
interest holders have any attributable interests in any other media of
mass communications. An applicant claiming that it qualifies for a 25
percent New Entrant Bidding Credit must certify that neither it nor any
of its attributable interest holders has any attributable interests in
more than three media of mass communications, and must identify and
describe such media of mass communications. A medium of mass
communications is defined in 47 CFR 73.5008(b). Full service
noncommercial educational stations, on both reserved and nonreserved
channels, are included among media of mass communications as defined in
47 CFR 73.5008(b).
E. Bidding Credits
54. Applicants that qualify for the New Entrant Bidding Credit, as
specified in the applicable rule, are eligible for a bidding credit
that represents the amount by which a bidder's winning bid is
discounted. The size of a New Entrant Bidding Credit depends on the
number of ownership interests in other media of mass communications
that are attributable to the bidder-entity and its attributable
interest-holders. A 35 percent bidding credit will be given to a
winning bidder if it, and/or any individual or entity with an
attributable interest in the winning bidder, has no attributable
interest in any other media of mass communications, as defined in 47
CFR 73.5008. A 25 percent bidding credit will be given to a winning
bidder if it, and/or any individual or entity with an attributable
interest in the winning bidder, has an attributable interest in no more
than three mass media facilities, as defined in 47 CFR 73.5008. No
bidding credit will be given if any of the commonly owned mass media
facilities serve the same area as the broadcast permit proposed in the
auction, as defined in 47 CFR 73.5007(b), or if the winning bidder,
and/or any individual or entity with an attributable interest in the
winning bidder, has attributable interests in more than three mass
media facilities. For purposes of determining whether a broadcast
permit identified for bidding in the auction is in the same area as an
applicant's existing mass media facilities, the coverage area of the
to-be-auctioned facility is calculated using maximum class facilities
at the allotment reference coordinates, NOT applicant-specified
preferred site coordinates.
55. Bidding credits are not cumulative; qualifying applicants
receive either the 25 percent or the 35 percent bidding credit, but not
both. Attributable interests are defined in 47 CFR 73.3555 and note 2
of that section. Applicants should note that unjust enrichment
provisions apply to a winning bidder that utilizes a bidding credit and
subsequently seeks to assign or transfer control of its license or
construction permit to an entity not qualifying for the same level of
bidding credit.
F. Disclosure of Bidding Arrangements
56. Applicants will be required to identify in their short-form
application all parties with whom they have entered into any
agreements, arrangements, or understandings of any kind relating to the
construction permits being auctioned, including any agreements relating
to post-auction market structure.
[[Page 3899]]
G. Ownership Disclosure Requirements
57. All applicants to participate in a broadcast auction must
comply with the uniform Part 1 ownership disclosure standards and
provide information required by 47 CFR 1.2105 and 1.2112. Specifically,
in completing the short-form application, applicants will be required
to fully disclose information on the real party- or parties-in-interest
and ownership structure of the applicant, including both direct and
indirect ownership interests of 10 percent or more. The ownership
disclosure standards for the short-form application are prescribed in
47 CFR 1.2105 and 1.2112. Each applicant is responsible for information
submitted in its short-form application being complete and accurate.
58. Each applicant is responsible for ensuring that the information
submitted in its short-form application for Auction 91 is complete and
accurate. In certain circumstances, an applicant's most current
ownership information on file with the Commission, if in an electronic
format compatible with the short-form application (FCC Form 175) (such
as information submitted in an on-line FCC Form 602 or in an FCC Form
175 filed for a previous auction using ISAS) will automatically be
entered into the applicant's short-form application. Applicants should
carefully review any information automatically entered to confirm that
it is complete and accurate as of the deadline for filing the short-
form application.
H. Provisions Regarding Former and Current Defaulters
59. Current defaulters or delinquents are not eligible to
participate in Auction 91, but former defaulters or delinquents can
participate so long as they are otherwise qualified and make upfront
payments that are 50 percent more than the normal upfront payment
amounts. An applicant is considered a current defaulter or a current
delinquent when it, any of its affiliates, any of its controlling
interests, or any of the affiliates of its controlling interests, is in
default on any payment for any Commission construction permit or
license (including a down payment) or is delinquent on any non-tax debt
owed to any Federal agency as of the filing deadline for short-form
applications. An applicant is considered a former defaulter or a former
delinquent when it, any of its affiliates, any of its controlling
interests, or any of the affiliates of its controlling interests, have
defaulted on any Commission construction permit or license or been
delinquent on any non-tax debt owed to any Federal agency, but have
since remedied all such defaults and cured all of the outstanding non-
tax delinquencies.
60. On the short-form application, an applicant must certify under
penalty of perjury that it, its affiliates, its controlling interests,
and the affiliates of its controlling interests, as defined by 47 CFR
1.2110, are not in default on any payment for a Commission construction
permit or license (including down payments) and that it is not
delinquent on any non-tax debt owed to any Federal agency. Each
applicant must also state under penalty of perjury whether it, its
affiliates, its controlling interests, and the affiliates of its
controlling interests, have ever been in default on any Commission
construction permit or license or have ever been delinquent on any non-
tax debt owed to any Federal agency. Prospective applicants are
reminded that submission of a false certification to the Commission is
a serious matter that may result in severe penalties, including
monetary forfeitures, license revocations, exclusion from participation
in future auctions, and/or criminal prosecution. These statements and
certifications are prerequisites to submitting an application to
participate in an FCC auction.
61. The Auction 91 Procedures Public Notice also reviews the
Bureaus' previous guidance on default and delinquency disclosure
requirements in the context of the short-form application process.
62. The Commission considers outstanding debts owed to the United
States Government, in any amount, to be a serious matter. The
Commission adopted rules, including a provision referred to as the red
light rule, that implement the Commission's obligations under the Debt
Collection Improvement Act of 1996, which governs the collection of
claims owed to the United States. Under the red light rule, the
Commission will not process applications and other requests for
benefits filed by parties that have outstanding debts owed to the
Commission. In the same rulemaking order, the Commission explicitly
declared, however, that the Commission's competitive bidding rules are
not affected by the red light rule. As a consequence, the Commission's
adoption of the red light rule does not alter the applicability of any
of the Commission's competitive bidding rules, including the provisions
and certifications of 47 CFR 1.2105 and 1.2106, with regard to current
and former defaults or delinquencies.
63. Applicants are reminded, however, that the Commission's Red
Light Display System, which provides information regarding debts
currently owed to the Commission, may not be determinative of an
auction applicant's ability to comply with the default and delinquency
disclosure requirements of 47 CFR 1.2105. Thus, while the red light
rule ultimately may prevent the processing of long-form applications by
auction winners, an auction applicant's lack of current red light
status is not necessarily determinative of its eligibility to
participate in an auction or of its upfront payment obligation.
64. Moreover, prospective applicants in Auction 91 should note that
any long-form applications filed after the close of bidding will be
reviewed for compliance with the Commission's red light rule, and such
review may result in the dismissal of a winning bidder's long-form
application. Applicants that have their long-form applications
dismissed will be deemed to have defaulted and will be subject to the
default payments under 47 CFR 1.2104(g) and 1.2109(c).
I. Optional Applicant Status Identification
65. Applicants owned by members of minority groups and/or women, as
defined in 47 CFR 1.2110(c)(3), and rural telephone companies, as
defined in 47 CFR 1.2110(c)(4), may identify themselves regarding this
status in filling out their short-form applications. This applicant
status information is collected for statistical purposes only and
assists the Commission in monitoring the participation of designated
entities in its auctions.
J. Noncommercial Educational Status Election
66. In the NCE Second Report and Order, 68 FR 26220, May 15, 2003,
the Commission held that applications for noncommercial educational
(NCE) FM stations on nonreserved spectrum, filed during an FM auction
filing window, will be returned as unacceptable for filing if mutually
exclusive with any application for a commercial station. If an FCC Form
175 filed during the Auction 91 filing window identifying the
application's proposed station as noncommercial educational is mutually
exclusive with any application filed during that window for a
commercial station, the former will be returned as unacceptable for
filing. For this reason, each prospective applicant in this auction
should consider carefully if the applicant wishes to propose operation
for any NCE FM station acquired in this auction. This NCE election
cannot be
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reversed after the initial application filing deadline.
K. Minor Modifications to Short-Form Applications
67. After the deadline for filing initial applications, an Auction
91 applicant is permitted to make only minor changes to its
application. Permissible minor changes include, among other things,
deletion and addition of authorized bidders (to a maximum of three) and
revision of addresses and telephone numbers of the applicants and their
contact persons. An applicant is not permitted to make a major
modification to its application (e.g., change of construction permit
selection, change control of the applicant, change the certifying
official, claim eligibility for a higher percentage of bidding credit,
or change the identification of the application's proposed facilities
as noncommercial educational) after the initial application filing
deadline. Thus, any change in control of an applicant, resulting from a
merger for example, will be considered a major modification to the
applicant's application, which will consequently be dismissed. The
Bureaus reiterated that, even if an applicant's short-form application
is dismissed, the application will remain subject to 47 CFR 1.2105(c)'s
prohibition on certain communications until the down payment deadline,
which will be established after the auction closes.
68. If an applicant wishes to make permissible minor changes to its
short-form application, such changes should be made electronically to
its short-form application using the FCC Auction System whenever
possible. Applicants are reminded to click on the SUBMIT button in the
FCC Auction System for the change to be submitted and considered by the
Commission. After the revised application has been submitted, a
confirmation page will be displayed that states the submission time,
submission date, and a unique file number. The Bureaus advise
applicants to print and retain a copy of the confirmation page.
69. An applicant cannot use the FCC Auction System outside of the
initial and resubmission filing windows to make changes to its short-
form application other than administrative changes (e.g. changing
certain contact information or the name of an authorized bidder). If
these or other permissible minor changes need to be made outside of
these windows, the applicant must submit a letter briefly summarizing
the changes and subsequently update its short-form application in ISAS
once the system is available. Moreover, after the filing window has
closed, ISAS will not permit applicants to make certain changes, such
as the applicant's legal classification and the identification of the
application's proposed facilities as noncommercial educational.
70. Any letter describing changes to an applicant's short-form
application should be submitted by e-mail to auction91@fcc.gov. The e-
mail summarizing the changes must include a subject or caption
referring to Auction 91 and the name of the applicant.
71. According to 47 CFR 1.917, any application amendment and
related statements of fact must be certified by (1) the applicant, if
the applicant is an individual; (2) one of the partners if the
applicant is a partnership; (3) an officer, director, or duly
authorized employee, if the applicant is a corporation; (4) a member
who is an officer, if the applicant is an unincorporated association;
(5) the trustee, if the applicant is an amateur radio service club; or
(6) a duly elected or appointed official who is authorized to make such
certifications under the laws of the applicable jurisdiction, if the
applicant is a governmental entity.
72. Applicants must not submit application-specific material
through the Commission's Electronic Comment Filing System, which was
used for submitting comments regarding Auction 91.
L. Maintaining Current Information in Short-Form Applications
73. 47 CFR 1.65 and 1.2105(b) require an applicant to maintain the
accuracy and completeness of information furnished in its pending
application and in competitive bidding proceedings to furnish
additional or corrected information to the Commission within five days
of a significant occurrence, or to amend a short form application no
more than five days after the applicant becomes aware of the need for
the amendment. Changes that cause a loss of or reduction in the
percentage of bidding credit specified on the originally submitted
application must be reported immediately, and no later than five
business days after the change occurs. For example, if ownership
changes result in the attribution of new interest holders that affect
the applicant's qualifications for a new entrant bidding credit, such
information must be clearly stated in the bidder's amendment. Events
occurring after the application filing deadline, such as the
acquisition of attributable interests in media of mass communications,
also may cause diminishment or loss of the bidding credit, and must be
reported immediately.
74. If an amendment reporting substantial changes is a major
amendment, as defined by 47 CFR 1.2105, the major amendment will not be
accepted and may result in the dismissal of the application. After the
application filing deadline, applicants may make only minor changes to
their applications.
75. Applicants must click on the Submit button in the FCC Auction
System for the changes to be submitted and considered by the
Commission. If 47 CFR 1.65 submissions are needed after the initial
filing and resubmission windows close, applicants must submit a letter,
briefly summarizing the changes, by e-mail to auction91@fcc.gov. The e-
mail summarizing the changes must include a subject or caption
referring to Auction 91 and the name of the applicant.
III. Pre-Auction Procedures
A. Online Auction Tutorial--Available January 31, 2011
76. On Monday, January 31, 2011, the Commission will post an
educational auction tutorial on the Auction 91 web page for prospective
bidders to familiarize themselves with the auction process. This online
tutorial will provide information about pre-auction procedures,
completing short-form applications, auction conduct, the FCC Auction
Bidding System, auction rules, and broadcast services rules. The
tutorial will also provide an avenue to ask FCC staff questions about
the auction, auction procedures, filing requirements, and other matters
related to this auction. The online tutorial will be accessible using a
web browser with Adobe Flash Player from the FCC's Auction 91 Web page
at https://wireless.fcc.gov/auctions/91/ through an Auction Tutorial
link.
B. Short-Form Applications--Due Prior to 6:00 p.m. ET on February 10,
2011
77. In order to be eligible to bid in this auction, applicants must
follow the procedures set forth in Attachment B to the Auction 91
Procedures Public Notice to submit a short-form application (FCC Form
175) electronically via the FCC Auction System. This short-form
application must be submitted through the FCC Auction System prior to 6
p.m. ET on February 10, 2011. Late applications will not be accepted.
Applicants are strongly encouraged to file early and are responsible
for allowing adequate time for filing their applications. An applicant
always must click on the SUBMIT button on the
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certify and submit screen to successfully submit its FCC Form 175 and
any modifications; otherwise the application or changes to the
application will not be received or reviewed. There is no application
fee required when filing an FCC Form 175, but an applicant must submit
a timely upfront payment to be eligible to bid. Any applicant that
submits a short-form application but fails to timely submit an upfront
payment will retain its status as an applicant in Auction 91 and will
remain subject to the Commission's rules prohibiting certain
communications, 47 CFR 1.2105(c) and 73.5002(d), but, having purchased
no bidding eligibility, will be not be eligible to bid.
C. Application Processing and Minor Corrections
78. After the deadline for filing FCC Form 175 applications, the
Commission will process all timely submitted applications to determine
which are complete, and subsequently will issue a public notice
identifying (1) those applications that are complete; (2) those
applications that are rejected; and (3) those applications that are
incomplete because of minor defects that may be corrected. The public
notice will include the deadline for resubmitting corrected
applications.
79. Applications specifying the same FM station construction permit
are considered mutually exclusive. Non-mutually exclusive applications
will be listed in a subsequent public notice to be released by the
Bureaus. Such applications will not proceed to auction, but will
proceed in accordance with instructions set forth in that public
notice. All mutually exclusive applications will be considered under
the relevant procedures for conflict resolution. Mutually exclusive
applications proposing commercial stations will proceed to auction.
80. Commission staff will communicate only with an applicant's
contact person or certifying official, as designated on the applicant's
short-form application, unless the applicant's certifying official or
contact person notifies the Commission in writing that applicant's
counsel or other representative is authorized to speak on its behalf.
Authorizations may be sent by e-mail to auction91@fcc.gov.
D. Upfront Payments--Due March 21, 2011
81. In order to be eligible to bid in this auction, applicants must
submit an upfront payment accompanied by an FCC Remittance Advice Form
(FCC Form 159). After completing its short-form application, an
applicant will have access to an electronic version of the FCC Form 159
that can be printed and sent by fax to the Commission's auction payment
lockbox bank, the U.S. Bank in St. Louis, Missouri. All upfront
payments must be made as instructed in the Auction 91 Procedures Public
Notice and must be received in the proper account at U.S. Bank before 6
p.m. ET on March 21, 2011. All payments must be made in U.S. dollars.
All payments must be made by wire transfer. An applicant must initiate
the wire transfer through its bank, authorizing the bank to wire funds
from the applicant's account to the U.S. Bank in St. Louis, Missouri.
Upfront payments for Auction 91 go to a lockbox number different from
the lockboxes used in previous FCC auctions. Failure to deliver a
sufficient upfront payment, as instructed, by the deadline on March 21,
2011 will result in dismissal of the short-form application and
disqualification from participation in the auction.
i. Making Upfront Payments by Wire Transfer
82. Wire transfer payments must be received before 6 p.m. ET on
March 21, 2011. No other payment method is acceptable. The Commission
will not accept checks, credit cards, or automated clearing house
payments.
83. At least one hour before placing the order for the wire
transfer (but on the same business day), applicants must fax a
completed FCC Form 159 (Revised 2/03) to U.S. Bank at (314) 418-4232.
On the fax cover sheet, applicants must write Wire Transfer--Auction
Payment for Auction 91. In order to meet the Commission's upfront
payment deadline, an applicant's payment must be credited to the
Commission's account for Auction 91 before the deadline.
84. Each applicant is responsible for ensuring timely submission of
its upfront payment and for timely filing of an accurate and complete
FCC Form 159. To avoid untimely payments, an applicant should
coordinate with its financial institution well ahead of the due date
regarding its wire transfer, including a discussion of bank closing
schedules, and allow sufficient time for the transfer to be initiated
and completed prior to the deadline. The Commission repeatedly has
cautioned auction participants about the importance of planning ahead
to prepare for unforeseen last-minute difficulties in making payments
by wire transfer. Each applicant also is responsible for obtaining
confirmation from its financial institution that its wire transfer to
U.S. Bank was successful and from Commission staff that the Commission
has timely received the applicant's upfront payment and deposited it
into the proper account.
ii. FCC Form 159
85. A completed FCC Form 159 (Revised 2/03) must be faxed to U.S.
Bank to accompany each upfront payment. Proper completion of FCC Form
159 is critical to ensuring correct crediting of upfront payments.
Detailed instructions for completion of FCC Form 159