Accessible Emergency Information, and Apparatus Requirements for Emergency Information and Video Description: Implementation of the Twenty-First Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010, 70970-70987 [2012-28716]
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 229 / Wednesday, November 28, 2012 / Proposed Rules
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 79
[MB Docket No. 12–107; FCC 12–142]
Accessible Emergency Information,
and Apparatus Requirements for
Emergency Information and Video
Description: Implementation of the
Twenty-First Century Communications
and Video Accessibility Act of 2010
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
In this document, the
Commission proposes rules to
implement provisions of the TwentyFirst Century Communications and
Video Accessibility Act of 2010
(‘‘CVAA’’) that mandate regulations to
ensure that emergency information is
accessible to individuals who are blind
and visually disabled and that television
apparatus are able to make available
video description and accessible
emergency information. The
Commission seeks comment on rules
that would apply to the distributors,
providers, and owners of television
video programming, as well as the
manufacturers of devices that display
such programming.
DATES: Comments are due on or before
December 18, 2012; reply comments are
due on or before December 28, 2012.
Written comments on the Paperwork
Reduction Act proposed information
collection requirements must be
submitted by the public, Office of
Management and Budget (OMB), and
other interested parties on or before
January 28, 2013.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by MB Docket No. 12–107, by
any of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Federal Communications
Commission’s Web Site: https://
fjallfoss.fcc.gov/ecfs2/. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Mail: Filings can be sent by hand or
messenger delivery, by commercial
overnight courier, or by first-class or
overnight U.S. Postal Service mail. All
filings must be addressed to the
Commission’s Secretary, Office of the
Secretary, Federal Communications
Commission.
• People with Disabilities: Contact the
FCC to request reasonable
accommodations (accessible format
documents, sign language interpreters,
CART, etc.) by email: FCC504@fcc.gov
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or phone: (202) 418–0530 or TTY: (202)
418–0432.
In addition to filing comments with
the Secretary, a copy of any comments
on the Paperwork Reduction Act
proposed information collection
requirements contained herein should
be submitted to the Federal
Communications Commission via email
to PRA@fcc.gov and to Nicholas A.
Fraser, Office of Management and
Budget, via email to
Nicholas_A._Fraser@omb.eop.gov or via
fax at (202) 395–5167. For detailed
instructions for submitting comments
and additional information on the
rulemaking process, see the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
this document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
additional information on this
proceeding, contact Diana Sokolow,
Diana.Sokolow@fcc.gov, or Maria
Mullarkey, Maria.Mullarkey@fcc.gov, of
the Policy Division, Media Bureau, (202)
418–2120. For additional information
concerning the Paperwork Reduction
Act information collection requirements
contained in this document, send an
email to PRA@fcc.gov or contact Cathy
Williams at (202) 418–2918.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a
summary of the Commission’s Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking, FCC 12–142,
adopted on November 16, 2012, and
released on November 19, 2012. The full
text is available for public inspection
and copying during regular business
hours in the FCC Reference Center,
Federal Communications Commission,
445 12th Street SW., Room CY–A257,
Washington, DC 20554. This document
will also be available via ECFS at
https://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/ecfs/. Documents
will be available electronically in ASCII,
Microsoft Word, and/or Adobe Acrobat.
The complete text may be purchased
from the Commission’s copy contractor,
445 12th Street SW., Room CY–B402,
Washington, DC 20554. Alternative
formats are available for people with
disabilities (Braille, large print,
electronic files, audio format), by
sending an email to fcc504@fcc.gov or
calling the Commission’s Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau at (202)
418–0530 (voice), (202) 418–0432
(TTY).
This document contains proposed
information collection requirements.
The Commission, as part of its
continuing effort to reduce paperwork
burdens, invites the general public and
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) to comment on the information
collection requirements contained in
this document, as required by the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995,
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Public Law 104–13. Public and agency
comments are due January 28, 2013.
Comments should address: (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 estimates; (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.
In addition, pursuant to the Small
Business Paperwork Relief Act of 2002,
Public Law 107–198, see 44 U.S.C.
3506(c)(4), we seek specific comment on
how we might further reduce the
information collection burden for small
business concerns with fewer than 25
employees.
To view or obtain a copy of this
information collection request (ICR)
submitted to OMB: (1) Go to this OMB/
GSA Web page: https://www.reginfo.gov/
public/do/PRAMain, (2) look for the
section of the Web page called
‘‘Currently Under Review,’’ (3) click on
the downward-pointing arrow in the
‘‘Select Agency’’ box below the
‘‘Currently Under Review’’ heading, (4)
select ‘‘Federal Communications
Commission’’ from the list of agencies
presented in the ‘‘Select Agency’’ box,
(5) click the ‘‘Submit’’ button to the
right of the ‘‘Select Agency’’ box, and (6)
when the list of FCC ICRs currently
under review appears, look for the OMB
control number of this ICR as show in
the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section
below (or its title if there is no OMB
control number) and then click on the
ICR Reference Number. A copy of the
FCC submission to OMB will be
displayed.
OMB Control Number: 3060–0967.
Title: Section 79.2, Accessibility of
Programming Providing Emergency
Information; Complaints Alleging
Violations of the Apparatus Emergency
Information and Video Description
Requirements.
Form No.: Not applicable.
Type of Review: Revision of a
currently approved collection.
Respondents: Individuals or
households; businesses or other forprofit entities; not-for-profit institutions;
State, local, or tribal governments.
Number of Respondents and
Responses: 80 respondents; 80
responses.
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 229 / Wednesday, November 28, 2012 / Proposed Rules
Estimated Time per Response: 1–3
hours.
Frequency of Response: On occasion
reporting requirement; Third party
disclosure requirement.
Obligation to Respond: Voluntary.
The statutory authority for this
collection of information is contained in
the Twenty-First Century
Communications and Video
Accessibility Act of 2010, Pub. L. 111–
260, 124 Stat. 2751, and 47 U.S.C. 151,
152(a), 154(i), 154(j), 303, 307, 309, 310,
330(b) and 613.
Total Annual Burden: 93 hours.
Total Annual Costs: $12,600.
Privacy Act Impact Assessment: Yes.
The Privacy Impact Assessment (PIA)
was completed on June 28, 2007. It may
be reviewed at: https://www.fcc.gov/
omd/privacyact/
Privacy_Impact_Assessment.html. The
Commission is in the process of
updating the PIA to incorporate various
revisions made to the SORN.
Nature and Extent of Confidentiality:
Confidentiality is an issue to the extent
that individuals and households
provide personally identifiable
information, which is covered under the
FCC’s system of records notice (SORN),
FCC/CGB–1, ‘‘Informal Complaints and
Inquiries.’’ As required by the Privacy
Act, 5 U.S.C. 552a, the Commission also
published a SORN, FCC/CGB–1
‘‘Informal Complaints and Inquiries,’’ in
the Federal Register on December 15,
2009 (74 FR 66356) which became
effective on January 25, 2010.
Needs and Uses: The Commission is
seeking approval for this proposed
information collection from the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB). On
November 19, 2012, the Commission
released a Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking, MB Docket No. 12–107;
FCC 12–142. This rulemaking proposed
information collection requirements that
support the Commission’s accessible
emergency information and apparatus
rules that would be codified at 47 CFR
79.2, 79.105, and 79.106, as required by
the CVAA.
The proposed information collection
requirements consist of:
Complaints alleging violations of the
emergency information rules.
Pursuant to existing rule 47 CFR 79.2,
consumers may file complaints alleging
violations of the accessible emergency
information requirements. As a result of
the proposed revisions to the existing
rule, we have estimated in increase in
the number of complaints filed annually
pursuant to this rule.
Complaints alleging violations of the
apparatus emergency information and
video description requirements.
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Pursuant to proposals contained in
the NPRM, consumers could file
complaints alleging violations of the
proposed rules containing apparatus
emergency information and video
description requirements, 47 CFR
79.105–79.106. A complaint alleging a
violation of the apparatus rules related
to emergency information and video
description may be transmitted to the
Consumer and Governmental Affairs
Bureau by any reasonable means, such
as the Commission’s online informal
complaint filing system, letter in writing
or Braille, facsimile transmission,
telephone (voice/TRS/TTY), email, or
some other method that would best
accommodate the complainant’s
disability. Given that the population
intended to benefit from the rules
adopted would be blind or visually
impaired, if a complainant calls the
Commission for assistance in preparing
a complaint, Commission staff would
document the complaint in writing for
the consumer and such communication
would be deemed a written complaint.
The NPRM proposes that such
complaints should include certain
information about the complainant and
the alleged violation. The Commission
will forward such complaints, as
appropriate, to the named manufacturer
or provider for its response, as well as
to any other entity that Commission
staff determines may be involved, and
may request additional information
from any relevant parties when, in the
estimation of Commission staff, such
information is needed to investigate the
complaint or adjudicate potential
violations of Commission rules. The
Commission is seeking OMB approval
for the proposed information collection
requirements.
Summary of the Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking
I. Introduction
1. The Federal Communications
Commission (‘‘Commission’’) initiates
this proceeding to implement the
provisions of the Twenty-First Century
Communications and Video
Accessibility Act of 2010 (‘‘CVAA’’)
requiring that emergency information be
made accessible to individuals who are
blind or visually impaired and that
certain equipment be capable of
delivering video description and
emergency information to those
individuals. First, pursuant to section
202 of the CVAA, this Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking (‘‘NPRM’’)
proposes to make televised emergency
information 1 more accessible to
1 ‘‘Emergency information’’ is defined in the
Commission’s rules as ‘‘[i]nformation, about a
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individuals who are blind or visually
impaired by requiring the use of a
secondary audio stream to provide
emergency information aurally that is
conveyed visually during programming
other than newscasts. Second, we seek
comment under section 203 of the
CVAA on how to ensure that television
apparatus are able to make available
video description,2 as well as to make
emergency information accessible to
individuals who are blind or visually
impaired. Our section 203 discussion
focuses on the availability of secondary
audio streams, because that is both the
mechanism for providing video
description and our proposed
mechanism for making emergency
information accessible.3 Our goal in this
proceeding is to enable individuals who
are blind or visually impaired to access
emergency information and video
description services more easily. The
proposed revisions to our rules will
help fulfill the purpose of the CVAA to
‘‘update the communications laws to
help ensure that individuals with
disabilities are able to fully utilize
communications services and
equipment and better access video
programming.’’ H.R. Rep. No. 111–563,
111th Cong., 2d Sess. at 19 (2010)
(‘‘House Committee Report’’); S. Rep.
No. 111–386, 111th Cong., 2d Sess. at 1
(2010) (‘‘Senate Committee Report’’).
II. Background
2. Section 202 of the CVAA requires
the Commission to complete a
proceeding to ‘‘identify methods to
current emergency, that is intended to further the
protection of life, health, safety, and property, i.e.,
critical details regarding the emergency and how to
respond to the emergency.’’ 47 CFR 79.2(a)(2).
Emergency information might pertain to
emergencies such as ‘‘tornadoes, hurricanes, floods,
tidal waves, earthquakes, icing conditions, heavy
snows, widespread fires, discharge of toxic gases,
widespread power failures, industrial explosions,
civil disorders, school closings and changes in
school bus schedules resulting from such
conditions, and warnings and watches of
impending changes in weather.’’ Id. ‘‘Critical details
include, but are not limited to, specific details
regarding the areas that will be affected by the
emergency, evacuation orders, detailed descriptions
of areas to be evacuated, specific evacuation routes,
approved shelters or the way to take shelter in one’s
home, instructions on how to secure personal
property, road closures, and how to obtain relief
assistance.’’ Note to 47 CFR 79.2(a)(2).
2 ‘‘Video description’’ is defined as ‘‘[t]he
insertion of audio narrated descriptions of a
television program’s key visual elements into
natural pauses between the program’s dialogue.’’ 47
CFR 79.3(a)(3).
3 A separate proceeding will address sections 204
and 205 of the CVAA, which pertain to user
interfaces and video programming guides and
menus. Public Notice, Media Bureau and Consumer
and Governmental Affairs Bureau Seek Comment
on Second VPAAC Report: User Interfaces, and
Video Programming Guides and Menus, 27 FCC Rcd
4191 (2012).
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convey emergency information (as that
term is defined in § 79.2 of title 47, Code
of Federal Regulations) in a manner
accessible to individuals who are blind
or visually impaired.’’ 4 47 U.S.C.
613(g)(1). The Commission must also
‘‘promulgate regulations that require
video programming providers and video
programming distributors (as those
terms are defined in § 79.1 of title 47,
Code of Federal Regulations) and
program owners to convey such
emergency information in a manner
accessible to individuals who are blind
or visually impaired.’’ 47 U.S.C.
613(g)(2). In addition, section 203 of the
CVAA directs the Commission to
prescribe regulations requiring
apparatus to have the capability to
decode and make available emergency
information in a manner that is
accessible to individuals who are blind
or visually impaired, and to decode and
make available video description
services. 47 U.S.C. 303(u)(1). The CVAA
requires that the Commission complete
its proceeding on access to emergency
information by April 9, 2013, and on
apparatus requirements for video
description and emergency information
by October 9, 2013.
3. The CVAA also required the
Chairman of the Commission to
establish an advisory committee known
as the Video Programming Accessibility
Advisory Committee (‘‘VPAAC’’). The
Commission announced the
establishment of the VPAAC on
December 7, 2010, and the committee
began meeting in January 2011. The
VPAAC divided itself into four advisory
working groups, with Working Group 3
focused on emergency information and
Working Group 2 focused on video
description. Section 201(e)(2) of the
CVAA required the VPAAC to submit a
report on video description and
emergency information to the
Commission within 18 months after the
date of enactment of the CVAA, or by
April 9, 2012. The VPAAC submitted
this report on April 9, 2012.5 In the
4 Accessibility of this emergency information is a
separate matter from accessibility of an activation
of the Emergency Alert System (‘‘EAS’’), which
facilitates emergency communications from the
President, the heads of State and local government,
their designated representatives, or the National
Weather Service. See 47 CFR 11.1. In this
proceeding we consider revisions to § 79.2 of our
rules, whereas EAS is governed by Part 11 of our
rules. Compare 47 CFR 79.2 with 47 CFR part 11.
In a separate proceeding, the Commission considers
ways to make EAS alerts more accessible to persons
with disabilities. While the EAS rules apply only
to certain emergency communications, as stated
above, § 79.2 of the Commission’s rules applies
more broadly to televised emergency information.
Compare 47 CFR 11.1 with 47 CFR 79.2.
5 Second Report of the Video Programming
Accessibility Advisory Committee on the Twenty-
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VPAAC Second Report, Working Group
3 presented its findings on methods to
convey emergency information to
individuals who are blind or visually
impaired, including alternatives that it
considered and rejected. Working Group
3 concluded that crawls containing
emergency information should be made
accessible to persons who are blind or
visually impaired by transmitting an
audio representation of the emergency
information on a secondary audio
stream, as the Commission now
proposes. Working Group 3 also
suggested issues that should be
analyzed further, and it described
variables that may affect
implementation deadlines. In a separate
section of the same report, Working
Group 2 presented information on
technical capabilities, protocols, and
procedures by which video description
reaches the consumer, as well as
developments for the delivery of video
description. Working Group 2 then set
forth its findings and recommendations
pertaining to the creation and delivery
of video description.6 The Media
Bureau and the Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau sought
comment on the portions of the VPAAC
Second Report that address emergency
information and video description.
4. The Commission previously
addressed the issue of making televised
emergency information accessible to
those who are blind or visually
impaired in 2000. Implementation of
Video Description of Video
Programming, Report and Order, 65 FR
54805 (2000) (‘‘2000 Video Description
Order’’). The Commission adopted a
rule that required broadcast stations and
multichannel video programming
distributors (‘‘MVPDs’’) ‘‘that provide[]
local emergency information to make
the critical details of that information
First Century Communications and Video
Accessibility Act of 2010, available at https://
vpaac.wikispaces.com (‘‘VPAAC Second Report’’).
The portion of the report that addresses video
description is available at https://vpaac.wikispaces.
com/file/view/120409+VPAAC+Video+Description+
REPORT+AS+SUBMITTED+4-9-2012.pdf. The
portion of the report that addresses access to
emergency information is available at https://vpaac.
wikispaces.com/file/view/120409+VPAAC+Access+
to+Emergency+Information+REPORT+AS+
SUBMITTED+4-9-2012.pdf.
6 In presenting its findings and recommendations,
the VPAAC discussed the consumer position
separately from the industry position where there
was not a consensus. Additionally, we note that the
VPAAC presented certain recommendations
regarding the provision of information about
programming that is video described, including
proposals that entities be required to provide
information about video described programming on
their Web sites and to programming information
distributors. These issues are beyond the scope of
this proceeding, and accordingly we will not
consider them here.
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accessible to persons with visual
disabilities’’ in certain situations.
Specifically, pursuant to § 79.2 of the
Commission’s rules, the emergency
information requirements for
accessibility to persons with visual
disabilities vary based on whether the
information is provided in the video
portion of a newscast. First, if
emergency information is provided in
the video portion of a regularly
scheduled newscast, or in the video
portion of a newscast that interrupts
regular programming, it must be made
accessible to people who are blind or
visually impaired.7 47 CFR
79.2(b)(1)(ii). This requires the aural
presentation of emergency information
that is being provided to viewers
visually to be included as part of the
primary program audio stream. Second,
if emergency information is provided
solely visually during programming that
is not a newscast (such as through an
on-screen crawl), it must be
accompanied by an aural tone. 47 CFR
79.2(b)(1)(iii). It is the second situation
that is the focus of the instant
proceeding. Industry has coalesced
around the use of three high-pitched
tones to indicate the presence of onscreen emergency information, although
the Commission’s rules do not specify
that three tones must be used. In this
situation, when an individual who is
blind or visually impaired hears the
three tones, he or she must take some
other action, such as turning on a radio,
to determine the nature and severity of
the situation. As a result, individuals
who are blind or visually impaired may
have inadequate or untimely access to
emergency information. This proceeding
seeks to remedy this situation by
ensuring that the critical details of
emergency information provided
visually during programming other than
a newscast will be fully accessible to
those members of the program’s
audience who are blind or visually
impaired.
5. In addition to emergency
information, we also consider access to
video description in this proceeding.
Video description services make video
programming accessible to individuals
who are blind or visually impaired.
Video description is the insertion of
audio narrated descriptions of a
7 Section 79.2 contains a separate requirement
that video programming distributors must make
emergency information that is provided in the
audio portion of the programming accessible to
persons with hearing disabilities by using closed
captioning or a method of visual presentation. 47
CFR 79.2(b)(1)(i). That requirement is not at issue
in this proceeding. Instead, this proceeding
involves the portions of § 79.2(b) concerning
accessibility to persons with visual disabilities. 47
CFR 79.2(b)(1)(ii) through (iii).
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television program’s key visual elements
into natural pauses between the
program’s dialogue. 47 CFR 79.3(a)(3).
Last year, as directed by the CVAA, the
Commission reinstated, with certain
modifications, video description rules
previously vacated by the United States
Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit. See 47 U.S.C.
613(f)(1)–(2); Video Description:
Implementation of the Twenty-First
Century Communications and Video
Accessibility Act of 2010, Report and
Order, 76 FR 55585 (2011) (‘‘2011 Video
Description Order’’). The rules require
full-power affiliates of the top four
national networks located in the top 25
television markets to provide 50 hours
per calendar quarter of video-described
prime time and/or children’s
programming. The rules also require
MVPDs that operate systems with
50,000 or more subscribers to provide
50 hours per calendar quarter of videodescribed prime time and/or children’s
programming on each of the top five
non-broadcast networks that they carry
on those systems. Broadcast television
stations and MVPDs must additionally
‘‘pass through’’ video description if they
have the technical capability to do so.
Broadcasters and MVPDs were required
to be in full compliance with these
requirements beginning on July 1, 2012.
Video descriptions for digital television
are provided as a secondary audio
service, and typically a viewer can
access video description through an
onscreen menu provided by the viewer’s
home television receiver or set-top box.
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III. Discussion
6. At the outset, we do not, at this
time, extend the scope of the emergency
information and video description rules
in this proceeding beyond the category
of programming already covered by our
existing emergency information and
video description rules.8 47 CFR
79.2(a)–(b), 79.3(a)–(c). In other words,
for purposes of this proceeding, the
emergency information and video
description rules will continue to apply
to television broadcast services and
MVPD services, but not to IP-delivered
video programming that is not otherwise
an MVPD service. Notably, Congress did
not explicitly extend the scope of the
emergency information rules to IPdelivered video programming, as it did
in requiring closed captioning of IPdelivered video programming.9 See 47
8 We note that Congress directed the Commission
to conduct inquiries on further video description
requirements in the future. 47 U.S.C. 613(f)(3).
9 We note, however, that Congress charged the
VPAAC to report and make recommendations to the
Commission with respect to the delivery of
accessible emergency information and video
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U.S.C. 613(c). Instead, Congress
referenced television-based definitions
of video programming distributors and
providers. 47 U.S.C. 613(g)(2). In
addition, as a practical matter, we note
that the VPAAC found that ‘‘at this time
* * * there does not appear to be any
uniform or consistent methodology for
delivering emergency information via
the Internet.’’ Similarly, we note that the
CVAA directs that the Commission’s
video description regulations ‘‘shall
apply to video programming * * *
insofar as such programming is
transmitted for display on television in
digital format.’’ 47 U.S.C. 613(f)(2)(A).
Accordingly, the video description rules
require video description only by
television broadcast stations and
MVPDs. Consistent with this view and
as explained more fully below, we
propose to limit the scope of the
apparatus rules that the Commission
will adopt in this proceeding to
apparatus that make available the type
of programming that is subject to our
existing emergency information rules, as
set forth in § 79.2, and our existing
video description rules, as set forth in
§ 79.3, i.e., apparatus designed to
receive, play back, or record broadcast
or MVPD service. We seek comment on
this analysis.
A. Accessible Emergency Information
7. The CVAA requires us to
‘‘promulgate regulations that require
video programming providers and video
programming distributors [as defined in
§ 79.1 of our rules] and program owners
to convey such emergency information
in a manner accessible to individuals
who are blind or visually impaired.’’ 47
U.S.C. 613(g)(2). Based upon the
VPAAC Second Report and the record
assembled in this proceeding regarding
the relative advantages and
disadvantages of several possible
description using IP. Public Law 111–260, sections
201(e)(2)(B), (C), and (E) (charging the VPAAC to
identify ‘‘the performance objectives * * * needed
to permit content providers, content distributors,
Internet service providers, software developers, and
device manufacturers to reliably encode, transport,
receive, and render video descriptions of video
programming, except for consumer generated
media, and emergency information delivered using
Internet protocol or digital broadcast television’’; to
identify ‘‘additional protocols * * * for the
delivery of video descriptions of video
programming, except for consumer generated
media, and emergency information delivered using
Internet protocol or digital broadcast television
* * *’’; and to recommend ‘‘any regulations that
may be necessary to ensure compatibility between
video programming, except for consumer generated
media, delivered using Internet protocol or digital
broadcast television and devices capable of
receiving and displaying such programming, except
for consumer generated media, in order to facilitate
access to video descriptions and emergency
information’’).
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methods, discussed below, we propose
to require covered entities to make
emergency information that is provided
visually during programming that is not
a newscast (such as that provided via
crawls) accessible to individuals who
are blind or visually impaired by using
a secondary audio stream to provide
that emergency information aurally and
concurrently with the emergency
information being conveyed visually.
8. As noted above, our emergency
information rules currently require
video programming distributors to do
two things to make emergency
information accessible to individuals
who are blind or visually impaired.10
First, for emergency information that is
provided in the video portion of a
regularly scheduled newscast or a
newscast that interrupts regular
programming, they must make the
emergency information accessible to
persons with visual disabilities. 47 CFR
79.2(b)(1)(ii). This accessibility is
achieved through the aural presentation
in the main program audio of emergency
information that is being provided to
viewers visually. No commenters
indicated a need to revise the existing
rules for this situation. We, therefore, do
not propose any substantive changes to
this requirement and expect covered
entities to comply with the existing rule.
9. Second, for emergency information
that is provided in the video portion of
programming that is not a regularly
scheduled newscast or a newscast that
interrupts regular programming, under
our current rules video programming
distributors must accompany the
emergency information with an aural
tone. 47 CFR 79.2(b)(1)(iii). We seek
comment on our proposal to modify this
requirement as the VPAAC advocates by
requiring video programming
distributors to make emergency
information available on a secondary
audio stream, if that information is
provided visually in programming that
10 We note that, in addition to the provisions
addressing accessibility to individuals who are
blind or visually impaired, our emergency
information rules also contain a provision
addressing accessibility to individuals with hearing
disabilities. 47 CFR 79.2(b)(1)(i) (requiring that
‘‘[e]mergency information that is provided in the
audio portion of the programming must be made
accessible to persons with hearing disabilities by
using a method of closed captioning or by using a
method of visual presentation, as described in
§ 79.1 of this part’’). The emergency information
provisions of section 202 of the CVAA are focused
on individuals who are blind or visually impaired,
and not on individuals who are deaf or hearing
impaired. 47 U.S.C. 613(g) (requiring the
Commission to adopt rules relating to conveying
emergency information ‘‘in a manner accessible to
individuals who are blind or visually impaired’’).
Accordingly, accessibility of emergency information
to individuals who are deaf or hard of hearing is
not at issue in this proceeding.
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is not a newscast.11 Under this
approach, consumers would be alerted
to the presence of such emergency
information through the alreadyrequired aural tone that accompanies
this emergency information, and the
emergency information would be
accessible to consumers who are blind
or visually impaired who switch to a
secondary audio stream. The VPAAC,
which includes representatives of the
industry and consumer groups, supports
the use of a secondary audio stream for
this purpose. According to the VPAAC,
MVPDs, including cable operators,
direct broadcast satellite (‘‘DBS’’)
providers, and Internet protocol
television providers (‘‘IPTV providers’’),
are technically capable of providing
access to emergency information
through the secondary audio streams.
The National Association of
Broadcasters (‘‘NAB’’) also supports the
approach of using the secondary audio
stream to provide emergency
information that is conveyed in an
onscreen crawl in a manner that is
audibly accessible.
10. We seek comment on the benefits
of providing accessible emergency
information on a secondary audio
stream and the incremental costs of
providing a secondary audio stream for
this purpose. Are there any broadcasters
or MVPDs that do not currently provide
a secondary audio stream, and if so,
should the new rules apply any
differently to them? We explained in the
2011 Video Description Order that
certain stations and MVPDs may lack
the technical capability to pass through
video description, and therefore the
Commission reinstated a technical
capability exception. Are there technical
capability issues that should be taken
into account in the context of requiring
emergency information to be provided
on a secondary audio stream? If lack of
technical capability is an issue, how
should the Commission consider it in
revising its emergency information rules
as proposed herein? If a video
programming distributor does not
currently make available a secondary
audio stream, but it has the technical
capability to do so, should the
Commission require it to make available
a secondary audio stream that could be
used to provide emergency information?
Or are there alternative ways for video
programming distributors that do not
have a secondary audio stream to
11 We also propose a non-substantive edit to our
existing emergency information rules. Specifically,
we propose to change references to ‘‘[e]mergency
information that is provided in the video portion’’
in the current rules to ‘‘[e]mergency information
that is provided visually.’’ We welcome comment
on this proposal.
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provide such information? What impact,
if any, would the proposals contained in
this NPRM have on broadcasters’ ability
to channel share? What additional
bandwidth, if any, would MVPDs need
to transmit multiple audio streams, and
how would this affect their networks if
they carry multiple audio streams for all
channels? Are any broadcasters or
MVPDs providing more than two audio
streams? If there are more than two
audio streams available, what is
provided or should be provided on
those audio streams and how will
consumers know which one to tune to
for emergency information? Should
aurally accessible emergency
information always be provided on the
audio stream containing video
description, rather than on a stream
dedicated to aurally accessible
emergency information or containing
other program-related material, such as
a Spanish or other language audio
stream? We seek comment on whether
and how the proposals contained herein
should apply to EAS alerts. For
example, to what extent is emergency
information provided as visual-only
EAS alerts? See 47 CFR 11.51.
11. We invite input on the
implementation of our proposal to
require covered entities to make
emergency information that is provided
visually during programming that is not
a newscast (such as that provided via
crawls) accessible to individuals who
are blind or visually impaired by using
a secondary audio stream to provide
that emergency information aurally and
concurrently with the emergency
information being conveyed visually.
What time frame is appropriate for
requiring covered entities to convey
emergency information in a secondary
audio stream? What steps must covered
entities take to meet this requirement?
Should we require covered entities to
provide customer support services to
assist consumers who are blind or
visually impaired to navigate between
the main and secondary audio streams
to access accessible emergency
information? We seek comment on
whether the Commission should update
its definition of ‘‘emergency
information.’’ See 47 CFR 79.2(a)(2). For
example, to what extent are severe
thunderstorms currently considered to
be ‘‘emergencies’’ subject to our rule? To
the extent they are currently covered,
should they be added to the list of
examples in the rule? Are there other
examples of emergencies that should
explicitly be included in our definition
of ‘‘emergency information’’? What
impact would revising our definition of
emergency information have on the
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availability of video description, given
that, under our proposal above, both
services will be provided using a
secondary audio stream?
12. Assuming the Commission
requires that visual emergency
information be made accessible by
means of a secondary audio stream, to
what extent should the Commission
permit the use of text-to-speech (‘‘TTS’’)
technologies? TTS is a technology that
generates an audio version of a textual
message. The VPAAC found TTS to be
essential for conveying emergency
information because of the speed with
which it can generate the necessary
audio.12 In a proceeding regarding EAS
earlier this year, the Commission
initially noted ‘‘concerns in the record
about whether text-to-speech software is
sufficiently accurate and reliable to
deliver consistently accurate and timely
alerts to the public,’’ and deferred
consideration of that issue to a later
proceeding. However, upon
reconsideration, the Commission
subsequently determined that it would
permit, but not require, regulated
entities to use TTS to render EAS audio
from the text of EAS alerts formatted in
the Common Alerting Protocol until the
merits of mandating TTS use for EAS
purposes have been more fully
developed in the record. We seek
comment on the accuracy and reliability
of current TTS technology and, more
specifically, whether it is sufficiently
accurate and reliable for rendering an
aural translation of emergency
information text on a secondary audio
stream, as proposed above. What would
be the costs and benefits of using TTS
for this purpose? We also seek comment
on other concerns related to this issue,
including the need to timely provide
emergency information. To the extent
commenters consider TTS too
unreliable for this purpose, we seek
comment on how TTS can be made
more reliable, as well as effective and
timely alternatives to TTS and their
costs and benefits.
12 We also note that, if textual data is also
transmitted as a separate file within the broadcast
stream, it can also be made available for other
assistive technologies and language translation
systems that have the potential to enhance access
to emergency information both for consumers with
and without visual impairments. For example, in
addition to providing audio, apparatus could
display the textual information in large print for
viewers who are deaf and have a visual impairment.
Further, by permitting the text to be converted to
speech in the apparatus, it could be possible for an
apparatus to translate emergency information to a
language other than English, or to provide
emergency information when the viewer is using
that apparatus for something other than watching
covered video programming. We seek comment on
these possibilities.
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13. Should we require emergency
information presented aurally to be
identical to that presented textually, or
should differences be permissible as
long as the information presented
aurally is comprehensive and satisfies
the requirements of § 79.2(a)(2)? We
note that emergency information is
defined as ‘‘[i]nformation, about a
current emergency, that is intended to
further the protection of life, health,
safety, and property, i.e., critical details
regarding the emergency and how to
respond to the emergency.’’ 47 CFR
79.2(a)(2). The rule’s accompanying
note requires the inclusion of ‘‘specific
details regarding the areas that will be
affected by the emergency, evacuation
orders, detailed descriptions of areas to
be evacuated, specific evacuation
routes, approved shelters or the way to
take shelter in one’s home, instructions
on how to secure personal property,
road closures, and how to obtain relief
assistance.’’ Must the information
provided aurally be verbatim to the text
provided to comply with this directive?
Should the emergency information
provided aurally be abbreviated where
the information presented textually is
particularly lengthy, for example, where
it lists many school district closings in
the viewing area? Given the potential
use of the secondary audio stream for
both emergency information and video
description, how can we ensure that
video description is not unduly
interrupted? Should we require covered
entities to repeat the aural version of
emergency information on the
secondary audio stream or take some
other action to ensure that consumers
have sufficient time to tune in after
hearing the required aural tones? Is
visual but non-textual emergency
information—such as a map showing
the path of a storm—sometimes
provided during programming that is
not a newscast? Are such visual
displays (e.g., maps) always
accompanied by a crawl or scroll
containing a textual version of the
emergency information conveyed by
that visual display? What requirements
should apply to the aural description of
visual but non-textual emergency
information?
14. The Commission’s rules currently
prohibit emergency information from
blocking video description, and they
prohibit video description from
blocking emergency information
provided by means other than video
description. 47 CFR 79.2(b)(3)(ii). The
VPAAC recommends eliminating the
portion of this rule that prohibits
emergency information from blocking
video description, given their
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recommendation that ‘‘emergency
information conveyed visually by crawl
or scroll also be conveyed aurally
utilizing the same audio stream as the
video description audio stream.’’ The
VPAAC recommends that § 79.2(b)(3)(ii)
be amended to read as follows: ‘‘Any
video description provided should not
block any emergency information
provided by video description or by
means other than video description.’’
We propose that this be simplified to
read as follows: ‘‘Any video description
provided should not block any
emergency information.’’ We seek
comment on this proposal. Should this
proposal be expanded to require such
aural emergency information to
supersede any content that may be
present on the secondary audio stream
(e.g., video description, Spanish or other
languages, a duplicate of the main
audio, or silence)?
15. Do the proposed revisions to the
emergency information requirements
necessitate any revisions to FCC Form
2000C, the disability access complaint
form, or the existing complaint
procedures contained in § 79.2(c) of our
rules? If so, what revisions are needed?
16. We also seek comment on the
roles of the various entities listed in
section 202. That provision mandates
that we ‘‘require video programming
providers and video programming
distributors (as those terms are defined
in section 79.1 of title 47, Code of
Federal Regulations) and program
owners to convey such emergency
information in a manner accessible to
individuals who are blind or visually
impaired.’’ 47 U.S.C. 613(g)(2). Section
79.1 of our rules defines a ‘‘video
programming distributor’’ as ‘‘[a]ny
television broadcast station licensed by
the Commission and any multichannel
video programming distributor as
defined in § 76.1000(e) of this chapter,
and any other distributor of video
programming for residential reception
that delivers such programming directly
to the home and is subject to the
jurisdiction of the Commission.’’ 47 CFR
79.1(a)(2). That section defines a ‘‘video
programming provider’’ as ‘‘[a]ny video
programming distributor and any other
entity that provides video programming
that is intended for distribution to
residential households including, but
not limited to broadcast or nonbroadcast
television network and the owners of
such programming.’’ 47 CFR 79.1(a)(3).
Section 79.2 of the Commission’s rules
currently imposes emergency
information accessibility requirements
on video programming distributors only,
but section 202(a) of the CVAA requires
us to promulgate regulations containing
requirements for video programming
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providers and program owners as well
as video programming distributors. 47
U.S.C. 613(g)(2). What role should video
programming distributors, video
programming providers, and program
owners play in ensuring that emergency
information is conveyed in an accessible
manner? Should video programming
distributors hold the primary
responsibility, with video programming
providers and program owners being
prohibited from interfering with or
hindering a video programming
distributor’s provision of accessible
emergency information? Or, are there
certain responsibilities that should be
allocated to each of the covered entities?
What entity is generally responsible for
preparing a crawl or scroll containing
emergency information, and how does
that responsibility affect the obligation
to provide an aural version of the
information?
17. As noted, § 79.1 of the
Commission’s rules includes definitions
for the terms ‘‘video programming
provider’’ and ‘‘video programming
distributor,’’ but it does not define
‘‘program owner.’’ See 47 CFR
79.1(a)(2)–(3). The definition of ‘‘video
programming provider’’ does, however,
include a ‘‘broadcast or nonbroadcast
television network and the owners of
such programming.’’ 47 CFR 79.1(a)(3).
We seek comment on whether it is
necessary to separately define a video
programming owner in the present
context. In the context of closed
captioning of IP-delivered video
programming, the Commission defined
a video programming owner as ‘‘any
person or entity that either (i) licenses
the video programming to a video
programming distributor or provider
that makes the video programming
available directly to the end user
through a distribution method that uses
Internet protocol; or (ii) acts as the video
programming distributor or provider,
and also possesses the right to license
the video programming to a video
programming distributor or provider
that makes the video programming
available directly to the end user
through a distribution method that uses
Internet protocol.’’ Closed Captioning of
Internet Protocol-Delivered Video
Programming: Implementation of the
Twenty-First Century Communications
and Video Accessibility Act of 2010,
Report and Order, 77 FR 19480 (2012)
(‘‘IP Closed Captioning Order’’).
Although the references in this
definition to ‘‘a distribution method that
uses Internet protocol’’ are specific to
the IP closed captioning proceeding,
and thus would not be applicable here,
the definition may be useful as a starting
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point for purposes of defining ‘‘program
owner’’ in this context. For example, for
purposes of this proceeding, we seek
comment on whether we should define
a video programming owner as any
person or entity that either (i) licenses
the video programming to a video
programming distributor or provider, as
those terms are defined in § 79.1 of the
Commission’s rules; or (ii) acts as the
video programming distributor or
provider, and also possesses the right to
license the video programming to a
video programming distributor or
provider, as those terms are defined in
§ 79.1 of the Commission’s rules.
18. The VPAAC identified additional
or alternative methods to convey
emergency information in a manner
accessible to individuals who are blind
or visually impaired, other than the use
of a secondary audio stream.13 For
example, the VPAAC considered
alternatives such as: (1) Including a
shortened audio version of the textual
emergency information on the primary
stream; or (2) broadcasting a 5 to 10
second audio message after the three
high-pitched tones announcing the start
of a textual message, to inform
individuals who are blind or visually
impaired of a means by which they
could access the emergency
information, such as a telephone
number or radio station. According to
the VPAAC, these alternatives could be
used in concert with each other, but
they would have disadvantages,
including interruption to the main
program audio and the need for
sufficient resources to create and
manage the brief audio messages.
Should we require (on an interim basis)
or permit covered entities to use one or
more of these alternative approaches in
concert with the use of the secondary
audio stream that we propose above?
The VPAAC also considered and
rejected other alternatives that it
determined either did not meet the
requirements of the CVAA, relied upon
technology or services that are not
widely available, or involved additional
problems.14 We invite comment on
whether the alternatives rejected by
13 The CVAA requires us to ‘‘identify methods to
convey emergency information * * * in a manner
accessible to individuals who are blind or visually
impaired.’’ 47 U.S.C. 613(g)(1).
14 The VPAAC rejected the following alternatives:
(1) ‘‘dipping’’ or lowering the main program audio
and playing an aural message over the lowered
audio; (2) providing screen reader software or
devices on request; (3) enabling users to select and
enlarge emergency crawl text; (4) providing
guidance for consumers, such as how to switch to
a secondary audio channel, which is insufficient as
a standalone solution; and (5) using an Internetbased standardized application to filter emergency
information by location.
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VPAAC merit further consideration. We
ask commenters to identify any other
alternative methods by which video
programming providers and distributors
and program owners can make
emergency information accessible to
individuals who are blind or visually
impaired. Are any such alternatives
preferable to our proposal, which
requires the use of a secondary audio
stream? How would the costs and
benefits of any alternate proposals
compare to the costs and benefits of the
proposed use of the secondary audio
stream discussed herein?
B. Apparatus Requirements for
Emergency Information and Video
Description
19. Pursuant to section 203 of the
CVAA, the Commission must require
certain apparatus to have the capability
to decode and make available required
video description services and
emergency information in a manner
accessible to individuals who are blind
or visually impaired. 47 U.S.C. 303(u),
(z), 330(b). The Commission must
prescribe these requirements by October
9, 2013. The regulations promulgated as
part of the current proceeding must
include ‘‘any technical standards,
protocols, and procedures needed for
the transmission of’’ video description
and emergency information. Public Law
111–260, § 203(d). Below we seek
comment on requirements for apparatus
with regard to video description and
emergency information. Our section 203
discussion focuses on the availability of
secondary audio streams, because that is
both the current mechanism for
providing video description and our
proposed mechanism for making
emergency information accessible.
1. Requirements for Apparatus Subject
to Section 203 of the CVAA
20. Pursuant to section 203 of the
CVAA, ‘‘apparatus designed to receive
or play back video programming
transmitted simultaneously with sound,
if such apparatus is manufactured in the
United States or imported for use in the
United States and uses a picture screen
of any size,’’ must ‘‘have the capability
to decode and make available the
transmission and delivery of’’ required
video description services. 47 U.S.C.
303(u)(1)(B). Such apparatus must also
‘‘have the capability to decode and
make available emergency information
* * * in a manner that is accessible to
individuals who are blind or visually
impaired.’’ 47 U.S.C. 303(u)(1)(C). We
seek comment on the meaning of these
requirements. What specific capabilities
should the Commission mandate? What
steps must manufacturers of covered
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apparatus take to ensure that video
description services and emergency
information provided via a secondary
audio stream are available and
accessible? How should we balance the
costs of compliance for apparatus
subject to section 203 of the CVAA and
the benefits to consumers? With respect
to MVPD-provided apparatus, should
we impose different requirements on
equipment provided by different types
of MVPDs? For example, the House
Committee Report indicated that DBS
providers may face unique technical
challenges pertaining to compliance
with section 203 of the CVAA. We seek
comment on whether apparatus should
have the capability to make textual
emergency information audible through
the use of text-to-speech, consistent
with our discussion above in paragraph
12 or whether there are any other
specific capabilities that apparatus
would need to include to comply with
these requirements beyond the ability to
select and decode a secondary audio
stream. If so, should we require
broadcasters and MVPDs to make the
textual emergency information available
to apparatus?
21. We also seek comment on the
requirements for recording devices,
namely, that ‘‘apparatus designed to
record video programming transmitted
simultaneously with sound * * *
enable the rendering or the pass through
of * * * video description signals, and
emergency information * * * such that
viewers are able to activate and deactivate the * * * video description as
the video programming is played back
on a picture screen of any size.’’ 47
U.S.C. 303(z)(1). What should we
require of recording devices to ‘‘enable
the rendering or the pass through of’’
video description and emergency
information? We seek comment on the
benefits and incremental costs to
ensuring that video description and
accessible emergency information, when
provided as proposed on the secondary
audio stream, are recorded and can be
activated or de-activated when played
back. How do requirements relating to
emergency information apply to
recording devices, given that emergency
information is, by its nature, extremely
time sensitive? How should we expect
recording devices to ensure that the
secondary audio stream is stored along
with the associated video, such that a
consumer may switch between the main
program audio and the secondary audio
stream when viewing recorded
programming?
22. The Commission’s rules must
‘‘provide performance and display
standards for * * * the transmission
and delivery of video description
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services, and the conveyance of
emergency information as required
* * * .’’ 47 U.S.C. 330(b). We seek
comment on what performance and
display standards we should impose for
the transmission and delivery of video
description and emergency information.
We also seek comment on the VPAAC’s
suggestion that, when video description,
alternate language audio, and
emergency information are not available
on a secondary audio channel, best
efforts should be taken to ensure that
the channel contains the main program
audio rather than silence. Such an
approach would enable consumers to
tune to their secondary audio stream all
of the time, instead of needing to switch
back and forth depending on whether
video description is available for a
particular program or emergency
information is being provided. Should
we impose this as a requirement, or
recommend it as a best practice?
23. Section 203 of the CVAA directs
the Commission to require that
‘‘interconnection mechanisms and
standards for digital video source
devices are available to carry from the
source device to the consumer
equipment the information necessary to
permit or render the display of closed
captions and to make encoded video
description and emergency information
audible.’’ 47 U.S.C. 303(z)(2). It is our
understanding that most, if not all,
devices already use interconnection
mechanisms that make available audio
provided via a secondary audio stream.
Thus, we do not believe that any further
steps are necessary to implement this
requirement. We seek comment on our
understanding.
24. We seek comment on three issues
that arose in the 2011 video description
proceeding that may be relevant here.
They pertain to equipment features that
present challenges for video
programming distributors and
consumers. First, the 2011 Video
Description Order observed that
‘‘viewers with digital sets may be unable
to find and activate an audio stream that
has been properly labeled ‘VI’ (‘Visually
Impaired’) pursuant to the ATSC
standard,’’ so the audio stream used for
video description must be labeled as
‘‘CM’’ (‘‘complete main’’) for the system
to work properly. Further, some
television receivers do not handle two
audio tracks identified as English
properly, and thus to ensure
compatibility, broadcasters often tag the
video description stream as a foreign
language. That is, rather than conveying
metadata that indicates the audio stream
is an English track for the visually
impaired (VI-English), broadcasters
convey metadata that the service is a
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‘‘complete main’’ audio stream in a
foreign language (typically CM-Spanish
or CM-Portuguese) in order to provide a
tag for the stream. In 2011, the
Commission decided that this issue
would be better addressed in a later
proceeding. The VPAAC recognizes that
there is a ‘‘need for a more user-friendly
mechanism to allow the carriage of
multiple audio services,’’ but it does not
identify a timeframe for such a
mechanism. We seek comment on
whether the Commission should impose
a requirement at this time that broadcast
receivers detect and decode tracks
marked for the ‘‘visually impaired.’’
How would consumers who have not
upgraded their equipment be affected by
such a requirement? How can we
minimize any confusion or cost to such
consumers? How can we mitigate the
need for consumers to purchase new
equipment to take advantage of the
requirements proposed herein? Do the
issues discussed in this paragraph
pertain to MVPDs as well as
broadcasters?
25. Second, Dolby Laboratories, Inc.
commented that the audio experience
for individuals accessing videodescribed programming could be
enhanced if devices supported a
‘‘receiver-mix’’ technology that would
enable the device to combine the full
surround sound main audio with video
description. Although it is technically
possible for broadcasters and some
MVPDs to provide two full surround
channels, the additional bandwidth
required to do so could pose a hardship
for those entities. In the 2011 Video
Description Order, the Commission
determined that this issue would also be
better addressed in a later proceeding.
We invite comment on whether any
action should be taken on this issue at
this time.
26. Third, although the ATSC
standard for digital television
broadcasting enables the use of multiple
audio streams (including, for example,
the concurrent use of a main audio
stream, a secondary video description
stream, and a third stream containing
Spanish or other foreign language
audio), it is our understanding that few,
if any, broadcasters or MVPDs provide
more than two audio streams, and few
devices are able to accommodate more
than two audio streams. The 2011 Video
Description Order noted that equipment
limitations may prohibit some viewers
from being able to access a third audio
channel even if one were to be provided
by a video programming distributor.
Although we do not propose to require
video programming distributors to carry
more than one additional audio channel
at this time, we are concerned that
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70977
equipment limitations may be
discouraging video programming
distributors from doing so voluntarily.
We seek comment on the suggestion of
consumer members of the VPAAC that
we ‘‘consider how best to facilitate a
transition * * * to deliver multiple
simultaneous ancillary audio services,
so that both Spanish (or other alternate
languages) and video description could
be provided for the same program.’’
Although industry members of the
VPAAC concluded that we do not need
a single format, protocol, or standard for
multiple audio services, we note the
existence of what is known as ‘‘CEA–
CEB21,’’ Recommended Practice for
Selection and Presentation of DTV
Audio, a bulletin that ‘‘provides
recommendations to manufacturers to
facilitate user setup of audio features in
the receiver without professional
assistance.’’ 15 The VPAAC stated that
consumer receiving devices could be
built in accordance with the
recommendations contained in CEA–
CEB21. Is this a solution that the
Commission should mandate? We seek
comment on the costs associated with
building a device in compliance with
this bulletin, as well as any drawbacks
to doing so. Would the benefits of
building a device in compliance with
CEA–CEB21 outweigh the costs? Are
there other industry guidelines that
could facilitate compatibility between
apparatus and covered services
containing multiple audio streams? If
we require apparatus to comply with the
recommendations contained in CEA–
CEB21, are there corresponding
requirements that we should impose on
broadcasters and MVPDs, and if so,
what?
27. We invite comment on the
appropriate deadline by which we
should require apparatus to meet the
requirements that we adopt as part of
this proceeding. We note that the
Commission has previously imposed a
two-year deadline for apparatus
requirements, for example, in the IP
Closed Captioning Order. We ask
commenters to justify any deadline they
propose by explaining what must be
done by that deadline to comply with
the new requirements. Should we
consider here the argument made by the
Consumer Electronics Association
(‘‘CEA’’) in a pending petition for
reconsideration of the IP Closed
Captioning Order that the compliance
deadline should be interpreted to refer
15 CEA–CEB21, Recommended Practice for
Selection and Presentation of DTV Audio, June
2011, available at https://www.ce.org/Standards/
Standard-Listings/R4-3-Television-Data-SystemsSubcommittee/CEA-CEB21.aspx.
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only to the date of manufacture, and not
to the date of importation?
28. In order to address any failures to
comply with the new requirements after
the established deadline, we propose
imposing complaint procedures
comparable to those adopted for
apparatus complaints in the IP Closed
Captioning Order. As a preliminary
matter, we seek comment on whether
the Commission should require MVPDs
that provide set-top boxes to provide
customer support services to assist
consumers who are blind or visually
impaired to navigate between the main
and secondary audio streams to access
video description and accessible
emergency information. Would such a
requirement help fulfill the CVAA’s
mandate that apparatus have the
capability to decode and make available
video description and accessible
emergency information, e.g., does the
use of the term ‘‘make available’’ in the
statute reasonably encompass more than
simply apparatus functionality? 47
U.S.C. 303(u)(1)(B) and (C). Would such
requirements benefit consumers and
industry by encouraging the resolution
rather than the filing of consumer
complaints? Would consumers and
industry benefit from the provision and
publication of contact information for
resolution of consumer concerns, such
as we require in our closed captioning
rules? See 47 CFR 79.1(i). How should
the Commission evaluate the potential
benefits of a customer support
requirement and the incremental costs,
which we expect would be relatively
minimal to the extent that a company
already provides customer support
services? What else can be done to make
legacy equipment more accessible to
and available to individuals with visual
disabilities?
29. With respect to the filing of
complaints, we propose that complaints
alleging a violation should include: (a)
The name, postal address, and other
contact information of the complainant,
such as telephone number or email
address; (b) the name and contact
information, such as postal address, of
the apparatus manufacturer or provider;
(c) information sufficient to identify the
software or device used to view or to
attempt to view video programming
with video description or emergency
information; (d) the date or dates on
which the complainant purchased,
acquired, or used, or tried to purchase,
acquire, or use the apparatus to view
video programming with video
description or emergency information;
(e) a statement of facts sufficient to
show that the manufacturer or provider
has violated or is violating the
Commission’s rules; (f) the specific
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relief or satisfaction sought by the
complainant; and (g) the complainant’s
preferred format or method of response
to the complaint. In addition, we
propose that a complaint alleging a
violation of the apparatus rules related
to emergency information and video
description may be transmitted to the
Consumer and Governmental Affairs
Bureau by any reasonable means, such
as the Commission’s online informal
complaint filing system, letter in writing
or Braille, facsimile transmission,
telephone (voice/TRS/TTY), email, or
some other method that would best
accommodate the complainant’s
disability. Given that the population
intended to benefit from the rules
adopted will be blind or visually
impaired, we also note that, if a
complainant calls the Commission for
assistance in preparing a complaint,
Commission staff will document the
complaint in writing for the consumer
and such communication will be
deemed to be a written complaint. We
also propose that the Commission will
forward such complaints, as
appropriate, to the named manufacturer
or provider for its response, as well as
to any other entity that Commission
staff determines may be involved, and
that the Commission be permitted to
request additional information from any
relevant parties when, in the estimation
of Commission staff, such information is
needed to investigate the complaint or
adjudicate potential violations of
Commission rules. Do the proposed
requirements for apparatus related to
video description and emergency
information necessitate any revisions to
FCC Form 2000C, the disability access
complaint form, and if so, what
revisions are needed?
2. Apparatus Subject to Section 203 of
the CVAA
30. In this section, we discuss which
apparatus should be subject to the video
description and emergency information
requirements of section 203 of the
CVAA. We propose at this time to apply
the video description and emergency
information requirements of section 203
of the CVAA only to apparatus designed
to receive, play back, or record
television broadcast services or MVPD
services. In other words, for purposes of
this proceeding, we propose to limit the
scope of the apparatus rules that the
Commission will adopt in this
proceeding to apparatus that make
available the type of programming that
is subject to our existing emergency
information rules, as set forth in § 79.2
of our rules, and our existing video
description rules, as set forth in § 79.3
of our rules. Accordingly, we propose
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that the apparatus requirements
discussed herein would not be triggered
by apparatus’ display of IP-delivered
video programming that is not part of a
television broadcast service or MVPD
service. We believe this is appropriate
given that the current video description
and emergency information rules will
continue to apply to television
broadcast services and MVPD services.
We invite comment on this proposal
and analysis. How should this proposal
apply to different types of apparatus, for
example, to tablet devices that enable
users to view television programming as
part of an MVPD service? Under this
proposal, how would the new
requirements we adopt in this
proceeding apply to apparatus beyond
conventional television equipment,
such as televisions and cable boxes, to
devices such as video game consoles
(e.g., Xbox) to the extent an MVPD
enables its subscribers to access its
MVPD service through those devices?
31. In the IP Closed Captioning Order,
the Commission concluded that the
scope of ‘‘apparatus designed to receive
or play back video programming
transmitted simultaneously with sound’’
covered by section 203 includes
physical devices designed to receive or
play back video programming, as well as
software integrated in those covered
devices. We propose that the term
‘‘apparatus’’ as used in this proceeding
similarly extend to physical devices
designed to receive, play back, or record
television broadcast or MVPD service
video programming as well as integrated
software, and we seek comment on that
proposal.
32. The Commission also found in the
IP Closed Captioning Order that an
apparatus is ‘‘designed to receive or
play back video programming
transmitted simultaneously with sound’’
if a device is sold with, or updated by
the manufacturer to add, an integrated
video player capable of displaying video
programming.16 The Commission
concluded further that, if apparatus uses
16 We note that a pending petition for
reconsideration of the IP Closed Captioning Order
seeks a Commission determination that the scope of
the apparatus requirements adopted in that
proceeding pursuant to section 203 of the CVAA
should apply only to apparatus that include ‘‘video
programming’’ players, as that term is defined in
the CVAA, and not more broadly to any apparatus
that include a ‘‘video player.’’ See Petition for
Reconsideration of the Consumer Electronics
Association, MB Docket No. 11–154, at 3–5 (filed
Apr. 30, 2012) (‘‘CEA Recon. Petition’’). The CEA
Recon. Petition also argues that the Commission
misinterpreted the phrase ‘‘designed to,’’ claiming
that the phrase instead refers to the subjective
intent of the manufacturer rather than the objective
fact that the product was designed with this
capability. Id. at 5–8. The CEA Recon. Petition
remains pending before the Commission.
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a picture screen of any size, that means
that the apparatus works in conjunction
with a picture screen. In the IP Closed
Captioning Order, the Commission also
addressed the meaning of the term
‘‘technically feasible,’’ and concluded
that if something is technically
infeasible, it is not merely difficult, but
rather is physically or technically
impossible.
33. We propose to apply the
interpretation of ‘‘technically feasible,’’
‘‘designed to receive or play back video
programming transmitted
simultaneously with sound,’’ and ‘‘uses
a picture screen of any size’’ from the
IP Closed Captioning Order to the
present video description and
emergency information context. We seek
comment on this proposal. We note that
the IP Closed Captioning Order
interpreted the same provisions of
section 203 of the CVAA that are at
issue in this proceeding, and
accordingly, we see no basis to deviate
from the Commission’s carefully
considered prior interpretations of
‘‘technically feasible,’’ ‘‘designed to
receive or play back video programming
transmitted simultaneously with
sound,’’ or ‘‘uses a picture screen of any
size.’’ We note, however, that unlike the
IP closed captioning context, we
propose to apply the rules in this
context, as discussed above, only to
apparatus designed to receive, play
back, or record television broadcast
services or MVPD services. As in the IP
Closed Captioning Order, we propose to
permit parties to raise technical
infeasibility as a defense to a complaint
or, alternatively, to file a request for a
ruling under § 1.41 of the Commission’s
rules before manufacturing or importing
the product, and we invite comment on
this proposal.
34. Consistent with the IP Closed
Captioning Order, we propose to
include removable media play back
apparatus, such as DVD and Blu-ray
players, within the scope of the new
requirements, but only to the extent that
they receive, play back, or record
television broadcast services or MVPD
services.17 We seek comment on
whether this proposal is the best reading
of the statute. We also propose
excluding commercial video equipment,
including professional movie theater
projectors and similar types of
professional equipment. We propose
this exclusion because we believe that a
typical consumer would not view
televised video programming via a
17 We note that the CEA Recon. Petition argues
that the Commission should not treat removable
media players as apparatus covered by the
captioning rules. See CEA Recon. Petition at 8–18.
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professional movie theater projector or
similar professional equipment.18 We
invite comments on the costs and
benefits of our proposal to include
removable media players within the
scope of the new requirements while
excluding commercial video equipment.
Should we require only video
description, and not emergency
information, to be accessible via
removable media players, since
generally we expect that emergency
information will no longer be pertinent
at the time consumers play back video
programming on removable media
players? Or, might consumers wish to
preserve the emergency information,
such as information about shelter
locations, school closings, or alternative
evacuation routes on removable
media—in which case, our rules should
cover those devices as well? If
removable media play back apparatus
are made capable of playing back a
secondary audio stream with video
description, would they necessarily also
be capable of playing back emergency
information on a secondary audio
stream? Would removable media
apparatus be capable of distinguishing
between or providing video description
but not emergency information?
3. Achievability, Display-Only
Monitors, and Purpose-Based Waivers
35. Section 203 of the CVAA creates
and authorizes exceptions for certain
categories of apparatus that otherwise
would be subject to the section 203
requirements. Public Law 111–260,
section 203(a)–(b). Specifically, section
203 provides that certain apparatus
must meet the requirements of that
section only if ‘‘achievable,’’ as that
word is defined in section 716 of the
Act.19 The achievability exception
18 Additionally, the legislative history of the
CVAA explains that section 203(a) was intended to
‘‘ensure[] that devices consumers use to view video
programming are able to * * * decode, and make
available the transmission of video description
services, and decode and make available emergency
information.’’ See House Committee Report at 30
(emphasis added); Senate Committee Report at 14
(emphasis added). We therefore believe that
Congress intended the Commission’s regulations to
cover apparatus that are used by consumers, which
would not include professional or commercial
equipment.
19 Section 716 of the Communications Act of
1934, as amended (the ‘‘Act’’), defines ‘‘achievable’’
as ‘‘with reasonable effort or expense, as
determined by the Commission,’’ and it directs the
Commission to consider the following factors in
determining whether the requirements of a
provision are achievable: ‘‘(1) The nature and cost
of the steps needed to meet the requirements of this
section with respect to the specific equipment or
service in question. (2) The technical and economic
impact on the operation of the manufacturer or
provider and on the operation of the specific
equipment or service in question, including on the
development and deployment of new
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applies to apparatus ‘‘that use a picture
screen that is less than 13 inches in
size.’’ 47 U.S.C. 303(u)(2)(A). The
achievability exception also applies to
‘‘apparatus designed to record video
programming transmitted
simultaneously with sound.’’ 20 47
U.S.C. 303(z)(1). Section 203 also states
that ‘‘any apparatus or class of
apparatus that are display-only video
monitors with no playback capability
are exempt from the requirements
* * *.’’ 47 U.S.C. 303(u)(2)(B). Further,
section 203 permits the Commission
‘‘on its own motion or in response to a
petition by a manufacturer, to waive the
requirements * * * for any apparatus or
class of apparatus primarily designed
for activities other than receiving or
playing back video programming
transmitted simultaneously with sound;
or for equipment designed for multiple
purposes, capable of receiving or
playing video programming transmitted
simultaneously with sound but whose
essential utility is derived from other
purposes.’’ 47 U.S.C. 303(u)(2)(C).
36. We propose to model the scope of
these exceptions on the IP Closed
Captioning Order, in which the
Commission evaluated each of these
exceptions. Regarding achievability, the
Commission adopted a flexible
approach by which a manufacturer may
raise achievability as a defense to a
complaint alleging a violation of section
203, or it may seek a determination of
achievability from the Commission
before manufacturing or importing the
apparatus.21 The Commission found
that the exemption for display-only
video monitors is self-explanatory and
thus incorporated the language of the
statutory provision directly into its
rules, and the Commission also
provided that a manufacturer may make
a request for a Commission
determination as to whether its device
communications technologies. (3) The type of
operations of the manufacturer or provider. (4) The
extent to which the service provider or
manufacturer in question offers accessible services
or equipment containing varying degrees of
functionality and features, and offered at differing
price points.’’ 47 U.S.C. 617(g).
20 Similar to the Commission’s reasoning in the IP
Closed Captioning Order, here ‘‘we expect
identifying apparatus designed to record to be
straightforward,’’ and we propose that ‘‘when
devices such as DVD, Blu-ray, and other removable
media recording devices are capable of recording
video programming, they also qualify as recording
devices under Section 203(b) and therefore’’ are
subject to the requirements that the CVAA imposes
on recording devices. We invite comment on this
interpretation.
21 If a manufacturer seeks a Commission
determination of achievability before manufacturing
or importing an apparatus, it would make such a
request pursuant to § 1.41 of the Commission’s
rules. See 47 CFR 1.41.
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qualifies for this exemption.22 As for
purpose-based waivers, another type of
exception permitted by the statute, the
Commission concluded that it would
address any such waiver requests on a
case-by-case basis, and it stated that
waivers would be available
prospectively for manufacturers seeking
certainty prior to the sale of a device.23
What impact, if any, would the
proposed scope of our rules in this
proceeding, if adopted, have on the
need for such waivers? We seek
comment on whether the scope of these
exceptions as adopted in the IP Closed
Captioning Order should govern in the
present context. Is there any reason to
deviate from the Commission’s previous
interpretation of these exceptions?
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4. Alternate Means of Compliance
37. We propose to implement here the
same approach to alternate means of
compliance that we adopted in the IP
Closed Captioning Order. As set forth in
section 203 of the CVAA, ‘‘[a]n entity
may meet the requirements of sections
303(u), 303(z), and 330(b) of [the Act]
through alternate means than those
prescribed by regulations pursuant to
subsection (d) if the requirements of
those sections are met, as determined by
the Commission.’’ Public Law 111–260,
section 203(e). We propose that, should
an entity seek to use an ‘‘alternate
means’’ to comply with the
requirements for apparatus with regard
to video description and emergency
information, that entity could either (i)
request a Commission determination
that the proposed alternate means
satisfies the statutory requirements
through a request pursuant to § 1.41 of
our rules, 47 CFR 1.41; or (ii) claim in
defense to a complaint or enforcement
action that the Commission should
determine that the party’s actions were
permissible alternate means of
compliance. Rather than specify what
may constitute a permissible ‘‘alternate
means,’’ we propose to address any
specific requests from parties subject to
the new rules when they are presented
to us. We seek comment on these
proposals. Alternatively, given the
22 A manufacturer would make such a request
pursuant to § 1.41 of the Commission’s rules. See
47 CFR 1.41.
23 The Commission also quoted the House and
Senate Committee Reports, which state that a
waiver under these provisions is available ‘‘where,
for instance, a consumer typically purchases a
product for a primary purpose other than viewing
video programming, and access to such
programming is provided on an incidental basis.’’
See House Committee Report at 30; Senate
Committee Report at 14. Waiver of the
Commission’s rules is also subject to our general
waiver standard, which requires good cause and a
showing that particular facts make compliance
inconsistent with the public interest. 47 CFR 1.3.
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nature of emergency information,
should we impose certain standards that
any permissible alternate means must
meet?
IV. Procedural Matters
A. Initial Regulatory Flexibility Act
Analysis
38. As required by the Regulatory
Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended
(‘‘RFA’’), see 5 U.S.C. 603, the
Commission has prepared this present
Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
(‘‘IRFA’’) concerning the possible
significant economic impact on small
entities by the policies and rules
proposed in the Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (‘‘NPRM’’). Written public
comments are requested on this IRFA.
Comments must be identified as
responses to the IRFA and must be filed
by the deadlines for comments provided
on the first page of the NPRM. The
Commission will send a copy of the
NPRM, including this IRFA, to the Chief
Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration (‘‘SBA’’). See 5
U.S.C. 603(a). In addition, the NPRM
and IRFA (or summaries thereof) will be
published in the Federal Register.
1. Need for, and Objectives of, the
Proposed Rule Changes
39. The Federal Communications
Commission (‘‘Commission’’) initiates
this proceeding to implement the
provisions of the Twenty-First Century
Communications and Video
Accessibility Act of 2010 (‘‘CVAA’’)
requiring that emergency information be
made accessible to individuals who are
blind or visually impaired and that
certain equipment be capable of
delivering video description and
emergency information to those
individuals. First, pursuant to section
202 of the CVAA, the NPRM proposes
to make televised emergency
information more accessible to
individuals who are blind or visually
impaired by requiring the use of a
secondary audio stream to provide
emergency information aurally that is
conveyed visually during programming
other than newscasts. Second, the
NPRM seeks comment under section
203 of the CVAA on how to ensure that
television apparatus are able to make
available video description, as well as to
make emergency information accessible
to individuals who are blind or visually
impaired. Our section 203 discussion
focuses on the availability of secondary
audio streams, because that is both the
mechanism for providing video
description and our proposed
mechanism for making emergency
information accessible. The NPRM
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proposes at this time to apply the video
description and emergency information
requirements of section 203 of the
CVAA only to apparatus designed to
receive, play back, or record television
broadcast services or MVPD services.
Our goal in this proceeding is to enable
individuals who are blind or visually
impaired to access emergency
information and video description
services more easily. The proposed
revisions to our rules will help fulfill
the purpose of the CVAA to ‘‘update the
communications laws to help ensure
that individuals with disabilities are
able to fully utilize communications
services and equipment and better
access video programming.’’
2. Legal Basis
40. The proposed action is authorized
pursuant to the Twenty-First Century
Communications and Video
Accessibility Act of 2010, Public Law
111–260, 124 Stat. 2751, and the
authority found in sections 4(i), 4(j),
303(u) and (z), 330(b), and 713(g), of the
Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, 47 U.S.C. 154(i), 154(j), 303(u)
and (z), 330(b), and 613(g).
3. Description and Estimate of the
Number of Small Entities to Which the
Proposed Rules Will Apply
41. The RFA directs agencies to
provide a description of, and where
feasible, an estimate of the number of
small entities that may be affected by
the proposed rules, if adopted. The RFA
generally defines the term ‘‘small
entity’’ as having the same meaning as
the terms ‘‘small business,’’ ‘‘small
organization,’’ and ‘‘small governmental
jurisdiction.’’ In addition, the term
‘‘small business’’ has the same meaning
as the term ‘‘small business concern’’
under the Small Business Act. A small
business concern is one which: (1) Is
independently owned and operated; (2)
is not dominant in its field of operation;
and (3) satisfies any additional criteria
established by the SBA. Below, we
provide a description of such small
entities, as well as an estimate of the
number of such small entities, where
feasible.
42. Cable Television Distribution
Services. Since 2007, these services
have been defined within the broad
economic census category of ‘‘Wired
Telecommunications Carriers,’’ which is
defined as follows: ‘‘This industry
comprises establishments primarily
engaged in operating and/or providing
access to transmission facilities and
infrastructure that they own and/or
lease for the transmission of voice, data,
text, sound, and video using wired
telecommunications networks.
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Transmission facilities may be based on
a single technology or a combination of
technologies.’’ The SBA has developed
a small business size standard for this
category, which is: all such firms having
1,500 or fewer employees. Census data
for 2007 shows that there were 31,996
establishments that operated that year.
Of those 31,996, 1,818 operated with
more than 100 employees, and 30,178
operated with fewer than 100
employees. Thus, under this category
and the associated small business size
standard, the majority of such firms can
be considered small.
43. Cable Companies and Systems.
The Commission has also developed its
own small business size standards, for
the purpose of cable rate regulation.
Under the Commission’s rules, a ‘‘small
cable company’’ is one serving 400,000
or fewer subscribers, nationwide.
Industry data indicate that, of 1,076
cable operators nationwide, all but
eleven are small under this size
standard. In addition, under the
Commission’s rules, a ‘‘small system’’ is
a cable system serving 15,000 or fewer
subscribers. Industry data indicate that,
of 6,635 systems nationwide, 5,802
systems have under 10,000 subscribers,
and an additional 302 systems have
10,000–19,999 subscribers. Thus, under
this second size standard, most cable
systems are small.
44. Cable System Operators. The
Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, also contains a size standard
for small cable system operators, which
is ‘‘a cable operator that, directly or
through an affiliate, serves in the
aggregate fewer than 1 percent of all
subscribers in the United States and is
not affiliated with any entity or entities
whose gross annual revenues in the
aggregate exceed $250,000,000.’’ The
Commission has determined that an
operator serving fewer than 677,000
subscribers shall be deemed a small
operator if its annual revenues, when
combined with the total annual
revenues of all its affiliates, do not
exceed $250 million in the aggregate.
Industry data indicate that all but nine
cable operators nationwide are small
under this subscriber size standard. We
note that the Commission neither
requests nor collects information on
whether cable system operators are
affiliated with entities whose gross
annual revenues exceed $250 million,
and therefore we are unable to estimate
more accurately the number of cable
system operators that would qualify as
small under this size standard.
45. Television Broadcasting. This
Economic Census category ‘‘comprises
establishments primarily engaged in
broadcasting images together with
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sound. These establishments operate
television broadcasting studios and
facilities for the programming and
transmission of programs to the public.’’
The SBA has created the following
small business size standard for
Television Broadcasting firms: those
having $14 million or less in annual
receipts. The Commission has estimated
the number of licensed commercial
television stations to be 1,387. In
addition, according to Commission staff
review of the BIA Advisory Services,
LLC’s Media Access Pro Television
Database on March 28, 2012, about 950
of an estimated 1,300 commercial
television stations (or approximately 73
percent) had revenues of $14 million or
less. We therefore estimate that the
majority of commercial television
broadcasters are small entities.
46. We note, however, that in
assessing whether a business concern
qualifies as small under the above
definition, business (control) affiliations
must be included. Our estimate,
therefore, likely overstates the number
of small entities that might be affected
by our action because the revenue figure
on which it is based does not include or
aggregate revenues from affiliated
companies. In addition, an element of
the definition of ‘‘small business’’ is that
the entity not be dominant in its field
of operation. We are unable at this time
to define or quantify the criteria that
would establish whether a specific
television station is dominant in its field
of operation. Accordingly, the estimate
of small businesses to which rules may
apply does not exclude any television
station from the definition of a small
business on this basis and is therefore
possibly over-inclusive to that extent.
47. In addition, the Commission has
estimated the number of licensed
noncommercial educational (NCE)
television stations to be 396. These
stations are non-profit, and therefore
considered to be small entities.
48. Direct Broadcast Satellite (‘‘DBS’’)
Service. DBS service is a nationally
distributed subscription service that
delivers video and audio programming
via satellite to a small parabolic ‘‘dish’’
antenna at the subscriber’s location.
DBS, by exception, is now included in
the SBA’s broad economic census
category, ‘‘Wired Telecommunications
Carriers,’’ which was developed for
small wireline firms. Under this
category, the SBA deems a wireline
business to be small if it has 1,500 or
fewer employees. Census data for 2007
shows that there were 31,996
establishments that operated that year.
Of those 31,996, 1,818 operated with
more than 100 employees, and 30,178
operated with fewer than 100
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employees. Thus, under this category
and the associated small business size
standard, the majority of such firms can
be considered small. Currently, only
two entities provide DBS service, which
requires a great investment of capital for
operation: DIRECTV and EchoStar
Communications Corporation
(‘‘EchoStar’’) (marketed as the DISH
Network). Each currently offers
subscription services. DIRECTV and
EchoStar each report annual revenues
that are in excess of the threshold for a
small business. Because DBS service
requires significant capital, we believe it
is unlikely that a small entity as defined
by the SBA would have the financial
wherewithal to become a DBS service
provider.
49. Satellite Telecommunications
Providers. Two economic census
categories address the satellite industry.
The first category has a small business
size standard of $15 million or less in
average annual receipts, under SBA
rules. The second has a size standard of
$25 million or less in annual receipts.
50. The category of ‘‘Satellite
Telecommunications’’ ‘‘comprises
establishments primarily engaged in
providing telecommunications services
to other establishments in the
telecommunications and broadcasting
industries by forwarding and receiving
communications signals via a system of
satellites or reselling satellite
telecommunications.’’ Census Bureau
data for 2007 show that 607 Satellite
Telecommunications establishments
operated for that entire year. Of this
total, 533 establishments had annual
receipts of under $10 million or less,
and 74 establishments had receipts of
$10 million or more. Consequently, the
Commission estimates that the majority
of Satellite Telecommunications firms
are small entities that might be affected
by our action.
51. The second category, i.e., ‘‘All
Other Telecommunications,’’ comprises
‘‘establishments primarily engaged in
providing specialized
telecommunications services, such as
satellite tracking, communications
telemetry, and radar station operation.
This industry also includes
establishments primarily engaged in
providing satellite terminal stations and
associated facilities connected with one
or more terrestrial systems and capable
of transmitting telecommunications to,
and receiving telecommunications from,
satellite systems. Establishments
providing Internet services or voice over
Internet protocol (VoIP) services via
client-supplied telecommunications
connections are also included in this
industry.’’ For this category, Census
data for 2007 shows that there were a
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total of 2,639 establishments that
operated for the entire year. Of those
2,639 establishments, 2,333 operated
with annual receipts of less than $10
million and 306 with annual receipts of
$10 million or more. Consequently, the
Commission estimates that a majority of
All Other Telecommunications
establishments are small entities that
might be affected by our action.
52. Satellite Master Antenna
Television (SMATV) Systems, also
known as Private Cable Operators
(PCOs). SMATV systems or PCOs are
video distribution facilities that use
closed transmission paths without using
any public right-of-way. They acquire
video programming and distribute it via
terrestrial wiring in urban and suburban
multiple dwelling units such as
apartments and condominiums, and
commercial multiple tenant units such
as hotels and office buildings. SMATV
systems or PCOs are now included in
the SBA’s broad economic census
category, ‘‘Wired Telecommunications
Carriers,’’ which was developed for
small wireline firms. Under this
category, the SBA deems a wireline
business to be small if it has 1,500 or
fewer employees. Census data for 2007
shows that there were 31,996
establishments that operated that year.
Of those 31,996, 1,818 operated with
more than 100 employees, and 30,178
operated with fewer than 100
employees. Thus, under this category
and the associated small business size
standard, the majority of such firms can
be considered small.
53. Home Satellite Dish (‘‘HSD’’)
Service. HSD or the large dish segment
of the satellite industry is the original
satellite-to-home service offered to
consumers, and involves the home
reception of signals transmitted by
satellites operating generally in the Cband frequency. Unlike DBS, which
uses small dishes, HSD antennas are
between four and eight feet in diameter
and can receive a wide range of
unscrambled (free) programming and
scrambled programming purchased from
program packagers that are licensed to
facilitate subscribers’ receipt of video
programming. Because HSD provides
subscription services, HSD falls within
the SBA-recognized definition of
‘‘Wired Telecommunications Carriers.’’
The SBA has developed a small
business size standard for this category,
which is: all such firms having 1,500 or
fewer employees. Census data for 2007
shows that there were 31,996
establishments that operated that year.
Of those 31,996, 1,818 operated with
more than 100 employees, and 30,178
operated with fewer than 100
employees. Thus, under this category
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and the associated small business size
standard, the majority of such firms can
be considered small.
54. Broadband Radio Service and
Educational Broadband Service.
Broadband Radio Service systems,
previously referred to as Multipoint
Distribution Service (MDS) and
Multichannel Multipoint Distribution
Service (MMDS) systems, and ‘‘wireless
cable,’’ transmit video programming to
subscribers and provide two-way high
speed data operations using the
microwave frequencies of the
Broadband Radio Service (BRS) and
Educational Broadband Service (EBS)
(previously referred to as the
Instructional Television Fixed Service
(ITFS)). In connection with the 1996
BRS auction, the Commission
established a small business size
standard as an entity that had annual
average gross revenues of no more than
$40 million in the previous three
calendar years. The BRS auctions
resulted in 67 successful bidders
obtaining licensing opportunities for
493 Basic Trading Areas (BTAs). Of the
67 auction winners, 61 met the
definition of a small business. BRS also
includes licensees of stations authorized
prior to the auction. At this time, we
estimate that of the 61 small business
BRS auction winners, 48 remain small
business licensees. In addition to the 48
small businesses that hold BTA
authorizations, there are approximately
392 incumbent BRS licensees that are
considered small entities. After adding
the number of small business auction
licensees to the number of incumbent
licensees not already counted, we find
that there are currently approximately
440 BRS licensees that are defined as
small businesses under either the SBA
or the Commission’s rules. In 2009, the
Commission conducted Auction 86, the
sale of 78 licenses in the BRS areas. The
Commission offered three levels of
bidding credits: (i) A bidder with
attributed average annual gross revenues
that exceed $15 million and do not
exceed $40 million for the preceding
three years (small business) received a
15 percent discount on its winning bid;
(ii) a bidder with attributed average
annual gross revenues that exceed $3
million and do not exceed $15 million
for the preceding three years (very small
business) received a 25 percent discount
on its winning bid; and (iii) a bidder
with attributed average annual gross
revenues that do not exceed $3 million
for the preceding three years
(entrepreneur) received a 35 percent
discount on its winning bid. Auction 86
concluded in 2009 with the sale of 61
licenses. Of the ten winning bidders,
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two bidders that claimed small business
status won four licenses; one bidder that
claimed very small business status won
three licenses; and two bidders that
claimed entrepreneur status won six
licenses.
55. In addition, the SBA’s placement
of Cable Television Distribution
Services in the category of Wired
Telecommunications Carriers is
applicable to cable-based Educational
Broadcasting Services. Since 2007,
‘‘Wired Telecommunications Carriers’’
have been defined as follows: ‘‘This
industry comprises establishments
primarily engaged in operating and/or
providing access to transmission
facilities and infrastructure that they
own and/or lease for the transmission of
voice, data, text, sound, and video using
wired telecommunications networks.
Transmission facilities may be based on
a single technology or a combination of
technologies.’’ Establishments in this
industry use the wired
telecommunications network facilities
that they operate to provide a variety of
services, such as wired telephony
services, including VoIP services; wired
(cable) audio and video programming
distribution; and wired broadband
Internet services. By exception,
establishments providing satellite
television distribution services using
facilities and infrastructure that they
operate are included in this industry.
For these services, the Commission uses
the SBA small business size standard for
Wired Telecommunications Carriers,
which is 1,500 or fewer employees.
Census data for 2007 shows that there
were 31,996 establishments that
operated that year. Of those 31,996,
1,818 operated with more than 100
employees, and 30,178 operated with
fewer than 100 employees. Thus, under
this category and the associated small
business size standard, the majority of
such firms can be considered small. In
addition to Census data, the
Commission’s internal records indicate
that as of September 2012, there are
2,241 active EBS licenses. The
Commission estimates that of these
2,241 licenses, the majority are held by
non-profit educational institutions and
school districts, which are by statute
defined as small businesses.
56. Fixed Microwave Services.
Microwave services include common
carrier, private-operational fixed, and
broadcast auxiliary radio services. They
also include the Local Multipoint
Distribution Service (LMDS), the Digital
Electronic Message Service (DEMS), and
the 24 GHz Service, where licensees can
choose between common carrier and
non-common carrier status. At present,
there are approximately 31,428 common
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carrier fixed licensees and 79,732
private operational-fixed licensees and
broadcast auxiliary radio licensees in
the microwave services. There are
approximately 120 LMDS licensees,
three DEMS licensees, and three 24 GHz
licensees. The Commission has not yet
defined a small business with respect to
microwave services. For purposes of the
IRFA, we will use the SBA’s definition
applicable to Wireless
Telecommunications Carriers (except
satellite)—i.e., an entity with no more
than 1,500 persons. Under the present
and prior categories, the SBA has
deemed a wireless business to be small
if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. For
the category of ‘‘Wireless
Telecommunications Carriers (except
Satellite),’’ Census data for 2007 show
that there were 11,163 firms that
operated for the entire year. Of this
total, 10,791 firms had employment of
999 or fewer employees and 372 had
employment of 1,000 employees or
more. Thus, under this category and the
associated small business size standard,
the majority of firms can be considered
small. We note that the number of firms
does not necessarily track the number of
licensees. We estimate that virtually all
of the Fixed Microwave licensees
(excluding broadcast auxiliary
licensees) would qualify as small
entities under the SBA definition.
57. Open Video Systems. The open
video system (‘‘OVS’’) framework was
established in 1996, and is one of four
statutorily recognized options for the
provision of video programming
services by local exchange carriers. The
OVS framework provides opportunities
for the distribution of video
programming other than through cable
systems. Because OVS operators provide
subscription services, OVS falls within
the SBA small business size standard
covering cable services, which is
‘‘Wired Telecommunications Carriers.’’
The SBA has developed a small
business size standard for this category,
which is: all such firms having 1,500 or
fewer employees. Census data for 2007
shows that there were 31,996
establishments that operated that year.
Of those 31,996, 1,818 operated with
more than 100 employees, and 30,178
operated with fewer than 100
employees. Thus, under this category
and the associated small business size
standard, the majority of such firms can
be considered small. In addition, we
note that the Commission has certified
some OVS operators, with some now
providing service. Broadband service
providers (‘‘BSPs’’) are currently the
only significant holders of OVS
certifications or local OVS franchises.
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The Commission does not have
financial or employment information
regarding the entities authorized to
provide OVS, some of which may not
yet be operational. Thus, at least some
of the OVS operators may qualify as
small entities.
58. Cable and Other Subscription
Programming. The Census Bureau
defines this category as follows: ‘‘This
industry comprises establishments
primarily engaged in operating studios
and facilities for the broadcasting of
programs on a subscription or fee basis.
These establishments produce
programming in their own facilities or
acquire programming from external
sources. The programming material is
usually delivered to a third party, such
as cable systems or direct-to-home
satellite systems, for transmission to
viewers.’’ The SBA has developed a
small business size standard for this
category, which is: all such firms having
$15 million dollars or less in annual
revenues. To gauge small business
prevalence in the Cable and Other
Subscription Programming industries,
the Commission relies on data currently
available from the U.S. Census for the
year 2007. Census Bureau data for 2007
show that there were 659 establishments
in this category that operated for the
entire year. Of that number, 462
operated with annual revenues of
$9,999,999 million dollars or less. 197
operated with annual revenues of 10
million or more. Thus, under this
category and associated small business
size standard, the majority of firms can
be considered small.
59. Small Incumbent Local Exchange
Carriers. We have included small
incumbent local exchange carriers in
this present RFA analysis. A ‘‘small
business’’ under the RFA is one that,
inter alia, meets the pertinent small
business size standard (e.g., a telephone
communications business having 1,500
or fewer employees), and ‘‘is not
dominant in its field of operation.’’ The
SBA’s Office of Advocacy contends that,
for RFA purposes, small incumbent
local exchange carriers are not dominant
in their field of operation because any
such dominance is not ‘‘national’’ in
scope. We have therefore included small
incumbent local exchange carriers in
this RFA analysis, although we
emphasize that this RFA action has no
effect on Commission analyses and
determinations in other, non-RFA
contexts.
60. Incumbent Local Exchange
Carriers (‘‘LECs’’). Neither the
Commission nor the SBA has developed
a small business size standard
specifically for incumbent local
exchange services. The appropriate size
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standard under SBA rules is for the
category ‘‘Wired Telecommunications
Carriers.’’ Under that size standard,
such a business is small if it has 1,500
or fewer employees. Census data for
2007 shows that there were 31,996
establishments that operated that year.
Of those 31,996, 1,818 operated with
more than 100 employees, and 30,178
operated with fewer than 100
employees. Thus, under this category
and the associated small business size
standard, the majority of such firms can
be considered small.
61. Competitive Local Exchange
Carriers, Competitive Access Providers
(CAPs), ‘‘Shared-Tenant Service
Providers,’’ and ‘‘Other Local Service
Providers.’’ Neither the Commission nor
the SBA has developed a small business
size standard specifically for these
service providers. The appropriate size
standard under SBA rules is for the
category ‘‘Wired Telecommunications
Carriers.’’ Under that size standard,
such a business is small if it has 1,500
or fewer employees. Census data for
2007 shows that there were 31,996
establishments that operated that year.
Of those 31,996, 1,818 operated with
more than 100 employees, and 30,178
operated with fewer than 100
employees. Thus, under this category
and the associated small business size
standard, the majority of such firms can
be considered small. Consequently, the
Commission estimates that most
providers of competitive local exchange
service, competitive access providers,
‘‘Shared-Tenant Service Providers,’’ and
‘‘Other Local Service Providers’’ are
small entities.
62. Motion Picture and Video
Production. The Census Bureau defines
this category as follows: This industry
comprises establishments primarily
engaged in producing, or producing and
distributing motion pictures, videos,
television programs, or television
commercials. We note that firms in this
category may be engaged in various
industries, including cable
programming. Specific figures are not
available regarding how many of these
firms produce and/or distribute
programming for cable television. The
SBA has developed a small business
size standard for this category, which is:
all such firms having $29.5 million
dollars or less in annual revenues. To
gauge small business prevalence in the
Motion Picture and Video Production
industries, the Commission relies on
data currently available from the U.S.
Census for the year 2007. Census Bureau
data for 2007, which now supersede
data from the 2002 Census, show that
there were 9,095 firms in this category
that operated for the entire year. Of
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these, 8,995 had annual receipts of
$24,999,999 or less, and 100 had annual
receipts ranging from not less than
$25,000,000 to $100,000,000 or more.
Thus, under this category and
associated small business size standard,
the majority of firms can be considered
small.
63. Motion Picture and Video
Distribution. The Census Bureau defines
this category as follows: ‘‘This industry
comprises establishments primarily
engaged in acquiring distribution rights
and distributing film and video
productions to motion picture theaters,
television networks and stations, and
exhibitors.’’ We note that firms in this
category may be engaged in various
industries, including cable
programming. Specific figures are not
available regarding how many of these
firms produce and/or distribute
programming for cable television. The
SBA has developed a small business
size standard for this category, which is:
All such firms having $29.5 million
dollars or less in annual revenues. To
gauge small business prevalence in the
Motion Picture and Video Distribution
industries, the Commission relies on
data currently available from the U.S.
Census for the year 2007. Census Bureau
data for 2007, which now supersede
data from the 2002 Census, show that
there were 450 firms in this category
that operated for the entire year. Of
these, 434 had annual receipts of
$24,999,999 or less, and 16 had annual
receipts ranging from not less than
$25,000,000 to $100,000,000 or more.
Thus, under this category and
associated small business size standard,
the majority of firms can be considered
small.
64. Radio and Television
Broadcasting and Wireless
Communications Equipment
Manufacturing. The Census Bureau
defines this category as follows: ‘‘This
industry comprises establishments
primarily engaged in manufacturing
radio and television broadcast and
wireless communications equipment.
Examples of products made by these
establishments are: transmitting and
receiving antennas, cable television
equipment, GPS equipment, pagers,
cellular phones, mobile
communications equipment, and radio
and television studio and broadcasting
equipment.’’ The SBA has developed a
small business size standard for Radio
and Television Broadcasting and
Wireless Communications Equipment
Manufacturing, which is: all such firms
having 750 or fewer employees.
According to Census Bureau data for
2007, there were 919 establishments
that operated for part or all of the entire
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year. Of those 919 establishments, 771
operated with 99 or fewer employees,
and 148 operated with 100 or more
employees. Thus, under that size
standard, the majority of establishments
can be considered small.
65. Audio and Video Equipment
Manufacturing. The SBA has classified
the manufacturing of audio and video
equipment under in NAICS Codes
classification scheme as an industry in
which a manufacturer is small if it has
less than 750 employees. Data contained
in the 2007 Economic Census indicate
that 491 establishments in this category
operated for part or all of the entire year.
Of those 491 establishments, 456
operated with 99 or fewer employees,
and 35 operated with 100 or more
employees. Thus, under the applicable
size standard, a majority of
manufacturers of audio and video
equipment may be considered small.
4. Description of Projected Reporting,
Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance
Requirements
66. Certain proposed rule changes
discussed in the NPRM would affect
reporting, recordkeeping, or other
compliance requirements. In general,
the NPRM proposes to satisfy the
requirements of section 202(a) of the
CVAA with regard to making emergency
information accessible to persons who
are blind or visually impaired by
mandating the use of a secondary audio
stream to provide the emergency
information aurally and concurrently
with the emergency information being
conveyed visually during non-news
programming. The NPRM also makes
certain proposals regarding apparatus
requirements for emergency information
and video description.
67. Specifically, on the topic of
apparatus requirements, the
Commission proposes to permit parties
to raise technical infeasibility as a
defense to a complaint or, alternatively,
to file a request for a ruling under § 1.41
of the Commission’s rules before
manufacturing or importing the product.
Similarly, the Commission proposes to
permit a manufacturer to raise
achievability as a defense to a complaint
alleging a violation of section 203, or to
seek a determination of achievability
from the Commission before
manufacturing or importing the
apparatus. Further, the Commission
proposes that a manufacturer may make
a request for a Commission
determination as to whether its
apparatus is an exempt display-only
video monitor, and that the Commission
will make purpose-based waivers
available prospectively and such
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waivers will be addressed on a case-bycase basis.
68. In the NPRM, the Commission also
seeks comment on complaint filing for
the proposed rules related both to access
to emergency information and apparatus
requirements for video description and
emergency information.
5. Steps Taken To Minimize Significant
Impact on Small Entities and Significant
Alternatives Considered
69. The RFA requires an agency to
describe any significant alternatives that
it has considered in reaching its
proposed approach, which may include
the following four alternatives (among
others): (1) The establishment of
differing compliance or reporting
requirements or timetables that take into
account the resources available to small
entities; (2) the clarification,
consolidation, or simplification of
compliance or reporting requirements
under the rule for small entities; (3) the
use of performance, rather than design,
standards; and (4) an exemption from
coverage of the rule, or any part thereof,
for small entities.
70. We emphasize at the outset that,
although alternatives to minimize
economic impact have been and are
being considered as part of this
proceeding, our proposals are governed
by the congressional mandate contained
in sections 202(a) and 203 of the CVAA.
The NPRM seeks comment on whether
any alternatives to the proposed use of
the secondary audio stream would be
preferable, and how the costs and
benefits of any alternate proposals
would compare to the costs and benefits
of the proposed use of the secondary
audio stream. Regarding accessible
emergency information, the NPRM seeks
comment on certain specified
alternative approaches (for example,
including a shortened audio version of
the textual emergency information on
the primary stream, or broadcasting a 5
to 10 second audio message after three
high-pitched tones announcing the start
of a textual message), and it additionally
seeks comment on any additional
alternatives that may become viable in
the future (for example, ‘‘dipping’’ or
lowering the main program audio and
playing an aural message over the
lowered audio, providing screen reader
software or devices on request, enabling
users to select and enlarge emergency
crawl text, providing guidance for
consumers, and using an Internet-based
standardized application to filter
emergency information by location).
Regarding apparatus requirements for
emergency information and video
description, the NPRM proposes that
parties may use alternate means of
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compliance to the rules adopted
pursuant to section 203 of the CVAA,
and it proposes to address any specific
requests from parties subject to new
rules when they are presented to the
Commission, rather than specifying
what may constitute a permissible
‘‘alternate means.’’ Individual entities,
including smaller entities, may benefit
from this provision.
71. Overall, in proposing rules
governing accessible emergency
information and apparatus requirements
for emergency information and video
description, we believe that we have
appropriately considered both the
interests of individuals who are blind or
visually impaired and the interests of
the entities who will be subject to the
rules, including those that are smaller
entities. Our efforts are consistent with
Congress’ goal of ‘‘updat[ing] the
communications laws to help ensure
that individuals with disabilities are
able to fully utilize communications
services and equipment and better
access video programming.’’
6. Federal Rules That May Duplicate,
Overlap, or Conflict With the Proposed
Rule
72. None.
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B. Paperwork Reduction Act
73. This document contains proposed
new or modified information collection
requirements. The Commission, as part
of its continuing effort to reduce
paperwork burdens, invites the general
public and the Office of Management
and Budget (‘‘OMB’’) to comment on the
information collection requirements
contained in this document, as required
by the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995. Public Law 104–13. In addition,
pursuant to the Small Business
Paperwork Relief Act of 2002, Public
Law 107–198, we seek specific comment
on how we might ‘‘further reduce the
information collection burden for small
business concerns with fewer than 25
employees.’’ 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(4).
C. Ex Parte Rules
74. Permit-But-Disclose. The
proceeding this NPRM initiates shall be
treated as a ‘‘permit-but-disclose’’
proceeding in accordance with the
Commission’s ex parte rules. 47 CFR
1.1200 et seq. Persons making ex parte
presentations must file a copy of any
written presentation or a memorandum
summarizing any oral presentation
within two business days after the
presentation (unless a different deadline
applicable to the Sunshine period
applies). Persons making oral ex parte
presentations are reminded that
memoranda summarizing the
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presentation must (1) list all persons
attending or otherwise participating in
the meeting at which the ex parte
presentation was made, and (2)
summarize all data presented and
arguments made during the
presentation. If the presentation
consisted in whole or in part of the
presentation of data or arguments
already reflected in the presenter’s
written comments, memoranda or other
filings in the proceeding, the presenter
may provide citations to such data or
arguments in his or her prior comments,
memoranda, or other filings (specifying
the relevant page and/or paragraph
numbers where such data or arguments
can be found) in lieu of summarizing
them in the memorandum. Documents
shown or given to Commission staff
during ex parte meetings are deemed to
be written ex parte presentations and
must be filed consistent with rule
§ 1.1206(b). In proceedings governed by
rule § 1.49(f) or for which the
Commission has made available a
method of electronic filing, written ex
parte presentations and memoranda
summarizing oral ex parte
presentations, and all attachments
thereto, must be filed through the
electronic comment filing system
available for that proceeding, and must
be filed in their native format (e.g., .doc,
.xml, .ppt, searchable .pdf). Participants
in this proceeding should familiarize
themselves with the Commission’s ex
parte rules.
D. Filing Requirements
75. Comments and Replies. Pursuant
to §§ 1.415 and 1.419 of the
Commission’s rules, interested parties
may file comments and reply comments
on or before the dates indicated on the
first page of this document. 47 CFR
1.415, 1.419. Comments may be filed
using the Commission’s Electronic
Comment Filing System (‘‘ECFS’’). See
Electronic Filing of Documents in
Rulemaking Proceedings, 63 FR 24121
(1998).
• Electronic Filers: Comments may be
filed electronically using the Internet by
accessing the ECFS: https://
fjallfoss.fcc.gov/ecfs2/.
• Paper Filers: Parties who choose to
file by paper must file an original and
one copy of each filing. If more than one
docket or rulemaking number appears in
the caption of this proceeding, filers
must submit two additional copies for
each additional docket or rulemaking
number.
Filings can be sent by hand or
messenger delivery, by commercial
overnight courier, or by first-class or
overnight U.S. Postal Service mail. All
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filings must be addressed to the
Commission’s Secretary, Office of the
Secretary, Federal Communications
Commission.
• All hand-delivered or messengerdelivered paper filings for the
Commission’s Secretary must be
delivered to FCC Headquarters at 445
12th Street SW., Room TW–A325,
Washington, DC 20554. The filing hours
are 8:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. All hand
deliveries must be held together with
rubber bands or fasteners. Any
envelopes and boxes must be disposed
of before entering the building.
• Commercial overnight mail (other
than U.S. Postal Service Express Mail
and Priority Mail) must be sent to 9300
East Hampton Drive, Capitol Heights,
MD 20743.
• U.S. Postal Service first-class,
Express, and Priority mail must be
addressed to 445 12th Street SW.,
Washington, DC 20554.
76. Availability of Documents.
Comments, reply comments, and ex
parte submissions will be available for
public inspection during regular
business hours in the FCC Reference
Center, Federal Communications
Commission, 445 12th Street SW., Room
CY–A257, Washington, DC 20554.
These documents will also be available
via ECFS. Documents will be available
electronically in ASCII, Microsoft Word,
and/or Adobe Acrobat.
77. People with Disabilities. To
request materials in accessible formats
for people with disabilities (Braille,
large print, electronic files, audio
format), send an email to fcc504@fcc.gov
or call the FCC’s Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau at (202)
418–0530 (voice), (202) 418–0432
(TTY).
78. Additional Information. For
additional information on this
proceeding, contact Diana Sokolow,
Diana.Sokolow@fcc.gov, or Maria
Mullarkey, Maria.Mullarkey@fcc.gov, of
the Media Bureau, Policy Division, (202)
418–2120.
V. Ordering Clauses
79. Accordingly, it is ordered that
pursuant to the Twenty-First Century
Communications and Video
Accessibility Act of 2010, Public Law
111–260, 124 Stat. 2751, and the
authority found in sections 4(i), 4(j),
303(u) and (z), 330(b), and 713(g), of the
Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, 47 U.S.C. 154(i), 154(j), 303(u)
and (z), 330(b), and 613(g), this Notice
of Proposed Rulemaking Is Adopted.
80. It is further ordered that the
Commission’s Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau, Reference
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70986
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 229 / Wednesday, November 28, 2012 / Proposed Rules
Information Center, shall send a copy of
this Notice of Proposed Rulemaking,
including the Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis, to the Chief
Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration.
List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 79
Cable television operators,
Communications equipment,
Multichannel video programming
distributors (MVPDs), Satellite
television service providers, Television
broadcasters.
Federal Communications Commission.
Bulah P. Wheeler,
Associate Secretary.
Proposed Rules
For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, the Federal Communications
Commission proposes to amend 47 CFR
part 79 as follows:
PART 79—CLOSED CAPTIONING AND
VIDEO DESCRIPTION OF VIDEO
PROGRAMMING
1. The authority citation for part 79
will continue to read as follows:
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 151, 152(a), 154(i),
303, 307, 309, 310, 330, 544a, 613, 617.
2. Amend § 79.2 by revising
paragraphs (b)(1)(ii), (b)(1)(iii), and
(b)(3)(ii) to read as follows:
§ 79.2 Accessibility of programming
providing emergency information.
erowe on DSK2VPTVN1PROD with
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) Emergency information that is
provided visually during a regularly
scheduled newscast, or newscast that
interrupts regular programming, must be
made accessible to persons with visual
disabilities; and
(iii) Emergency information that is
provided visually during programming
that is not a regularly scheduled
newscast, or a newscast that interrupts
regular programming, must be
accompanied with an aural tone, and
beginning [DATES TO BE
DETERMINED] must be made accessible
to persons with visual disabilities
through the use of a secondary audio
stream to provide the emergency
information aurally.
*
*
*
*
*
(3) * * *
(ii) Any video description provided
should not block any emergency
information.
*
*
*
*
*
3. Add § 79.105 to read as follows:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
13:16 Nov 27, 2012
Jkt 229001
§ 79.105 Video description and emergency
information decoder requirements for all
apparatus.
(a) Effective [DATES TO BE
DETERMINED], all apparatus designed
to receive or play back video
programming transmitted
simultaneously with sound that is part
of a broadcast or multichannel video
programming distributor service, if such
apparatus is manufactured in the United
States or imported for use in the United
States and uses a picture screen of any
size, must have the capability to decode
and make available the following
services, if technically feasible, unless
otherwise provided herein:
(1) The transmission and delivery of
video description services as described
in § 79.3; and
(2) Emergency information in a
manner that is accessible to individuals
who are blind or visually impaired as
described in § 79.2.
Note to paragraph (a): Apparatus
includes the physical device and the
video players that manufacturers install
into the devices they manufacture
before sale, whether in the form of
hardware, software, or a combination of
both, as well as any video players that
manufacturers direct consumers to
install after sale.
(b) Exempt apparatus—(1) Displayonly monitors. Apparatus or class of
apparatus that are display-only video
monitors with no playback capability
are not required to comply with the
provisions of this section.
(2) Professional or commercial
equipment. Apparatus or class of
apparatus that are professional or
commercial equipment not typically
used by the public are not required to
comply with the provisions of this
section.
(3)(i) Achievable. Manufacturers of
apparatus that use a picture screen of
less than 13 inches in size may petition
the Commission for a full or partial
exemption from the video description
and emergency information
requirements of this section pursuant to
§ 1.41 of this chapter, which the
Commission may grant upon a finding
that the requirements of this section are
not achievable, or may assert that such
apparatus is fully or partially exempt as
a response to a complaint, which the
Commission may dismiss upon a
finding that the requirements of this
section are not achievable.
(ii) The petitioner or respondent must
support a petition for exemption or a
response to a complaint with sufficient
evidence to demonstrate that
compliance with the requirements of
this section is not ‘‘achievable’’ where
‘‘achievable’’ means with reasonable
PO 00000
Frm 00046
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
effort or expense. The Commission will
consider the following factors when
determining whether the requirements
of this section are not ‘‘achievable:’’
(A) The nature and cost of the steps
needed to meet the requirements of this
section with respect to the specific
equipment or service in question;
(B) The technical and economic
impact on the operation of the
manufacturer or provider and on the
operation of the specific equipment or
service in question, including on the
development and deployment of new
communications technologies;
(C) The type of operations of the
manufacturer or provider; and
(D) The extent to which the service
provider or manufacturer in question
offers accessible services or equipment
containing varying degrees of
functionality and features, and offered
at differing price points.
(4) Waiver. Manufacturers of
apparatus may petition the Commission
for a full or partial waiver of the
requirements of this section, which the
Commission may grant upon a finding
that the apparatus meets one of the
following provisions:
(i) The apparatus is primarily
designed for activities other than
receiving or playing back video
programming transmitted
simultaneously with sound; or
(ii) The apparatus is designed for
multiple purposes, capable of receiving
or playing back video programming
transmitted simultaneously with sound
but whose essential utility is derived
from other purposes.
4. Add § 79.106 to read as follows:
§ 79.106 Video description and emergency
information decoder requirements for
recording devices.
(a) Effective [DATES TO BE
DETERMINED], all apparatus designed
to record video programming
transmitted simultaneously with sound
that is part of a broadcast or
multichannel video programming
distributor service, if such apparatus is
manufactured in the United States or
imported for use in the United States,
must comply with the provisions of this
section except that apparatus must only
do so if it is achievable as defined in
§ 79.105(b)(3).
Note to paragraph (a): Apparatus
includes the physical device and the
video players that manufacturers install
into the devices they manufacture
before sale, whether in the form of
hardware, software, or a combination of
both, as well as any video players that
manufacturers direct consumers to
install after sale.
(b) All apparatus subject to this
section must enable the rendering or the
E:\FR\FM\28NOP1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 229 / Wednesday, November 28, 2012 / Proposed Rules
pass through of video description
signals and emergency information (as
that term is defined in § 79.2) such that
viewers are able to activate and deactivate the video description as the
video programming is played back on a
picture screen of any size.
[FR Doc. 2012–28716 Filed 11–27–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
Public Comments
50 CFR Part 17
[Docket No. FWS–R8–ES–2012–0075;
4500030114]
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
and Plants; Status Review for a
Petition To List the Ashy Storm-Petrel
as Endangered or Threatened
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice; initiation of status
review and solicitation of new
information.
AGENCY:
We, the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service (Service), announce the
opening of an information collection
period regarding the status of the ashy
storm-petrel (Oceanodroma homochroa)
throughout its range in the United
States. The status review will include
analysis of whether the ashy stormpetrel may be an endangered or
threatened species due to threats in any
significant portion of the range of the
ashy storm-petrel. Through this action,
we encourage all interested parties to
provide us information regarding the
status of, and any potential threats to,
the ashy storm-petrel throughout its
range, or any significant portion of its
range.
DATES: To be fully considered for the
status review, comments must be
submitted on or before December 28,
2012.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
by one of the following methods:
(1) Electronically: Go to the Federal
eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Search for Docket
No. FWS–R8–ES–2012–0075, which is
the docket number for this rulemaking.
(2) By hard copy: Submit by U.S. mail
or hand-delivery to: Public Comments
Processing, Attn: FWS–R8–ES–2012–
0075; Division of Policy and Directives
Management; U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service; 4401 N. Fairfax Drive, MS
2042–PDM; Arlington, VA 22203.
We request that you send comments
only by the methods described above.
erowe on DSK2VPTVN1PROD with
SUMMARY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
13:16 Nov 27, 2012
We will post all comments on https://
www.regulations.gov. This generally
means that we will post any personal
information you provide us (see the
Public Comments section below for
more information).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Mike Chotkowski, Bay-Delta Fish and
Wildlife Office, 650 Capitol Mall, Eighth
Floor, Sacramento, CA 95814; by
telephone at 916–930–5603; or facsimile
at 916–930– 5654.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Jkt 229001
To ensure that the status review is
complete and based on the best
available scientific and commercial
information, we are soliciting
information concerning the status of the
ashy storm-petrel. We request any
additional information and suggestions
from the public, other concerned
governmental agencies, Native
American Tribes, the scientific
community, industry, or any other
interested parties. We are opening a 30day information collection period to
allow all interested parties an
opportunity to provide information on
the status of the ashy storm-petrel
throughout its range, including:
(1) Information regarding the species’
historical and current population status,
distribution, and trends; its biology and
ecology; and habitat selection.
(2) Information on the effects of
potential threat factors that are the basis
for a species’ listing determination
under section 4(a) of the Endangered
Species Act (Act) (16 U.S.C. 1531 et
seq.), which are:
(a) The present or threatened
destruction, modification, or
curtailment of the species’ habitat or
range;
(b) Overutilization for commercial,
recreational, scientific, or educational
purposes;
(c) Disease or predation;
(d) Inadequacy of existing regulatory
mechanisms; and
(e) Other natural or manmade factors
affecting its continued existence.
(3) Timing within year, type, and
amount of human activities (for
example, commercial and recreational
fishing, tourism) and their impacts on
ashy storm-petrels at locations where
ashy storm-petrels are known or
suspected to breed, including but not
limited to: Van Damme Rock
(Mendocino County); Bird, Chimney,
and Double Point Rocks (Marin County);
the Farallon Islands (San Francisco
County); Castle and Hurricane Point
Rocks (Monterey County); San Miguel
Island, Castle Rock, Prince Island,
PO 00000
Frm 00047
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
70987
mainland locations and offshore islets at
Vandenberg Air Force Base, Santa Cruz
Island, Santa Barbara Island, Sutil
Island, and Shag Rock (Santa Barbara
County); Anacapa Island (Ventura
County); Santa Catalina Island and San
Clemente Island (Los Angeles County);
and Islas Los Coronados and Islas Todos
Santos, Mexico.
(4) Projected changes in sea level
along the coast of California during the
21st century, specifically at the
locations listed in (3) above and its
impact on ashy storm-petrels.
(5) Elevations of known and suitable
breeding habitat at the locations listed
in (3) above.
(6) Projected acidification of oceanic
waters of the California Current during
the 21st century and its impact on ashy
storm-petrels.
(7) Locations of oil tanker routes, and
timing and frequency of oil tanker traffic
along the coast of California and
Northern Baja California, Mexico, and
their impact on ashy storm-petrels.
(8) Nighttime observations of ashy
storm-petrels, other storm-petrels, other
nocturnal seabirds (for example,
Xantus’s murrelets (Synthliboramphus
hypoleucus)), and other seabirds (for
example, gulls (Larus sp.)) on or near
boats (commercial or recreational) off of
central and southern California and Baja
California, Mexico.
(9) Measured and observed nighttime
lighting, and timing within year of
nighttime lighting, by boats (commercial
and recreational) at locations listed in
(3) above, and their impacts on ashy
storm-petrels.
(10) Daily and seasonal activity
patterns of ashy storm-petrels and avian
predators of ashy storm-petrels (for
example, western gull (Larus
occidentalis), burrowing owl (Athene
cunicularia)) at breeding locations in
general and, specifically, in relation to
light intensity at night, and their
impacts on ashy storm-petrels.
(11) Abundance and distribution of
predators of ashy storm-petrels at ashy
storm-petrel breeding locations.
(12) Observations of ashy stormpetrels or other storm-petrels at night on
offshore oil platforms, or additional
evidence that ashy storm-petrels are
attracted to or have collided with
offshore oil platforms.
(13) Locations of proposed offshore
liquefied natural gas (LNG) facilities
along the coast of California and
Northern Baja California, Mexico, and
their impacts on ashy storm-petrels.
(14) Evidence of organochlorine
contamination of ashy storm-petrel eggs
and birds.
(15) Ingestion of plastics by ashy
storm-petrels, distribution and
E:\FR\FM\28NOP1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 229 (Wednesday, November 28, 2012)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 70970-70987]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-28716]
[[Page 70970]]
=======================================================================
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FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 79
[MB Docket No. 12-107; FCC 12-142]
Accessible Emergency Information, and Apparatus Requirements for
Emergency Information and Video Description: Implementation of the
Twenty-First Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010
AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In this document, the Commission proposes rules to implement
provisions of the Twenty-First Century Communications and Video
Accessibility Act of 2010 (``CVAA'') that mandate regulations to ensure
that emergency information is accessible to individuals who are blind
and visually disabled and that television apparatus are able to make
available video description and accessible emergency information. The
Commission seeks comment on rules that would apply to the distributors,
providers, and owners of television video programming, as well as the
manufacturers of devices that display such programming.
DATES: Comments are due on or before December 18, 2012; reply comments
are due on or before December 28, 2012. Written comments on the
Paperwork Reduction Act proposed information collection requirements
must be submitted by the public, Office of Management and Budget (OMB),
and other interested parties on or before January 28, 2013.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by MB Docket No. 12-107,
by any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Federal Communications Commission's Web Site: https://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/ecfs2/. Follow the instructions for submitting
comments.
Mail: Filings can be sent by hand or messenger delivery,
by commercial overnight courier, or by first-class or overnight U.S.
Postal Service mail. All filings must be addressed to the Commission's
Secretary, Office of the Secretary, Federal Communications Commission.
People with Disabilities: Contact the FCC to request
reasonable accommodations (accessible format documents, sign language
interpreters, CART, etc.) by email: FCC504@fcc.gov or phone: (202) 418-
0530 or TTY: (202) 418-0432.
In addition to filing comments with the Secretary, a copy of any
comments on the Paperwork Reduction Act proposed information collection
requirements contained herein should be submitted to the Federal
Communications Commission via email to PRA@fcc.gov and to Nicholas A.
Fraser, Office of Management and Budget, via email to Nicholas_A._Fraser@omb.eop.gov or via fax at (202) 395-5167. For detailed
instructions for submitting comments and additional information on the
rulemaking process, see the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of this
document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For additional information on this
proceeding, contact Diana Sokolow, Diana.Sokolow@fcc.gov, or Maria
Mullarkey, Maria.Mullarkey@fcc.gov, of the Policy Division, Media
Bureau, (202) 418-2120. For additional information concerning the
Paperwork Reduction Act information collection requirements contained
in this document, send an email to PRA@fcc.gov or contact Cathy
Williams at (202) 418-2918.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Commission's Notice
of Proposed Rulemaking, FCC 12-142, adopted on November 16, 2012, and
released on November 19, 2012. The full text is available for public
inspection and copying during regular business hours in the FCC
Reference Center, Federal Communications Commission, 445 12th Street
SW., Room CY-A257, Washington, DC 20554. This document will also be
available via ECFS at https://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/ecfs/. Documents will be
available electronically in ASCII, Microsoft Word, and/or Adobe
Acrobat. The complete text may be purchased from the Commission's copy
contractor, 445 12th Street SW., Room CY-B402, Washington, DC 20554.
Alternative formats are available for people with disabilities
(Braille, large print, electronic files, audio format), by sending an
email to fcc504@fcc.gov or calling the Commission's Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau at (202) 418-0530 (voice), (202) 418-0432
(TTY).
This document contains proposed information collection
requirements. The Commission, as part of its continuing effort to
reduce paperwork burdens, invites the general public and the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) to comment on the information collection
requirements contained in this document, as required by the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, Public Law 104-13. Public and agency comments
are due January 28, 2013.
Comments should address: (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 estimates; (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. In addition, pursuant
to the Small Business Paperwork Relief Act of 2002, Public Law 107-198,
see 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(4), we seek specific comment on how we might
further reduce the information collection burden for small business
concerns with fewer than 25 employees.
To view or obtain a copy of this information collection request
(ICR) submitted to OMB: (1) Go to this OMB/GSA Web page: https://www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAMain, (2) look for the section of the Web
page called ``Currently Under Review,'' (3) click on the downward-
pointing arrow in the ``Select Agency'' box below the ``Currently Under
Review'' heading, (4) select ``Federal Communications Commission'' from
the list of agencies presented in the ``Select Agency'' box, (5) click
the ``Submit'' button to the right of the ``Select Agency'' box, and
(6) when the list of FCC ICRs currently under review appears, look for
the OMB control number of this ICR as show in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section below (or its title if there is no OMB control
number) and then click on the ICR Reference Number. A copy of the FCC
submission to OMB will be displayed.
OMB Control Number: 3060-0967.
Title: Section 79.2, Accessibility of Programming Providing
Emergency Information; Complaints Alleging Violations of the Apparatus
Emergency Information and Video Description Requirements.
Form No.: Not applicable.
Type of Review: Revision of a currently approved collection.
Respondents: Individuals or households; businesses or other for-
profit entities; not-for-profit institutions; State, local, or tribal
governments.
Number of Respondents and Responses: 80 respondents; 80 responses.
[[Page 70971]]
Estimated Time per Response: 1-3 hours.
Frequency of Response: On occasion reporting requirement; Third
party disclosure requirement.
Obligation to Respond: Voluntary. The statutory authority for this
collection of information is contained in the Twenty-First Century
Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010, Pub. L. 111-260,
124 Stat. 2751, and 47 U.S.C. 151, 152(a), 154(i), 154(j), 303, 307,
309, 310, 330(b) and 613.
Total Annual Burden: 93 hours.
Total Annual Costs: $12,600.
Privacy Act Impact Assessment: Yes. The Privacy Impact Assessment
(PIA) was completed on June 28, 2007. It may be reviewed at: https://www.fcc.gov/omd/privacyact/Privacy_Impact_Assessment.html. The
Commission is in the process of updating the PIA to incorporate various
revisions made to the SORN.
Nature and Extent of Confidentiality: Confidentiality is an issue
to the extent that individuals and households provide personally
identifiable information, which is covered under the FCC's system of
records notice (SORN), FCC/CGB-1, ``Informal Complaints and
Inquiries.'' As required by the Privacy Act, 5 U.S.C. 552a, the
Commission also published a SORN, FCC/CGB-1 ``Informal Complaints and
Inquiries,'' in the Federal Register on December 15, 2009 (74 FR 66356)
which became effective on January 25, 2010.
Needs and Uses: The Commission is seeking approval for this
proposed information collection from the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB). On November 19, 2012, the Commission released a Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking, MB Docket No. 12-107; FCC 12-142. This rulemaking
proposed information collection requirements that support the
Commission's accessible emergency information and apparatus rules that
would be codified at 47 CFR 79.2, 79.105, and 79.106, as required by
the CVAA.
The proposed information collection requirements consist of:
Complaints alleging violations of the emergency information rules.
Pursuant to existing rule 47 CFR 79.2, consumers may file
complaints alleging violations of the accessible emergency information
requirements. As a result of the proposed revisions to the existing
rule, we have estimated in increase in the number of complaints filed
annually pursuant to this rule.
Complaints alleging violations of the apparatus emergency
information and video description requirements.
Pursuant to proposals contained in the NPRM, consumers could file
complaints alleging violations of the proposed rules containing
apparatus emergency information and video description requirements, 47
CFR 79.105-79.106. A complaint alleging a violation of the apparatus
rules related to emergency information and video description may be
transmitted to the Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau by any
reasonable means, such as the Commission's online informal complaint
filing system, letter in writing or Braille, facsimile transmission,
telephone (voice/TRS/TTY), email, or some other method that would best
accommodate the complainant's disability. Given that the population
intended to benefit from the rules adopted would be blind or visually
impaired, if a complainant calls the Commission for assistance in
preparing a complaint, Commission staff would document the complaint in
writing for the consumer and such communication would be deemed a
written complaint. The NPRM proposes that such complaints should
include certain information about the complainant and the alleged
violation. The Commission will forward such complaints, as appropriate,
to the named manufacturer or provider for its response, as well as to
any other entity that Commission staff determines may be involved, and
may request additional information from any relevant parties when, in
the estimation of Commission staff, such information is needed to
investigate the complaint or adjudicate potential violations of
Commission rules. The Commission is seeking OMB approval for the
proposed information collection requirements.
Summary of the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
I. Introduction
1. The Federal Communications Commission (``Commission'') initiates
this proceeding to implement the provisions of the Twenty-First Century
Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010 (``CVAA'') requiring
that emergency information be made accessible to individuals who are
blind or visually impaired and that certain equipment be capable of
delivering video description and emergency information to those
individuals. First, pursuant to section 202 of the CVAA, this Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking (``NPRM'') proposes to make televised emergency
information \1\ more accessible to individuals who are blind or
visually impaired by requiring the use of a secondary audio stream to
provide emergency information aurally that is conveyed visually during
programming other than newscasts. Second, we seek comment under section
203 of the CVAA on how to ensure that television apparatus are able to
make available video description,\2\ as well as to make emergency
information accessible to individuals who are blind or visually
impaired. Our section 203 discussion focuses on the availability of
secondary audio streams, because that is both the mechanism for
providing video description and our proposed mechanism for making
emergency information accessible.\3\ Our goal in this proceeding is to
enable individuals who are blind or visually impaired to access
emergency information and video description services more easily. The
proposed revisions to our rules will help fulfill the purpose of the
CVAA to ``update the communications laws to help ensure that
individuals with disabilities are able to fully utilize communications
services and equipment and better access video programming.'' H.R. Rep.
No. 111-563, 111th Cong., 2d Sess. at 19 (2010) (``House Committee
Report''); S. Rep. No. 111-386, 111th Cong., 2d Sess. at 1 (2010)
(``Senate Committee Report'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ ``Emergency information'' is defined in the Commission's
rules as ``[i]nformation, about a current emergency, that is
intended to further the protection of life, health, safety, and
property, i.e., critical details regarding the emergency and how to
respond to the emergency.'' 47 CFR 79.2(a)(2). Emergency information
might pertain to emergencies such as ``tornadoes, hurricanes,
floods, tidal waves, earthquakes, icing conditions, heavy snows,
widespread fires, discharge of toxic gases, widespread power
failures, industrial explosions, civil disorders, school closings
and changes in school bus schedules resulting from such conditions,
and warnings and watches of impending changes in weather.'' Id.
``Critical details include, but are not limited to, specific details
regarding the areas that will be affected by the emergency,
evacuation orders, detailed descriptions of areas to be evacuated,
specific evacuation routes, approved shelters or the way to take
shelter in one's home, instructions on how to secure personal
property, road closures, and how to obtain relief assistance.'' Note
to 47 CFR 79.2(a)(2).
\2\ ``Video description'' is defined as ``[t]he insertion of
audio narrated descriptions of a television program's key visual
elements into natural pauses between the program's dialogue.'' 47
CFR 79.3(a)(3).
\3\ A separate proceeding will address sections 204 and 205 of
the CVAA, which pertain to user interfaces and video programming
guides and menus. Public Notice, Media Bureau and Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau Seek Comment on Second VPAAC Report:
User Interfaces, and Video Programming Guides and Menus, 27 FCC Rcd
4191 (2012).
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II. Background
2. Section 202 of the CVAA requires the Commission to complete a
proceeding to ``identify methods to
[[Page 70972]]
convey emergency information (as that term is defined in Sec. 79.2 of
title 47, Code of Federal Regulations) in a manner accessible to
individuals who are blind or visually impaired.'' \4\ 47 U.S.C.
613(g)(1). The Commission must also ``promulgate regulations that
require video programming providers and video programming distributors
(as those terms are defined in Sec. 79.1 of title 47, Code of Federal
Regulations) and program owners to convey such emergency information in
a manner accessible to individuals who are blind or visually
impaired.'' 47 U.S.C. 613(g)(2). In addition, section 203 of the CVAA
directs the Commission to prescribe regulations requiring apparatus to
have the capability to decode and make available emergency information
in a manner that is accessible to individuals who are blind or visually
impaired, and to decode and make available video description services.
47 U.S.C. 303(u)(1). The CVAA requires that the Commission complete its
proceeding on access to emergency information by April 9, 2013, and on
apparatus requirements for video description and emergency information
by October 9, 2013.
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\4\ Accessibility of this emergency information is a separate
matter from accessibility of an activation of the Emergency Alert
System (``EAS''), which facilitates emergency communications from
the President, the heads of State and local government, their
designated representatives, or the National Weather Service. See 47
CFR 11.1. In this proceeding we consider revisions to Sec. 79.2 of
our rules, whereas EAS is governed by Part 11 of our rules. Compare
47 CFR 79.2 with 47 CFR part 11. In a separate proceeding, the
Commission considers ways to make EAS alerts more accessible to
persons with disabilities. While the EAS rules apply only to certain
emergency communications, as stated above, Sec. 79.2 of the
Commission's rules applies more broadly to televised emergency
information. Compare 47 CFR 11.1 with 47 CFR 79.2.
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3. The CVAA also required the Chairman of the Commission to
establish an advisory committee known as the Video Programming
Accessibility Advisory Committee (``VPAAC''). The Commission announced
the establishment of the VPAAC on December 7, 2010, and the committee
began meeting in January 2011. The VPAAC divided itself into four
advisory working groups, with Working Group 3 focused on emergency
information and Working Group 2 focused on video description. Section
201(e)(2) of the CVAA required the VPAAC to submit a report on video
description and emergency information to the Commission within 18
months after the date of enactment of the CVAA, or by April 9, 2012.
The VPAAC submitted this report on April 9, 2012.\5\ In the VPAAC
Second Report, Working Group 3 presented its findings on methods to
convey emergency information to individuals who are blind or visually
impaired, including alternatives that it considered and rejected.
Working Group 3 concluded that crawls containing emergency information
should be made accessible to persons who are blind or visually impaired
by transmitting an audio representation of the emergency information on
a secondary audio stream, as the Commission now proposes. Working Group
3 also suggested issues that should be analyzed further, and it
described variables that may affect implementation deadlines. In a
separate section of the same report, Working Group 2 presented
information on technical capabilities, protocols, and procedures by
which video description reaches the consumer, as well as developments
for the delivery of video description. Working Group 2 then set forth
its findings and recommendations pertaining to the creation and
delivery of video description.\6\ The Media Bureau and the Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau sought comment on the portions of the VPAAC
Second Report that address emergency information and video description.
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\5\ Second Report of the Video Programming Accessibility
Advisory Committee on the Twenty-First Century Communications and
Video Accessibility Act of 2010, available at https://vpaac.wikispaces.com (``VPAAC Second Report''). The portion of the
report that addresses video description is available at https://
vpaac.wikispaces.com/file/view/
120409+VPAAC+Video+Description+REPORT+AS+SUBMITTED+4-9-2012.pdf. The
portion of the report that addresses access to emergency information
is available at https://vpaac.wikispaces.com/file/view/
120409+VPAAC+Access+to+Emergency+Information+REPORT+AS+SUBMITTED+4-
9-2012.pdf.
\6\ In presenting its findings and recommendations, the VPAAC
discussed the consumer position separately from the industry
position where there was not a consensus. Additionally, we note that
the VPAAC presented certain recommendations regarding the provision
of information about programming that is video described, including
proposals that entities be required to provide information about
video described programming on their Web sites and to programming
information distributors. These issues are beyond the scope of this
proceeding, and accordingly we will not consider them here.
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4. The Commission previously addressed the issue of making
televised emergency information accessible to those who are blind or
visually impaired in 2000. Implementation of Video Description of Video
Programming, Report and Order, 65 FR 54805 (2000) (``2000 Video
Description Order''). The Commission adopted a rule that required
broadcast stations and multichannel video programming distributors
(``MVPDs'') ``that provide[] local emergency information to make the
critical details of that information accessible to persons with visual
disabilities'' in certain situations. Specifically, pursuant to Sec.
79.2 of the Commission's rules, the emergency information requirements
for accessibility to persons with visual disabilities vary based on
whether the information is provided in the video portion of a newscast.
First, if emergency information is provided in the video portion of a
regularly scheduled newscast, or in the video portion of a newscast
that interrupts regular programming, it must be made accessible to
people who are blind or visually impaired.\7\ 47 CFR 79.2(b)(1)(ii).
This requires the aural presentation of emergency information that is
being provided to viewers visually to be included as part of the
primary program audio stream. Second, if emergency information is
provided solely visually during programming that is not a newscast
(such as through an on-screen crawl), it must be accompanied by an
aural tone. 47 CFR 79.2(b)(1)(iii). It is the second situation that is
the focus of the instant proceeding. Industry has coalesced around the
use of three high-pitched tones to indicate the presence of on-screen
emergency information, although the Commission's rules do not specify
that three tones must be used. In this situation, when an individual
who is blind or visually impaired hears the three tones, he or she must
take some other action, such as turning on a radio, to determine the
nature and severity of the situation. As a result, individuals who are
blind or visually impaired may have inadequate or untimely access to
emergency information. This proceeding seeks to remedy this situation
by ensuring that the critical details of emergency information provided
visually during programming other than a newscast will be fully
accessible to those members of the program's audience who are blind or
visually impaired.
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\7\ Section 79.2 contains a separate requirement that video
programming distributors must make emergency information that is
provided in the audio portion of the programming accessible to
persons with hearing disabilities by using closed captioning or a
method of visual presentation. 47 CFR 79.2(b)(1)(i). That
requirement is not at issue in this proceeding. Instead, this
proceeding involves the portions of Sec. 79.2(b) concerning
accessibility to persons with visual disabilities. 47 CFR
79.2(b)(1)(ii) through (iii).
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5. In addition to emergency information, we also consider access to
video description in this proceeding. Video description services make
video programming accessible to individuals who are blind or visually
impaired. Video description is the insertion of audio narrated
descriptions of a
[[Page 70973]]
television program's key visual elements into natural pauses between
the program's dialogue. 47 CFR 79.3(a)(3). Last year, as directed by
the CVAA, the Commission reinstated, with certain modifications, video
description rules previously vacated by the United States Court of
Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. See 47 U.S.C. 613(f)(1)-
(2); Video Description: Implementation of the Twenty-First Century
Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010, Report and Order,
76 FR 55585 (2011) (``2011 Video Description Order''). The rules
require full-power affiliates of the top four national networks located
in the top 25 television markets to provide 50 hours per calendar
quarter of video-described prime time and/or children's programming.
The rules also require MVPDs that operate systems with 50,000 or more
subscribers to provide 50 hours per calendar quarter of video-described
prime time and/or children's programming on each of the top five non-
broadcast networks that they carry on those systems. Broadcast
television stations and MVPDs must additionally ``pass through'' video
description if they have the technical capability to do so.
Broadcasters and MVPDs were required to be in full compliance with
these requirements beginning on July 1, 2012. Video descriptions for
digital television are provided as a secondary audio service, and
typically a viewer can access video description through an onscreen
menu provided by the viewer's home television receiver or set-top box.
III. Discussion
6. At the outset, we do not, at this time, extend the scope of the
emergency information and video description rules in this proceeding
beyond the category of programming already covered by our existing
emergency information and video description rules.\8\ 47 CFR 79.2(a)-
(b), 79.3(a)-(c). In other words, for purposes of this proceeding, the
emergency information and video description rules will continue to
apply to television broadcast services and MVPD services, but not to
IP-delivered video programming that is not otherwise an MVPD service.
Notably, Congress did not explicitly extend the scope of the emergency
information rules to IP-delivered video programming, as it did in
requiring closed captioning of IP-delivered video programming.\9\ See
47 U.S.C. 613(c). Instead, Congress referenced television-based
definitions of video programming distributors and providers. 47 U.S.C.
613(g)(2). In addition, as a practical matter, we note that the VPAAC
found that ``at this time * * * there does not appear to be any uniform
or consistent methodology for delivering emergency information via the
Internet.'' Similarly, we note that the CVAA directs that the
Commission's video description regulations ``shall apply to video
programming * * * insofar as such programming is transmitted for
display on television in digital format.'' 47 U.S.C. 613(f)(2)(A).
Accordingly, the video description rules require video description only
by television broadcast stations and MVPDs. Consistent with this view
and as explained more fully below, we propose to limit the scope of the
apparatus rules that the Commission will adopt in this proceeding to
apparatus that make available the type of programming that is subject
to our existing emergency information rules, as set forth in Sec.
79.2, and our existing video description rules, as set forth in Sec.
79.3, i.e., apparatus designed to receive, play back, or record
broadcast or MVPD service. We seek comment on this analysis.
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\8\ We note that Congress directed the Commission to conduct
inquiries on further video description requirements in the future.
47 U.S.C. 613(f)(3).
\9\ We note, however, that Congress charged the VPAAC to report
and make recommendations to the Commission with respect to the
delivery of accessible emergency information and video description
using IP. Public Law 111-260, sections 201(e)(2)(B), (C), and (E)
(charging the VPAAC to identify ``the performance objectives * * *
needed to permit content providers, content distributors, Internet
service providers, software developers, and device manufacturers to
reliably encode, transport, receive, and render video descriptions
of video programming, except for consumer generated media, and
emergency information delivered using Internet protocol or digital
broadcast television''; to identify ``additional protocols * * * for
the delivery of video descriptions of video programming, except for
consumer generated media, and emergency information delivered using
Internet protocol or digital broadcast television * * *''; and to
recommend ``any regulations that may be necessary to ensure
compatibility between video programming, except for consumer
generated media, delivered using Internet protocol or digital
broadcast television and devices capable of receiving and displaying
such programming, except for consumer generated media, in order to
facilitate access to video descriptions and emergency
information'').
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A. Accessible Emergency Information
7. The CVAA requires us to ``promulgate regulations that require
video programming providers and video programming distributors [as
defined in Sec. 79.1 of our rules] and program owners to convey such
emergency information in a manner accessible to individuals who are
blind or visually impaired.'' 47 U.S.C. 613(g)(2). Based upon the VPAAC
Second Report and the record assembled in this proceeding regarding the
relative advantages and disadvantages of several possible methods,
discussed below, we propose to require covered entities to make
emergency information that is provided visually during programming that
is not a newscast (such as that provided via crawls) accessible to
individuals who are blind or visually impaired by using a secondary
audio stream to provide that emergency information aurally and
concurrently with the emergency information being conveyed visually.
8. As noted above, our emergency information rules currently
require video programming distributors to do two things to make
emergency information accessible to individuals who are blind or
visually impaired.\10\ First, for emergency information that is
provided in the video portion of a regularly scheduled newscast or a
newscast that interrupts regular programming, they must make the
emergency information accessible to persons with visual disabilities.
47 CFR 79.2(b)(1)(ii). This accessibility is achieved through the aural
presentation in the main program audio of emergency information that is
being provided to viewers visually. No commenters indicated a need to
revise the existing rules for this situation. We, therefore, do not
propose any substantive changes to this requirement and expect covered
entities to comply with the existing rule.
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\10\ We note that, in addition to the provisions addressing
accessibility to individuals who are blind or visually impaired, our
emergency information rules also contain a provision addressing
accessibility to individuals with hearing disabilities. 47 CFR
79.2(b)(1)(i) (requiring that ``[e]mergency information that is
provided in the audio portion of the programming must be made
accessible to persons with hearing disabilities by using a method of
closed captioning or by using a method of visual presentation, as
described in Sec. 79.1 of this part''). The emergency information
provisions of section 202 of the CVAA are focused on individuals who
are blind or visually impaired, and not on individuals who are deaf
or hearing impaired. 47 U.S.C. 613(g) (requiring the Commission to
adopt rules relating to conveying emergency information ``in a
manner accessible to individuals who are blind or visually
impaired''). Accordingly, accessibility of emergency information to
individuals who are deaf or hard of hearing is not at issue in this
proceeding.
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9. Second, for emergency information that is provided in the video
portion of programming that is not a regularly scheduled newscast or a
newscast that interrupts regular programming, under our current rules
video programming distributors must accompany the emergency information
with an aural tone. 47 CFR 79.2(b)(1)(iii). We seek comment on our
proposal to modify this requirement as the VPAAC advocates by requiring
video programming distributors to make emergency information available
on a secondary audio stream, if that information is provided visually
in programming that
[[Page 70974]]
is not a newscast.\11\ Under this approach, consumers would be alerted
to the presence of such emergency information through the already-
required aural tone that accompanies this emergency information, and
the emergency information would be accessible to consumers who are
blind or visually impaired who switch to a secondary audio stream. The
VPAAC, which includes representatives of the industry and consumer
groups, supports the use of a secondary audio stream for this purpose.
According to the VPAAC, MVPDs, including cable operators, direct
broadcast satellite (``DBS'') providers, and Internet protocol
television providers (``IPTV providers''), are technically capable of
providing access to emergency information through the secondary audio
streams. The National Association of Broadcasters (``NAB'') also
supports the approach of using the secondary audio stream to provide
emergency information that is conveyed in an onscreen crawl in a manner
that is audibly accessible.
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\11\ We also propose a non-substantive edit to our existing
emergency information rules. Specifically, we propose to change
references to ``[e]mergency information that is provided in the
video portion'' in the current rules to ``[e]mergency information
that is provided visually.'' We welcome comment on this proposal.
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10. We seek comment on the benefits of providing accessible
emergency information on a secondary audio stream and the incremental
costs of providing a secondary audio stream for this purpose. Are there
any broadcasters or MVPDs that do not currently provide a secondary
audio stream, and if so, should the new rules apply any differently to
them? We explained in the 2011 Video Description Order that certain
stations and MVPDs may lack the technical capability to pass through
video description, and therefore the Commission reinstated a technical
capability exception. Are there technical capability issues that should
be taken into account in the context of requiring emergency information
to be provided on a secondary audio stream? If lack of technical
capability is an issue, how should the Commission consider it in
revising its emergency information rules as proposed herein? If a video
programming distributor does not currently make available a secondary
audio stream, but it has the technical capability to do so, should the
Commission require it to make available a secondary audio stream that
could be used to provide emergency information? Or are there
alternative ways for video programming distributors that do not have a
secondary audio stream to provide such information? What impact, if
any, would the proposals contained in this NPRM have on broadcasters'
ability to channel share? What additional bandwidth, if any, would
MVPDs need to transmit multiple audio streams, and how would this
affect their networks if they carry multiple audio streams for all
channels? Are any broadcasters or MVPDs providing more than two audio
streams? If there are more than two audio streams available, what is
provided or should be provided on those audio streams and how will
consumers know which one to tune to for emergency information? Should
aurally accessible emergency information always be provided on the
audio stream containing video description, rather than on a stream
dedicated to aurally accessible emergency information or containing
other program-related material, such as a Spanish or other language
audio stream? We seek comment on whether and how the proposals
contained herein should apply to EAS alerts. For example, to what
extent is emergency information provided as visual-only EAS alerts? See
47 CFR 11.51.
11. We invite input on the implementation of our proposal to
require covered entities to make emergency information that is provided
visually during programming that is not a newscast (such as that
provided via crawls) accessible to individuals who are blind or
visually impaired by using a secondary audio stream to provide that
emergency information aurally and concurrently with the emergency
information being conveyed visually. What time frame is appropriate for
requiring covered entities to convey emergency information in a
secondary audio stream? What steps must covered entities take to meet
this requirement? Should we require covered entities to provide
customer support services to assist consumers who are blind or visually
impaired to navigate between the main and secondary audio streams to
access accessible emergency information? We seek comment on whether the
Commission should update its definition of ``emergency information.''
See 47 CFR 79.2(a)(2). For example, to what extent are severe
thunderstorms currently considered to be ``emergencies'' subject to our
rule? To the extent they are currently covered, should they be added to
the list of examples in the rule? Are there other examples of
emergencies that should explicitly be included in our definition of
``emergency information''? What impact would revising our definition of
emergency information have on the availability of video description,
given that, under our proposal above, both services will be provided
using a secondary audio stream?
12. Assuming the Commission requires that visual emergency
information be made accessible by means of a secondary audio stream, to
what extent should the Commission permit the use of text-to-speech
(``TTS'') technologies? TTS is a technology that generates an audio
version of a textual message. The VPAAC found TTS to be essential for
conveying emergency information because of the speed with which it can
generate the necessary audio.\12\ In a proceeding regarding EAS earlier
this year, the Commission initially noted ``concerns in the record
about whether text-to-speech software is sufficiently accurate and
reliable to deliver consistently accurate and timely alerts to the
public,'' and deferred consideration of that issue to a later
proceeding. However, upon reconsideration, the Commission subsequently
determined that it would permit, but not require, regulated entities to
use TTS to render EAS audio from the text of EAS alerts formatted in
the Common Alerting Protocol until the merits of mandating TTS use for
EAS purposes have been more fully developed in the record. We seek
comment on the accuracy and reliability of current TTS technology and,
more specifically, whether it is sufficiently accurate and reliable for
rendering an aural translation of emergency information text on a
secondary audio stream, as proposed above. What would be the costs and
benefits of using TTS for this purpose? We also seek comment on other
concerns related to this issue, including the need to timely provide
emergency information. To the extent commenters consider TTS too
unreliable for this purpose, we seek comment on how TTS can be made
more reliable, as well as effective and timely alternatives to TTS and
their costs and benefits.
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\12\ We also note that, if textual data is also transmitted as a
separate file within the broadcast stream, it can also be made
available for other assistive technologies and language translation
systems that have the potential to enhance access to emergency
information both for consumers with and without visual impairments.
For example, in addition to providing audio, apparatus could display
the textual information in large print for viewers who are deaf and
have a visual impairment. Further, by permitting the text to be
converted to speech in the apparatus, it could be possible for an
apparatus to translate emergency information to a language other
than English, or to provide emergency information when the viewer is
using that apparatus for something other than watching covered video
programming. We seek comment on these possibilities.
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[[Page 70975]]
13. Should we require emergency information presented aurally to be
identical to that presented textually, or should differences be
permissible as long as the information presented aurally is
comprehensive and satisfies the requirements of Sec. 79.2(a)(2)? We
note that emergency information is defined as ``[i]nformation, about a
current emergency, that is intended to further the protection of life,
health, safety, and property, i.e., critical details regarding the
emergency and how to respond to the emergency.'' 47 CFR 79.2(a)(2). The
rule's accompanying note requires the inclusion of ``specific details
regarding the areas that will be affected by the emergency, evacuation
orders, detailed descriptions of areas to be evacuated, specific
evacuation routes, approved shelters or the way to take shelter in
one's home, instructions on how to secure personal property, road
closures, and how to obtain relief assistance.'' Must the information
provided aurally be verbatim to the text provided to comply with this
directive? Should the emergency information provided aurally be
abbreviated where the information presented textually is particularly
lengthy, for example, where it lists many school district closings in
the viewing area? Given the potential use of the secondary audio stream
for both emergency information and video description, how can we ensure
that video description is not unduly interrupted? Should we require
covered entities to repeat the aural version of emergency information
on the secondary audio stream or take some other action to ensure that
consumers have sufficient time to tune in after hearing the required
aural tones? Is visual but non-textual emergency information--such as a
map showing the path of a storm--sometimes provided during programming
that is not a newscast? Are such visual displays (e.g., maps) always
accompanied by a crawl or scroll containing a textual version of the
emergency information conveyed by that visual display? What
requirements should apply to the aural description of visual but non-
textual emergency information?
14. The Commission's rules currently prohibit emergency information
from blocking video description, and they prohibit video description
from blocking emergency information provided by means other than video
description. 47 CFR 79.2(b)(3)(ii). The VPAAC recommends eliminating
the portion of this rule that prohibits emergency information from
blocking video description, given their recommendation that ``emergency
information conveyed visually by crawl or scroll also be conveyed
aurally utilizing the same audio stream as the video description audio
stream.'' The VPAAC recommends that Sec. 79.2(b)(3)(ii) be amended to
read as follows: ``Any video description provided should not block any
emergency information provided by video description or by means other
than video description.'' We propose that this be simplified to read as
follows: ``Any video description provided should not block any
emergency information.'' We seek comment on this proposal. Should this
proposal be expanded to require such aural emergency information to
supersede any content that may be present on the secondary audio stream
(e.g., video description, Spanish or other languages, a duplicate of
the main audio, or silence)?
15. Do the proposed revisions to the emergency information
requirements necessitate any revisions to FCC Form 2000C, the
disability access complaint form, or the existing complaint procedures
contained in Sec. 79.2(c) of our rules? If so, what revisions are
needed?
16. We also seek comment on the roles of the various entities
listed in section 202. That provision mandates that we ``require video
programming providers and video programming distributors (as those
terms are defined in section 79.1 of title 47, Code of Federal
Regulations) and program owners to convey such emergency information in
a manner accessible to individuals who are blind or visually
impaired.'' 47 U.S.C. 613(g)(2). Section 79.1 of our rules defines a
``video programming distributor'' as ``[a]ny television broadcast
station licensed by the Commission and any multichannel video
programming distributor as defined in Sec. 76.1000(e) of this chapter,
and any other distributor of video programming for residential
reception that delivers such programming directly to the home and is
subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission.'' 47 CFR 79.1(a)(2).
That section defines a ``video programming provider'' as ``[a]ny video
programming distributor and any other entity that provides video
programming that is intended for distribution to residential households
including, but not limited to broadcast or nonbroadcast television
network and the owners of such programming.'' 47 CFR 79.1(a)(3).
Section 79.2 of the Commission's rules currently imposes emergency
information accessibility requirements on video programming
distributors only, but section 202(a) of the CVAA requires us to
promulgate regulations containing requirements for video programming
providers and program owners as well as video programming distributors.
47 U.S.C. 613(g)(2). What role should video programming distributors,
video programming providers, and program owners play in ensuring that
emergency information is conveyed in an accessible manner? Should video
programming distributors hold the primary responsibility, with video
programming providers and program owners being prohibited from
interfering with or hindering a video programming distributor's
provision of accessible emergency information? Or, are there certain
responsibilities that should be allocated to each of the covered
entities? What entity is generally responsible for preparing a crawl or
scroll containing emergency information, and how does that
responsibility affect the obligation to provide an aural version of the
information?
17. As noted, Sec. 79.1 of the Commission's rules includes
definitions for the terms ``video programming provider'' and ``video
programming distributor,'' but it does not define ``program owner.''
See 47 CFR 79.1(a)(2)-(3). The definition of ``video programming
provider'' does, however, include a ``broadcast or nonbroadcast
television network and the owners of such programming.'' 47 CFR
79.1(a)(3). We seek comment on whether it is necessary to separately
define a video programming owner in the present context. In the context
of closed captioning of IP-delivered video programming, the Commission
defined a video programming owner as ``any person or entity that either
(i) licenses the video programming to a video programming distributor
or provider that makes the video programming available directly to the
end user through a distribution method that uses Internet protocol; or
(ii) acts as the video programming distributor or provider, and also
possesses the right to license the video programming to a video
programming distributor or provider that makes the video programming
available directly to the end user through a distribution method that
uses Internet protocol.'' Closed Captioning of Internet Protocol-
Delivered Video Programming: Implementation of the Twenty-First Century
Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010, Report and Order,
77 FR 19480 (2012) (``IP Closed Captioning Order''). Although the
references in this definition to ``a distribution method that uses
Internet protocol'' are specific to the IP closed captioning
proceeding, and thus would not be applicable here, the definition may
be useful as a starting
[[Page 70976]]
point for purposes of defining ``program owner'' in this context. For
example, for purposes of this proceeding, we seek comment on whether we
should define a video programming owner as any person or entity that
either (i) licenses the video programming to a video programming
distributor or provider, as those terms are defined in Sec. 79.1 of
the Commission's rules; or (ii) acts as the video programming
distributor or provider, and also possesses the right to license the
video programming to a video programming distributor or provider, as
those terms are defined in Sec. 79.1 of the Commission's rules.
18. The VPAAC identified additional or alternative methods to
convey emergency information in a manner accessible to individuals who
are blind or visually impaired, other than the use of a secondary audio
stream.\13\ For example, the VPAAC considered alternatives such as: (1)
Including a shortened audio version of the textual emergency
information on the primary stream; or (2) broadcasting a 5 to 10 second
audio message after the three high-pitched tones announcing the start
of a textual message, to inform individuals who are blind or visually
impaired of a means by which they could access the emergency
information, such as a telephone number or radio station. According to
the VPAAC, these alternatives could be used in concert with each other,
but they would have disadvantages, including interruption to the main
program audio and the need for sufficient resources to create and
manage the brief audio messages. Should we require (on an interim
basis) or permit covered entities to use one or more of these
alternative approaches in concert with the use of the secondary audio
stream that we propose above? The VPAAC also considered and rejected
other alternatives that it determined either did not meet the
requirements of the CVAA, relied upon technology or services that are
not widely available, or involved additional problems.\14\ We invite
comment on whether the alternatives rejected by VPAAC merit further
consideration. We ask commenters to identify any other alternative
methods by which video programming providers and distributors and
program owners can make emergency information accessible to individuals
who are blind or visually impaired. Are any such alternatives
preferable to our proposal, which requires the use of a secondary audio
stream? How would the costs and benefits of any alternate proposals
compare to the costs and benefits of the proposed use of the secondary
audio stream discussed herein?
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\13\ The CVAA requires us to ``identify methods to convey
emergency information * * * in a manner accessible to individuals
who are blind or visually impaired.'' 47 U.S.C. 613(g)(1).
\14\ The VPAAC rejected the following alternatives: (1)
``dipping'' or lowering the main program audio and playing an aural
message over the lowered audio; (2) providing screen reader software
or devices on request; (3) enabling users to select and enlarge
emergency crawl text; (4) providing guidance for consumers, such as
how to switch to a secondary audio channel, which is insufficient as
a standalone solution; and (5) using an Internet-based standardized
application to filter emergency information by location.
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B. Apparatus Requirements for Emergency Information and Video
Description
19. Pursuant to section 203 of the CVAA, the Commission must
require certain apparatus to have the capability to decode and make
available required video description services and emergency information
in a manner accessible to individuals who are blind or visually
impaired. 47 U.S.C. 303(u), (z), 330(b). The Commission must prescribe
these requirements by October 9, 2013. The regulations promulgated as
part of the current proceeding must include ``any technical standards,
protocols, and procedures needed for the transmission of'' video
description and emergency information. Public Law 111-260, Sec.
203(d). Below we seek comment on requirements for apparatus with regard
to video description and emergency information. Our section 203
discussion focuses on the availability of secondary audio streams,
because that is both the current mechanism for providing video
description and our proposed mechanism for making emergency information
accessible.
1. Requirements for Apparatus Subject to Section 203 of the CVAA
20. Pursuant to section 203 of the CVAA, ``apparatus designed to
receive or play back video programming transmitted simultaneously with
sound, if such apparatus is manufactured in the United States or
imported for use in the United States and uses a picture screen of any
size,'' must ``have the capability to decode and make available the
transmission and delivery of'' required video description services. 47
U.S.C. 303(u)(1)(B). Such apparatus must also ``have the capability to
decode and make available emergency information * * * in a manner that
is accessible to individuals who are blind or visually impaired.'' 47
U.S.C. 303(u)(1)(C). We seek comment on the meaning of these
requirements. What specific capabilities should the Commission mandate?
What steps must manufacturers of covered apparatus take to ensure that
video description services and emergency information provided via a
secondary audio stream are available and accessible? How should we
balance the costs of compliance for apparatus subject to section 203 of
the CVAA and the benefits to consumers? With respect to MVPD-provided
apparatus, should we impose different requirements on equipment
provided by different types of MVPDs? For example, the House Committee
Report indicated that DBS providers may face unique technical
challenges pertaining to compliance with section 203 of the CVAA. We
seek comment on whether apparatus should have the capability to make
textual emergency information audible through the use of text-to-
speech, consistent with our discussion above in paragraph 12 or whether
there are any other specific capabilities that apparatus would need to
include to comply with these requirements beyond the ability to select
and decode a secondary audio stream. If so, should we require
broadcasters and MVPDs to make the textual emergency information
available to apparatus?
21. We also seek comment on the requirements for recording devices,
namely, that ``apparatus designed to record video programming
transmitted simultaneously with sound * * * enable the rendering or the
pass through of * * * video description signals, and emergency
information * * * such that viewers are able to activate and de-
activate the * * * video description as the video programming is played
back on a picture screen of any size.'' 47 U.S.C. 303(z)(1). What
should we require of recording devices to ``enable the rendering or the
pass through of'' video description and emergency information? We seek
comment on the benefits and incremental costs to ensuring that video
description and accessible emergency information, when provided as
proposed on the secondary audio stream, are recorded and can be
activated or de-activated when played back. How do requirements
relating to emergency information apply to recording devices, given
that emergency information is, by its nature, extremely time sensitive?
How should we expect recording devices to ensure that the secondary
audio stream is stored along with the associated video, such that a
consumer may switch between the main program audio and the secondary
audio stream when viewing recorded programming?
22. The Commission's rules must ``provide performance and display
standards for * * * the transmission and delivery of video description
[[Page 70977]]
services, and the conveyance of emergency information as required * * *
.'' 47 U.S.C. 330(b). We seek comment on what performance and display
standards we should impose for the transmission and delivery of video
description and emergency information. We also seek comment on the
VPAAC's suggestion that, when video description, alternate language
audio, and emergency information are not available on a secondary audio
channel, best efforts should be taken to ensure that the channel
contains the main program audio rather than silence. Such an approach
would enable consumers to tune to their secondary audio stream all of
the time, instead of needing to switch back and forth depending on
whether video description is available for a particular program or
emergency information is being provided. Should we impose this as a
requirement, or recommend it as a best practice?
23. Section 203 of the CVAA directs the Commission to require that
``interconnection mechanisms and standards for digital video source
devices are available to carry from the source device to the consumer
equipment the information necessary to permit or render the display of
closed captions and to make encoded video description and emergency
information audible.'' 47 U.S.C. 303(z)(2). It is our understanding
that most, if not all, devices already use interconnection mechanisms
that make available audio provided via a secondary audio stream. Thus,
we do not believe that any further steps are necessary to implement
this requirement. We seek comment on our understanding.
24. We seek comment on three issues that arose in the 2011 video
description proceeding that may be relevant here. They pertain to
equipment features that present challenges for video programming
distributors and consumers. First, the 2011 Video Description Order
observed that ``viewers with digital sets may be unable to find and
activate an audio stream that has been properly labeled `VI' (`Visually
Impaired') pursuant to the ATSC standard,'' so the audio stream used
for video description must be labeled as ``CM'' (``complete main'') for
the system to work properly. Further, some television receivers do not
handle two audio tracks identified as English properly, and thus to
ensure compatibility, broadcasters often tag the video description
stream as a foreign language. That is, rather than conveying metadata
that indicates the audio stream is an English track for the visually
impaired (VI-English), broadcasters convey metadata that the service is
a ``complete main'' audio stream in a foreign language (typically CM-
Spanish or CM-Portuguese) in order to provide a tag for the stream. In
2011, the Commission decided that this issue would be better addressed
in a later proceeding. The VPAAC recognizes that there is a ``need for
a more user-friendly mechanism to allow the carriage of multiple audio
services,'' but it does not identify a timeframe for such a mechanism.
We seek comment on whether the Commission should impose a requirement
at this time that broadcast receivers detect and decode tracks marked
for the ``visually impaired.'' How would consumers who have not
upgraded their equipment be affected by such a requirement? How can we
minimize any confusion or cost to such consumers? How can we mitigate
the need for consumers to purchase new equipment to take advantage of
the requirements proposed herein? Do the issues discussed in this
paragraph pertain to MVPDs as well as broadcasters?
25. Second, Dolby Laboratories, Inc. commented that the audio
experience for individuals accessing video-described programming could
be enhanced if devices supported a ``receiver-mix'' technology that
would enable the device to combine the full surround sound main audio
with video description. Although it is technically possible for
broadcasters and some MVPDs to provide two full surround channels, the
additional bandwidth required to do so could pose a hardship for those
entities. In the 2011 Video Description Order, the Commission
determined that this issue would also be better addressed in a later
proceeding. We invite comment on whether any action should be taken on
this issue at this time.
26. Third, although the ATSC standard for digital television
broadcasting enables the use of multiple audio streams (including, for
example, the concurrent use of a main audio stream, a secondary video
description stream, and a third stream containing Spanish or other
foreign language audio), it is our understanding that few, if any,
broadcasters or MVPDs provide more than two audio streams, and few
devices are able to accommodate more than two audio streams. The 2011
Video Description Order noted that equipment limitations may prohibit
some viewers from being able to access a third audio channel even if
one were to be provided by a video programming distributor. Although we
do not propose to require video programming distributors to carry more
than one additional audio channel at this time, we are concerned that
equipment limitations may be discouraging video programming
distributors from doing so voluntarily. We seek comment on the
suggestion of consumer members of the VPAAC that we ``consider how best
to facilitate a transition * * * to deliver multiple simultaneous
ancillary audio services, so that both Spanish (or other alternate
languages) and video description could be provided for the same
program.'' Although industry members of the VPAAC concluded that we do
not need a single format, protocol, or standard for multiple audio
services, we note the existence of what is known as ``CEA-CEB21,''
Recommended Practice for Selection and Presentation of DTV Audio, a
bulletin that ``provides recommendations to manufacturers to facilitate
user setup of audio features in the receiver without professional
assistance.'' \15\ The VPAAC stated that consumer receiving devices
could be built in accordance with the recommendations contained in CEA-
CEB21. Is this a solution that the Commission should mandate? We seek
comment on the costs associated with building a device in compliance
with this bulletin, as well as any drawbacks to doing so. Would the
benefits of building a device in compliance with CEA-CEB21 outweigh the
costs? Are there other industry guidelines that could facilitate
compatibility between apparatus and covered services containing
multiple audio streams? If we require apparatus to comply with the
recommendations contained in CEA-CEB21, are there corresponding
requirements that we should impose on broadcasters and MVPDs, and if
so, what?
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\15\ CEA-CEB21, Recommended Practice for Selection and
Presentation of DTV Audio, June 2011, available at https://www.ce.org/Standards/Standard-Listings/R4-3-Television-Data-Systems-Subcommittee/CEA-CEB21.aspx.
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27. We invite comment on the appropriate deadline by which we
should require apparatus to meet the requirements that we adopt as part
of this proceeding. We note that the Commission has previously imposed
a two-year deadline for apparatus requirements, for example, in the IP
Closed Captioning Order. We ask commenters to justify any deadline they
propose by explaining what must be done by that deadline to comply with
the new requirements. Should we consider here the argument made by the
Consumer Electronics Association (``CEA'') in a pending petition for
reconsideration of the IP Closed Captioning Order that the compliance
deadline should be interpreted to refer
[[Page 70978]]
only to the date of manufacture, and not to the date of importation?
28. In order to address any failures to comply with the new
requirements after the established deadline, we propose imposing
complaint procedures comparable to those adopted for apparatus
complaints in the IP Closed Captioning Order. As a preliminary matter,
we seek comment on whether the Commission should require MVPDs that
provide set-top boxes to provide customer support services to assist
consumers who are blind or visually impaired to navigate between the
main and secondary audio streams to access video description and
accessible emergency information. Would such a requirement help fulfill
the CVAA's mandate that apparatus have the capability to decode and
make available video description and accessible emergency information,
e.g., does the use of the term ``make available'' in the statute
reasonably encompass more than simply apparatus functionality? 47
U.S.C. 303(u)(1)(B) and (C). Would such requirements benefit consumers
and industry by encouraging the resolution rather than the filing of
consumer complaints? Would consumers and industry benefit from the
provision and publication of contact information for resolution of
consumer concerns, such as we require in our closed captioning rules?
See 47 CFR 79.1(i). How should the Commission evaluate the potential
benefits of a customer support requirement and the incremental costs,
which we expect would be relatively minimal to the extent that a
company already provides customer support services? What else can be
done to make legacy equipment more accessible to and available to
individuals with visual disabilities?
29. With respect to the filing of complaints, we propose that
complaints alleging a violation should include: (a) The name, postal
address, and other contact information of the complainant, such as
telephone number or email address; (b) the name and contact
information, such as postal address, of the apparatus manufacturer or
provider; (c) information sufficient to identify the software or device
used to view or to attempt to view video programming with video
description or emergency information; (d) the date or dates on which
the complainant purchased, acquired, or used, or tried to purchase,
acquire, or use the apparatus to view video programming with video
description or emergency information; (e) a statement of facts
sufficient to show that the manufacturer or provider has violated or is
violating the Commission's rules; (f) the specific relief or
satisfaction sought by the complainant; and (g) the complainant's
preferred format or method of response to the complaint. In addition,
we propose that a complaint alleging a violation of the apparatus rules
related to emergency information and video description may be
transmitted to the Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau by any
reasonable means, such as the Commission's online informal complaint
filing system, letter in writing or Braille, facsimile transmission,
telephone (voice/TRS/TTY), email, or some other method that would best
accommodate the complainant's disability. Given that the population
intended to benefit from the rules adopted will be blind or visually
impaired, we also note that, if a complainant calls the Commission for
assistance in preparing a complaint, Commission staff will document the
complaint in writing for the consumer and such communication will be
deemed to be a written complaint. We also propose that the Commission
will forward such complaints, as appropriate, to the named manufacturer
or provider for its response, as well as to any other entity that
Commission staff determines may be involved, and that the Commission be
permitted to request additional information from any relevant parties
when, in the estimation of Commission staff, such information is needed
to investigate the complaint or adjudicate potential violations of
Commission rules. Do the proposed requirements for apparatus related to
video description and emergency information necessitate any revisions
to FCC Form 2000C, the disability access complaint form, and if so,
what revisions are needed?
2. Apparatus Subject to Section 203 of the CVAA
30. In this section, we discuss which apparatus should be subject
to the video description and emergency information requirements of
section 203 of the CVAA. We propose at this time to apply the video
description and emergency information requirements of section 203 of
the CVAA only to apparatus designed to receive, play back, or record
television broadcast services or MVPD services. In other words, for
purposes of this proceeding, we propose to limit the scope of the
apparatus rules that the Commission will adopt in this proceeding to
apparatus that make available the type of programming that is subject
to our existing emergency information rules, as set forth in Sec. 79.2
of our rules, and our existing video description rules, as set forth in
Sec. 79.3 of our rules. Accordingly, we propose that the apparatus
requirements discussed herein would not be triggered by apparatus'
display of IP-delivered video programming that is not part of a
television broadcast service or MVPD service. We believe this is
appropriate given that the current video description and emergency
information rules will continue to apply to television broadcast
services and MVPD services. We invite comment on this proposal and
analysis. How should this proposal apply to different types of
apparatus, for example, to tablet devices that enable users to view
television programming as part of an MVPD service? Under this proposal,
how would the new requirements we adopt in this proceeding apply to
apparatus beyond conventional television equipment, such as televisions
and cable boxes, to devices such as video game consoles (e.g., Xbox) to
the extent an MVPD enables its subscribers to access its MVPD service
through those devices?
31. In the IP Closed Captioning Order, the Commission concluded
that the scope of ``apparatus designed to receive or play back video
programming transmitted simultaneously with sound'' covered by section
203 includes physical devices designed to receive or play back video
programming, as well as software integrated in those covered devices.
We propose that the term ``apparatus'' as used in this proceeding
similarly extend to physical devices designed to receive, play back, or
record television broadcast or MVPD service video programming as well
as integrated software, and we seek comment on that proposal.
32. The Commission also found in the IP Closed Captioning Order
that an apparatus is ``designed to receive or play back video
programming transmitted simultaneously with sound'' if a device is sold
with, or updated by the manufacturer to add, an integrated video player
capable of displaying video programming.\16\ The Commission concluded
further that, if apparatus uses
[[Page 70979]]
a picture screen of any size, that means that the apparatus works in
conjunction with a picture screen. In the IP Closed Captioning Order,
the Commission also addressed the meaning of the term ``technically
feasible,'' and concluded that if something is technically infeasible,
it is not merely difficult, but rather is physically or technically
impossible.
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\16\ We note that a pending petition for reconsideration of the
IP Closed Captioning Order seeks a Commission determination that the
scope of the apparatus requirements adopted in that proceeding
pursuant to section 203 of the CVAA should apply only to apparatus
that include ``video programming'' players, as that term is defined
in the CVAA, and not more broadly to any apparatus that include a
``video player.'' See Petition for Reconsideration of the Consumer
Electronics Association, MB Docket No. 11-154, at 3-5 (filed Apr.
30, 2012) (``CEA Recon. Petition''). The CEA Recon. Petition also
argues that the Commission misinterpreted the phrase ``designed
to,'' claiming that the phrase instead refers to the subjective
intent of the manufacturer rather than the objective fact that the
product was designed with this capability. Id. at 5-8. The CEA
Recon. Petition remains pending before the Commission.
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33. We propose to apply the interpretation of ``technically
feasible,'' ``designed to receive or play back video programming
transmitted simultaneously with sound,'' and ``uses a picture screen of
any size'' from the IP Closed Captioning Order to the present video
description and emergency information context. We seek comment on this
proposal. We note that the IP Closed Captioning Order interpreted the
same provisions of section 203 of the CVAA that are at issue in this
proceeding, and accordingly, we see no basis to deviate from the
Commission's carefully considered prior interpretations of
``technically feasible,'' ``designed to receive or play back video
programming transmitted simultaneously with sound,'' or ``uses a
picture screen of any size.'' We note, however, that unlike the IP
closed captioning context, we propose to apply the rules in this
context, as discussed above, only to apparatus designed to receive,
play back, or record television broadcast services or MVPD services. As
in the IP Closed Captioning Order, we propose to permit parties to
raise technical infeasibility as a defense to a complaint or,
alternatively, to file a request for a ruling under Sec. 1.41 of the
Commission's rules before manufacturing or importing the product, and
we invite comment on this proposal.
34. Consistent with the IP Closed Captioning Order, we propose to
include removable media play back apparatus, such as DVD and Blu-ray
players, within the scope of the new requirements, but only to the
extent that they receive, play back, or record television broadcast
services or MVPD services.\17\ We seek comment on whether this proposal
is the best reading of the statute. We also propose excluding
commercial video equipment, including professional movie theater
projectors and similar types of professional equipment. We propose this
exclusion because we believe that a typical consumer would not view
televised video programming via a professional movie theater projector
or similar professional equipment.\18\ We invite comments on the costs
and benefits of our proposal to include removable media players within
the scope of the new requirements while excluding commercial video
equipment. Should we require only video description, and not emergency
information, to be accessible via removable media players, since
generally we expect that emergency information will no longer be
pertinent at the time consumers play back video programming on
removable media players? Or, might consumers wish to preserve the
emergency information, such as information about shelter locations,
school closings, or alternative evacuation routes on removable media--
in which case, our rules should cover those devices as well? If
removable media play back apparatus are made capable of playing back a
secondary audio stream with video description, would they necessarily
also be capable of playing back emergency information on a secondary
audio stream? Would removable media apparatus be capable of
distinguishing between or providing video description but not emergency
information?
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\17\ We note that the CEA Recon. Petition argues that the
Commission should not treat removable media players as apparatus
covered by the captioning rules. See CEA Recon. Petition at 8-18.
\18\ Additionally, the legislative history of the CVAA explains
that section 203(a) was intended to ``ensure[] that devices
consumers use to view video programming are able to * * * decode,
and make available the transmission of video description services,
and decode and make available emergency information.'' See House
Committee Report at 30 (emphasis added); Senate Committee Report at
14 (emphasis added). We therefore believe that Congress intended the
Commission's regulations to cover apparatus that are used by
consumers, which would not include professional or commercial
equipment.
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3. Achievability, Display-Only Monitors, and Purpose-Based Waivers
35. Section 203 of the CVAA creates and authorizes exceptions for
certain categories of apparatus that otherwise would be subject to the
section 203 requirements. Public Law 111-260, section 203(a)-(b).
Specifically, section 203 provides that certain apparatus must meet the
requirements of that section only if ``achievable,'' as that word is
defined in section 716 of the Act.\19\ The achievability exception
applies to apparatus ``that use a picture screen that is less than 13
inches in size.'' 47 U.S.C. 303(u)(2)(A). The achievability exception
also applies to ``apparatus designed to record video programming
transmitted simultaneously with sound.'' \20\ 47 U.S.C. 303(z)(1).
Section 203 also states that ``any apparatus or class of apparatus that
are display-only video monitors with no playback capability are exempt
from the requirements * * *.'' 47 U.S.C. 303(u)(2)(B). Further, section
203 permits the Commission ``on its own motion or in response to a
petition by a manufacturer, to waive the requirements * * * for any
apparatus or class of apparatus primarily designed for activities other
than receiving or playing back video programming transmitted
simultaneously with sound; or for equipment designed for multiple
purposes, capable of receiving or playing video programming transmitted
simultaneously with sound but whose essential utility is derived from
other purposes.'' 47 U.S.C. 303(u)(2)(C).
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\19\ Section 716 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended
(the ``Act''), defines ``achievable'' as ``with reasonable effort or
expense, as determined by the Commission,'' and it directs the
Commission to consider the following factors in determining whether
the requirements of a provision are achievable: ``(1) The nature and
cost of the steps needed to meet the requirements of this section
with respect to the specific equipment or service in question. (2)
The technical and economic impact on the operation of the
manufacturer or provider and on the operation of the specific
equipment or service in question, including on the development and
deployment of new communications technologies. (3) The type of
operations of the manufacturer or provider. (4) The extent to which
the service provider or manufacturer in question offers accessible
services or equipment containing varying degrees of functionality
and features, and offered at differing price points.'' 47 U.S.C.
617(g).
\20\ Similar to the Commission's reasoning in the IP Closed
Captioning Order, here ``we expect identifying apparatus designed to
record to be straightforward,'' and we propose that ``when devices
such as DVD, Blu-ray, and other removable media recording devices
are capable of recording video programming, they also qualify as
recording devices under Section 203(b) and therefore'' are subject
to the requirements that the CVAA imposes on recording devices. We
invite comment on this interpretation.
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36. We propose to model the scope of these exceptions on the IP
Closed Captioning Order, in which the Commission evaluated each of
these exceptions. Regarding achievability, the Commission adopted a
flexible approach by which a manufacturer may raise achievability as a
defense to a complaint alleging a violation of section 203, or it may
seek a determination of achievability from the Commission before
manufacturing or importing the apparatus.\21\ The Commission found that
the exemption for display-only video monitors is self-explanatory and
thus incorporated the language of the statutory provision directly into
its rules, and the Commission also provided that a manufacturer may
make a request for a Commission determination as to whether its device
[[Page 70980]]
qualifies for this exemption.\22\ As for purpose-based waivers, another
type of exception permitted by the statute, the Commission concluded
that it would address any such waiver requests on a case-by-case basis,
and it stated that waivers would be available prospectively for
manufacturers seeking certainty prior to the sale of a device.\23\ What
impact, if any, would the proposed scope of our rules in this
proceeding, if adopted, have on the need for such waivers? We seek
comment on whether the scope of these exceptions as adopted in the IP
Closed Captioning Order should govern in the present context. Is there
any reason to deviate from the Commission's previous interpretation of
these exceptions?
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\21\ If a manufacturer seeks a Commission determination of
achievability before manufacturing or importing an apparatus, it
would make such a request pursuant to Sec. 1.41 of the Commission's
rules. See 47 CFR 1.41.
\22\ A manufacturer would make such a request pursuant to Sec.
1.41 of the Commission's rules. See 47 CFR 1.41.
\23\ The Commission also quoted the House and Senate Committee
Reports, which state that a waiver under these provisions is
available ``where, for instance, a consumer typically purchases a
product for a primary purpose other than viewing video programming,
and access to such programming is provided on an incidental basis.''
See House Committee Report at 30; Senate Committee Report at 14.
Waiver of the Commission's rules is also subject to our general
waiver standard, which requires good cause and a showing that
particular facts make compliance inconsistent with the public
interest. 47 CFR 1.3.
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4. Alternate Means of Compliance
37. We propose to implement here the same approach to alternate
means of compliance that we adopted in the IP Closed Captioning Order.
As set forth in section 203 of the CVAA, ``[a]n entity may meet the
requirements of sections 303(u), 303(z), and 330(b) of [the Act]
through alternate means than those prescribed by regulations pursuant
to subsection (d) if the requirements of those sections are met, as
determined by the Commission.'' Public Law 111-260, section 203(e). We
propose that, should an entity seek to use an ``alternate means'' to
comply with the requirements for apparatus with regard to video
description and emergency information, that entity could either (i)
request a Commission determination that the proposed alternate means
satisfies the statutory requirements through a request pursuant to
Sec. 1.41 of our rules, 47 CFR 1.41; or (ii) claim in defense to a
complaint or enforcement action that the Commission should determine
that the party's actions were permissible alternate means of
compliance. Rather than specify what may constitute a permissible
``alternate means,'' we propose to address any specific requests from
parties subject to the new rules when they are presented to us. We seek
comment on these proposals. Alternatively, given the nature of
emergency information, should we impose certain standards that any
permissible alternate means must meet?
IV. Procedural Matters
A. Initial Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
38. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as
amended (``RFA''), see 5 U.S.C. 603, the Commission has prepared this
present Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (``IRFA'') concerning
the possible significant economic impact on small entities by the
policies and rules proposed in the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
(``NPRM''). Written public comments are requested on this IRFA.
Comments must be identified as responses to the IRFA and must be filed
by the deadlines for comments provided on the first page of the NPRM.
The Commission will send a copy of the NPRM, including this IRFA, to
the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration
(``SBA''). See 5 U.S.C. 603(a). In addition, the NPRM and IRFA (or
summaries thereof) will be published in the Federal Register.
1. Need for, and Objectives of, the Proposed Rule Changes
39. The Federal Communications Commission (``Commission'')
initiates this proceeding to implement the provisions of the Twenty-
First Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010
(``CVAA'') requiring that emergency information be made accessible to
individuals who are blind or visually impaired and that certain
equipment be capable of delivering video description and emergency
information to those individuals. First, pursuant to section 202 of the
CVAA, the NPRM proposes to make televised emergency information more
accessible to individuals who are blind or visually impaired by
requiring the use of a secondary audio stream to provide emergency
information aurally that is conveyed visually during programming other
than newscasts. Second, the NPRM seeks comment under section 203 of the
CVAA on how to ensure that television apparatus are able to make
available video description, as well as to make emergency information
accessible to individuals who are blind or visually impaired. Our
section 203 discussion focuses on the availability of secondary audio
streams, because that is both the mechanism for providing video
description and our proposed mechanism for making emergency information
accessible. The NPRM proposes at this time to apply the video
description and emergency information requirements of section 203 of
the CVAA only to apparatus designed to receive, play back, or record
television broadcast services or MVPD services. Our goal in this
proceeding is to enable individuals who are blind or visually impaired
to access emergency information and video description services more
easily. The proposed revisions to our rules will help fulfill the
purpose of the CVAA to ``update the communications laws to help ensure
that individuals with disabilities are able to fully utilize
communications services and equipment and better access video
programming.''
2. Legal Basis
40. The proposed action is authorized pursuant to the Twenty-First
Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010, Public Law
111-260, 124 Stat. 2751, and the authority found in sections 4(i),
4(j), 303(u) and (z), 330(b), and 713(g), of the Communications Act of
1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 154(i), 154(j), 303(u) and (z), 330(b), and
613(g).
3. Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities to Which
the Proposed Rules Will Apply
41. The RFA directs agencies to provide a description of, and where
feasible, an estimate of the number of small entities that may be
affected by the proposed rules, if adopted. The RFA generally defines
the term ``small entity'' as having the same meaning as the terms
``small business,'' ``small organization,'' and ``small governmental
jurisdiction.'' In addition, the term ``small business'' has the same
meaning as the term ``small business concern'' under the Small Business
Act. A small business concern is one which: (1) Is independently owned
and operated; (2) is not dominant in its field of operation; and (3)
satisfies any additional criteria established by the SBA. Below, we
provide a description of such small entities, as well as an estimate of
the number of such small entities, where feasible.
42. Cable Television Distribution Services. Since 2007, these
services have been defined within the broad economic census category of
``Wired Telecommunications Carriers,'' which is defined as follows:
``This industry comprises establishments primarily engaged in operating
and/or providing access to transmission facilities and infrastructure
that they own and/or lease for the transmission of voice, data, text,
sound, and video using wired telecommunications networks.
[[Page 70981]]
Transmission facilities may be based on a single technology or a
combination of technologies.'' The SBA has developed a small business
size standard for this category, which is: all such firms having 1,500
or fewer employees. Census data for 2007 shows that there were 31,996
establishments that operated that year. Of those 31,996, 1,818 operated
with more than 100 employees, and 30,178 operated with fewer than 100
employees. Thus, under this category and the associated small business
size standard, the majority of such firms can be considered small.
43. Cable Companies and Systems. The Commission has also developed
its own small business size standards, for the purpose of cable rate
regulation. Under the Commission's rules, a ``small cable company'' is
one serving 400,000 or fewer subscribers, nationwide. Industry data
indicate that, of 1,076 cable operators nationwide, all but eleven are
small under this size standard. In addition, under the Commission's
rules, a ``small system'' is a cable system serving 15,000 or fewer
subscribers. Industry data indicate that, of 6,635 systems nationwide,
5,802 systems have under 10,000 subscribers, and an additional 302
systems have 10,000-19,999 subscribers. Thus, under this second size
standard, most cable systems are small.
44. Cable System Operators. The Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, also contains a size standard for small cable system
operators, which is ``a cable operator that, directly or through an
affiliate, serves in the aggregate fewer than 1 percent of all
subscribers in the United States and is not affiliated with any entity
or entities whose gross annual revenues in the aggregate exceed
$250,000,000.'' The Commission has determined that an operator serving
fewer than 677,000 subscribers shall be deemed a small operator if its
annual revenues, when combined with the total annual revenues of all
its affiliates, do not exceed $250 million in the aggregate. Industry
data indicate that all but nine cable operators nationwide are small
under this subscriber size standard. We note that the Commission
neither requests nor collects information on whether cable system
operators are affiliated with entities whose gross annual revenues
exceed $250 million, and therefore we are unable to estimate more
accurately the number of cable system operators that would qualify as
small under this size standard.
45. Television Broadcasting. This Economic Census category
``comprises establishments primarily engaged in broadcasting images
together with sound. These establishments operate television
broadcasting studios and facilities for the programming and
transmission of programs to the public.'' The SBA has created the
following small business size standard for Television Broadcasting
firms: those having $14 million or less in annual receipts. The
Commission has estimated the number of licensed commercial television
stations to be 1,387. In addition, according to Commission staff review
of the BIA Advisory Services, LLC's Media Access Pro Television
Database on March 28, 2012, about 950 of an estimated 1,300 commercial
television stations (or approximately 73 percent) had revenues of $14
million or less. We therefore estimate that the majority of commercial
television broadcasters are small entities.
46. We note, however, that in assessing whether a business concern
qualifies as small under the above definition, business (control)
affiliations must be included. Our estimate, therefore, likely
overstates the number of small entities that might be affected by our
action because the revenue figure on which it is based does not include
or aggregate revenues from affiliated companies. In addition, an
element of the definition of ``small business'' is that the entity not
be dominant in its field of operation. We are unable at this time to
define or quantify the criteria that would establish whether a specific
television station is dominant in its field of operation. Accordingly,
the estimate of small businesses to which rules may apply does not
exclude any television station from the definition of a small business
on this basis and is therefore possibly over-inclusive to that extent.
47. In addition, the Commission has estimated the number of
licensed noncommercial educational (NCE) television stations to be 396.
These stations are non-profit, and therefore considered to be small
entities.
48. Direct Broadcast Satellite (``DBS'') Service. DBS service is a
nationally distributed subscription service that delivers video and
audio programming via satellite to a small parabolic ``dish'' antenna
at the subscriber's location. DBS, by exception, is now included in the
SBA's broad economic census category, ``Wired Telecommunications
Carriers,'' which was developed for small wireline firms. Under this
category, the SBA deems a wireline business to be small if it has 1,500
or fewer employees. Census data for 2007 shows that there were 31,996
establishments that operated that year. Of those 31,996, 1,818 operated
with more than 100 employees, and 30,178 operated with fewer than 100
employees. Thus, under this category and the associated small business
size standard, the majority of such firms can be considered small.
Currently, only two entities provide DBS service, which requires a
great investment of capital for operation: DIRECTV and EchoStar
Communications Corporation (``EchoStar'') (marketed as the DISH
Network). Each currently offers subscription services. DIRECTV and
EchoStar each report annual revenues that are in excess of the
threshold for a small business. Because DBS service requires
significant capital, we believe it is unlikely that a small entity as
defined by the SBA would have the financial wherewithal to become a DBS
service provider.
49. Satellite Telecommunications Providers. Two economic census
categories address the satellite industry. The first category has a
small business size standard of $15 million or less in average annual
receipts, under SBA rules. The second has a size standard of $25
million or less in annual receipts.
50. The category of ``Satellite Telecommunications'' ``comprises
establishments primarily engaged in providing telecommunications
services to other establishments in the telecommunications and
broadcasting industries by forwarding and receiving communications
signals via a system of satellites or reselling satellite
telecommunications.'' Census Bureau data for 2007 show that 607
Satellite Telecommunications establishments operated for that entire
year. Of this total, 533 establishments had annual receipts of under
$10 million or less, and 74 establishments had receipts of $10 million
or more. Consequently, the Commission estimates that the majority of
Satellite Telecommunications firms are small entities that might be
affected by our action.
51. The second category, i.e., ``All Other Telecommunications,''
comprises ``establishments primarily engaged in providing specialized
telecommunications services, such as satellite tracking, communications
telemetry, and radar station operation. This industry also includes
establishments primarily engaged in providing satellite terminal
stations and associated facilities connected with one or more
terrestrial systems and capable of transmitting telecommunications to,
and receiving telecommunications from, satellite systems.
Establishments providing Internet services or voice over Internet
protocol (VoIP) services via client-supplied telecommunications
connections are also included in this industry.'' For this category,
Census data for 2007 shows that there were a
[[Page 70982]]
total of 2,639 establishments that operated for the entire year. Of
those 2,639 establishments, 2,333 operated with annual receipts of less
than $10 million and 306 with annual receipts of $10 million or more.
Consequently, the Commission estimates that a majority of All Other
Telecommunications establishments are small entities that might be
affected by our action.
52. Satellite Master Antenna Television (SMATV) Systems, also known
as Private Cable Operators (PCOs). SMATV systems or PCOs are video
distribution facilities that use closed transmission paths without
using any public right-of-way. They acquire video programming and
distribute it via terrestrial wiring in urban and suburban multiple
dwelling units such as apartments and condominiums, and commercial
multiple tenant units such as hotels and office buildings. SMATV
systems or PCOs are now included in the SBA's broad economic census
category, ``Wired Telecommunications Carriers,'' which was developed
for small wireline firms. Under this category, the SBA deems a wireline
business to be small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. Census data
for 2007 shows that there were 31,996 establishments that operated that
year. Of those 31,996, 1,818 operated with more than 100 employees, and
30,178 operated with fewer than 100 employees. Thus, under this
category and the associated small business size standard, the majority
of such firms can be considered small.
53. Home Satellite Dish (``HSD'') Service. HSD or the large dish
segment of the satellite industry is the original satellite-to-home
service offered to consumers, and involves the home reception of
signals transmitted by satellites operating generally in the C-band
frequency. Unlike DBS, which uses small dishes, HSD antennas are
between four and eight feet in diameter and can receive a wide range of
unscrambled (free) programming and scrambled programming purchased from
program packagers that are licensed to facilitate subscribers' receipt
of video programming. Because HSD provides subscription services, HSD
falls within the SBA-recognized definition of ``Wired
Telecommunications Carriers.'' The SBA has developed a small business
size standard for this category, which is: all such firms having 1,500
or fewer employees. Census data for 2007 shows that there were 31,996
establishments that operated that year. Of those 31,996, 1,818 operated
with more than 100 employees, and 30,178 operated with fewer than 100
employees. Thus, under this category and the associated small business
size standard, the majority of such firms can be considered small.
54. Broadband Radio Service and Educational Broadband Service.
Broadband Radio Service systems, previously referred to as Multipoint
Distribution Service (MDS) and Multichannel Multipoint Distribution
Service (MMDS) systems, and ``wireless cable,'' transmit video
programming to subscribers and provide two-way high speed data
operations using the microwave frequencies of the Broadband Radio
Service (BRS) and Educational Broadband Service (EBS) (previously
referred to as the Instructional Television Fixed Service (ITFS)). In
connection with the 1996 BRS auction, the Commission established a
small business size standard as an entity that had annual average gross
revenues of no more than $40 million in the previous three calendar
years. The BRS auctions resulted in 67 successful bidders obtaining
licensing opportunities for 493 Basic Trading Areas (BTAs). Of the 67
auction winners, 61 met the definition of a small business. BRS also
includes licensees of stations authorized prior to the auction. At this
time, we estimate that of the 61 small business BRS auction winners, 48
remain small business licensees. In addition to the 48 small businesses
that hold BTA authorizations, there are approximately 392 incumbent BRS
licensees that are considered small entities. After adding the number
of small business auction licensees to the number of incumbent
licensees not already counted, we find that there are currently
approximately 440 BRS licensees that are defined as small businesses
under either the SBA or the Commission's rules. In 2009, the Commission
conducted Auction 86, the sale of 78 licenses in the BRS areas. The
Commission offered three levels of bidding credits: (i) A bidder with
attributed average annual gross revenues that exceed $15 million and do
not exceed $40 million for the preceding three years (small business)
received a 15 percent discount on its winning bid; (ii) a bidder with
attributed average annual gross revenues that exceed $3 million and do
not exceed $15 million for the preceding three years (very small
business) received a 25 percent discount on its winning bid; and (iii)
a bidder with attributed average annual gross revenues that do not
exceed $3 million for the preceding three years (entrepreneur) received
a 35 percent discount on its winning bid. Auction 86 concluded in 2009
with the sale of 61 licenses. Of the ten winning bidders, two bidders
that claimed small business status won four licenses; one bidder that
claimed very small business status won three licenses; and two bidders
that claimed entrepreneur status won six licenses.
55. In addition, the SBA's placement of Cable Television
Distribution Services in the category of Wired Telecommunications
Carriers is applicable to cable-based Educational Broadcasting
Services. Since 2007, ``Wired Telecommunications Carriers'' have been
defined as follows: ``This industry comprises establishments primarily
engaged in operating and/or providing access to transmission facilities
and infrastructure that they own and/or lease for the transmission of
voice, data, text, sound, and video using wired telecommunications
networks. Transmission facilities may be based on a single technology
or a combination of technologies.'' Establishments in this industry use
the wired telecommunications network facilities that they operate to
provide a variety of services, such as wired telephony services,
including VoIP services; wired (cable) audio and video programming
distribution; and wired broadband Internet services. By exception,
establishments providing satellite television distribution services
using facilities and infrastructure that they operate are included in
this industry. For these services, the Commission uses the SBA small
business size standard for Wired Telecommunications Carriers, which is
1,500 or fewer employees. Census data for 2007 shows that there were
31,996 establishments that operated that year. Of those 31,996, 1,818
operated with more than 100 employees, and 30,178 operated with fewer
than 100 employees. Thus, under this category and the associated small
business size standard, the majority of such firms can be considered
small. In addition to Census data, the Commission's internal records
indicate that as of September 2012, there are 2,241 active EBS
licenses. The Commission estimates that of these 2,241 licenses, the
majority are held by non-profit educational institutions and school
districts, which are by statute defined as small businesses.
56. Fixed Microwave Services. Microwave services include common
carrier, private-operational fixed, and broadcast auxiliary radio
services. They also include the Local Multipoint Distribution Service
(LMDS), the Digital Electronic Message Service (DEMS), and the 24 GHz
Service, where licensees can choose between common carrier and non-
common carrier status. At present, there are approximately 31,428
common
[[Page 70983]]
carrier fixed licensees and 79,732 private operational-fixed licensees
and broadcast auxiliary radio licensees in the microwave services.
There are approximately 120 LMDS licensees, three DEMS licensees, and
three 24 GHz licensees. The Commission has not yet defined a small
business with respect to microwave services. For purposes of the IRFA,
we will use the SBA's definition applicable to Wireless
Telecommunications Carriers (except satellite)--i.e., an entity with no
more than 1,500 persons. Under the present and prior categories, the
SBA has deemed a wireless business to be small if it has 1,500 or fewer
employees. For the category of ``Wireless Telecommunications Carriers
(except Satellite),'' Census data for 2007 show that there were 11,163
firms that operated for the entire year. Of this total, 10,791 firms
had employment of 999 or fewer employees and 372 had employment of
1,000 employees or more. Thus, under this category and the associated
small business size standard, the majority of firms can be considered
small. We note that the number of firms does not necessarily track the
number of licensees. We estimate that virtually all of the Fixed
Microwave licensees (excluding broadcast auxiliary licensees) would
qualify as small entities under the SBA definition.
57. Open Video Systems. The open video system (``OVS'') framework
was established in 1996, and is one of four statutorily recognized
options for the provision of video programming services by local
exchange carriers. The OVS framework provides opportunities for the
distribution of video programming other than through cable systems.
Because OVS operators provide subscription services, OVS falls within
the SBA small business size standard covering cable services, which is
``Wired Telecommunications Carriers.'' The SBA has developed a small
business size standard for this category, which is: all such firms
having 1,500 or fewer employees. Census data for 2007 shows that there
were 31,996 establishments that operated that year. Of those 31,996,
1,818 operated with more than 100 employees, and 30,178 operated with
fewer than 100 employees. Thus, under this category and the associated
small business size standard, the majority of such firms can be
considered small. In addition, we note that the Commission has
certified some OVS operators, with some now providing service.
Broadband service providers (``BSPs'') are currently the only
significant holders of OVS certifications or local OVS franchises. The
Commission does not have financial or employment information regarding
the entities authorized to provide OVS, some of which may not yet be
operational. Thus, at least some of the OVS operators may qualify as
small entities.
58. Cable and Other Subscription Programming. The Census Bureau
defines this category as follows: ``This industry comprises
establishments primarily engaged in operating studios and facilities
for the broadcasting of programs on a subscription or fee basis. These
establishments produce programming in their own facilities or acquire
programming from external sources. The programming material is usually
delivered to a third party, such as cable systems or direct-to-home
satellite systems, for transmission to viewers.'' The SBA has developed
a small business size standard for this category, which is: all such
firms having $15 million dollars or less in annual revenues. To gauge
small business prevalence in the Cable and Other Subscription
Programming industries, the Commission relies on data currently
available from the U.S. Census for the year 2007. Census Bureau data
for 2007 show that there were 659 establishments in this category that
operated for the entire year. Of that number, 462 operated with annual
revenues of $9,999,999 million dollars or less. 197 operated with
annual revenues of 10 million or more. Thus, under this category and
associated small business size standard, the majority of firms can be
considered small.
59. Small Incumbent Local Exchange Carriers. We have included small
incumbent local exchange carriers in this present RFA analysis. A
``small business'' under the RFA is one that, inter alia, meets the
pertinent small business size standard (e.g., a telephone
communications business having 1,500 or fewer employees), and ``is not
dominant in its field of operation.'' The SBA's Office of Advocacy
contends that, for RFA purposes, small incumbent local exchange
carriers are not dominant in their field of operation because any such
dominance is not ``national'' in scope. We have therefore included
small incumbent local exchange carriers in this RFA analysis, although
we emphasize that this RFA action has no effect on Commission analyses
and determinations in other, non-RFA contexts.
60. Incumbent Local Exchange Carriers (``LECs''). Neither the
Commission nor the SBA has developed a small business size standard
specifically for incumbent local exchange services. The appropriate
size standard under SBA rules is for the category ``Wired
Telecommunications Carriers.'' Under that size standard, such a
business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. Census data for
2007 shows that there were 31,996 establishments that operated that
year. Of those 31,996, 1,818 operated with more than 100 employees, and
30,178 operated with fewer than 100 employees. Thus, under this
category and the associated small business size standard, the majority
of such firms can be considered small.
61. Competitive Local Exchange Carriers, Competitive Access
Providers (CAPs), ``Shared-Tenant Service Providers,'' and ``Other
Local Service Providers.'' Neither the Commission nor the SBA has
developed a small business size standard specifically for these service
providers. The appropriate size standard under SBA rules is for the
category ``Wired Telecommunications Carriers.'' Under that size
standard, such a business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees.
Census data for 2007 shows that there were 31,996 establishments that
operated that year. Of those 31,996, 1,818 operated with more than 100
employees, and 30,178 operated with fewer than 100 employees. Thus,
under this category and the associated small business size standard,
the majority of such firms can be considered small. Consequently, the
Commission estimates that most providers of competitive local exchange
service, competitive access providers, ``Shared-Tenant Service
Providers,'' and ``Other Local Service Providers'' are small entities.
62. Motion Picture and Video Production. The Census Bureau defines
this category as follows: This industry comprises establishments
primarily engaged in producing, or producing and distributing motion
pictures, videos, television programs, or television commercials. We
note that firms in this category may be engaged in various industries,
including cable programming. Specific figures are not available
regarding how many of these firms produce and/or distribute programming
for cable television. The SBA has developed a small business size
standard for this category, which is: all such firms having $29.5
million dollars or less in annual revenues. To gauge small business
prevalence in the Motion Picture and Video Production industries, the
Commission relies on data currently available from the U.S. Census for
the year 2007. Census Bureau data for 2007, which now supersede data
from the 2002 Census, show that there were 9,095 firms in this category
that operated for the entire year. Of
[[Page 70984]]
these, 8,995 had annual receipts of $24,999,999 or less, and 100 had
annual receipts ranging from not less than $25,000,000 to $100,000,000
or more. Thus, under this category and associated small business size
standard, the majority of firms can be considered small.
63. Motion Picture and Video Distribution. The Census Bureau
defines this category as follows: ``This industry comprises
establishments primarily engaged in acquiring distribution rights and
distributing film and video productions to motion picture theaters,
television networks and stations, and exhibitors.'' We note that firms
in this category may be engaged in various industries, including cable
programming. Specific figures are not available regarding how many of
these firms produce and/or distribute programming for cable television.
The SBA has developed a small business size standard for this category,
which is: All such firms having $29.5 million dollars or less in annual
revenues. To gauge small business prevalence in the Motion Picture and
Video Distribution industries, the Commission relies on data currently
available from the U.S. Census for the year 2007. Census Bureau data
for 2007, which now supersede data from the 2002 Census, show that
there were 450 firms in this category that operated for the entire
year. Of these, 434 had annual receipts of $24,999,999 or less, and 16
had annual receipts ranging from not less than $25,000,000 to
$100,000,000 or more. Thus, under this category and associated small
business size standard, the majority of firms can be considered small.
64. Radio and Television Broadcasting and Wireless Communications
Equipment Manufacturing. The Census Bureau defines this category as
follows: ``This industry comprises establishments primarily engaged in
manufacturing radio and television broadcast and wireless
communications equipment. Examples of products made by these
establishments are: transmitting and receiving antennas, cable
television equipment, GPS equipment, pagers, cellular phones, mobile
communications equipment, and radio and television studio and
broadcasting equipment.'' The SBA has developed a small business size
standard for Radio and Television Broadcasting and Wireless
Communications Equipment Manufacturing, which is: all such firms having
750 or fewer employees. According to Census Bureau data for 2007, there
were 919 establishments that operated for part or all of the entire
year. Of those 919 establishments, 771 operated with 99 or fewer
employees, and 148 operated with 100 or more employees. Thus, under
that size standard, the majority of establishments can be considered
small.
65. Audio and Video Equipment Manufacturing. The SBA has classified
the manufacturing of audio and video equipment under in NAICS Codes
classification scheme as an industry in which a manufacturer is small
if it has less than 750 employees. Data contained in the 2007 Economic
Census indicate that 491 establishments in this category operated for
part or all of the entire year. Of those 491 establishments, 456
operated with 99 or fewer employees, and 35 operated with 100 or more
employees. Thus, under the applicable size standard, a majority of
manufacturers of audio and video equipment may be considered small.
4. Description of Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other
Compliance Requirements
66. Certain proposed rule changes discussed in the NPRM would
affect reporting, recordkeeping, or other compliance requirements. In
general, the NPRM proposes to satisfy the requirements of section
202(a) of the CVAA with regard to making emergency information
accessible to persons who are blind or visually impaired by mandating
the use of a secondary audio stream to provide the emergency
information aurally and concurrently with the emergency information
being conveyed visually during non-news programming. The NPRM also
makes certain proposals regarding apparatus requirements for emergency
information and video description.
67. Specifically, on the topic of apparatus requirements, the
Commission proposes to permit parties to raise technical infeasibility
as a defense to a complaint or, alternatively, to file a request for a
ruling under Sec. 1.41 of the Commission's rules before manufacturing
or importing the product. Similarly, the Commission proposes to permit
a manufacturer to raise achievability as a defense to a complaint
alleging a violation of section 203, or to seek a determination of
achievability from the Commission before manufacturing or importing the
apparatus. Further, the Commission proposes that a manufacturer may
make a request for a Commission determination as to whether its
apparatus is an exempt display-only video monitor, and that the
Commission will make purpose-based waivers available prospectively and
such waivers will be addressed on a case-by-case basis.
68. In the NPRM, the Commission also seeks comment on complaint
filing for the proposed rules related both to access to emergency
information and apparatus requirements for video description and
emergency information.
5. Steps Taken To Minimize Significant Impact on Small Entities and
Significant Alternatives Considered
69. The RFA requires an agency to describe any significant
alternatives that it has considered in reaching its proposed approach,
which may include the following four alternatives (among others): (1)
The establishment of differing compliance or reporting requirements or
timetables that take into account the resources available to small
entities; (2) the clarification, consolidation, or simplification of
compliance or reporting requirements under the rule for small entities;
(3) the use of performance, rather than design, standards; and (4) an
exemption from coverage of the rule, or any part thereof, for small
entities.
70. We emphasize at the outset that, although alternatives to
minimize economic impact have been and are being considered as part of
this proceeding, our proposals are governed by the congressional
mandate contained in sections 202(a) and 203 of the CVAA. The NPRM
seeks comment on whether any alternatives to the proposed use of the
secondary audio stream would be preferable, and how the costs and
benefits of any alternate proposals would compare to the costs and
benefits of the proposed use of the secondary audio stream. Regarding
accessible emergency information, the NPRM seeks comment on certain
specified alternative approaches (for example, including a shortened
audio version of the textual emergency information on the primary
stream, or broadcasting a 5 to 10 second audio message after three
high-pitched tones announcing the start of a textual message), and it
additionally seeks comment on any additional alternatives that may
become viable in the future (for example, ``dipping'' or lowering the
main program audio and playing an aural message over the lowered audio,
providing screen reader software or devices on request, enabling users
to select and enlarge emergency crawl text, providing guidance for
consumers, and using an Internet-based standardized application to
filter emergency information by location). Regarding apparatus
requirements for emergency information and video description, the NPRM
proposes that parties may use alternate means of
[[Page 70985]]
compliance to the rules adopted pursuant to section 203 of the CVAA,
and it proposes to address any specific requests from parties subject
to new rules when they are presented to the Commission, rather than
specifying what may constitute a permissible ``alternate means.''
Individual entities, including smaller entities, may benefit from this
provision.
71. Overall, in proposing rules governing accessible emergency
information and apparatus requirements for emergency information and
video description, we believe that we have appropriately considered
both the interests of individuals who are blind or visually impaired
and the interests of the entities who will be subject to the rules,
including those that are smaller entities. Our efforts are consistent
with Congress' goal of ``updat[ing] the communications laws to help
ensure that individuals with disabilities are able to fully utilize
communications services and equipment and better access video
programming.''
6. Federal Rules That May Duplicate, Overlap, or Conflict With the
Proposed Rule
72. None.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
73. This document contains proposed new or modified information
collection requirements. The Commission, as part of its continuing
effort to reduce paperwork burdens, invites the general public and the
Office of Management and Budget (``OMB'') to comment on the information
collection requirements contained in this document, as required by the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995. Public Law 104-13. In addition,
pursuant to the Small Business Paperwork Relief Act of 2002, Public Law
107-198, we seek specific comment on how we might ``further reduce the
information collection burden for small business concerns with fewer
than 25 employees.'' 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(4).
C. Ex Parte Rules
74. Permit-But-Disclose. The proceeding this NPRM initiates shall
be treated as a ``permit-but-disclose'' proceeding in accordance with
the Commission's ex parte rules. 47 CFR 1.1200 et seq. Persons making
ex parte presentations must file a copy of any written presentation or
a memorandum summarizing any oral presentation within two business days
after the presentation (unless a different deadline applicable to the
Sunshine period applies). Persons making oral ex parte presentations
are reminded that memoranda summarizing the presentation must (1) list
all persons attending or otherwise participating in the meeting at
which the ex parte presentation was made, and (2) summarize all data
presented and arguments made during the presentation. If the
presentation consisted in whole or in part of the presentation of data
or arguments already reflected in the presenter's written comments,
memoranda or other filings in the proceeding, the presenter may provide
citations to such data or arguments in his or her prior comments,
memoranda, or other filings (specifying the relevant page and/or
paragraph numbers where such data or arguments can be found) in lieu of
summarizing them in the memorandum. Documents shown or given to
Commission staff during ex parte meetings are deemed to be written ex
parte presentations and must be filed consistent with rule Sec.
1.1206(b). In proceedings governed by rule Sec. 1.49(f) or for which
the Commission has made available a method of electronic filing,
written ex parte presentations and memoranda summarizing oral ex parte
presentations, and all attachments thereto, must be filed through the
electronic comment filing system available for that proceeding, and
must be filed in their native format (e.g., .doc, .xml, .ppt,
searchable .pdf). Participants in this proceeding should familiarize
themselves with the Commission's ex parte rules.
D. Filing Requirements
75. Comments and Replies. Pursuant to Sec. Sec. 1.415 and 1.419 of
the Commission's rules, interested parties may file comments and reply
comments on or before the dates indicated on the first page of this
document. 47 CFR 1.415, 1.419. Comments may be filed using the
Commission's Electronic Comment Filing System (``ECFS''). See
Electronic Filing of Documents in Rulemaking Proceedings, 63 FR 24121
(1998).
Electronic Filers: Comments may be filed electronically
using the Internet by accessing the ECFS: https://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/ecfs2/.
Paper Filers: Parties who choose to file by paper must
file an original and one copy of each filing. If more than one docket
or rulemaking number appears in the caption of this proceeding, filers
must submit two additional copies for each additional docket or
rulemaking number.
Filings can be sent by hand or messenger delivery, by commercial
overnight courier, or by first-class or overnight U.S. Postal Service
mail. All filings must be addressed to the Commission's Secretary,
Office of the Secretary, Federal Communications Commission.
All hand-delivered or messenger-delivered paper filings
for the Commission's Secretary must be delivered to FCC Headquarters at
445 12th Street SW., Room TW-A325, Washington, DC 20554. The filing
hours are 8:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. All hand deliveries must be held
together with rubber bands or fasteners. Any envelopes and boxes must
be disposed of before entering the building.
Commercial overnight mail (other than U.S. Postal Service
Express Mail and Priority Mail) must be sent to 9300 East Hampton
Drive, Capitol Heights, MD 20743.
U.S. Postal Service first-class, Express, and Priority
mail must be addressed to 445 12th Street SW., Washington, DC 20554.
76. Availability of Documents. Comments, reply comments, and ex
parte submissions will be available for public inspection during
regular business hours in the FCC Reference Center, Federal
Communications Commission, 445 12th Street SW., Room CY-A257,
Washington, DC 20554. These documents will also be available via ECFS.
Documents will be available electronically in ASCII, Microsoft Word,
and/or Adobe Acrobat.
77. People with Disabilities. To request materials in accessible
formats for people with disabilities (Braille, large print, electronic
files, audio format), send an email to fcc504@fcc.gov or call the FCC's
Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau at (202) 418-0530 (voice),
(202) 418-0432 (TTY).
78. Additional Information. For additional information on this
proceeding, contact Diana Sokolow, Diana.Sokolow@fcc.gov, or Maria
Mullarkey, Maria.Mullarkey@fcc.gov, of the Media Bureau, Policy
Division, (202) 418-2120.
V. Ordering Clauses
79. Accordingly, it is ordered that pursuant to the Twenty-First
Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010, Public Law
111-260, 124 Stat. 2751, and the authority found in sections 4(i),
4(j), 303(u) and (z), 330(b), and 713(g), of the Communications Act of
1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 154(i), 154(j), 303(u) and (z), 330(b), and
613(g), this Notice of Proposed Rulemaking Is Adopted.
80. It is further ordered that the Commission's Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau, Reference
[[Page 70986]]
Information Center, shall send a copy of this Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking, including the Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, to
the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration.
List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 79
Cable television operators, Communications equipment, Multichannel
video programming distributors (MVPDs), Satellite television service
providers, Television broadcasters.
Federal Communications Commission.
Bulah P. Wheeler,
Associate Secretary.
Proposed Rules
For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Federal
Communications Commission proposes to amend 47 CFR part 79 as follows:
PART 79--CLOSED CAPTIONING AND VIDEO DESCRIPTION OF VIDEO
PROGRAMMING
1. The authority citation for part 79 will continue to read as
follows:
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 151, 152(a), 154(i), 303, 307, 309, 310,
330, 544a, 613, 617.
2. Amend Sec. 79.2 by revising paragraphs (b)(1)(ii), (b)(1)(iii),
and (b)(3)(ii) to read as follows:
Sec. 79.2 Accessibility of programming providing emergency
information.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) Emergency information that is provided visually during a
regularly scheduled newscast, or newscast that interrupts regular
programming, must be made accessible to persons with visual
disabilities; and
(iii) Emergency information that is provided visually during
programming that is not a regularly scheduled newscast, or a newscast
that interrupts regular programming, must be accompanied with an aural
tone, and beginning [DATES TO BE DETERMINED] must be made accessible to
persons with visual disabilities through the use of a secondary audio
stream to provide the emergency information aurally.
* * * * *
(3) * * *
(ii) Any video description provided should not block any emergency
information.
* * * * *
3. Add Sec. 79.105 to read as follows:
Sec. 79.105 Video description and emergency information decoder
requirements for all apparatus.
(a) Effective [DATES TO BE DETERMINED], all apparatus designed to
receive or play back video programming transmitted simultaneously with
sound that is part of a broadcast or multichannel video programming
distributor service, if such apparatus is manufactured in the United
States or imported for use in the United States and uses a picture
screen of any size, must have the capability to decode and make
available the following services, if technically feasible, unless
otherwise provided herein:
(1) The transmission and delivery of video description services as
described in Sec. 79.3; and
(2) Emergency information in a manner that is accessible to
individuals who are blind or visually impaired as described in Sec.
79.2.
Note to paragraph (a): Apparatus includes the physical device and
the video players that manufacturers install into the devices they
manufacture before sale, whether in the form of hardware, software, or
a combination of both, as well as any video players that manufacturers
direct consumers to install after sale.
(b) Exempt apparatus--(1) Display-only monitors. Apparatus or class
of apparatus that are display-only video monitors with no playback
capability are not required to comply with the provisions of this
section.
(2) Professional or commercial equipment. Apparatus or class of
apparatus that are professional or commercial equipment not typically
used by the public are not required to comply with the provisions of
this section.
(3)(i) Achievable. Manufacturers of apparatus that use a picture
screen of less than 13 inches in size may petition the Commission for a
full or partial exemption from the video description and emergency
information requirements of this section pursuant to Sec. 1.41 of this
chapter, which the Commission may grant upon a finding that the
requirements of this section are not achievable, or may assert that
such apparatus is fully or partially exempt as a response to a
complaint, which the Commission may dismiss upon a finding that the
requirements of this section are not achievable.
(ii) The petitioner or respondent must support a petition for
exemption or a response to a complaint with sufficient evidence to
demonstrate that compliance with the requirements of this section is
not ``achievable'' where ``achievable'' means with reasonable effort or
expense. The Commission will consider the following factors when
determining whether the requirements of this section are not
``achievable:''
(A) The nature and cost of the steps needed to meet the
requirements of this section with respect to the specific equipment or
service in question;
(B) The technical and economic impact on the operation of the
manufacturer or provider and on the operation of the specific equipment
or service in question, including on the development and deployment of
new communications technologies;
(C) The type of operations of the manufacturer or provider; and
(D) The extent to which the service provider or manufacturer in
question offers accessible services or equipment containing varying
degrees of functionality and features, and offered at differing price
points.
(4) Waiver. Manufacturers of apparatus may petition the Commission
for a full or partial waiver of the requirements of this section, which
the Commission may grant upon a finding that the apparatus meets one of
the following provisions:
(i) The apparatus is primarily designed for activities other than
receiving or playing back video programming transmitted simultaneously
with sound; or
(ii) The apparatus is designed for multiple purposes, capable of
receiving or playing back video programming transmitted simultaneously
with sound but whose essential utility is derived from other purposes.
4. Add Sec. 79.106 to read as follows:
Sec. 79.106 Video description and emergency information decoder
requirements for recording devices.
(a) Effective [DATES TO BE DETERMINED], all apparatus designed to
record video programming transmitted simultaneously with sound that is
part of a broadcast or multichannel video programming distributor
service, if such apparatus is manufactured in the United States or
imported for use in the United States, must comply with the provisions
of this section except that apparatus must only do so if it is
achievable as defined in Sec. 79.105(b)(3).
Note to paragraph (a): Apparatus includes the physical device and
the video players that manufacturers install into the devices they
manufacture before sale, whether in the form of hardware, software, or
a combination of both, as well as any video players that manufacturers
direct consumers to install after sale.
(b) All apparatus subject to this section must enable the rendering
or the
[[Page 70987]]
pass through of video description signals and emergency information (as
that term is defined in Sec. 79.2) such that viewers are able to
activate and de-activate the video description as the video programming
is played back on a picture screen of any size.
[FR Doc. 2012-28716 Filed 11-27-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712-01-P