Auction of FM Broadcast Construction Permits Scheduled for July 23, 2015; Comment Sought on Competitive Bidding Procedures for Auction 98, 15715-15722 [2015-06864]
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 57 / Wednesday, March 25, 2015 / Proposed Rules
To implement these provisions,
Maryland amended Regulation .01
under COMAR 26.11.01 (General
Administrative Provisions) and
Regulations .01 and .02 under COMAR
26.11.17 (Nonattainment Provisions for
Major New Sources and Major
Modifications). The general definitions
at COMAR 26.11.01.01 were amended to
add definitions of ‘‘PM2.5’’ and ‘‘PM2.5
emissions.’’ COMAR 26.11.17 contains
the preconstruction requirements for
new major stationary sources and major
modifications locating in nonattainment
areas. The definitions of ‘‘regulated NSR
pollutant’’ and ‘‘significant’’ under
COMAR 26.11.17.01 were amended.
The amended definitions require that
sources account for the condensable
fraction of PM10 and PM2.5, require that
NOX and SO2 be regulated as precursors
to PM10 and PM2.5, and establish
significant emission rates (SERs) for
PM2.5 and its precursors. COMAR
26.11.17.02 was revised to specify that
all of the major nonattainment NSR
preconstruction requirements of the
chapter are applicable to new major
stationary sources and major
modifications that are major for PM2.5 or
its precursors. COMAR 26.11.17.02 was
also revised to clarify that in addition to
the requirements of that chapter, the
Prevention of Significant Deterioration
(PSD) requirements of COMAR
26.11.04.16 may also apply to sources
locating in nonattainment areas.
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III. Proposed Action
EPA’s review of this material
indicates that the proposed revisions
comply with the nonattainment NSR
program requirements of the CAA and
its implementing regulations (including
the 2008 NSR PM2.5 Rule) that are
applicable in Maryland at this time.
EPA is therefore proposing to approve
MDE’s August 22, 2013 submittal as a
revision to the Maryland SIP. EPA is
soliciting public comments on the
issues discussed in this document.
These comments will be considered
before taking final action.
IV. Incorporation by Reference
In this proposed action, the EPA is
proposing to include in a final EPA rule,
regulatory text that includes
incorporation by reference. In
accordance with requirements of 1 CFR
51.5, the EPA is proposing to
incorporate by reference amendments to
Regulation .01 under COMAR 26.11.01
(General Administrative Provisions) and
Regulations .01 and .02 under COMAR
26.11.17 (Nonattainment Provisions for
Major New Sources and Major
Modifications). The EPA has made, and
will continue to make, these documents
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generally available electronically
through www.regulations.gov and/or in
hard copy at the appropriate EPA office
(see the ADDRESSES section of this
preamble for more information).
V. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Under the CAA, the Administrator is
required to approve a SIP submission
that complies with the provisions of the
CAA and applicable Federal regulations.
42 U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR 52.02(a).
Thus, in reviewing SIP submissions,
EPA’s role is to approve state choices,
provided that they meet the criteria of
the CAA. Accordingly, this action
merely approves state law as meeting
Federal requirements and does not
impose additional requirements beyond
those imposed by state law. For that
reason, this proposed action:
• Is not a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ subject to review by the Office
of Management and Budget under
Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735,
October 4, 1993);
• does not impose an information
collection burden under the provisions
of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
• is certified as not having a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
• does not contain any unfunded
mandate or significantly or uniquely
affect small governments, as described
in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4);
• does not have Federalism
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999);
• is not an economically significant
regulatory action based on health or
safety risks subject to Executive Order
13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);
• is not a significant regulatory action
subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR
28355, May 22, 2001);
• is not subject to requirements of
Section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because
application of those requirements would
be inconsistent with the CAA; and
• does not provide EPA with the
discretionary authority to address, as
appropriate, disproportionate human
health or environmental effects, using
practicable and legally permissible
methods, under Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, this proposed rule, relating
to Maryland’s nonattainment NSR
program, does not have tribal
implications as specified by Executive
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Order 13175 (65 FR 67249, November 9,
2000), because the SIP is not approved
to apply in Indian country located in the
state, and EPA notes that it will not
impose substantial direct costs on tribal
governments or preempt tribal law.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Carbon monoxide,
Incorporation by reference,
Intergovernmental relations, Lead,
Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone, Particulate
matter, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Sulfur oxides, Volatile
organic compounds.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: March 9, 2015.
William C. Early,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region III.
[FR Doc. 2015–06729 Filed 3–24–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Parts 1 and 73
[AU Docket No. 15–3; DA 15–25]
Auction of FM Broadcast Construction
Permits Scheduled for July 23, 2015;
Comment Sought on Competitive
Bidding Procedures for Auction 98
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Proposed rule; proposed auction
procedures; comment sought.
AGENCY:
The Wireless
Telecommunications and Media
Bureaus (the Bureaus) announce the
auction of certain FM broadcast
construction permits. This document
also seeks comment on competitive
bidding procedures for Auction 98.
DATES: Comments are due on or before
April 1, 2015, and reply comments are
due on or before April 8, 2015. Bidding
for construction permits in Auction 98
is scheduled to begin on July 23, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Interested parties may
submit comments to the Auction 98
Request for Comment by any of the
following methods:
• FCC’s Web site: Federal
Communication Commission’s
Electronic Comment Filing System
(ECFS): https://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/ecfs2/.
Follow the instructions for submitting
comments.
• Mail: FCC Headquarters, 445 12th
Street SW., Room TW–A325,
Washington, DC 20554.
• People With Disabilities: To request
materials in accessible formats for
SUMMARY:
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 57 / Wednesday, March 25, 2015 / Proposed Rules
people with disabilities (braille, large
print, electronic files, or audio format),
send an email to FCC504@fcc.gov or call
the Consumer & Governmental Affairs
Bureau at 202–418–0530 (voice), 202–
418–0432 (TTY).
For detailed instructions for
submitting comments, see the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
this document.
Initial Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 Analysis:
This document does not contain
proposed information collection
requirements subject to the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, Public Law 104–
13. In addition, therefore, it does not
contain any proposed information
collection burden for small business
concerns with fewer than 25 employees,
pursuant to the Small Business
Paperwork Relief Act of 2002, Public
Law 107–198. See 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(4).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Wireless Telecommunications Bureau,
Auctions and Spectrum Access Division:
For auction legal questions: Lynne
Milne or Howard Davenport at (202)
418–0660; for general auction questions:
Jeff Crooks at (202) 418–0660 or Sue
Sterner at (717) 338–2868.
Media Bureau, Audio Division: For
FM service rules questions: Lisa Scanlan
or Tom Nessinger at (202) 418–2700.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a
summary of the Auction 98 Request for
Comment in AU Docket No. 15–3, DA
15–25, released on March 16, 2015. The
complete text of this document,
including any attachment, is available
for public inspection and copying from
8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Eastern Time (ET)
Monday through Thursday or from 8:00
a.m. to 11:30 a.m. ET on Fridays in the
FCC Reference Information Center, 445
12th Street SW., Room CY–A257,
Washington, DC 20554. The Auction 98
Request for Comment and related
documents also are available on the
Internet at the Commission’s Web site:
https://wireless.fcc.gov/auctions/98/, or
by using the search function for AU
Docket No. 15–3 on the Commission’s
ECFS Web page at https://www.fcc.gov/
cgb/ecfs/.
All filings in response to the Auction
98 Request for Comment must refer to
AU Docket No. 15–3. The Bureaus
strongly encourage interested parties to
file comments electronically, and
request that an additional copy of all
comments and reply comments be
submitted electronically to the
following address: auction98@fcc.gov.
• Electronic Filers: Comments may be
filed electronically using the Internet by
accessing the Federal Communication
Commission’s Electronic Comments
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Filing System (ECFS): https://
fjallfoss.fcc.gov/ecfs2/. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Paper Filers: Parties who choose to
file by paper must file an original and
one copy of each filing. Filings can be
sent by hand or messenger delivery, by
commercial overnight courier or by firstclass or overnight U.S. Postal Service
mail. All filings must be addressed to
the Commission’s Secretary Attn: WTB/
ASAD, Office of the Secretary, Federal
Communications Commission (FCC).
All hand-delivered or messengerdelivered paper filings for the
Commission’s Secretary must be
delivered to the 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. Eastern Time
(ET). 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.
I. Construction Permits in Auction 98
1. Auction 98 will offer 131
construction permits in the FM
broadcast service. The construction
permits to be auctioned are for 113 new
FM allotments, including 18
construction permits that were offered
but not sold or were defaulted upon in
prior auctions. Attachment A of the
Auction 98 Request for Comment lists
the specific vacant FM allotments, along
with the reference coordinates for each
vacant FM allotment. These comprise
FM channels added to the Table of FM
Allotments, 47 CFR 73.202(b), and
designated for use in the indicated
communities.
2. Under established Commission
policies, an applicant may apply for any
vacant FM allotment listed in
Attachment A of the Auction 98 Request
for Comment. If two or more short-form
applications (FCC Form 175) specify a
construction permit for the same FM
allotment in Auction 98, mutual
exclusivity exists for auction purposes,
and even if only one applicant is
qualified to bid for a particular
construction permit in Auction 98, that
applicant is required to submit a bid in
order to obtain that construction permit.
Any applicant that submits a short-form
application for Auction 98, but fails to
become a qualified bidder for any
reason, including a failure to timely
submit an upfront payment, will retain
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its status as an applicant in Auction 98
and will remain subject to the rules
prohibiting certain communications.
II. Due Diligence
3. Each potential bidder is solely
responsible for investigating and
evaluating all technical and marketplace
factors that may have a bearing on the
value of the construction permits for
broadcast facilities that it is seeking in
this auction. Each bidder is responsible
for assuring that, if it wins a
construction permit, it will be able to
build and operate facilities in
accordance with the Commission’s
rules. The FCC makes no
representations or warranties about the
use of this spectrum for particular
services. Each applicant should be
aware that an FCC auction of FM station
construction permits represents an
opportunity to become an FCC
permittee in the broadcast service,
subject to certain conditions and
regulations. These conditions include,
but are not limited to, the condition that
FCC licenses and other authorizations
(whether awarded through competitive
bidding or otherwise) are subject to the
authority of the FCC, under the
Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, to modification through
rulemaking and adjudicative
proceedings. An FCC auction does not
constitute an endorsement by the FCC of
any particular service, technology, or
product, nor does an FCC construction
permit or license constitute a guarantee
of business success.
4. An applicant should perform its
due diligence research and analysis
before proceeding, as it would with any
new business venture. In particular, the
Bureaus strongly encourage each
potential bidder to review all
underlying Commission orders, such as
the specific Report and Order amending
the FM Table of Allotments and
allotting the FM channel(s) on which it
plans to bid. A Report and Order
adopted in an FM allotment rulemaking
proceeding may include anomalies such
as site restrictions or expense
reimbursement requirements.
Additionally, each potential bidder
should perform technical analyses and/
or refresh any previous analyses to
assure itself that, should it become a
winning bidder for any Auction 98
construction permit, it will be able to
build and operate facilities that will
fully comply with all applicable
technical and legal requirements. The
Bureaus strongly encourage each
applicant to inspect any prospective
transmitter sites located in, or near, the
service area for which it plans to bid;
confirm the availability of such sites;
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and familiarize itself with 47 CFR
1.1301–1.1319.
5. The Bureaus strongly encourage
each applicant to conduct its own
research prior to Auction 98 in order to
determine the existence of pending
administrative or judicial proceedings,
including pending allocation
rulemaking proceedings that might
affect its decisions regarding
participation in the auction. The
Bureaus strongly encourage participants
in Auction 98 to continue such research
throughout the auction. These due
diligence considerations are not an
exhaustive list of steps that should be
undertaken prior to participating in this
auction. As always, the burden is on the
potential bidder to determine how much
research to undertake, depending upon
the specific facts and circumstances
related to its interests.
III. Bureaus Seek Comment on Auction
Procedures
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A. Auction Structure
6. Simultaneous Multiple Round
Auction Design. The Bureaus propose to
auction all construction permits
included in Auction 98 using the
Commission’s standard simultaneous
multiple-round auction format. This
type of auction offers every construction
permit for bid at the same time and
consists of successive bidding rounds in
which eligible bidders may place bids
on individual construction permits.
Typically, bidding remains open on all
construction permits until bidding stops
on every construction permit. The
Bureaus seek comment on this proposal.
7. Bidding Rounds. Auction 98 will
consist of sequential bidding rounds,
each followed by the release of round
results. The initial bidding schedule
will be announced in a public notice to
be released at least one week before the
start of the auction. Details on viewing
round results, including the location
and format of downloadable round
results files, will be included in the
same public notice.
8. The Commission will conduct
Auction 98 over the Internet using the
Commission’s Integrated Spectrum
Auction System (FCC Auction System).
Bidders will also have the option of
placing bids by telephone through a
dedicated Auction Bidder Line. The
toll-free telephone number for the
Auction Bidder Line will be provided to
qualified bidders prior to the start of the
auction.
9. The Bureaus propose to retain the
discretion to change the bidding
schedule in order to foster an auction
pace that reasonably balances speed
with the bidders’ need to study round
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results and adjust their bidding
strategies. Under this proposal, the
Bureaus may change the amount of time
for the bidding rounds, the amount of
time between rounds, or the number of
rounds per day, depending upon
bidding activity and other factors. The
Bureaus seek comment on this proposal.
Commenters on this issue should
address the role of the bidding schedule
in managing the pace of the auction,
specifically discussing the tradeoffs in
managing auction pace by bidding
schedule changes, by changing the
activity requirements or bid amount
parameters, or by using other means.
10. Stopping Rule. To complete the
auction within a reasonable time, the
Bureaus propose to employ a
simultaneous stopping rule approach for
Auction 98, which means all
construction permits remain available
for bidding until bidding stops on every
construction permit. Specifically,
bidding will close on all construction
permits after the first round in which no
bidder submits any new bid, applies a
proactive waiver, or, if bid withdrawals
are permitted in this auction, withdraws
any provisionally winning bid which is
a bid that would become a final winning
bid if the auction were to close in that
given round. Thus, unless the Bureaus
announce alternative procedures, the
simultaneous stopping rule will be used
in this auction, and bidding will remain
open on all construction permits until
bidding stops on every construction
permit. Consequently, it is not possible
to determine in advance how long the
bidding in this auction will last.
11. Further, the Bureaus propose to
retain the discretion to exercise any of
the following options during Auction
98. (1) Use a modified version of the
simultaneous stopping rule that would
close the auction for all construction
permits after the first round in which no
bidder applies a waiver, withdraws a
provisionally winning bid (if
withdrawals are permitted in this
auction), or places any new bid on a
construction permit for which it is not
the provisionally winning bidder, which
means that, absent any other bidding
activity, a bidder placing a new bid on
a construction permit for which it is the
provisionally winning bidder would not
keep the auction open under this
modified stopping rule. (2) Use a
modified version of the simultaneous
stopping rule that would close the
auction for all construction permits after
the first round in which no bidder
applies a waiver, withdraws a
provisionally winning bid (if
withdrawals are permitted in this
auction), or places any new bid on a
construction permit that is not FCC
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held, which means that, absent any
other bidding activity, a bidder placing
a new bid on a construction permit that
does not already have a provisionally
winning bid (an FCC-held construction
permit) would not keep the auction
open under this modified stopping rule.
(3) Use a modified version of the
simultaneous stopping rule that
combines (1) and (2). (4) Declare the
auction will end after a specified
number of additional rounds (special
stopping rule). If the Bureaus invoke
this special stopping rule, they will
accept bids in the specified final
round(s), after which the auction will
close. (5) Keep the auction open even if
no bidder places any new bid, applies
a waiver, or withdraws any
provisionally winning bid (if
withdrawals are permitted in this
auction). In this event, the effect will be
the same as if a bidder had applied a
waiver. The activity rule will apply as
usual, and a bidder with insufficient
activity will either lose bidding
eligibility or use a waiver.
12. The Bureaus propose to exercise
these options only in certain
circumstances, for example, where the
auction is proceeding unusually slowly
or quickly, there is minimal overall
bidding activity, or it appears likely that
the auction will not close within a
reasonable period of time or will close
prematurely. Before exercising these
options, the Bureaus are likely to
attempt to change the pace of the
auction. For example, the Bureaus may
adjust the pace of bidding by changing
the number of bidding rounds per day
and/or the minimum acceptable bids.
The Bureaus proposed to retain the
discretion to exercise any of these
options with or without prior
announcement during the auction. The
Bureaus seek comment on these
proposals.
13. Information Relating to Auction
Delay, Suspension or Cancellation.
Pursuant to 47 CFR 1.2104(i), the
Bureaus propose that they may delay,
suspend, or cancel Auction 98 in the
event of a natural disaster, technical
obstacle, administrative or weather
necessity, evidence of an auction
security breach or unlawful bidding
activity, or for any other reason that
affects the fair and efficient conduct of
competitive bidding. The Bureaus will
notify participants of any such delay,
suspension or cancellation by public
notice and/or through the FCC Auction
System’s announcement function. If the
auction is delayed or suspended, the
Bureaus may, in their sole discretion,
elect to resume the auction starting from
the beginning of the current round or
from some previous round, or cancel the
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auction in its entirety. Network
interruption may cause the Bureaus to
delay or suspend the auction. The
Bureaus emphasize that they will
exercise this authority solely at their
discretion, and not as a substitute for
situations in which bidders may wish to
apply activity rule waivers. The Bureaus
seek comment on this proposal.
B. Auction Procedures
14. Upfront Payments and Bidding
Eligibility. The Bureaus have delegated
authority and discretion to determine an
appropriate upfront payment for each
construction permit being auctioned,
taking into account such factors as the
efficiency of the auction process and the
potential value of similar construction
permits. The upfront payment is a
refundable deposit made by each bidder
to establish eligibility to bid on
construction permits. Upfront payments
that are related to the specific
construction permits being auctioned
protect against frivolous or insincere
bidding and provide the Commission
with a source of funds from which to
collect payments owed at the close of
the auction. With these considerations
in mind, the Bureaus propose the
upfront payments set forth in
Attachment A of the Auction 98 Request
for Comment. The Bureaus seek
comment on the upfront payments
specified in Attachment A of the
Auction 98 Request for Comment.
15. The Bureaus further propose that
the amount of the upfront payment
submitted by a bidder will determine its
initial bidding eligibility in bidding
units. The Bureaus propose to assign
each construction permit a specific
number of bidding units, equal to one
bidding unit per dollar of the upfront
payment listed in Attachment A of the
Auction 98 Request for Comment. The
number of bidding units for a given
construction permit is fixed and does
not change during the auction as prices
change. A bidder may place bids on
multiple construction permits, provided
that the total number of bidding units
associated with those construction
permits does not exceed the bidder’s
current eligibility. A bidder cannot
increase its eligibility during the
auction; it can only maintain its
eligibility or decrease its eligibility.
Thus, in calculating its upfront payment
amount and hence its initial bidding
eligibility, an applicant must determine
the maximum number of bidding units
on which it may wish to bid (or hold
provisionally winning bids) in any
single round, and submit an upfront
payment amount covering that total
number of bidding units. The Bureaus
request comment on these proposals.
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16. Activity Rule. In order to ensure
that the auction closes within a
reasonable period of time, an activity
rule requires bidders to bid actively
throughout the auction, rather than wait
until late in the auction before
participating. A bidder’s activity in a
round will be the sum of the bidding
units associated with any construction
permits upon which it places bids
during the current round and the
bidding units associated with any
construction permits for which it holds
provisionally winning bids. Bidders are
required to be active on a specific
percentage of their current bidding
eligibility during each round of the
auction. Failure to maintain the
requisite activity level would result in
the use of an activity rule waiver, if any
remain, or a reduction in the bidder’s
eligibility for the next round of bidding,
possibly curtailing or eliminating the
bidder’s ability to place additional bids
in the auction. The Bureaus seek
comment on these proposals.
17. The Bureaus propose to divide the
auction into at least two stages, each
with a different activity requirement.
Under this proposal, a bidder desiring to
maintain its current bidding eligibility
would be required to be active on
bidding units associated with
construction permits representing at
least 80 percent of its current bidding
eligibility in each round of the first stage
of the auction. During Stage One, a
bidder’s reduced eligibility for the next
round would be calculated by
multiplying the bidder’s current round
activity level by five-fourths (5/4). The
Bureaus propose to advance the auction
to the next stage by announcement
during the auction. A bidder desiring to
maintain its current bidding eligibility
would be required to be active in each
round of the second stage of Auction 98
on 95 percent of its current bidding
eligibility. During Stage Two, a bidder’s
reduced eligibility for the next round
would be calculated by multiplying the
bidder’s current round activity by
twenty-nineteenths (20/19). If the
Bureaus implement a stage with an
activity requirement other than 80
percent or 95 percent, the Bureaus
propose to calculate a bidder’s reduced
eligibility for the next round by
multiplying the bidder’s current round
activity by the reciprocal of the activity
requirement. Failure to maintain the
requisite activity level will result in the
use of an activity rule waiver, if any
remain, or a reduction in the bidder’s
eligibility for the next round of bidding,
possibly curtailing or eliminating the
bidder’s ability to place additional bids
in the auction. The Bureaus seek
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comment on these activity
requirements.
18. The Bureaus retain the discretion
to change stages unilaterally by
announcement during the auction and
to change the activity requirements
during the auction. For example, the
Bureaus could decide to add an
additional stage with a higher activity
requirement, not to transition to Stage
Two if the Bureaus believe the auction
is progressing satisfactorily under the
Stage One activity requirement, or to
transition to Stage Two with an activity
requirement that is higher or lower than
the 95 percent proposed for Stage Two
in the Auction 98 Request for Comment.
19. Activity Rule Waivers and
Reducing Eligibility. When a bidder’s
activity in the current round is below
the required minimum level, it may
preserve its current level of eligibility
through an activity rule waiver. An
activity rule waiver applies to an entire
round of bidding, not to a particular
construction permit. Activity rule
waivers can be either proactive or
automatic. Activity rule waivers are
principally a mechanism for a bidder to
avoid the loss of bidding eligibility in
the event that exigent circumstances
prevent it from bidding in a particular
round.
20. The FCC Auction System assumes
that a bidder that does not meet the
activity requirement would prefer to use
an activity rule waiver (if available)
rather than lose bidding eligibility.
Therefore, the system will automatically
apply a waiver at the end of any bidding
round in which a bidder’s activity is
below the minimum required unless (1)
the bidder has no activity rule waiver
remaining or (2) the bidder overrides the
automatic application of a waiver by
reducing eligibility, thereby meeting the
activity requirement. If a bidder has no
waiver remaining and does not satisfy
the required activity level, the bidder’s
current eligibility will be permanently
reduced, possibly curtailing or
eliminating the ability to place
additional bids in the auction.
21. A bidder with insufficient activity
may wish to reduce its bidding
eligibility rather than use an activity
rule waiver. If so, the bidder must
affirmatively override the automatic
waiver mechanism during the bidding
round by using the reduced eligibility
function in the FCC Auction System. In
this case, the bidder’s eligibility is
permanently reduced to bring it into
compliance with the activity
requirement specified for that stage of
the auction. Reducing eligibility is an
irreversible action; once eligibility has
been reduced, a bidder will not be
permitted to regain its lost bidding
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eligibility, even if the round has not yet
closed.
22. Under the proposed simultaneous
stopping rule, a bidder may apply an
activity rule waiver proactively as a
means to keep the auction open without
placing a bid. If a bidder proactively
applies an activity rule waiver (using
the apply waiver function in the FCC
Auction System) during a bidding round
in which no bids are placed or
withdrawn (if bid withdrawals are
permitted in this auction), the auction
will remain open and the bidder’s
eligibility will be preserved. An
automatic waiver applied by the FCC
Auction System in a round in which
there are no new bids, withdrawals (if
bid withdrawals are permitted in this
auction), or proactive waivers will not
keep the auction open. A bidder cannot
apply a proactive waiver after bidding
in a round, and applying a proactive
waiver will preclude it from taking any
other bidding-related action in that
round, including placing bids or
withdrawing bids (if bid withdrawals
are permitted in this auction). Applying
a waiver is irreversible; once a proactive
waiver is submitted, it cannot be
unsubmitted, even if the round has not
yet closed.
23. The Bureaus propose that each
bidder in Auction 98 be provided with
three activity rule waivers that may be
used at the bidder’s discretion during
the course of the auction. The Bureaus
seek comment on this proposal.
24. Reserve Price or Minimum
Opening Bids. Normally, a reserve price
is an absolute minimum price below
which an item will not be sold in a
given auction. The Bureaus do not
propose to establish separate reserve
prices for the construction permits to be
offered in Auction 98.
25. A minimum opening bid is the
minimum bid price set at the beginning
of the auction below which no bids are
accepted. Because it is an effective
bidding tool for accelerating the
competitive bidding process, the
Bureaus propose to establish minimum
opening bid amounts for Auction 98
determined by taking into account the
type of service and class of facility
offered, market size, population covered
by the proposed broadcast facility, and
recent broadcast transaction data.
Attachment A of the Auction 98 Request
for Comment lists a proposed minimum
opening bid amount for each
construction permit available in
Auction 98. The Bureaus seek comment
on the minimum opening bid amounts
specified in Attachment A of the
Auction 98 Request for Comment.
26. If commenters believe that these
minimum opening bid amounts will
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result in unsold construction permits,
are not reasonable amounts, or should
instead operate as reserve prices, they
should explain why this is so and
comment on the desirability of an
alternative approach. The Bureaus ask
commenters to support their claims
with valuation analyses and suggested
amounts or formulas for reserve prices
or minimum opening bids. In
establishing the minimum opening bid
amounts, the Bureaus particularly seek
comment on factors that could
reasonably have an impact on valuation
of the broadcast spectrum, including the
type of service and class of facility
offered, market size, population covered
by the proposed FM broadcast facility,
and any other relevant factors.
27. Bid Amounts. The Bureaus
propose that, if the bidder has sufficient
eligibility to place a bid on a particular
construction permit in a round, an
eligible bidder will be able to place a
bid on that construction permit in any
of up to nine different amounts. Under
this proposal, the FCC Auction System
interface will list the acceptable bid
amounts for each construction permit. If
there are duplicate bid amounts due to
rounding, the FCC Auction System will
omit the duplicates and will list fewer
than nine acceptable bid amounts for
the construction permit.
28. The first of the acceptable bid
amounts is called the minimum
acceptable bid amount. The minimum
acceptable bid amount for a
construction permit will be equal to its
minimum opening bid amount until
there is a provisionally winning bid for
the construction permit. After there is a
provisionally winning bid for a
construction permit, the minimum
acceptable bid amount will be a certain
percentage higher. That is, the FCC will
calculate the minimum acceptable bid
amount by multiplying the
provisionally winning bid amount times
one plus the minimum acceptable bid
percentage. If, for example, the
minimum acceptable bid percentage is
10 percent, the minimum acceptable bid
amount will equal (provisionally
winning bid amount) * (1.10), rounded
using the Commission’s standard
rounding procedures for auctions as
described in the Auction 98 Request for
Comment. If bid withdrawals are
permitted in this auction, in the case of
a construction permit for which the
provisionally winning bid has been
withdrawn, the minimum acceptable
bid amount will equal the second
highest bid received for the construction
permit.
29. The FCC will calculate the eight
additional bid amounts using the
minimum acceptable bid amount and a
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bid increment percentage. The first
additional acceptable bid amount equals
the minimum acceptable bid amount
times one plus the bid increment
percentage, rounded. If, for example, the
bid increment percentage is 5 percent,
the calculation is (minimum acceptable
bid amount) * (1 + 0.05), rounded, or
(minimum acceptable bid amount) *
1.05, rounded; the second additional
acceptable bid amount equals the
minimum acceptable bid amount times
one plus two times the bid increment
percentage, rounded, or (minimum
acceptable bid amount) * 1.10, rounded;
etc. The Bureaus will round the results
using the Commission’s standard
rounding procedures for auctions.
30. For Auction 98, the Bureaus
propose to use a minimum acceptable
bid percentage of 10 percent. This
means that the minimum acceptable bid
amount for a construction permit will be
approximately 10 percent greater than
the provisionally winning bid amount
for the construction permit. To calculate
the additional acceptable bid amounts,
the Bureaus proposed to use a bid
increment percentage of 5 percent. The
Bureaus seek comment on these
proposals.
31. The Bureaus retain the discretion
to change the minimum acceptable bid
amounts, the minimum acceptable bid
percentage, the bid increment
percentage, and the number of
acceptable bid amounts if the Bureaus
determine that circumstances so dictate.
Further, the Bureaus retain the
discretion to do so on a constructionpermit-by-construction-permit basis.
The Bureaus also retain the discretion to
limit (a) the amount by which a
minimum acceptable bid for a
construction permit may increase
compared with the corresponding
provisionally winning bid, and (b) the
amount by which an additional bid
amount may increase compared with
the immediately preceding acceptable
bid amount. For example, the Bureaus
could set a $10,000 limit on increases in
minimum acceptable bid amounts over
provisionally winning bids. Thus, if
calculating a minimum acceptable bid
using the minimum acceptable bid
percentage results in a minimum
acceptable bid amount that is $12,000
higher than the provisionally winning
bid on a construction permit, the
minimum acceptable bid amount would
instead be capped at $10,000 above the
provisionally winning bid. The Bureaus
seek comment on the circumstances
under which the Bureaus should
employ such a limit, factors the Bureaus
should consider when determining the
dollar amount of the limit, and the
tradeoffs in setting such a limit or
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changing other parameters, such as
changing the minimum acceptable bid
percentage, the bid increment
percentage, or the number of acceptable
bid amounts. If the Bureaus exercise this
discretion, they will alert bidders by
announcement in the FCC Auction
System during the auction.
32. Provisionally Winning Bids.
Provisionally winning bids are bids that
would become final winning bids if the
auction were to close in that given
round. At the end of a bidding round,
the FCC Auction System determines a
provisionally winning bid for each
construction permit based on the
highest bid amount received. If identical
high bid amounts are submitted on a
construction permit in any given round
(i.e., tied bids), the FCC Auction System
will use a random number generator to
select a single provisionally winning bid
from among the tied bids. (The FCC
Auction System assigns a random
number to each bid when the bid is
entered. The tied bid with the highest
random number wins the tiebreaker.)
The remaining bidders, as well as the
provisionally winning bidder, can
submit higher bids in subsequent
rounds. However, if the auction were to
end with no other bids being placed, the
winning bidder would be the one that
placed the provisionally winning bid. If
the construction permit receives any
bids in a subsequent round, the
provisionally winning bid again will be
determined by the highest bid amount
received for the construction permit.
33. A provisionally winning bid will
be retained until there is a higher bid on
the construction permit at the close of
a subsequent round, unless the
provisionally winning bid is withdrawn
(if bid withdrawals are permitted in this
auction). The Bureaus remind bidders
that provisionally winning bids count
toward a bidder’s activity level for
purposes of the activity rule.
34. Bid Removal and Bid Withdrawal.
For Auction 98, the Bureaus propose the
following bid removal procedures.
Before the close of a bidding round, a
bidder has the option of removing any
bid that bidder placed in that round. By
removing a selected bid in the FCC
Auction System, a bidder may
effectively unsubmit any bid placed
within that round. In contrast to the bid
withdrawal provisions, a bidder
removing a bid placed in the same
round is not subject to a withdrawal
payment. Once a round closes, a bidder
may no longer remove a bid. The
Bureaus seek comment on this bid
removal proposal.
35. The Bureaus also seek comment
on whether bid withdrawals should be
permitted in Auction 98. When
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permitted in an auction, bid
withdrawals provide a bidder with the
option of withdrawing bids placed in
prior rounds that have become
provisionally winning bids. A bidder
may withdraw its provisionally winning
bids using the withdraw bids function
in the FCC Auction System. A bidder
that withdraws its provisionally
winning bid(s), if permitted in this
auction, is subject to the bid withdrawal
payment provisions of 47 CFR 1.2104(g)
and 1.2109.
36. Based on guidance provided by
the Commission in several competitive
bidding rulemaking proceedings and on
the experience of the Bureaus with past
auctions of FM broadcast construction
permits, the Bureaus propose to prohibit
bidders from withdrawing any bid after
the close of the round in which the bid
was placed. The Bureaus make this
proposal in light of the site-specific
nature and wide geographic dispersion
of the permits available in this auction,
which suggests that potential applicants
for this auction may have fewer
incentives to aggregate permits through
the auction process (as compared with
bidders in many auctions of wireless
licenses). Thus, the Bureaus believe that
it is unlikely that bidders will have a
need to withdraw bids in this auction.
Bid withdrawals also could encourage
insincere bidding and the use of
withdrawals for anti-competitive
strategic purposes. The Bureaus also
remain mindful that bid withdrawals,
particularly those made late in this
auction, could result in delays in
licensing new FM stations and attendant
delays in the offering of new broadcast
service to the public. The Bureaus seek
comment on their proposal to prohibit
bid withdrawals in Auction 98.
C. Post-Auction Payments
37. Interim Withdrawal Payment
Percentage. A bidder that withdraws a
bid during an auction is subject to a
withdrawal payment equal to the
difference between the amount of the
withdrawn bid and the amount of the
winning bid in the same or a subsequent
auction. However, if a construction
permit for which a bid has been
withdrawn does not receive a
subsequent higher bid or winning bid in
the same auction, the FCC cannot
calculate the final withdrawal payment
until that construction permit receives a
higher bid or winning bid in a
subsequent auction. In such cases, when
that final withdrawal payment cannot
yet be calculated, the FCC imposes on
the bidder responsible for the
withdrawn bid an interim bid
withdrawal payment, which will be
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applied toward any final bid withdrawal
payment that is ultimately assessed.
38. The amount of the interim bid
withdrawal payment may range from
three percent to twenty percent of the
withdrawn bid amount. If bid
withdrawals are allowed in Auction 98,
the Bureaus propose that the interim bid
withdrawal payment be 20 percent of
the withdrawn bid, the maximum
interim bid withdrawal payment
percentage allowed by 47 CFR
1.2104(g)(1). The Bureaus request
comment on using twenty percent for
calculating an interim bid withdrawal
payment amount in Auction 98.
Commenters advocating the use of bid
withdrawals should also address the
percentage of the interim bid
withdrawal payment.
39. Additional Default Payment
Percentage. Any winning bidder that
defaults or is disqualified after the close
of an auction (i.e., fails to remit the
required down payment within the
prescribed period of time, fails to
submit a timely long-form application,
fails to make full and timely final
payment, or is otherwise disqualified) is
liable for a default payment under 47
CFR 1.2104(g)(2). This default payment
consists of a deficiency payment equal
to the difference between the amount of
the Auction 98 bidder’s winning bid
and the amount of the winning bid the
next time a construction permit
covering the same spectrum is won in
an auction, plus an additional payment
equal to a percentage of the defaulter’s
bid or of the subsequent winning bid,
whichever is less.
40. Defaults weaken the integrity of
the auction process and may impede the
deployment of service to the public, and
an additional twenty percent default
payment will be more effective in
deterring defaults than the three percent
used in some earlier auctions. Moreover,
a twenty percent additional default
payment amount is consistent with the
percentage used in recent auctions of
FM permits. Based on the nature of the
service and the construction permits
being offered, the Bureaus propose for
Auction 98 an additional default
payment of twenty percent of the
relevant bid. The Bureaus seek comment
on this proposal.
IV. Ex Parte Rules
41. This proceeding has been
designated as a permit-but-disclose
proceeding in accordance with the
Commission’s ex parte rules. Persons
making oral ex parte presentations are
reminded that memoranda summarizing
the presentations must contain
summaries of the substance of the
presentations and not merely a listing of
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the subjects discussed. More than a oneor two-sentence description of the views
and arguments presented is generally
required. Other provisions pertaining to
oral and written ex parte presentations
in permit-but-disclose proceedings are
set forth in 47 CFR 1.1206(b).
V. Supplemental Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis
42. Consistent with the Regulatory
Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended
(RFA), as well as the Bureaus’
obligations to small businesses under 47
U.S.C. 309(j)(3)(B) and 309(j)(4)(D), the
Bureaus have prepared this additional
analysis to supplement the
Commission’s Initial and Final
Regulatory Flexibility Analyses
completed in the underlying notices of
proposed rulemaking and orders,
including the Broadcast First Report
and Order and associated competitive
bidding orders, which are hereby
incorporated by reference. This analysis
addresses any possible incremental
significant economic impact on small
entities by the competitive bidding
procedures proposed in the Auction 98
Request for Comment implementing
such rulemaking orders. The Bureaus
request written public comments on this
supplemental analysis. Comments must
be filed on or before April 1, 2015, and
reply comments are due on or before
April 8, 2015, and must be identified as
responses to this supplemental analysis.
The Bureaus will send a copy of the
Auction 98 Request for Comment,
including this supplemental analysis, to
the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration (SBA).
43. Need for, and Objectives of, the
Proposed Competitive Bidding
Procedures. The Auction 98 Request for
Comment seeks comment on proposed
procedures to govern Auction 98, an
auction of 131 FM radio station
construction permits. This process is
intended to implement the
Commission’s duty under 47 U.S.C.
309(j)(3)(e)(i) to provide notice of and
adequate time for potential applicants to
comment on proposed auction
procedures. The objective is to promote
the efficient and fair administration of
the competitive bidding process for all
Auction 98 participants, including small
businesses.
44. The Auction 98 Request for
Comment seeks comment on proposed
procedures for conducting Auction 98,
including: (1) Use of a simultaneous
multiple-round auction format,
consisting of sequential bidding rounds
with a simultaneous stopping rule (with
discretion to exercise alternative
stopping rules under certain
circumstances); (2) A specific minimum
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opening bid amount for each
construction permit proposed to be
offered in Auction 98; (3) A specific
upfront payment amount for each
construction permit; (4) Establishment
of a bidder’s initial bidding eligibility in
bidding units based on that bidder’s
upfront payment through assignment of
a specific number of bidding units for
each construction permit; (5) Use of an
activity rule that would require bidders
to bid actively during the auction rather
than waiting until late in the auction
before participating; (6) Use of different
activity requirements in two stages of
the auction, with the Bureaus retaining
discretion to change the activity
requirement during the auction; (7)
Provision of three activity rule waivers
for each bidder to allow it to preserve
bidding eligibility during the course of
the auction; (8) Use of minimum
acceptable bid amounts and bid
increments, along with a proposed
methodology for calculating such
amounts, with the Bureaus retaining
discretion to change their methodology
if circumstances dictate; (9) A procedure
for breaking ties if identical high bid
amounts are submitted on a permit in a
given round; (10) Bid removal
procedures; (11) Whether to permit bid
withdrawals; (12) Establishment of an
interim bid withdrawal percentage of 20
percent of the withdrawn bid in the
event the Bureaus allow bid
withdrawals in Auction 98; and (13)
Establishment of an additional default
payment of 20 percent under 47 CFR
1.2104(g)(2) in the event that a winning
bidder defaults or is disqualified after
the auction.
45. Description and Estimate of the
Number of Small Entities to which
Specified Auction 98 Procedures Will
Apply. 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
rules proposed in that rulemaking
proceeding, 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. Moreover, the
SBA has created a small business size
standard of $38.5 million or less in
annual receipts for establishments
primarily engaged in broadcasting aural
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15721
programs. The size data provided by the
SBA, however, does not enable the
Bureaus to make a meaningful estimate
of the number of small entities who may
participate in Auction 98.
46. The specific procedures on which
comment is sought in the Auction 98
Request for Comment will affect directly
all applicants participating in Auction
98. The number of entities that may
apply to participate in Auction 98 is
unknown. Based on the numbers of
applicants in prior FM auctions, the
Bureaus estimate that the number of
applicants for Auction 98 may range
from approximately 175 to 260. This
estimate is based on the number of
applicants who filed short-form
applications to participate in previous
auctions of FM radio station
construction permits (exclusive of
closed auctions). In the eight open FM
broadcast auctions held to date, an
average of 1.98 short-form applications
were filed per construction permit
offered, with a median of 1.365
applications per permit. If those figures
apply to Auction 98, the number of
applicants may range between 179 and
259. The Bureaus recognize, however,
that the actual number of applicants for
Auction 98 could vary significantly as
any individual’s or entity’s decision to
participate may be affected by a number
of factors beyond the Commission’s
control.
47. The Bureaus are unable to
accurately develop an estimate based on
the number of small entities that
applied to participate in prior broadcast
auctions because that information is not
collected from applicants for broadcast
auctions in which bidding credits are
not based on an applicant’s size (as is
the case in auctions of licenses for
wireless services). Potential applicants
in Auction 98 may include existing
holders of broadcast station
construction permits or licenses, as well
as non-licensees. The Bureaus note,
however, that the Commission has
recently estimated that 97 percent of
radio broadcasters met the SBA’s prior
definition of small business concern,
based on annual revenues of $7 million.
Moreover, the SBA has since increased
that revenue threshold to $38.5 million.
Based on this assessment, the Bureaus
conclude that nearly all of Auction 98
applicants will likely meet the SBA’s
definition of a small business concern.
48. Legal Basis. The Commission has
established a framework of competitive
bidding rules pursuant to which it has
conducted auctions since the inception
of the auction program in 1994 and
would conduct Auction 98. The basis
for those rules is found in various
statutory provisions, including 47
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U.S.C. 154(i), 301, 302, 303(e), 303(f),
303(r), 304, 307 and 309(j). The
Commission has directed the Bureaus,
under delegated authority, to seek
comment on a variety of auctionspecific procedures prior to the start of
each auction.
49. Description of Projected
Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other
Compliance Requirements. In the
Auction 98 Request for Comment, the
Bureaus do not propose to implement
any new reporting requirements,
recordkeeping requirements or any
other compliance requirements. Any
individual or entity seeking to
participate in an auction must submit a
short-form application (FCC Form 175).
The information collected on FCC Form
175 is used by the Bureaus to determine
if an applicant is legally, technically,
and financially qualified to participate
in a Commission auction. Additionally,
if an applicant applies for status as a
new entrant auction participant
pursuant to Commission rules, the
Commission uses information collected
on FCC Form 175 to determine whether
the applicant is eligible for the status
requested. If an applicant is a winning
bidder, it is required to submit a more
detailed long-form application (such as
an FCC Form 301 for an FM station),
including any showings to demonstrate
its eligibility for new entrant status it
may have claimed. This two-phased
process helps minimize reporting and
compliance requirements for auction
applicants.
50. Steps Taken to Minimize
Significant Economic Impact on Small
Entities, and Significant Alternatives
Considered. The RFA requires an
agency to describe any significant
alternatives beneficial to small entities
considered in reaching a proposed
approach, which may include the
following four alternatives (among
others): (1) Establishment of differing
compliance or reporting requirements or
timetables that take into account the
resources available to small entities; (2)
clarification, consolidation, or
simplification for small entities of
compliance and reporting requirements;
(3) use of performance, rather than
design, standards; and (4) an exemption
for small entities.
51. The Bureaus propose a number of
specific procedures to govern an auction
of 131 FM radio station construction
permits, which are summarized above
in this supplemental analysis. Based on
experience in conducting numerous
auctions since the program’s inception
in 1994, the Commission has taken steps
to minimize the impact of its auction
procedures on small businesses. For
example, following consideration of any
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comments submitted in response to the
Auction 98 Request for Comment, the
Bureaus will release a public notice to
provide detailed guidance for potential
applicants on how to complete a shortform application, participate in the
auction, and comply with the various
competitive bidding requirements
applicable to all Auction 98 applicants.
52. The Commission designed the
auction application process to minimize
reporting and compliance requirements
for applicants, including small business
applicants. In the first part of the
Commission’s two-phased auction
application process, parties desiring to
participate in an auction file
streamlined, short-form applications in
which they certify under penalty of
perjury as to their qualifications.
Eligibility to participate in bidding is
based on an applicant’s short-form
application and certifications, as well as
its upfront payment. In the second
phase of the process, winning bidders
file a more comprehensive long-form
application. Thus, a small business
which fails to become a winning bidder
does not need to file a long-form
application and provide the additional
showings and more detailed
demonstrations required of a winning
bidder.
53. The Commission provides a
number of resources through which
potential auction participants, including
small entities, may seek clarification of
or guidance on complying with
competitive bidding rules and
procedures, reporting requirements, and
the FCC’s auction system. An FCC
Auctions Hotline provides access to
Commission staff for information about
the auction process and procedures. The
FCC Auctions Technical Support
Hotline is another resource which
provides technical assistance to
applicants, including small business
entities, on issues such as access to or
navigation within the electronic FCC
Form 175 and use of the FCC’s auction
system. These hotlines are generally
accessible during regular business
hours. Commission staff also produces a
web-based, interactive online tutorial
for each auction which potential
applicants, including small businesses,
may access to familiarize themselves
with auction procedures, filing
requirements and other matters related
to an auction. Once posted, the online
tutorial remains available for reference
and is accessible anytime.
54. The Bureaus also make various
databases and other sources of
information, including the Media
Bureau’s Consolidated Database System,
the Auctions program Web sites, and
copies of Commission decisions,
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available to the public without charge,
providing a low-cost mechanism for
small businesses to conduct research
prior to and throughout the auction.
Prior to and at the close of Auction 98,
the Bureaus will post public notices on
the Auctions Web site, which articulate
auction procedures and deadlines. The
Bureaus make this information easily
accessible and without charge to benefit
all Auction 98 applicants, including
small businesses, by lowering their
administrative costs to comply with the
Commission’s competitive bidding
rules.
55. Prior to the start of bidding in
each auction, all auction applicants are
given an opportunity to become familiar
with auction procedures and the
bidding system by participating in a
mock auction. Further, the Commission
intends to conduct Auction 98
electronically over the Internet using its
web-based auction system that
eliminates the need for qualified bidders
to be physically present in a specific
location. Qualified bidders also have an
option to place bids by telephone. These
mechanisms are made available to
facilitate participation in Auction 98 by
all applicants, including small business
entities. Moreover, the adoption of
bidding procedures in advance of the
auction, consistent with statutory
directive, is designed to ensure that the
auction will be administered
predictably and fairly for all
participants, including small
businesses.
56. Federal Rules that May Duplicate,
Overlap, or Conflict with the Procedures
for which Comment is Solicited. None.
These proposed procedures for the
conduct of Auction 98 constitute the
more specific implementation of the
competitive bidding rules contemplated
by Parts 1 and 73 of the Commission’s
rules and the underlying rulemaking
orders, including the Broadcast First
Report and Order and associated
competitive bidding orders, and are
fully consistent therewith.
Federal Communications Commission.
Gary D. Michaels,
Deputy Chief, Auctions and Spectrum Access
Division, WTB.
[FR Doc. 2015–06864 Filed 3–24–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
E:\FR\FM\25MRP1.SGM
25MRP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 57 (Wednesday, March 25, 2015)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 15715-15722]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-06864]
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FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
47 CFR Parts 1 and 73
[AU Docket No. 15-3; DA 15-25]
Auction of FM Broadcast Construction Permits Scheduled for July
23, 2015; Comment Sought on Competitive Bidding Procedures for Auction
98
AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
ACTION: Proposed rule; proposed auction procedures; comment sought.
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SUMMARY: The Wireless Telecommunications and Media Bureaus (the
Bureaus) announce the auction of certain FM broadcast construction
permits. This document also seeks comment on competitive bidding
procedures for Auction 98.
DATES: Comments are due on or before April 1, 2015, and reply comments
are due on or before April 8, 2015. Bidding for construction permits in
Auction 98 is scheduled to begin on July 23, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Interested parties may submit comments to the Auction 98
Request for Comment by any of the following methods:
FCC's Web site: Federal Communication Commission's
Electronic Comment Filing System (ECFS): https://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/ecfs2/. Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Mail: FCC Headquarters, 445 12th Street SW., Room TW-A325,
Washington, DC 20554.
People With Disabilities: To request materials in
accessible formats for
[[Page 15716]]
people with disabilities (braille, large print, electronic files, or
audio format), send an email to FCC504@fcc.gov or call the Consumer &
Governmental Affairs Bureau at 202-418-0530 (voice), 202-418-0432
(TTY).
For detailed instructions for submitting comments, see the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of this document.
Initial Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 Analysis:
This document does not contain proposed information collection
requirements subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, Public Law
104-13. In addition, therefore, it does not contain any proposed
information collection burden for small business concerns with fewer
than 25 employees, pursuant to the Small Business Paperwork Relief Act
of 2002, Public Law 107-198. See 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(4).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Wireless Telecommunications Bureau, Auctions and Spectrum Access
Division: For auction legal questions: Lynne Milne or Howard Davenport
at (202) 418-0660; for general auction questions: Jeff Crooks at (202)
418-0660 or Sue Sterner at (717) 338-2868.
Media Bureau, Audio Division: For FM service rules questions: Lisa
Scanlan or Tom Nessinger at (202) 418-2700.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Auction 98 Request
for Comment in AU Docket No. 15-3, DA 15-25, released on March 16,
2015. The complete text of this document, including any attachment, is
available for public inspection and copying from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Eastern Time (ET) Monday through Thursday or from 8:00 a.m. to 11:30
a.m. ET on Fridays in the FCC Reference Information Center, 445 12th
Street SW., Room CY-A257, Washington, DC 20554. The Auction 98 Request
for Comment and related documents also are available on the Internet at
the Commission's Web site: https://wireless.fcc.gov/auctions/98/, or by
using the search function for AU Docket No. 15-3 on the Commission's
ECFS Web page at https://www.fcc.gov/cgb/ecfs/.
All filings in response to the Auction 98 Request for Comment must
refer to AU Docket No. 15-3. The Bureaus strongly encourage interested
parties to file comments electronically, and request that an additional
copy of all comments and reply comments be submitted electronically to
the following address: auction98@fcc.gov.
Electronic Filers: Comments may be filed electronically
using the Internet by accessing the Federal Communication Commission's
Electronic Comments Filing System (ECFS): https://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/ecfs2/. Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Paper Filers: Parties who choose to file by paper must
file an original and one copy of each filing. 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 Attn: WTB/ASAD, Office of the
Secretary, Federal Communications Commission (FCC). All hand-delivered
or messenger-delivered paper filings for the Commission's Secretary
must be delivered to the 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. Eastern Time (ET). 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.
I. Construction Permits in Auction 98
1. Auction 98 will offer 131 construction permits in the FM
broadcast service. The construction permits to be auctioned are for 113
new FM allotments, including 18 construction permits that were offered
but not sold or were defaulted upon in prior auctions. Attachment A of
the Auction 98 Request for Comment lists the specific vacant FM
allotments, along with the reference coordinates for each vacant FM
allotment. These comprise FM channels added to the Table of FM
Allotments, 47 CFR 73.202(b), and designated for use in the indicated
communities.
2. Under established Commission policies, an applicant may apply
for any vacant FM allotment listed in Attachment A of the Auction 98
Request for Comment. If two or more short-form applications (FCC Form
175) specify a construction permit for the same FM allotment in Auction
98, mutual exclusivity exists for auction purposes, and even if only
one applicant is qualified to bid for a particular construction permit
in Auction 98, that applicant is required to submit a bid in order to
obtain that construction permit. Any applicant that submits a short-
form application for Auction 98, but fails to become a qualified bidder
for any reason, including a failure to timely submit an upfront
payment, will retain its status as an applicant in Auction 98 and will
remain subject to the rules prohibiting certain communications.
II. Due Diligence
3. Each potential bidder is solely responsible for investigating
and evaluating all technical and marketplace factors that may have a
bearing on the value of the construction permits for broadcast
facilities that it is seeking in this auction. Each bidder is
responsible for assuring that, if it wins a construction permit, it
will be able to build and operate facilities in accordance with the
Commission's rules. The FCC makes no representations or warranties
about the use of this spectrum for particular services. Each applicant
should be aware that an FCC auction of FM station construction permits
represents an opportunity to become an FCC permittee in the broadcast
service, subject to certain conditions and regulations. These
conditions include, but are not limited to, the condition that FCC
licenses and other authorizations (whether awarded through competitive
bidding or otherwise) are subject to the authority of the FCC, under
the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, to modification through
rulemaking and adjudicative proceedings. An FCC auction does not
constitute an endorsement by the FCC of any particular service,
technology, or product, nor does an FCC construction permit or license
constitute a guarantee of business success.
4. An applicant should perform its due diligence research and
analysis before proceeding, as it would with any new business venture.
In particular, the Bureaus strongly encourage each potential bidder to
review all underlying Commission orders, such as the specific Report
and Order amending the FM Table of Allotments and allotting the FM
channel(s) on which it plans to bid. A Report and Order adopted in an
FM allotment rulemaking proceeding may include anomalies such as site
restrictions or expense reimbursement requirements. Additionally, each
potential bidder should perform technical analyses and/or refresh any
previous analyses to assure itself that, should it become a winning
bidder for any Auction 98 construction permit, it will be able to build
and operate facilities that will fully comply with all applicable
technical and legal requirements. The Bureaus strongly encourage each
applicant to inspect any prospective transmitter sites located in, or
near, the service area for which it plans to bid; confirm the
availability of such sites;
[[Page 15717]]
and familiarize itself with 47 CFR 1.1301-1.1319.
5. The Bureaus strongly encourage each applicant to conduct its own
research prior to Auction 98 in order to determine the existence of
pending administrative or judicial proceedings, including pending
allocation rulemaking proceedings that might affect its decisions
regarding participation in the auction. The Bureaus strongly encourage
participants in Auction 98 to continue such research throughout the
auction. These due diligence considerations are not an exhaustive list
of steps that should be undertaken prior to participating in this
auction. As always, the burden is on the potential bidder to determine
how much research to undertake, depending upon the specific facts and
circumstances related to its interests.
III. Bureaus Seek Comment on Auction Procedures
A. Auction Structure
6. Simultaneous Multiple Round Auction Design. The Bureaus propose
to auction all construction permits included in Auction 98 using the
Commission's standard simultaneous multiple-round auction format. This
type of auction offers every construction permit for bid at the same
time and consists of successive bidding rounds in which eligible
bidders may place bids on individual construction permits. Typically,
bidding remains open on all construction permits until bidding stops on
every construction permit. The Bureaus seek comment on this proposal.
7. Bidding Rounds. Auction 98 will consist of sequential bidding
rounds, each followed by the release of round results. The initial
bidding schedule will be announced in a public notice to be released at
least one week before the start of the auction. Details on viewing
round results, including the location and format of downloadable round
results files, will be included in the same public notice.
8. The Commission will conduct Auction 98 over the Internet using
the Commission's Integrated Spectrum Auction System (FCC Auction
System). Bidders will also have the option of placing bids by telephone
through a dedicated Auction Bidder Line. The toll-free telephone number
for the Auction Bidder Line will be provided to qualified bidders prior
to the start of the auction.
9. The Bureaus propose to retain the discretion to change the
bidding schedule in order to foster an auction pace that reasonably
balances speed with the bidders' need to study round results and adjust
their bidding strategies. Under this proposal, the Bureaus may change
the amount of time for the bidding rounds, the amount of time between
rounds, or the number of rounds per day, depending upon bidding
activity and other factors. The Bureaus seek comment on this proposal.
Commenters on this issue should address the role of the bidding
schedule in managing the pace of the auction, specifically discussing
the tradeoffs in managing auction pace by bidding schedule changes, by
changing the activity requirements or bid amount parameters, or by
using other means.
10. Stopping Rule. To complete the auction within a reasonable
time, the Bureaus propose to employ a simultaneous stopping rule
approach for Auction 98, which means all construction permits remain
available for bidding until bidding stops on every construction permit.
Specifically, bidding will close on all construction permits after the
first round in which no bidder submits any new bid, applies a proactive
waiver, or, if bid withdrawals are permitted in this auction, withdraws
any provisionally winning bid which is a bid that would become a final
winning bid if the auction were to close in that given round. Thus,
unless the Bureaus announce alternative procedures, the simultaneous
stopping rule will be used in this auction, and bidding will remain
open on all construction permits until bidding stops on every
construction permit. Consequently, it is not possible to determine in
advance how long the bidding in this auction will last.
11. Further, the Bureaus propose to retain the discretion to
exercise any of the following options during Auction 98. (1) Use a
modified version of the simultaneous stopping rule that would close the
auction for all construction permits after the first round in which no
bidder applies a waiver, withdraws a provisionally winning bid (if
withdrawals are permitted in this auction), or places any new bid on a
construction permit for which it is not the provisionally winning
bidder, which means that, absent any other bidding activity, a bidder
placing a new bid on a construction permit for which it is the
provisionally winning bidder would not keep the auction open under this
modified stopping rule. (2) Use a modified version of the simultaneous
stopping rule that would close the auction for all construction permits
after the first round in which no bidder applies a waiver, withdraws a
provisionally winning bid (if withdrawals are permitted in this
auction), or places any new bid on a construction permit that is not
FCC held, which means that, absent any other bidding activity, a bidder
placing a new bid on a construction permit that does not already have a
provisionally winning bid (an FCC-held construction permit) would not
keep the auction open under this modified stopping rule. (3) Use a
modified version of the simultaneous stopping rule that combines (1)
and (2). (4) Declare the auction will end after a specified number of
additional rounds (special stopping rule). If the Bureaus invoke this
special stopping rule, they will accept bids in the specified final
round(s), after which the auction will close. (5) Keep the auction open
even if no bidder places any new bid, applies a waiver, or withdraws
any provisionally winning bid (if withdrawals are permitted in this
auction). In this event, the effect will be the same as if a bidder had
applied a waiver. The activity rule will apply as usual, and a bidder
with insufficient activity will either lose bidding eligibility or use
a waiver.
12. The Bureaus propose to exercise these options only in certain
circumstances, for example, where the auction is proceeding unusually
slowly or quickly, there is minimal overall bidding activity, or it
appears likely that the auction will not close within a reasonable
period of time or will close prematurely. Before exercising these
options, the Bureaus are likely to attempt to change the pace of the
auction. For example, the Bureaus may adjust the pace of bidding by
changing the number of bidding rounds per day and/or the minimum
acceptable bids. The Bureaus proposed to retain the discretion to
exercise any of these options with or without prior announcement during
the auction. The Bureaus seek comment on these proposals.
13. Information Relating to Auction Delay, Suspension or
Cancellation. Pursuant to 47 CFR 1.2104(i), the Bureaus propose that
they may delay, suspend, or cancel Auction 98 in the event of a natural
disaster, technical obstacle, administrative or weather necessity,
evidence of an auction security breach or unlawful bidding activity, or
for any other reason that affects the fair and efficient conduct of
competitive bidding. The Bureaus will notify participants of any such
delay, suspension or cancellation by public notice and/or through the
FCC Auction System's announcement function. If the auction is delayed
or suspended, the Bureaus may, in their sole discretion, elect to
resume the auction starting from the beginning of the current round or
from some previous round, or cancel the
[[Page 15718]]
auction in its entirety. Network interruption may cause the Bureaus to
delay or suspend the auction. The Bureaus emphasize that they will
exercise this authority solely at their discretion, and not as a
substitute for situations in which bidders may wish to apply activity
rule waivers. The Bureaus seek comment on this proposal.
B. Auction Procedures
14. Upfront Payments and Bidding Eligibility. The Bureaus have
delegated authority and discretion to determine an appropriate upfront
payment for each construction permit being auctioned, taking into
account such factors as the efficiency of the auction process and the
potential value of similar construction permits. The upfront payment is
a refundable deposit made by each bidder to establish eligibility to
bid on construction permits. Upfront payments that are related to the
specific construction permits being auctioned protect against frivolous
or insincere bidding and provide the Commission with a source of funds
from which to collect payments owed at the close of the auction. With
these considerations in mind, the Bureaus propose the upfront payments
set forth in Attachment A of the Auction 98 Request for Comment. The
Bureaus seek comment on the upfront payments specified in Attachment A
of the Auction 98 Request for Comment.
15. The Bureaus further propose that the amount of the upfront
payment submitted by a bidder will determine its initial bidding
eligibility in bidding units. The Bureaus propose to assign each
construction permit a specific number of bidding units, equal to one
bidding unit per dollar of the upfront payment listed in Attachment A
of the Auction 98 Request for Comment. The number of bidding units for
a given construction permit is fixed and does not change during the
auction as prices change. A bidder may place bids on multiple
construction permits, provided that the total number of bidding units
associated with those construction permits does not exceed the bidder's
current eligibility. A bidder cannot increase its eligibility during
the auction; it can only maintain its eligibility or decrease its
eligibility. Thus, in calculating its upfront payment amount and hence
its initial bidding eligibility, an applicant must determine the
maximum number of bidding units on which it may wish to bid (or hold
provisionally winning bids) in any single round, and submit an upfront
payment amount covering that total number of bidding units. The Bureaus
request comment on these proposals.
16. Activity Rule. In order to ensure that the auction closes
within a reasonable period of time, an activity rule requires bidders
to bid actively throughout the auction, rather than wait until late in
the auction before participating. A bidder's activity in a round will
be the sum of the bidding units associated with any construction
permits upon which it places bids during the current round and the
bidding units associated with any construction permits for which it
holds provisionally winning bids. Bidders are required to be active on
a specific percentage of their current bidding eligibility during each
round of the auction. Failure to maintain the requisite activity level
would result in the use of an activity rule waiver, if any remain, or a
reduction in the bidder's eligibility for the next round of bidding,
possibly curtailing or eliminating the bidder's ability to place
additional bids in the auction. The Bureaus seek comment on these
proposals.
17. The Bureaus propose to divide the auction into at least two
stages, each with a different activity requirement. Under this
proposal, a bidder desiring to maintain its current bidding eligibility
would be required to be active on bidding units associated with
construction permits representing at least 80 percent of its current
bidding eligibility in each round of the first stage of the auction.
During Stage One, a bidder's reduced eligibility for the next round
would be calculated by multiplying the bidder's current round activity
level by five-fourths (5/4). The Bureaus propose to advance the auction
to the next stage by announcement during the auction. A bidder desiring
to maintain its current bidding eligibility would be required to be
active in each round of the second stage of Auction 98 on 95 percent of
its current bidding eligibility. During Stage Two, a bidder's reduced
eligibility for the next round would be calculated by multiplying the
bidder's current round activity by twenty-nineteenths (20/19). If the
Bureaus implement a stage with an activity requirement other than 80
percent or 95 percent, the Bureaus propose to calculate a bidder's
reduced eligibility for the next round by multiplying the bidder's
current round activity by the reciprocal of the activity requirement.
Failure to maintain the requisite activity level will result in the use
of an activity rule waiver, if any remain, or a reduction in the
bidder's eligibility for the next round of bidding, possibly curtailing
or eliminating the bidder's ability to place additional bids in the
auction. The Bureaus seek comment on these activity requirements.
18. The Bureaus retain the discretion to change stages unilaterally
by announcement during the auction and to change the activity
requirements during the auction. For example, the Bureaus could decide
to add an additional stage with a higher activity requirement, not to
transition to Stage Two if the Bureaus believe the auction is
progressing satisfactorily under the Stage One activity requirement, or
to transition to Stage Two with an activity requirement that is higher
or lower than the 95 percent proposed for Stage Two in the Auction 98
Request for Comment.
19. Activity Rule Waivers and Reducing Eligibility. When a bidder's
activity in the current round is below the required minimum level, it
may preserve its current level of eligibility through an activity rule
waiver. An activity rule waiver applies to an entire round of bidding,
not to a particular construction permit. Activity rule waivers can be
either proactive or automatic. Activity rule waivers are principally a
mechanism for a bidder to avoid the loss of bidding eligibility in the
event that exigent circumstances prevent it from bidding in a
particular round.
20. The FCC Auction System assumes that a bidder that does not meet
the activity requirement would prefer to use an activity rule waiver
(if available) rather than lose bidding eligibility. Therefore, the
system will automatically apply a waiver at the end of any bidding
round in which a bidder's activity is below the minimum required unless
(1) the bidder has no activity rule waiver remaining or (2) the bidder
overrides the automatic application of a waiver by reducing
eligibility, thereby meeting the activity requirement. If a bidder has
no waiver remaining and does not satisfy the required activity level,
the bidder's current eligibility will be permanently reduced, possibly
curtailing or eliminating the ability to place additional bids in the
auction.
21. A bidder with insufficient activity may wish to reduce its
bidding eligibility rather than use an activity rule waiver. If so, the
bidder must affirmatively override the automatic waiver mechanism
during the bidding round by using the reduced eligibility function in
the FCC Auction System. In this case, the bidder's eligibility is
permanently reduced to bring it into compliance with the activity
requirement specified for that stage of the auction. Reducing
eligibility is an irreversible action; once eligibility has been
reduced, a bidder will not be permitted to regain its lost bidding
[[Page 15719]]
eligibility, even if the round has not yet closed.
22. Under the proposed simultaneous stopping rule, a bidder may
apply an activity rule waiver proactively as a means to keep the
auction open without placing a bid. If a bidder proactively applies an
activity rule waiver (using the apply waiver function in the FCC
Auction System) during a bidding round in which no bids are placed or
withdrawn (if bid withdrawals are permitted in this auction), the
auction will remain open and the bidder's eligibility will be
preserved. An automatic waiver applied by the FCC Auction System in a
round in which there are no new bids, withdrawals (if bid withdrawals
are permitted in this auction), or proactive waivers will not keep the
auction open. A bidder cannot apply a proactive waiver after bidding in
a round, and applying a proactive waiver will preclude it from taking
any other bidding-related action in that round, including placing bids
or withdrawing bids (if bid withdrawals are permitted in this auction).
Applying a waiver is irreversible; once a proactive waiver is
submitted, it cannot be unsubmitted, even if the round has not yet
closed.
23. The Bureaus propose that each bidder in Auction 98 be provided
with three activity rule waivers that may be used at the bidder's
discretion during the course of the auction. The Bureaus seek comment
on this proposal.
24. Reserve Price or Minimum Opening Bids. Normally, a reserve
price is an absolute minimum price below which an item will not be sold
in a given auction. The Bureaus do not propose to establish separate
reserve prices for the construction permits to be offered in Auction
98.
25. A minimum opening bid is the minimum bid price set at the
beginning of the auction below which no bids are accepted. Because it
is an effective bidding tool for accelerating the competitive bidding
process, the Bureaus propose to establish minimum opening bid amounts
for Auction 98 determined by taking into account the type of service
and class of facility offered, market size, population covered by the
proposed broadcast facility, and recent broadcast transaction data.
Attachment A of the Auction 98 Request for Comment lists a proposed
minimum opening bid amount for each construction permit available in
Auction 98. The Bureaus seek comment on the minimum opening bid amounts
specified in Attachment A of the Auction 98 Request for Comment.
26. If commenters believe that these minimum opening bid amounts
will result in unsold construction permits, are not reasonable amounts,
or should instead operate as reserve prices, they should explain why
this is so and comment on the desirability of an alternative approach.
The Bureaus ask commenters to support their claims with valuation
analyses and suggested amounts or formulas for reserve prices or
minimum opening bids. In establishing the minimum opening bid amounts,
the Bureaus particularly seek comment on factors that could reasonably
have an impact on valuation of the broadcast spectrum, including the
type of service and class of facility offered, market size, population
covered by the proposed FM broadcast facility, and any other relevant
factors.
27. Bid Amounts. The Bureaus propose that, if the bidder has
sufficient eligibility to place a bid on a particular construction
permit in a round, an eligible bidder will be able to place a bid on
that construction permit in any of up to nine different amounts. Under
this proposal, the FCC Auction System interface will list the
acceptable bid amounts for each construction permit. If there are
duplicate bid amounts due to rounding, the FCC Auction System will omit
the duplicates and will list fewer than nine acceptable bid amounts for
the construction permit.
28. The first of the acceptable bid amounts is called the minimum
acceptable bid amount. The minimum acceptable bid amount for a
construction permit will be equal to its minimum opening bid amount
until there is a provisionally winning bid for the construction permit.
After there is a provisionally winning bid for a construction permit,
the minimum acceptable bid amount will be a certain percentage higher.
That is, the FCC will calculate the minimum acceptable bid amount by
multiplying the provisionally winning bid amount times one plus the
minimum acceptable bid percentage. If, for example, the minimum
acceptable bid percentage is 10 percent, the minimum acceptable bid
amount will equal (provisionally winning bid amount) * (1.10), rounded
using the Commission's standard rounding procedures for auctions as
described in the Auction 98 Request for Comment. If bid withdrawals are
permitted in this auction, in the case of a construction permit for
which the provisionally winning bid has been withdrawn, the minimum
acceptable bid amount will equal the second highest bid received for
the construction permit.
29. The FCC will calculate the eight additional bid amounts using
the minimum acceptable bid amount and a bid increment percentage. The
first additional acceptable bid amount equals the minimum acceptable
bid amount times one plus the bid increment percentage, rounded. If,
for example, the bid increment percentage is 5 percent, the calculation
is (minimum acceptable bid amount) * (1 + 0.05), rounded, or (minimum
acceptable bid amount) * 1.05, rounded; the second additional
acceptable bid amount equals the minimum acceptable bid amount times
one plus two times the bid increment percentage, rounded, or (minimum
acceptable bid amount) * 1.10, rounded; etc. The Bureaus will round the
results using the Commission's standard rounding procedures for
auctions.
30. For Auction 98, the Bureaus propose to use a minimum acceptable
bid percentage of 10 percent. This means that the minimum acceptable
bid amount for a construction permit will be approximately 10 percent
greater than the provisionally winning bid amount for the construction
permit. To calculate the additional acceptable bid amounts, the Bureaus
proposed to use a bid increment percentage of 5 percent. The Bureaus
seek comment on these proposals.
31. The Bureaus retain the discretion to change the minimum
acceptable bid amounts, the minimum acceptable bid percentage, the bid
increment percentage, and the number of acceptable bid amounts if the
Bureaus determine that circumstances so dictate. Further, the Bureaus
retain the discretion to do so on a construction-permit-by-
construction-permit basis. The Bureaus also retain the discretion to
limit (a) the amount by which a minimum acceptable bid for a
construction permit may increase compared with the corresponding
provisionally winning bid, and (b) the amount by which an additional
bid amount may increase compared with the immediately preceding
acceptable bid amount. For example, the Bureaus could set a $10,000
limit on increases in minimum acceptable bid amounts over provisionally
winning bids. Thus, if calculating a minimum acceptable bid using the
minimum acceptable bid percentage results in a minimum acceptable bid
amount that is $12,000 higher than the provisionally winning bid on a
construction permit, the minimum acceptable bid amount would instead be
capped at $10,000 above the provisionally winning bid. The Bureaus seek
comment on the circumstances under which the Bureaus should employ such
a limit, factors the Bureaus should consider when determining the
dollar amount of the limit, and the tradeoffs in setting such a limit
or
[[Page 15720]]
changing other parameters, such as changing the minimum acceptable bid
percentage, the bid increment percentage, or the number of acceptable
bid amounts. If the Bureaus exercise this discretion, they will alert
bidders by announcement in the FCC Auction System during the auction.
32. Provisionally Winning Bids. Provisionally winning bids are bids
that would become final winning bids if the auction were to close in
that given round. At the end of a bidding round, the FCC Auction System
determines a provisionally winning bid for each construction permit
based on the highest bid amount received. If identical high bid amounts
are submitted on a construction permit in any given round (i.e., tied
bids), the FCC Auction System will use a random number generator to
select a single provisionally winning bid from among the tied bids.
(The FCC Auction System assigns a random number to each bid when the
bid is entered. The tied bid with the highest random number wins the
tiebreaker.) The remaining bidders, as well as the provisionally
winning bidder, can submit higher bids in subsequent rounds. However,
if the auction were to end with no other bids being placed, the winning
bidder would be the one that placed the provisionally winning bid. If
the construction permit receives any bids in a subsequent round, the
provisionally winning bid again will be determined by the highest bid
amount received for the construction permit.
33. A provisionally winning bid will be retained until there is a
higher bid on the construction permit at the close of a subsequent
round, unless the provisionally winning bid is withdrawn (if bid
withdrawals are permitted in this auction). The Bureaus remind bidders
that provisionally winning bids count toward a bidder's activity level
for purposes of the activity rule.
34. Bid Removal and Bid Withdrawal. For Auction 98, the Bureaus
propose the following bid removal procedures. Before the close of a
bidding round, a bidder has the option of removing any bid that bidder
placed in that round. By removing a selected bid in the FCC Auction
System, a bidder may effectively unsubmit any bid placed within that
round. In contrast to the bid withdrawal provisions, a bidder removing
a bid placed in the same round is not subject to a withdrawal payment.
Once a round closes, a bidder may no longer remove a bid. The Bureaus
seek comment on this bid removal proposal.
35. The Bureaus also seek comment on whether bid withdrawals should
be permitted in Auction 98. When permitted in an auction, bid
withdrawals provide a bidder with the option of withdrawing bids placed
in prior rounds that have become provisionally winning bids. A bidder
may withdraw its provisionally winning bids using the withdraw bids
function in the FCC Auction System. A bidder that withdraws its
provisionally winning bid(s), if permitted in this auction, is subject
to the bid withdrawal payment provisions of 47 CFR 1.2104(g) and
1.2109.
36. Based on guidance provided by the Commission in several
competitive bidding rulemaking proceedings and on the experience of the
Bureaus with past auctions of FM broadcast construction permits, the
Bureaus propose to prohibit bidders from withdrawing any bid after the
close of the round in which the bid was placed. The Bureaus make this
proposal in light of the site-specific nature and wide geographic
dispersion of the permits available in this auction, which suggests
that potential applicants for this auction may have fewer incentives to
aggregate permits through the auction process (as compared with bidders
in many auctions of wireless licenses). Thus, the Bureaus believe that
it is unlikely that bidders will have a need to withdraw bids in this
auction. Bid withdrawals also could encourage insincere bidding and the
use of withdrawals for anti-competitive strategic purposes. The Bureaus
also remain mindful that bid withdrawals, particularly those made late
in this auction, could result in delays in licensing new FM stations
and attendant delays in the offering of new broadcast service to the
public. The Bureaus seek comment on their proposal to prohibit bid
withdrawals in Auction 98.
C. Post-Auction Payments
37. Interim Withdrawal Payment Percentage. A bidder that withdraws
a bid during an auction is subject to a withdrawal payment equal to the
difference between the amount of the withdrawn bid and the amount of
the winning bid in the same or a subsequent auction. However, if a
construction permit for which a bid has been withdrawn does not receive
a subsequent higher bid or winning bid in the same auction, the FCC
cannot calculate the final withdrawal payment until that construction
permit receives a higher bid or winning bid in a subsequent auction. In
such cases, when that final withdrawal payment cannot yet be
calculated, the FCC imposes on the bidder responsible for the withdrawn
bid an interim bid withdrawal payment, which will be applied toward any
final bid withdrawal payment that is ultimately assessed.
38. The amount of the interim bid withdrawal payment may range from
three percent to twenty percent of the withdrawn bid amount. If bid
withdrawals are allowed in Auction 98, the Bureaus propose that the
interim bid withdrawal payment be 20 percent of the withdrawn bid, the
maximum interim bid withdrawal payment percentage allowed by 47 CFR
1.2104(g)(1). The Bureaus request comment on using twenty percent for
calculating an interim bid withdrawal payment amount in Auction 98.
Commenters advocating the use of bid withdrawals should also address
the percentage of the interim bid withdrawal payment.
39. Additional Default Payment Percentage. Any winning bidder that
defaults or is disqualified after the close of an auction (i.e., fails
to remit the required down payment within the prescribed period of
time, fails to submit a timely long-form application, fails to make
full and timely final payment, or is otherwise disqualified) is liable
for a default payment under 47 CFR 1.2104(g)(2). This default payment
consists of a deficiency payment equal to the difference between the
amount of the Auction 98 bidder's winning bid and the amount of the
winning bid the next time a construction permit covering the same
spectrum is won in an auction, plus an additional payment equal to a
percentage of the defaulter's bid or of the subsequent winning bid,
whichever is less.
40. Defaults weaken the integrity of the auction process and may
impede the deployment of service to the public, and an additional
twenty percent default payment will be more effective in deterring
defaults than the three percent used in some earlier auctions.
Moreover, a twenty percent additional default payment amount is
consistent with the percentage used in recent auctions of FM permits.
Based on the nature of the service and the construction permits being
offered, the Bureaus propose for Auction 98 an additional default
payment of twenty percent of the relevant bid. The Bureaus seek comment
on this proposal.
IV. Ex Parte Rules
41. This proceeding has been designated as a permit-but-disclose
proceeding in accordance with the Commission's ex parte rules. Persons
making oral ex parte presentations are reminded that memoranda
summarizing the presentations must contain summaries of the substance
of the presentations and not merely a listing of
[[Page 15721]]
the subjects discussed. More than a one- or two-sentence description of
the views and arguments presented is generally required. Other
provisions pertaining to oral and written ex parte presentations in
permit-but-disclose proceedings are set forth in 47 CFR 1.1206(b).
V. Supplemental Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
42. Consistent with the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as
amended (RFA), as well as the Bureaus' obligations to small businesses
under 47 U.S.C. 309(j)(3)(B) and 309(j)(4)(D), the Bureaus have
prepared this additional analysis to supplement the Commission's
Initial and Final Regulatory Flexibility Analyses completed in the
underlying notices of proposed rulemaking and orders, including the
Broadcast First Report and Order and associated competitive bidding
orders, which are hereby incorporated by reference. This analysis
addresses any possible incremental significant economic impact on small
entities by the competitive bidding procedures proposed in the Auction
98 Request for Comment implementing such rulemaking orders. The Bureaus
request written public comments on this supplemental analysis. Comments
must be filed on or before April 1, 2015, and reply comments are due on
or before April 8, 2015, and must be identified as responses to this
supplemental analysis. The Bureaus will send a copy of the Auction 98
Request for Comment, including this supplemental analysis, to the Chief
Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration (SBA).
43. Need for, and Objectives of, the Proposed Competitive Bidding
Procedures. The Auction 98 Request for Comment seeks comment on
proposed procedures to govern Auction 98, an auction of 131 FM radio
station construction permits. This process is intended to implement the
Commission's duty under 47 U.S.C. 309(j)(3)(e)(i) to provide notice of
and adequate time for potential applicants to comment on proposed
auction procedures. The objective is to promote the efficient and fair
administration of the competitive bidding process for all Auction 98
participants, including small businesses.
44. The Auction 98 Request for Comment seeks comment on proposed
procedures for conducting Auction 98, including: (1) Use of a
simultaneous multiple-round auction format, consisting of sequential
bidding rounds with a simultaneous stopping rule (with discretion to
exercise alternative stopping rules under certain circumstances); (2) A
specific minimum opening bid amount for each construction permit
proposed to be offered in Auction 98; (3) A specific upfront payment
amount for each construction permit; (4) Establishment of a bidder's
initial bidding eligibility in bidding units based on that bidder's
upfront payment through assignment of a specific number of bidding
units for each construction permit; (5) Use of an activity rule that
would require bidders to bid actively during the auction rather than
waiting until late in the auction before participating; (6) Use of
different activity requirements in two stages of the auction, with the
Bureaus retaining discretion to change the activity requirement during
the auction; (7) Provision of three activity rule waivers for each
bidder to allow it to preserve bidding eligibility during the course of
the auction; (8) Use of minimum acceptable bid amounts and bid
increments, along with a proposed methodology for calculating such
amounts, with the Bureaus retaining discretion to change their
methodology if circumstances dictate; (9) A procedure for breaking ties
if identical high bid amounts are submitted on a permit in a given
round; (10) Bid removal procedures; (11) Whether to permit bid
withdrawals; (12) Establishment of an interim bid withdrawal percentage
of 20 percent of the withdrawn bid in the event the Bureaus allow bid
withdrawals in Auction 98; and (13) Establishment of an additional
default payment of 20 percent under 47 CFR 1.2104(g)(2) in the event
that a winning bidder defaults or is disqualified after the auction.
45. Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities to
which Specified Auction 98 Procedures Will Apply. 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 rules proposed
in that rulemaking proceeding, 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. Moreover, the SBA has
created a small business size standard of $38.5 million or less in
annual receipts for establishments primarily engaged in broadcasting
aural programs. The size data provided by the SBA, however, does not
enable the Bureaus to make a meaningful estimate of the number of small
entities who may participate in Auction 98.
46. The specific procedures on which comment is sought in the
Auction 98 Request for Comment will affect directly all applicants
participating in Auction 98. The number of entities that may apply to
participate in Auction 98 is unknown. Based on the numbers of
applicants in prior FM auctions, the Bureaus estimate that the number
of applicants for Auction 98 may range from approximately 175 to 260.
This estimate is based on the number of applicants who filed short-form
applications to participate in previous auctions of FM radio station
construction permits (exclusive of closed auctions). In the eight open
FM broadcast auctions held to date, an average of 1.98 short-form
applications were filed per construction permit offered, with a median
of 1.365 applications per permit. If those figures apply to Auction 98,
the number of applicants may range between 179 and 259. The Bureaus
recognize, however, that the actual number of applicants for Auction 98
could vary significantly as any individual's or entity's decision to
participate may be affected by a number of factors beyond the
Commission's control.
47. The Bureaus are unable to accurately develop an estimate based
on the number of small entities that applied to participate in prior
broadcast auctions because that information is not collected from
applicants for broadcast auctions in which bidding credits are not
based on an applicant's size (as is the case in auctions of licenses
for wireless services). Potential applicants in Auction 98 may include
existing holders of broadcast station construction permits or licenses,
as well as non-licensees. The Bureaus note, however, that the
Commission has recently estimated that 97 percent of radio broadcasters
met the SBA's prior definition of small business concern, based on
annual revenues of $7 million. Moreover, the SBA has since increased
that revenue threshold to $38.5 million. Based on this assessment, the
Bureaus conclude that nearly all of Auction 98 applicants will likely
meet the SBA's definition of a small business concern.
48. Legal Basis. The Commission has established a framework of
competitive bidding rules pursuant to which it has conducted auctions
since the inception of the auction program in 1994 and would conduct
Auction 98. The basis for those rules is found in various statutory
provisions, including 47
[[Page 15722]]
U.S.C. 154(i), 301, 302, 303(e), 303(f), 303(r), 304, 307 and 309(j).
The Commission has directed the Bureaus, under delegated authority, to
seek comment on a variety of auction-specific procedures prior to the
start of each auction.
49. Description of Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other
Compliance Requirements. In the Auction 98 Request for Comment, the
Bureaus do not propose to implement any new reporting requirements,
recordkeeping requirements or any other compliance requirements. Any
individual or entity seeking to participate in an auction must submit a
short-form application (FCC Form 175). The information collected on FCC
Form 175 is used by the Bureaus to determine if an applicant is
legally, technically, and financially qualified to participate in a
Commission auction. Additionally, if an applicant applies for status as
a new entrant auction participant pursuant to Commission rules, the
Commission uses information collected on FCC Form 175 to determine
whether the applicant is eligible for the status requested. If an
applicant is a winning bidder, it is required to submit a more detailed
long-form application (such as an FCC Form 301 for an FM station),
including any showings to demonstrate its eligibility for new entrant
status it may have claimed. This two-phased process helps minimize
reporting and compliance requirements for auction applicants.
50. Steps Taken to Minimize Significant Economic Impact on Small
Entities, and Significant Alternatives Considered. The RFA requires an
agency to describe any significant alternatives beneficial to small
entities considered in reaching a proposed approach, which may include
the following four alternatives (among others): (1) Establishment of
differing compliance or reporting requirements or timetables that take
into account the resources available to small entities; (2)
clarification, consolidation, or simplification for small entities of
compliance and reporting requirements; (3) use of performance, rather
than design, standards; and (4) an exemption for small entities.
51. The Bureaus propose a number of specific procedures to govern
an auction of 131 FM radio station construction permits, which are
summarized above in this supplemental analysis. Based on experience in
conducting numerous auctions since the program's inception in 1994, the
Commission has taken steps to minimize the impact of its auction
procedures on small businesses. For example, following consideration of
any comments submitted in response to the Auction 98 Request for
Comment, the Bureaus will release a public notice to provide detailed
guidance for potential applicants on how to complete a short-form
application, participate in the auction, and comply with the various
competitive bidding requirements applicable to all Auction 98
applicants.
52. The Commission designed the auction application process to
minimize reporting and compliance requirements for applicants,
including small business applicants. In the first part of the
Commission's two-phased auction application process, parties desiring
to participate in an auction file streamlined, short-form applications
in which they certify under penalty of perjury as to their
qualifications. Eligibility to participate in bidding is based on an
applicant's short-form application and certifications, as well as its
upfront payment. In the second phase of the process, winning bidders
file a more comprehensive long-form application. Thus, a small business
which fails to become a winning bidder does not need to file a long-
form application and provide the additional showings and more detailed
demonstrations required of a winning bidder.
53. The Commission provides a number of resources through which
potential auction participants, including small entities, may seek
clarification of or guidance on complying with competitive bidding
rules and procedures, reporting requirements, and the FCC's auction
system. An FCC Auctions Hotline provides access to Commission staff for
information about the auction process and procedures. The FCC Auctions
Technical Support Hotline is another resource which provides technical
assistance to applicants, including small business entities, on issues
such as access to or navigation within the electronic FCC Form 175 and
use of the FCC's auction system. These hotlines are generally
accessible during regular business hours. Commission staff also
produces a web-based, interactive online tutorial for each auction
which potential applicants, including small businesses, may access to
familiarize themselves with auction procedures, filing requirements and
other matters related to an auction. Once posted, the online tutorial
remains available for reference and is accessible anytime.
54. The Bureaus also make various databases and other sources of
information, including the Media Bureau's Consolidated Database System,
the Auctions program Web sites, and copies of Commission decisions,
available to the public without charge, providing a low-cost mechanism
for small businesses to conduct research prior to and throughout the
auction. Prior to and at the close of Auction 98, the Bureaus will post
public notices on the Auctions Web site, which articulate auction
procedures and deadlines. The Bureaus make this information easily
accessible and without charge to benefit all Auction 98 applicants,
including small businesses, by lowering their administrative costs to
comply with the Commission's competitive bidding rules.
55. Prior to the start of bidding in each auction, all auction
applicants are given an opportunity to become familiar with auction
procedures and the bidding system by participating in a mock auction.
Further, the Commission intends to conduct Auction 98 electronically
over the Internet using its web-based auction system that eliminates
the need for qualified bidders to be physically present in a specific
location. Qualified bidders also have an option to place bids by
telephone. These mechanisms are made available to facilitate
participation in Auction 98 by all applicants, including small business
entities. Moreover, the adoption of bidding procedures in advance of
the auction, consistent with statutory directive, is designed to ensure
that the auction will be administered predictably and fairly for all
participants, including small businesses.
56. Federal Rules that May Duplicate, Overlap, or Conflict with the
Procedures for which Comment is Solicited. None. These proposed
procedures for the conduct of Auction 98 constitute the more specific
implementation of the competitive bidding rules contemplated by Parts 1
and 73 of the Commission's rules and the underlying rulemaking orders,
including the Broadcast First Report and Order and associated
competitive bidding orders, and are fully consistent therewith.
Federal Communications Commission.
Gary D. Michaels,
Deputy Chief, Auctions and Spectrum Access Division, WTB.
[FR Doc. 2015-06864 Filed 3-24-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712-01-P