Expanding the Economic and Innovation Opportunities of Spectrum Through Incentive Auctions; Channel Sharing by Full Power and Class A Stations Outside the Broadcast Television Spectrum Incentive Auction Context, 67337-67344 [2015-27738]
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Parts 1 and 73
[GN Docket No. 12–268; MB Docket No. 15–
137; FCC 15–67]
Expanding the Economic and
Innovation Opportunities of Spectrum
Through Incentive Auctions; Channel
Sharing by Full Power and Class A
Stations Outside the Broadcast
Television Spectrum Incentive Auction
Context
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY: In this document, the
Commission refines the rules it adopted
in the Incentive Auction Report and
Order and the preceding Channel
Sharing Report and Order to provide
greater flexibility and certainty
regarding channel sharing agreements
(‘‘CSAs’’). Among other things, we
modify our rules to allow broadcasters
that relinquish rights in the incentive
auction in order to channel share to
enter into CSAs after the auction and,
whether they enter into CSAs before or
after the auction, to determine the
length of their agreements.
DATES: Effective December 2, 2015,
except for §§ 1.2204(c)(4) and
73.3700(b)(1), which contain new or
modified information collection
requirements that require approval by
OMB under the PRA and will become
effective after the Commission publishes
a notice in the Federal Register
announcing such approval and the
relevant effective date.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kim
Matthews, Media Bureau, Policy
Division, 202–418–2154, or email at
kim.matthews@fcc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a
summary of the Commission’s First
Order on Reconsideration, FCC 15–67,
adopted on June 11, 2015 and released
on June 12, 2015. The full text of this
document is available for public
inspection and copying during regular
business hours in the FCC Reference
Center, Federal Communications
Commission, 445 12th Street SW., Room
CY–A257, Washington, DC 20554. The
complete text may be purchased from
the Commission’s copy contractor, 445
12th Street SW., Room CY–B402,
Washington, DC 20554. This document
will also be available via ECFS at https://
fjallfoss.fcc.gov/ecfs/. Documents will
be available electronically in ASCII,
Microsoft Word, and/or Adobe Acrobat.
Alternative formats are available for
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people with disabilities (Braille, large
print, electronic files, audio format) by
sending an email to fcc504@fcc.gov or
calling the Commission’s Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau at (202)
418–0530 (voice), (202) 418–0432
(TTY).
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
Analysis
The First Order on Reconsideration
contains new or modified information
collection requirements subject to the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(‘‘PRA’’), Public Law 104–13. It will be
submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget (‘‘OMB’’) for review under
section 3507(d) of the PRA. The
Commission, as part of its continuing
effort to reduce paperwork burdens, will
invite the general public to comment on
the information collection requirements
contained in this First Order on
Reconsideration as required by the PRA
in a separate published Federal Register
notice.
In addition, the Commission notes
that pursuant to the Small Business
Paperwork Relief Act of 2002, Public
Law 107–198, see 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(4),
we previously sought specific comment
on how the Commission might further
reduce the information collection
burden for small business concerns with
fewer than 25 employees. We have
assessed the effects of the policies
adopted in this First Order on
Reconsideration with regard to
information collection burdens on small
business concerns, and find that these
policies will benefit many companies
with fewer than 25 employees by
providing them with options for
voluntarily relinquishing broadcast
spectrum usage rights and by
streamlining the pre-auction application
process. In addition, we have described
impacts that might affect small
businesses, which includes most
businesses with fewer than 25
employees, in the Supplemental FRFA.
Synopsis of the First Order on
Reconsideration
I. Introduction
1. Broadcasters will have the unique
financial opportunity in the broadcast
television spectrum incentive auction to
voluntarily return some or all of their
licensed spectrum usage rights in
exchange for incentive payments. One
of broadcasters’ bid options will be to
relinquish rights in order to share a
channel with another licensee. The
Commission established rules governing
channel sharing agreements (‘‘CSAs’’) in
the Incentive Auction Report & Order,
79 FR 48442 (August 15, 2014) (‘‘IA
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R&O’’) and the preceding Channel
Sharing Report & Order, 77 FR 30423
(May 23, 2012) (‘‘Channel Sharing
R&O’’). In this First Order on
Reconsideration, we refine those rules
to provide greater flexibility and
certainty regarding CSAs. Among other
things, we modify our rules to allow
broadcasters that relinquish rights in the
incentive auction in order to channel
share to enter into CSAs after the
auction and, whether they enter into
CSAs before or after the auction, to
determine the length of their
agreements. In the companion Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking (‘‘NPRM’’), 80 FR
40957, July 14, 2015, we tentatively
conclude that we should authorize
channel sharing by full power and Class
A stations outside the incentive auction
context, including ‘‘second generation’’
agreements in which one or both
entities were parties to an auctionrelated CSA whose term has expired or
that has otherwise been terminated. By
providing greater flexibility and
certainty regarding CSAs, our objective
is to encourage voluntary participation
by broadcasters in the incentive auction.
II. Background
2. Congress authorized the
Commission to conduct the incentive
auction to help meet the Nation’s
growing spectrum needs. Section
1452(a)(2) of the Spectrum Act provides
for three bid options that will be
available to eligible full power and Class
A broadcast television licensees in the
auction, including relinquishment of
‘‘usage rights in order to share a
television channel with another
licensee’’ (‘‘channel sharing bid’’).
Section 1452(a)(4) provides that a
licensee that voluntarily relinquishes
usage rights in order to channel share
and that possessed carriage rights on
November 30, 2010 ‘‘shall have, at its
shared location, the carriage rights . . .
that would apply to such station at such
location if it were not sharing a
channel.’’ In the Channel Sharing R&O,
the Commission established rules
authorizing channel sharing in
connection with the incentive auction.
3. The Commission addressed a
variety of further issues related to
channel sharing in the IA R&O. The
Commission concluded that applicants
that participate in the auction in order
to share a channel must provide
information concerning their Channel
Sharing Agreements (‘‘CSAs’’) prior to
the auction, as part of their pre-auction
applications, and must submit a copy of
the executed CSA with their
applications. With respect to licensing,
the Commission determined that,
following the auction, a licensee that
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reversionary interest rule and that
parties to CSAs may bargain for
common contractual rights consistent
with existing Commission rules and
policies. We received no opposition to
EOBC’s request. In its ‘‘Opposition and
Reply,’’ CTIA joins and supports all of
EOBC’s reconsideration requests
regarding channel sharing. Fox, Ion
Media, Tribune, and Univision, who
filed a reply comment in response to the
Incentive Auction Comment PN, agree
with this position.
9. We grant EOBC’s request. We
clarify that parties to a CSA may grant
each other options, puts, calls, rights of
first refusal, and other common
contingent interests, subject to all
applicable Commission rules and
policies, including the media ownership
rules, without committing a per se
violation of the reversionary interest
rule. The reversionary interest rule does
not necessarily apply to a CSA, because
a CSA does not involve the transfer of
a license from one sharing partner to
another. In addition, CSA provisions for
contingent interests in the licenses
involved in a CSA would not violate the
reversionary interest rule absent grant of
a prohibited security interest. We
recognize that contracting for these
common contingent rights will enable
sharing parties to eliminate some of the
uncertainty regarding the identity of
their sharing partners in the event that
one sharing party decides to sell its
license. Moreover, we share EOBC’s
concern that, without the ability to
bargain for these rights, broadcasters
may not avail themselves of this bid
option in the auction.
III. First Order on Reconsideration
6. We grant the EOBC Petition, with
the exceptions noted below. In addition
to addressing each of EOBC’s abovestated requests for reconsideration
below, we modify and clarify the preand post-auction CSA filing
requirements that apply before and after
the auction and address the scope of
CSA review by Commission staff.
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enters into a CSA as the result of a
winning reverse auction bid will be
issued a new license indicating the
station’s ‘‘shared’’ status and specifying
the station’s designated shared
operating frequency. The Commission
also decided that shared channels will
be designated permanently as shared in
the Table of Allotments, absent a future
rulemaking proceeding to redesignate
the channel for non-shared use.
4. The Expanding Opportunities for
Broadcasters Coalition (‘‘EOBC’’) filed a
Petition for Reconsideration of our
channel sharing decisions in the IA
R&O, urging the Commission to ‘‘(1)
clarify that parties to broadcast CSAs are
free to negotiate for common contractual
rights; (2) permit broadcasters to enter
into CSAs either before or after the
incentive auction; (3) ensure that parties
to CSAs have the flexibility to choose
whether those agreements are
permanent or for a fixed term; and (4)
clarify that the Commission will never
force a broadcaster to accept a channel
sharing partner.’’
5. The National Cable &
Telecommunications Association
(‘‘NCTA’’) filed an opposition arguing
that extending carriage rights to
broadcasters that enter into post-auction
CSAs would contravene the Spectrum
Act. NCTA argues that this would cause
uncertainty in the post-auction
broadcaster transition process; confer
greater cable carriage rights than
Congress intended; lead to customer
confusion; and might leave MVPDs
unreimbursed. CTIA supports all of
EOBC’s requests, as do Fox, Ion Media,
Tribune, and Univision.
B. Flexibility To Enter Into CSAs After
the Incentive Auction
10. Under the rules adopted in the IA
R&O, a reverse auction bidder interested
in channel sharing must submit an
executed copy of the CSA with its preauction application, as well as
certifications under penalty of perjury
that it can meet its community of
license requirements from the proposed
sharer’s site (or that it has identified a
new community of license that meets
the same, or a higher, allotment priority
as its current community; or the next
highest priority if no community meets
the same or higher priority); that the
CSA is consistent with all relevant
Commission rules and policies; and that
the applicant accepts any risk that the
implementation of the CSA may not be
feasible for any reason.
11. EOBC requests that the
Commission modify its rules to allow a
winning license relinquishment bidder
to execute a CSA after bidding in the
auction is complete. Fox, Ion Media,
A. Negotiating for Common Contractual
Rights
7. In the IA R&O, we noted that
channel sharing agreements for
contingent rights must not violate the
reversionary interest rule, which
precludes a seller from retaining an
interest in the license it sells, and
prohibits a licensee from granting a
third party an automatic reversionary
interest, such as a security interest, in
its license.
8. EOBC asks the Commission to
clarify that the act of entering into a
CSA, in and of itself, does not trigger the
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Tribune, and Univision, who filed a
reply comment in response to the
Incentive Auction Comment PN, agree
with this position. EOBC argues that the
carriage rights of parties to such postauction CSAs would be protected under
the Spectrum Act. CTIA agrees. NCTA,
however, asserts that grant of EOBC’s
request would (1) introduce additional
uncertainty into the post-auction
transition process; (2) confer greater
cable carriage rights than Congress
intended; (3) lead to customer
confusion; and (4) risk leaving cable
operators unreimbursed for mandatory
carriage of sharee stations.
12. We grant EOBC’s request, subject
to the conditions set forth herein.
Specifically, we modify our rules to
allow winning bidders that relinquish
their spectrum usage rights to enter into
CSAs after the completion of the
incentive auction, provided that they (1)
indicate in their pre-auction
applications that they have a present
intent to find a channel sharing partner
after the auction, and (2) execute and
implement their CSAs by the date on
which they would otherwise be required
to relinquish their licenses. Parties to
post-auction CSAs will be entitled to the
same carriage rights as parties to preauction CSAs. We emphasize, however,
that the exception to the rule
prohibiting certain communications
before and during the incentive auction
will apply only to parties to pre-auction
CSAs.
13. Subject to these conditions, we
agree with EOBC that pre- and postauction CSAs are the same for purposes
of the Spectrum Act. We also agree with
EOBC that providing this flexibility will
encourage broadcasters to consider the
channel sharing bid option by enabling
them to participate in the auction even
if they do not find a channel sharing
partner before the auction begins.
Indeed, as EOBC notes, parties may be
able to negotiate CSAs more readily
after the auction is complete, when
fewer variables remain unknown. This
action also may help to preserve
independent voices by enabling
licensees to continue broadcasting after
they voluntarily relinquish rights in the
incentive auction. As stated above,
broadcasters that do not submit
executed CSAs with their pre-auction
applications will be ineligible for the
exception to the prohibited
communications rule. Accordingly,
there will be no need for the staff to
review a CSA prior to the auction to
verify that the applicant qualifies for the
exception.
14. In order to enter into a postauction CSA, we will require that a
license relinquishment bidder indicate
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in its pre-auction application its present
intent to find a channel sharing partner
after the auction. As we noted in the
Channel Sharing R&O, ‘‘the Spectrum
Act does not set a date restriction on the
execution of channel sharing
arrangements.’’ It guarantees carriage
rights, however, only for ‘‘a licensee that
voluntarily relinquishes rights in order
to channel share.’’ To fall within the
scope of this guarantee, we conclude
that a licensee availing itself of the
flexibility we provide here must express
a present intent to channel share in its
pre-auction application. We recognize
that a successful bidder’s interest in a
post-auction CSA may depend on the
outcome of the auction, and that its
ability to execute a CSA with a sharing
partner will not be entirely within its
control. A successful bidder’s
expression of present intent, therefore,
will not bind it to seek out a channel
sharing partner or enter into a postauction CSA.
15. In addition, post-auction CSAs
must be executed and implemented (i.e.,
operations commenced on the shared
channel) by the date on which the
channel sharee otherwise would be
required to relinquish its license.
Pursuant to the IA R&O, a winning
license relinquishment bidder must
cease operations within three months
after receiving its share of auction
proceeds. We conclude that a postauction CSA must be executed and
implemented by the license
relinquishment deadline. In this regard,
we disagree with EOBC that licensees
should have up to twelve months after
that relinquishment deadline to enter
into a CSA. EOBC’s reliance on section
312(g) of the Communications Act,
which provides that a broadcast license
automatically expires if the station fails
to broadcast for a consecutive 12-month
period, is misplaced: A broadcaster
holds a license during the statutory 12month period, whereas a winning
license relinquishment bidder will no
longer hold a license after the license
relinquishment deadline.
16. This requirement addresses
NCTA’s concern that allowing auction
participants to enter into post-auction
CSAs would introduce additional
uncertainty into the post-auction
transition process. As NCTA notes,
‘‘[u]nder the current rules, sharing
stations must notify the Commission of
their intent to share prior to the auction
and must file their application for
license for the shared channel within
three months after receiving auction
proceeds.’’ Under our ruling here,
sharee stations likewise will have to
execute and implement their postauction CSAs by the time they have to
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relinquish their licenses, and thus they
will be on the same notification timeline
as those stations that entered into preauction CSAs. We believe that this
timeframe also will provide adequate
time for parties to post-auction CSAs to
comply with the consumer and MVPD
notice requirements laid out in the IA
R&O.
17. Finally, we find that the
reimbursement process set out in the IA
R&O, coupled with the requirements we
adopt herein, will enable MVPDs to
obtain reimbursement for their
reasonable costs associated with
mandatory carriage of stations that enter
into post-auction CSAs. NCTA argues
that, if CSAs are not ‘‘in sync’’ with the
deadline for submitting reimbursement
estimates, MVPDs might not have notice
of a carriage obligation by the deadline,
impacting their ability to recover
reasonable expenses related to carrying
the sharee stations from their new
locations. We direct the Media Bureau,
in the Channel Reassignment PN to be
released following the completion of the
incentive auction, to identify those
winning bidders that are eligible to
channel share, either because they
submitted an executed pre-auction CSA
or expressed a present intent to enter
into a post-auction CSA. Accordingly,
the Channel Reassignment PN will
provide MVPDs with notice of the
identity of successful bidders who have
executed pre-auction CSAs, as well as
those who may enter post-auction CSAs,
prior to the deadline for submitting
estimated reimbursement costs,
enabling MVPDs to account for these
potential costs in their initial cost
estimates. In addition, if necessary,
MVPDs may update their estimates after
the initial three-month deadline if
necessary in order to account for postauction CSAs.
C. Term-Limited Channel Sharing
Agreements
18. Under the rules adopted in the IA
R&O, CSAs are permanent in nature:
CSAs may be amended, and rights
under a CSA may be assigned or
transferred subject to Commission
approval, but ‘‘shared channels
permanently will be designated as
shared in the Table of Allotments,
absent a future rulemaking proceeding
to redesignate the channel for nonshared use,’’ and ‘‘CSAs may not
contain any provision that would seek
to dissolve or modify the shared nature
of the channel[.]’’ EOBC argues that we
should ‘‘permit broadcasters to choose
the length of their agreements.’’ ‘‘Once
an agreement is terminated,’’ suggests
EOBC, ‘‘the host or sharer station could
either find another channel sharing
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partner or notify the agency that it is no
longer a shared station and that its
license should be modified accordingly.
The host station would then have the
right to utilize the full capacity of its 6
MHz channel. The sharee station(s),
meanwhile, could either relinquish their
licenses or find a new partner, subject
to the one-year time limit to resume
transmissions under section 312(g) of
the Communications Act.’’ CTIA
supports this approach, as do Fox, Ion
Media, Tribune, and Univision. EOBC
further argues that we should authorize
‘‘second generation’’ CSAs subject to the
same rights and restrictions as CSAs
entered into in connection with the
incentive auction.
19. We modify our rules to provide
flexibility for broadcasters to determine
the length of their CSAs. Specifically,
we will permit broadcasters to choose
the length of their channel sharing
agreements. We agree that allowing
term-limited CSAs will encourage
channel sharing bids in the incentive
auction by allowing parties to end the
channel sharing relationship if they
choose while still having the
opportunity to continue operating. We
also agree with EOBC that providing
such flexibility is appropriate to meet
broadcasters’ individualized
programming and economic needs.
Consistent with our decision, as
discussed below, we will not
permanently designate channels as
‘‘shared’’ in the Table of Allotments.
Instead, a channel’s shared status will
be indicated on a sharing station’s
license.
20. However, our decision to allow
term-limited CSAs raises the question of
whether to authorize CSAs by full
power and Class A stations outside the
incentive auction context. In the
companion Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking, we tentatively conclude
that we should allow future CSAs
outside the incentive auction context,
and we invite comment on issues
attendant to that proposal.
D. Termination of a Sharing Station’s
Spectrum Usage Rights
21. Under the rules adopted in the IA
R&O, if a channel sharing station’s
license is terminated due to voluntary
relinquishment, revocation, failure to
renew, or any other circumstance, the
remaining channel sharing station or
stations will continue to have rights to
their portion(s) of the shared channel,
and the rights to the terminated portion
of the shared channel will revert to the
Commission for reassignment. The
Commission further stated that shared
channels ‘‘permanently will be
designated as shared in the Table of
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Allotments, absent a future rulemaking
proceeding to redesignate the channel
for non-shared use.’’
22. EOBC argues that ‘‘[e]ven the
possibility that the FCC could appoint a
successor sharing partner will be
troublesome to most broadcasters
considering the channel sharing
option.’’ Instead, EOBC argues that
channel sharing parties should have
‘‘the option to reclaim the spectrum
rights (but not the licenses) previously
held by the departing party . . . Thus,
if a sharee station relinquishes its
spectrum, the host station could either
find a new channel sharing partner . . .
or resume use of the full six megahertz
channel. If the host station relinquishes
its spectrum, meanwhile, the sharee
station(s) would have the option to
assume the previously shared channel,
subject to the technical parameters of
the existing allotment.’’ CTIA agrees
that, if a sharing station relinquishes its
license, then the right to use the
relinquished portion of the shared
spectrum should return to the remaining
sharing partner(s). Similarly, Fox, Ion
Media, Tribute, and Univision agree that
‘‘upon expiration or termination of a
CSA sharing stations should have the
flexibility either to utilize the full
capacity of their shared channel or to
enter into a channel sharing
arrangement with a new partner (or
partners).’’ No parties opposed this
request.
23. We grant EOBC’s request, and
modify our rules to allow parties to
develop CSA terms that address what
happens in the event that a sharing
party’s license is terminated for any
reason, rather than providing that the
terminated spectrum usage rights revert
to the Commission for reassignment.
Our decisions here do not affect the
right of a channel sharing party to assign
or transfer its license consistent with the
IA R&O.
24. We agree with EOBC that, as
business partners, channel sharers
should ‘‘have the ability to choose
partners that satisfy their own criteria.’’
The Commission will not select a
sharing partner. To accommodate this
flexibility, we will not permanently
designate channels as ‘‘shared’’ in the
Table of Allotments, and a channel’s
shared status will be indicated on the
station license. In the event that a
sharing partner relinquishes its license,
its spectrum usage rights (but not its
license) may revert to the remaining
sharing partners if the partners so agree.
Where only one sharing partner
remains, it may apply to change its
license to non-shared status using FCC
Form 2100 Schedule B (formerly FCC
Form 302) or F (formerly FCC Form
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302–CA). If a full power station that is
sharing with a Class A station
relinquishes its license, then the Class A
station would continue to operate under
the rules governing Class A stations.
E. Commission Review of CSAs and
Licensing of Channel Sharees
25. In order to provide additional
certainty to broadcasters interested in
the channel sharing bid option, and in
light of our decision to allow postauction CSAs, we modify and clarify
our procedures for submission and
review of both pre-auction and postauction CSAs. At the outset, we
emphasize that we will not question
parties’ business judgment in drafting
CSAs.
26. If a licensee submits an executed
CSA before the auction along with its
auction application, we will accept for
purposes of determining eligibility to
participate the applicant’s certification
that the CSA complies with our channel
sharing operating rules. We will not
review the CSA itself at the pre-auction
stage for compliance with our operating
rules. We will review the CSA at the
pre-auction stage solely to confirm that
the parties qualify for the channel
sharing exception to the rule prohibiting
certain communication adopted in the
IA R&O.
27. Post-auction, we will review CSAs
submitted before or after the auction by
successful bidders to determine whether
the CSAs meet the requirements the
Commission has adopted to ensure
compliance with our CSA operating
rules and policies. Although in the IA
R&O we reserved the right to review the
CSA and require modification of any
CSAs that do not comply with our CSA
operating rules and policies, we clarify
that such review will occur after the
auction. To allow time for such review,
we modify our rules to require that, at
least 60 days prior to the date by which
it must implement the CSA, the channel
sharee file a minor change application
for a construction permit specifying the
same technical facilities as the sharer
station, and include a copy of the CSA
with its application. This requirement
will be the same regardless of whether
the parties execute their CSA before or
after the auction. Following grant of the
construction permit and initiation of
shared operations, both the sharee and
sharer must file a license application.
We emphasize again that the
Commission does not involve itself in
private contractual agreements, and we
do not intend during our review of the
CSA to substitute our judgment for that
of the parties with respect to the terms
of the agreement. Thus, we will limit
our post-auction review to confirming
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that the CSA contains the required
provisions and that any terms beyond
those related to sharing of bitstream and
related technical facilities comport with
our general rules and policies regarding
licensee agreements. We also reiterate
that any application for a construction
permit or modified license filed in
accordance with the requirements
established here or in the IA R&O will
not trigger the filing of competing
applications.
F. Exception to Prohibited
Communications for Parties to CSAs
28. Under the rules adopted in the IA
R&O, all parties to a CSA submitted
with a reverse auction application may
communicate with each other about
their bids and bidding strategies. The
Commission adopted this exception to
the rule generally prohibiting such
communications in order to encourage
channel sharing relationships, allowing
potential channel sharers to fully engage
as various options are presented during
the auction process. In light of the risk
of agreements to reduce competition in
response to auction conditions,
however, the exception is limited to
CSAs executed prior to the reverse
auction application filing deadline and
submitted with the reverse auction
application. We note that a CSA may
have more than two parties (if, for
instance, three stations propose to share
the same channel), and all parties to a
pre-auction CSA may communicate
during the auction. Commenters have
proposed that we also allow stations to
enter into multiple contingent CSAs. We
will address this issue in a forthcoming
decision.
IV. Procedural Matters
A. Supplemental Final Regulatory
Flexibility Act Analysis
29. As required by the Regulatory
Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended
(‘‘RFA’’), an Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (‘‘IRFA’’) was
incorporated in the Notice of Proposed
Rule Making (‘‘Notice’’). The
Commission sought written public
comment on the proposals in the Notice,
including comment on the IRFA. The
Commission subsequently incorporated
a Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
(‘‘FRFA’’) in the Report and Order. This
Supplemental FRFA conforms to the
RFA and incorporates by reference the
FRFA in the IA R&O. It reflects changes
to the Commission’s rules arising from
the First Order on Reconsideration
prepared in response to the Petition for
Reconsideration filed by the Expanding
Opportunities for Broadcasters Coalition
(‘‘EOBC’’).
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 211 / Monday, November 2, 2015 / Rules and Regulations
30. This First Order on
Reconsideration affirms the
Commission’s commitment to making
the channel sharing reverse auction bid
option attractive to television
broadcasters. In the Channel Sharing
R&O, the Commission established rules
authorizing channel sharing in
connection with the incentive auction.
The Commission addressed a variety of
further issues related to channel sharing
in the IA R&O in order to complete the
framework for incentive auction-related
channel sharing. In this First Order on
Reconsideration, the Commission
generally grants the EOBC Petition,
finding that modifying its original
determination will increase
broadcasters’ flexibility to use the
channel sharing bid option, will make
the option more attractive and will
provide an improved ability of the
Commission to monitor compliance of
CSAs with our rules.
31. Specifically, in the First Order on
Reconsideration, the Commission grants
in part the EOBC petition for
reconsideration by: Clarifying that the
reversionary interest rule does not apply
to CSAs; allowing parties the flexibility
to enter into term-limited CSAs and to
execute a CSAs post-auction; and
modifying the rules to allow the
spectrum usage rights of a sharing party
whose license is terminated to revert to
the remaining sharing parties rather
than having the rights revert to the
Commission for reassignment. The
Order also clarifies that at the preauction stage Commission staff will only
review CSAs to determine whether the
bidder qualifies for the anti-collusion
rule exception. To allow review for
compliance with Commission rules, the
Order requires that a channel sharee file
a construction permit application,
including a copy of the CSA, after the
auction. Most notably, the flexibility
granted herein will make it easier for
entities such as small businesses and
non-commercial education stations to
avail themselves of the opportunity to
channel share as part of the incentive
auction.
32. No commenters directly
responded to the IRFA in the Notice.
Because a number of commenters raised
concerns about the impact on small
businesses of various auction design
issues, the FRFA in the IA R&O
addressed those concerns. The EOBC
Petition addressed herein, and
associated pleadings, did not raise any
concerns with the FRFA.
33. Pursuant to the Small Business
Jobs Act of 2010, the Commission is
required to respond to any comments
filed by the Chief Counsel for Advocacy
of the Small Business Administration
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(SBA), and to provide a detailed
statement of any change made to the
proposed rules as a result of those
comments. The Chief Counsel did not
file any comments in response to the
rules adopted in this proceeding.
34. The RFA directs the Commission
to provide a description of and, where
feasible, an estimate of the number of
small entities that will be affected by the
adopted rules, if adopted. The RFA
generally defines the term ‘‘small
entity’’ as having the same meaning as
the terms ‘‘small business,’’ small
organization,’’ and ‘‘small government
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.
35. As noted, we incorporated a FRFA
into the IA R&O. In that analysis, the
Commission described in detail the
various small business entities that may
be affected by the final rules, including
television broadcast entities. This First
Order on Reconsideration amends the
final rules adopted in the IA R&O
affecting television broadcasting. This
Supplemental FRFA incorporates by
reference the description and estimate
of the number of television broadcasting
small entities from the IRFA in the
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
accompanying this First Order on
Reconsideration.
36. In section D of the FRFA
incorporated into the IA R&O, the
Commission described in detail the
projected recording, recordkeeping,
reporting and other compliance
requirements for small entities arising
from the rules adopted in the IA R&O.
This Supplemental FRFA incorporates
by reference the requirements described
in section D of the FRFA. In this First
Order on Reconsideration, however, the
Commission adds and modifies rules
adopted in the IA R&O. It adds the
requirement that in order to take
advantage of the flexibility adopted in
this First Order on Reconsideration to
enter into a channel sharing agreement
post-auction, a license relinquishment
bidder must indicate its intent to enter
a post auction channel sharing
agreement on its pre-auction
application. The First Order on
Reconsideration also requires channel
sharee stations to file an application for
construction permit, including a copy of
the executed channel sharing
agreement. Commercial stations must
pay the fee associated with this filing.
(Non-commercial entities are fee
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exempt.) In addition, it require CSAs to
include a provision regarding the
reversion of spectrum usage rights to
remaining channel sharing partners in
the event that one party has its license
terminated. Finally, to take advantage of
the new rule allowing the last remaining
licensee to a channel sharing agreement
to have its license revert to non-shared
status, that last remaining licensee must
file a license application requesting this
reversion.
37. The RFA requires an agency to
describe any significant alternatives that
it has considered in developing its
approach, which may include the
following four alternatives (among
others): ‘‘(1) The establishment of
differing compliance or reporting
requirements or timetables that take into
account the resources available to small
entities; (2) the clarification,
consolidation, or simplification of
compliance and reporting requirements
under the rule for such small entities;
(3) the use of performance rather than
design standards; and (4) an exemption
from coverage of the rule, or any part
thereof, for such small entities.’’
38. The reporting, recordkeeping, and
other compliance requirements resulting
from the First Order on Reconsideration
will apply to all entities in the same
manner. The Commission believes that
applying the same rules equally to all
entities in this context promotes
fairness. The Commission does not
believe that the costs and/or
administrative burdens associated with
the rules, including the payment of a
construction permit filing fee by
commercial broadcasters who are
reverse auction winners and who will
channel share, will unduly burden
small entities. (Non-commercial
broadcasters are exempt from such filing
fees.) The construction permit itself will
contain the same information included
in the construction permit and license
information of the channel sharer
station and therefore can be copied
without additional engineering work.
The submission of the executed channel
sharing agreement does not add cost as
the rules already require execution of a
channel sharing agreement between
sharing parties.
39. While these new rules require
additional filings for those reverse
auction winning bidders that channel
share, they give bidders, including
broadcast television entities meeting the
definition of small businesses, the
increased flexibility to enter into post
auction CSAs, to limit the term of their
CSAs rather than make them permanent,
and to request reversion of spectrum
usage rights in the event of the
termination of the license of a
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broadcaster with whom they share
spectrum. Lastly, the requirement that a
channel sharee file a construction
permit including a copy of the channel
sharing agreement will streamline the
pre-auction application process.
Federal Rules That Might Duplicate,
Overlap, or Conflict With the Rules
40. None.
Report to Congress
41. The Commission will send a copy
of this First Order on Reconsideration in
a report to be sent to Congress and the
Government Accountability Office
pursuant to the Congressional Review
Act, see 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
Report to Small Business
Administration
42. The Commission will send a copy
of this First Order on Reconsideration,
including this Supplemental FRFA, to
the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration.
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B. Final Paperwork Reduction Act
Analysis
43. This document contains new or
modified information collection
requirements subject to the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (‘‘PRA’’), Public
Law 104–13. It will be submitted to the
Office of Management and Budget
(‘‘OMB’’) for review under section
3507(d) of the PRA. OMB, the general
public, and other Federal agencies will
be invited to comment on the new or
modified information collection
requirements contained in this
proceeding in a separate published
Federal Register notice. In addition, we
note that pursuant to the Small Business
Paperwork Relief Act of 2002, Public
Law 107–198, see 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(4),
we previously sought specific comment
on how the Commission might further
reduce the information collection
burden for small business concerns with
fewer than 25 employees.
44. We have assessed the effects of the
policies adopted in this First Order on
Reconsideration with regard to
information collection burdens on small
business concerns, and find that these
policies will benefit many companies
with fewer than 25 employees by
providing them with options for
voluntarily relinquishing broadcast
spectrum usage rights and by
streamlining the pre-auction application
process. In addition, we have described
impacts that might affect small
businesses, which includes most
businesses with fewer than 25
employees, in the Supplemental FRFA
in Appendix B.
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V. Ordering Clauses
45. Accordingly, IT IS ORDERED that,
pursuant to the authority contained in
sections 1, 4, 301, 303, 307, 308, 309,
310, 316, 319, and 405 of the
Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, and sections 6402 and 6403 of
Middle Class Tax Relief and Job
Creation Act of 2012, Pub. L. 112–96,
126 Stat. 156, 47 U.S.C. 151, 154, 301,
303, 307, 308, 309, 310, 316, 319, 405,
1404, and 1452, this FIRST ORDER ON
RECONSIDERATION is ADOPTED and
parts 1 and 73 of Commission’s rules are
AMENDED as set forth in the Appendix
A of the First Order on Reconsideration.
46. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that
the rules adopted herein will become
effective December 2, 2015, except for
sections 1.2204(c)(4) and 73.3700(b)(1),
which contain new or modified
information collection requirements that
require approval by the OMB under the
PRA and WILL BECOME EFFECTIVE
after the Commission publishes a notice
in the Federal Register announcing
such approval and the relevant effective
date.
47. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that,
that pursuant to sections 4(i), and 405
of the Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, 47 U.S.C. 154(i) and 405, and
section 1.429 of the Commission’s rules,
47 CFR 1.429, the Petition for
Reconsideration filed by the Expanding
Opportunities for Broadcasters Coalition
IS HEREBY GRANTED IN PART AND IS
OTHERWISE DISMISSED AS MOOT.
48. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that
the Commission’s Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau, Reference
Information Center, SHALL SEND a
copy of this First Order on
Reconsideration, including the
Supplemental Final Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis, to the Chief
Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration.
49. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that
the Commission SHALL SEND a copy of
this First Order on Reconsideration in a
report to be sent to Congress and the
Government Accountability Office
pursuant to the Congressional Review
Act, see 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
List of Subjects
Administrative practice and
procedure, Television.
47 CFR Part 73
Television, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Frm 00082
Fmt 4700
Final Rules
For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, the Federal Communications
Commission amends Parts 1 and 73 of
Title 47 of the Code of Federal
Regulations as follows:
PART 1—PRACTICE AND
PROCEDURE
1. The authority citation for part 1
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 79, et seq.; 47 U.S.C.
151, 154(i), 154(j), 155, 157, 160, 201, 225,
227, 303, 309, 332, 1403, 1404, 1451, 1452,
and 1455.
2. Section 1.2200 is amended by
revising paragraph (d) to read as
follows:
■
§ 1.2200
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Channel sharing bid. The term
channel sharing bid means a bid to
relinquish all spectrum usage rights
with respect to a particular television
channel in order to share a television
channel with another broadcast
television licensee by an applicant that
submits an executed channel sharing
agreement with its application.
*
*
*
*
*
3. Section 1.2204 is amended by
redesignating paragraphs (c)(4)(i)
through (iii) as (c)(4)(ii) through (iv),
and adding new paragraph (c)(4)(i) to
read as follows:
■
§ 1.2204 Applications to participate in
competitive bidding.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(4) * * *
(i) Whether it intends to enter into a
channel sharing agreement if it becomes
a winning bidder;
*
*
*
*
*
PART 73—RADIO BROADCAST
SERVICES
4. The authority citation for part 73
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 303, 334, 336,
and 339.
47 CFR Part 1
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Federal Communications Commission.
Gloria J. Miles,
Federal Register Liaison.
Sfmt 4700
5. Section 73.3700 is amended by
revising paragraph (a)(3); revising
paragraph (b)(1)(i); adding paragraph
(b)(1)(vii); revising paragraphs (b)(2)(i)
introductory text, (b)(2)(ii), and (b)(3);
and revising paragraphs (h)(2) through
(5) to read as follows:
■
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§ 73.3700 Post-incentive auction licensing
and operation.
(a) * * *
(3) Channel sharee station. For
purposes of this section, channel sharee
station means a broadcast television
station for which a winning channel
sharing bid, as defined in § 1.2200(d) of
this chapter, was submitted, or a
broadcast television station for which a
winning license relinquishment bid, as
defined in § 1.2200(g) of this chapter,
was submitted where the station
licensee executes and implements a
post-auction channel sharing agreement.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) Licensees of reassigned stations,
UHF-to-VHF stations, and High-VHF-toLow-VHF stations must file a minor
change application for a construction
permit for the channel specified in the
Channel Reassignment Public Notice
using FCC Form 2100 Schedule A (for
a full power station) or E (for a Class A
station) within three months of the
release date of the Channel
Reassignment Public Notice. Licensees
that are unable to meet this filing
deadline may request a waiver of the
deadline no later than 30 days prior to
the deadline.
*
*
*
*
*
(vii) Channel sharee stations must file
a minor change application for a
construction permit for the channel on
which the channel sharer operates at
least sixty (60) days prior to the date by
which it must terminate operations on
its pre-auction channel pursuant to
paragraphs (b)(4)(i) and (ii) of this
section. The application must include a
copy of the executed channel sharing
agreement.
*
*
*
*
*
(2) * * *
(i) Alternate channels. The licensee of
a reassigned station, a UHF-to-VHF
station, or a High-VHF-to-Low-VHF
station, or a broadcast television station
described in paragraph (b)(1)(iv)(B) of
this section will be permitted to file a
major change application for a
construction permit for an alternate
channel on FCC Form 2100 Schedules A
(for a full power station) and E (for a
Class A station) during a filing window
to be announced by the Media Bureau
by public notice, provided that:
*
*
*
*
*
(ii) Expanded facilities. The licensee
of a reassigned station, a UHF-to-VHF
station, or a High-VHF-to-Low-VHF
station, or a broadcast television station
described in paragraph (b)(1)(iv)(B) of
this section will be permitted to file a
minor change application for a
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construction permit on FCC Form 2100
Schedules A (for a full power station)
and E (for a Class A station) during a
filing window to be announced by the
Media Bureau by public notice, in order
to request a change in the technical
parameters specified in the Channel
Reassignment Public Notice (or, in the
case of a broadcast television station
described in paragraph (b)(1)(iv)(B) of
this section that is not reassigned to a
new channel, a change in its authorized
technical parameters) with respect to
height above average terrain (HAAT),
effective radiated power (ERP), or
transmitter location that would be
considered a minor change under
§ 73.3572(a)(1) and (2) or § 74.787(b) of
this chapter.
*
*
*
*
*
(3) License applications for channel
sharing stations. The licensee of each
channel sharee station and channel
sharer station must file an application
for a license for the shared channel
using FCC Form 2100 Schedule B (for a
full power station) or F (for a Class A
station) within three months of the date
that the channel sharee station licensee
receives its incentive payment pursuant
to section 6403(a)(1) of the Spectrum
Act.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) * * *
(2) Upon termination of the license of
a party to a CSA, the spectrum usage
rights covered by that license may revert
to the remaining parties to the CSA.
Such reversion shall be governed by the
terms of the CSA in accordance with
paragraph (h)(5)(i)(E) of this section. If
upon termination of the license of a
party to a CSA only one party to the
CSA remains, the remaining licensee
may file an application to change its
license to non-shared status using FCC
Form 2100, Schedule B (for a full power
licensee) or F (for a Class A licensee).
(3) Channel sharing between full
power television and Class A television
stations. (i) A CSA may be executed
between licensees of full power
television stations, between licensees of
Class A television stations, and between
licensees of full power and Class A
television stations.
(ii) A Class A channel sharee station
licensee that is a party to a CSA with a
full power channel sharer station
licensee must comply with the rules of
part 73 governing power levels and
interference, and must comply in all
other respects with the rules and
policies applicable to Class A television
stations, as set forth in §§ 73.6000 et seq.
(iii) A full power channel sharee
station licensee that is a party to a CSA
with a Class A channel sharer station
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67343
licensee must comply with the rules of
part 74 of this chapter governing power
levels and interference.
(iv) A Class A channel sharee station
may qualify only for the cable carriage
rights afforded to ‘‘qualified low power
television stations’’ in § 76.56(b)(3) of
this chapter.
(4) Channel sharing between
commercial and noncommercial
educational television stations. (i) A
CSA may be executed between
commercial and NCE broadcast
television station licensees.
(ii) The licensee of an NCE station
operating on a reserved channel under
§ 73.621 that becomes a party to a CSA,
either as a channel sharee station or as
a channel sharer station, will retain its
NCE status and must continue to
comply with § 73.621.
(iii) If the licensee of an NCE station
operating on a reserved channel under
§ 73.621 becomes a party to a CSA,
either as a channel sharee station or as
a channel sharer station, the portion of
the shared television channel on which
the NCE station operates shall be
reserved for NCE-only use.
(iv) The licensee of an NCE station
operating on a reserved channel under
§ 73.621 that becomes a party to a CSA
may assign or transfer its shared license
only to an entity qualified under
§ 73.621 as an NCE television licensee.
(5) Required CSA provisions. (i) CSAs
must contain provisions outlining each
licensee’s rights and responsibilities
regarding:
(A) Access to facilities, including
whether each licensee will have
unrestrained access to the shared
transmission facilities;
(B) Allocation of bandwidth within
the shared channel;
(C) Operation, maintenance, repair,
and modification of facilities, including
a list of all relevant equipment, a
description of each party’s financial
obligations, and any relevant notice
provisions;
(D) Transfer/assignment of a shared
license, including the ability of a new
licensee to assume the existing CSA;
and
(E) Termination of the license of a
party to the CSA, including reversion of
spectrum usage rights to the remaining
parties to the CSA.
(ii) CSAs must include provisions:
(A) Affirming compliance with the
requirements in paragraph (h)(5) of this
section and all relevant Commission
rules and policies; and
(B) Requiring that each channel
sharing licensee shall retain spectrum
usage rights adequate to ensure a
sufficient amount of the shared channel
capacity to allow it to provide at least
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one Standard Definition (SD) program
stream at all times.
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2015–27738 Filed 10–30–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 73
[GN Docket No. 12–268 and MB Docket No.
15–137; FCC 15–139]
Channel Sharing by Full Power and
Class A Stations Outside the
Broadcast Television Spectrum
Incentive Auction Context
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: In this Second Order on
Reconsideration, the Federal
Communications Commission
(Commission) provides more flexibility
to broadcasters interested in the channel
sharing option in the broadcast
incentive auction by clarifying that
back-up channel sharing agreements
(‘‘CSAs’’) are permitted under its rules
and providing more time for successful
bidders to transition to shared facilities
after the auction. The Commission also
provides guidance regarding how the
CSA exception to the prohibited
communications rule applies with
respect to back-up CSAs.
DATES: Effective December 2, 2015.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Shaun Maher, Shaun.Maher@fcc.gov of
the Media Bureau, Video Division, (202)
418–2324.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a
summary of the Commission’s Second
Order on Reconsideration, FCC 15–139,
adopted October 21, 2015, in MB Docket
No. 15–137. The full text of the Second
Order on Reconsideration is available
for inspection and copying during
regular business hours in the FCC
Reference Center, 445 12th Street SW.,
Room CY–A257, Portals II, Washington,
DC 20554. This document is available in
alternative formats (computer diskette,
large print, audio record, and Braille).
Persons with disabilities who need
documents in these formats may contact
the FCC by email: FCC504@fcc.gov or
phone: 202–418–0530 or TTY: 202–418–
0432.
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
Analysis: This Second Order on
Reconsideration does not contain any
additional new or modified information
collection requirements subject to the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
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Jkt 238001
(‘‘PRA’’), Public Law 104–13, beyond
those that were already in the
Commission’s Incentive Auction Report
and Order, 79 FR 48442–01 (Aug. 15,
2014) (‘‘Incentive Auction R&O’’). In
addition, therefore, it does not contain
any additional new or modified
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, beyond those that
were already in the Incentive Auction
R&O.
The Commission is seeking separate
OMB approval for FCC Form 2100,
Schedule B (for a full power station) and
F (for a Class A station) and FCC Form
177.
Synopsis
1. The Commission adopted rules for
the broadcast incentive auction in the
Incentive Auction R&O including rules
for parties interested in entering into
CSAs. The Commission recently
modified those channel sharing rules to
provide greater flexibility to stations
considering that option. In this Second
Order on Reconsideration, the
Commission announces that the
availability of back-up channel sharing
arrangements would provide additional
flexibility for stations considering
channel sharing. In particular, it would
enable both parties to a CSA to
participate in the auction while
mitigating the risk that the auction
system could freeze both stations in the
same round and thus deprive both
stations of a post-auction host or
‘‘sharer’’ station. For some, the risk of
being left without any spectrum on
which to share may be too great and
foreclose that kind of participation. The
Commission concludes that a back-up
CSA could mitigate that risk and
encourage greater participation.
2. The Commission clarifies that, if
both parties to a CSA participate in the
auction, the rules allow either or both
parties to also enter into a back-up CSA
with one other station in the same DMA
to act as the back-up host or sharer
station. By allowing the parties to secure
a fallback arrangement in the event that
both parties relinquish their spectrum
usage rights in the auction, this
clarification will help promote wider
participation in the auction by
broadcasters that require assurance that
they will remain on the air in the DMA.
The Commission reminds parties that
all of their auction-related activity and
communications, including with respect
to back-up CSAs, must adhere to the
antitrust laws as well as the rules.
3. In the Second Order on
Reconsideration, the Commission rejects
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the Broadcaster Representatives’ request
to allow ‘‘contingent multi-party CSAs
across multiple markets.’’ The
Commission concludes that multimarket back-up CSAs are not necessary
to address the uncertainty created if
multiple parties to a particular CSA
participate in the auction. Such a result
would undermine the general goal of the
rules prohibiting certain
communications, which are intended to
reinforce existing antitrust laws,
facilitate the detection of collusive
conduct, and assure incentive auction
participants that the auction process
will be fair and objective. The
Commission restated that it crafted the
CSA exception to apply on an
agreement-by-agreement basis in order
to encourage channel sharing
relationships without undermining
these objectives.
4. The Commission also clarifies that,
consistent with the foregoing, the CSA
exception to the reverse auction rule
prohibiting certain communications
applies only to communications
between parties to a single CSA at any
given time. Further, the CSA exception
only applies to a CSA, including backup CSAs, if the CSA was entered into
and filed with the Commission by the
application deadline. If both stations
pursuant to the primary CSA have a
bidding status of ‘‘frozen—provisional
winner,’’ i.e., the auction system
determines that the station can never be
assigned a feasible channel in its preauction band in the current stage, then
parties to a back-up CSA may
communicate regarding bids and
bidding strategy and must cease
communication of this type with the
party to the original CSA. Prior to that
point, the rationale for the CSA
exception—that parties to a CSA should
be able to ‘‘fully engage as various
options are presented during the auction
process’’—is inapplicable with respect
to the back-up CSA. Once the
relinquishment bid of the prospective
host of the CSA is provisionally
accepted by the auction system in a
given stage of the auction, the CSA
exception may be utilized for otherwise
prohibited communications involving
the parties to the back-up agreement,
and can no longer be utilized for parties
to the primary agreement in that stage.
5. The Commission notes that under
the reverse auction bidding procedures,
the bidding status of a ‘‘frozen—
provisional winner’’ may change to
‘‘bidding in the current round’’ if the
auction enters a subsequent stage.
Accordingly, if the host in the primary
CSA, which was no longer operative
because its bidding status became
‘‘frozen—provisional winner’’ in the
E:\FR\FM\02NOR1.SGM
02NOR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 211 (Monday, November 2, 2015)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 67337-67344]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-27738]
[[Page 67337]]
=======================================================================
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FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
47 CFR Parts 1 and 73
[GN Docket No. 12-268; MB Docket No. 15-137; FCC 15-67]
Expanding the Economic and Innovation Opportunities of Spectrum
Through Incentive Auctions; Channel Sharing by Full Power and Class A
Stations Outside the Broadcast Television Spectrum Incentive Auction
Context
AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In this document, the Commission refines the rules it adopted
in the Incentive Auction Report and Order and the preceding Channel
Sharing Report and Order to provide greater flexibility and certainty
regarding channel sharing agreements (``CSAs''). Among other things, we
modify our rules to allow broadcasters that relinquish rights in the
incentive auction in order to channel share to enter into CSAs after
the auction and, whether they enter into CSAs before or after the
auction, to determine the length of their agreements.
DATES: Effective December 2, 2015, except for Sec. Sec. 1.2204(c)(4)
and 73.3700(b)(1), which contain new or modified information collection
requirements that require approval by OMB under the PRA and will become
effective after the Commission publishes a notice in the Federal
Register announcing such approval and the relevant effective date.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kim Matthews, Media Bureau, Policy
Division, 202-418-2154, or email at kim.matthews@fcc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Commission's First
Order on Reconsideration, FCC 15-67, adopted on June 11, 2015 and
released on June 12, 2015. The full text of this document is available
for public inspection and copying during regular business hours in the
FCC Reference Center, Federal Communications Commission, 445 12th
Street SW., Room CY-A257, Washington, DC 20554. The complete text may
be purchased from the Commission's copy contractor, 445 12th Street
SW., Room CY-B402, Washington, DC 20554. This document will also be
available via ECFS at https://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/ecfs/. Documents will be
available electronically in ASCII, Microsoft Word, and/or Adobe
Acrobat. Alternative formats are available for people with disabilities
(Braille, large print, electronic files, audio format) by sending an
email to fcc504@fcc.gov or calling the Commission's Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau at (202) 418-0530 (voice), (202) 418-0432
(TTY).
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 Analysis
The First Order on Reconsideration contains new or modified
information collection requirements subject to the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (``PRA''), Public Law 104-13. It will be submitted to the
Office of Management and Budget (``OMB'') for review under section
3507(d) of the PRA. The Commission, as part of its continuing effort to
reduce paperwork burdens, will invite the general public to comment on
the information collection requirements contained in this First Order
on Reconsideration as required by the PRA in a separate published
Federal Register notice.
In addition, the Commission notes that pursuant to the Small
Business Paperwork Relief Act of 2002, Public Law 107-198, see 44
U.S.C. 3506(c)(4), we previously sought specific comment on how the
Commission might further reduce the information collection burden for
small business concerns with fewer than 25 employees. We have assessed
the effects of the policies adopted in this First Order on
Reconsideration with regard to information collection burdens on small
business concerns, and find that these policies will benefit many
companies with fewer than 25 employees by providing them with options
for voluntarily relinquishing broadcast spectrum usage rights and by
streamlining the pre-auction application process. In addition, we have
described impacts that might affect small businesses, which includes
most businesses with fewer than 25 employees, in the Supplemental FRFA.
Synopsis of the First Order on Reconsideration
I. Introduction
1. Broadcasters will have the unique financial opportunity in the
broadcast television spectrum incentive auction to voluntarily return
some or all of their licensed spectrum usage rights in exchange for
incentive payments. One of broadcasters' bid options will be to
relinquish rights in order to share a channel with another licensee.
The Commission established rules governing channel sharing agreements
(``CSAs'') in the Incentive Auction Report & Order, 79 FR 48442 (August
15, 2014) (``IA R&O'') and the preceding Channel Sharing Report &
Order, 77 FR 30423 (May 23, 2012) (``Channel Sharing R&O''). In this
First Order on Reconsideration, we refine those rules to provide
greater flexibility and certainty regarding CSAs. Among other things,
we modify our rules to allow broadcasters that relinquish rights in the
incentive auction in order to channel share to enter into CSAs after
the auction and, whether they enter into CSAs before or after the
auction, to determine the length of their agreements. In the companion
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (``NPRM''), 80 FR 40957, July 14, 2015,
we tentatively conclude that we should authorize channel sharing by
full power and Class A stations outside the incentive auction context,
including ``second generation'' agreements in which one or both
entities were parties to an auction-related CSA whose term has expired
or that has otherwise been terminated. By providing greater flexibility
and certainty regarding CSAs, our objective is to encourage voluntary
participation by broadcasters in the incentive auction.
II. Background
2. Congress authorized the Commission to conduct the incentive
auction to help meet the Nation's growing spectrum needs. Section
1452(a)(2) of the Spectrum Act provides for three bid options that will
be available to eligible full power and Class A broadcast television
licensees in the auction, including relinquishment of ``usage rights in
order to share a television channel with another licensee'' (``channel
sharing bid''). Section 1452(a)(4) provides that a licensee that
voluntarily relinquishes usage rights in order to channel share and
that possessed carriage rights on November 30, 2010 ``shall have, at
its shared location, the carriage rights . . . that would apply to such
station at such location if it were not sharing a channel.'' In the
Channel Sharing R&O, the Commission established rules authorizing
channel sharing in connection with the incentive auction.
3. The Commission addressed a variety of further issues related to
channel sharing in the IA R&O. The Commission concluded that applicants
that participate in the auction in order to share a channel must
provide information concerning their Channel Sharing Agreements
(``CSAs'') prior to the auction, as part of their pre-auction
applications, and must submit a copy of the executed CSA with their
applications. With respect to licensing, the Commission determined
that, following the auction, a licensee that
[[Page 67338]]
enters into a CSA as the result of a winning reverse auction bid will
be issued a new license indicating the station's ``shared'' status and
specifying the station's designated shared operating frequency. The
Commission also decided that shared channels will be designated
permanently as shared in the Table of Allotments, absent a future
rulemaking proceeding to redesignate the channel for non-shared use.
4. The Expanding Opportunities for Broadcasters Coalition
(``EOBC'') filed a Petition for Reconsideration of our channel sharing
decisions in the IA R&O, urging the Commission to ``(1) clarify that
parties to broadcast CSAs are free to negotiate for common contractual
rights; (2) permit broadcasters to enter into CSAs either before or
after the incentive auction; (3) ensure that parties to CSAs have the
flexibility to choose whether those agreements are permanent or for a
fixed term; and (4) clarify that the Commission will never force a
broadcaster to accept a channel sharing partner.''
5. The National Cable & Telecommunications Association (``NCTA'')
filed an opposition arguing that extending carriage rights to
broadcasters that enter into post-auction CSAs would contravene the
Spectrum Act. NCTA argues that this would cause uncertainty in the
post-auction broadcaster transition process; confer greater cable
carriage rights than Congress intended; lead to customer confusion; and
might leave MVPDs unreimbursed. CTIA supports all of EOBC's requests,
as do Fox, Ion Media, Tribune, and Univision.
III. First Order on Reconsideration
6. We grant the EOBC Petition, with the exceptions noted below. In
addition to addressing each of EOBC's above-stated requests for
reconsideration below, we modify and clarify the pre- and post-auction
CSA filing requirements that apply before and after the auction and
address the scope of CSA review by Commission staff.
A. Negotiating for Common Contractual Rights
7. In the IA R&O, we noted that channel sharing agreements for
contingent rights must not violate the reversionary interest rule,
which precludes a seller from retaining an interest in the license it
sells, and prohibits a licensee from granting a third party an
automatic reversionary interest, such as a security interest, in its
license.
8. EOBC asks the Commission to clarify that the act of entering
into a CSA, in and of itself, does not trigger the reversionary
interest rule and that parties to CSAs may bargain for common
contractual rights consistent with existing Commission rules and
policies. We received no opposition to EOBC's request. In its
``Opposition and Reply,'' CTIA joins and supports all of EOBC's
reconsideration requests regarding channel sharing. Fox, Ion Media,
Tribune, and Univision, who filed a reply comment in response to the
Incentive Auction Comment PN, agree with this position.
9. We grant EOBC's request. We clarify that parties to a CSA may
grant each other options, puts, calls, rights of first refusal, and
other common contingent interests, subject to all applicable Commission
rules and policies, including the media ownership rules, without
committing a per se violation of the reversionary interest rule. The
reversionary interest rule does not necessarily apply to a CSA, because
a CSA does not involve the transfer of a license from one sharing
partner to another. In addition, CSA provisions for contingent
interests in the licenses involved in a CSA would not violate the
reversionary interest rule absent grant of a prohibited security
interest. We recognize that contracting for these common contingent
rights will enable sharing parties to eliminate some of the uncertainty
regarding the identity of their sharing partners in the event that one
sharing party decides to sell its license. Moreover, we share EOBC's
concern that, without the ability to bargain for these rights,
broadcasters may not avail themselves of this bid option in the
auction.
B. Flexibility To Enter Into CSAs After the Incentive Auction
10. Under the rules adopted in the IA R&O, a reverse auction bidder
interested in channel sharing must submit an executed copy of the CSA
with its pre-auction application, as well as certifications under
penalty of perjury that it can meet its community of license
requirements from the proposed sharer's site (or that it has identified
a new community of license that meets the same, or a higher, allotment
priority as its current community; or the next highest priority if no
community meets the same or higher priority); that the CSA is
consistent with all relevant Commission rules and policies; and that
the applicant accepts any risk that the implementation of the CSA may
not be feasible for any reason.
11. EOBC requests that the Commission modify its rules to allow a
winning license relinquishment bidder to execute a CSA after bidding in
the auction is complete. Fox, Ion Media, Tribune, and Univision, who
filed a reply comment in response to the Incentive Auction Comment PN,
agree with this position. EOBC argues that the carriage rights of
parties to such post-auction CSAs would be protected under the Spectrum
Act. CTIA agrees. NCTA, however, asserts that grant of EOBC's request
would (1) introduce additional uncertainty into the post-auction
transition process; (2) confer greater cable carriage rights than
Congress intended; (3) lead to customer confusion; and (4) risk leaving
cable operators unreimbursed for mandatory carriage of sharee stations.
12. We grant EOBC's request, subject to the conditions set forth
herein. Specifically, we modify our rules to allow winning bidders that
relinquish their spectrum usage rights to enter into CSAs after the
completion of the incentive auction, provided that they (1) indicate in
their pre-auction applications that they have a present intent to find
a channel sharing partner after the auction, and (2) execute and
implement their CSAs by the date on which they would otherwise be
required to relinquish their licenses. Parties to post-auction CSAs
will be entitled to the same carriage rights as parties to pre-auction
CSAs. We emphasize, however, that the exception to the rule prohibiting
certain communications before and during the incentive auction will
apply only to parties to pre-auction CSAs.
13. Subject to these conditions, we agree with EOBC that pre- and
post-auction CSAs are the same for purposes of the Spectrum Act. We
also agree with EOBC that providing this flexibility will encourage
broadcasters to consider the channel sharing bid option by enabling
them to participate in the auction even if they do not find a channel
sharing partner before the auction begins. Indeed, as EOBC notes,
parties may be able to negotiate CSAs more readily after the auction is
complete, when fewer variables remain unknown. This action also may
help to preserve independent voices by enabling licensees to continue
broadcasting after they voluntarily relinquish rights in the incentive
auction. As stated above, broadcasters that do not submit executed CSAs
with their pre-auction applications will be ineligible for the
exception to the prohibited communications rule. Accordingly, there
will be no need for the staff to review a CSA prior to the auction to
verify that the applicant qualifies for the exception.
14. In order to enter into a post-auction CSA, we will require that
a license relinquishment bidder indicate
[[Page 67339]]
in its pre-auction application its present intent to find a channel
sharing partner after the auction. As we noted in the Channel Sharing
R&O, ``the Spectrum Act does not set a date restriction on the
execution of channel sharing arrangements.'' It guarantees carriage
rights, however, only for ``a licensee that voluntarily relinquishes
rights in order to channel share.'' To fall within the scope of this
guarantee, we conclude that a licensee availing itself of the
flexibility we provide here must express a present intent to channel
share in its pre-auction application. We recognize that a successful
bidder's interest in a post-auction CSA may depend on the outcome of
the auction, and that its ability to execute a CSA with a sharing
partner will not be entirely within its control. A successful bidder's
expression of present intent, therefore, will not bind it to seek out a
channel sharing partner or enter into a post-auction CSA.
15. In addition, post-auction CSAs must be executed and implemented
(i.e., operations commenced on the shared channel) by the date on which
the channel sharee otherwise would be required to relinquish its
license. Pursuant to the IA R&O, a winning license relinquishment
bidder must cease operations within three months after receiving its
share of auction proceeds. We conclude that a post-auction CSA must be
executed and implemented by the license relinquishment deadline. In
this regard, we disagree with EOBC that licensees should have up to
twelve months after that relinquishment deadline to enter into a CSA.
EOBC's reliance on section 312(g) of the Communications Act, which
provides that a broadcast license automatically expires if the station
fails to broadcast for a consecutive 12-month period, is misplaced: A
broadcaster holds a license during the statutory 12-month period,
whereas a winning license relinquishment bidder will no longer hold a
license after the license relinquishment deadline.
16. This requirement addresses NCTA's concern that allowing auction
participants to enter into post-auction CSAs would introduce additional
uncertainty into the post-auction transition process. As NCTA notes,
``[u]nder the current rules, sharing stations must notify the
Commission of their intent to share prior to the auction and must file
their application for license for the shared channel within three
months after receiving auction proceeds.'' Under our ruling here,
sharee stations likewise will have to execute and implement their post-
auction CSAs by the time they have to relinquish their licenses, and
thus they will be on the same notification timeline as those stations
that entered into pre-auction CSAs. We believe that this timeframe also
will provide adequate time for parties to post-auction CSAs to comply
with the consumer and MVPD notice requirements laid out in the IA R&O.
17. Finally, we find that the reimbursement process set out in the
IA R&O, coupled with the requirements we adopt herein, will enable
MVPDs to obtain reimbursement for their reasonable costs associated
with mandatory carriage of stations that enter into post-auction CSAs.
NCTA argues that, if CSAs are not ``in sync'' with the deadline for
submitting reimbursement estimates, MVPDs might not have notice of a
carriage obligation by the deadline, impacting their ability to recover
reasonable expenses related to carrying the sharee stations from their
new locations. We direct the Media Bureau, in the Channel Reassignment
PN to be released following the completion of the incentive auction, to
identify those winning bidders that are eligible to channel share,
either because they submitted an executed pre-auction CSA or expressed
a present intent to enter into a post-auction CSA. Accordingly, the
Channel Reassignment PN will provide MVPDs with notice of the identity
of successful bidders who have executed pre-auction CSAs, as well as
those who may enter post-auction CSAs, prior to the deadline for
submitting estimated reimbursement costs, enabling MVPDs to account for
these potential costs in their initial cost estimates. In addition, if
necessary, MVPDs may update their estimates after the initial three-
month deadline if necessary in order to account for post-auction CSAs.
C. Term-Limited Channel Sharing Agreements
18. Under the rules adopted in the IA R&O, CSAs are permanent in
nature: CSAs may be amended, and rights under a CSA may be assigned or
transferred subject to Commission approval, but ``shared channels
permanently will be designated as shared in the Table of Allotments,
absent a future rulemaking proceeding to redesignate the channel for
non-shared use,'' and ``CSAs may not contain any provision that would
seek to dissolve or modify the shared nature of the channel[.]'' EOBC
argues that we should ``permit broadcasters to choose the length of
their agreements.'' ``Once an agreement is terminated,'' suggests EOBC,
``the host or sharer station could either find another channel sharing
partner or notify the agency that it is no longer a shared station and
that its license should be modified accordingly. The host station would
then have the right to utilize the full capacity of its 6 MHz channel.
The sharee station(s), meanwhile, could either relinquish their
licenses or find a new partner, subject to the one-year time limit to
resume transmissions under section 312(g) of the Communications Act.''
CTIA supports this approach, as do Fox, Ion Media, Tribune, and
Univision. EOBC further argues that we should authorize ``second
generation'' CSAs subject to the same rights and restrictions as CSAs
entered into in connection with the incentive auction.
19. We modify our rules to provide flexibility for broadcasters to
determine the length of their CSAs. Specifically, we will permit
broadcasters to choose the length of their channel sharing agreements.
We agree that allowing term-limited CSAs will encourage channel sharing
bids in the incentive auction by allowing parties to end the channel
sharing relationship if they choose while still having the opportunity
to continue operating. We also agree with EOBC that providing such
flexibility is appropriate to meet broadcasters' individualized
programming and economic needs. Consistent with our decision, as
discussed below, we will not permanently designate channels as
``shared'' in the Table of Allotments. Instead, a channel's shared
status will be indicated on a sharing station's license.
20. However, our decision to allow term-limited CSAs raises the
question of whether to authorize CSAs by full power and Class A
stations outside the incentive auction context. In the companion Notice
of Proposed Rulemaking, we tentatively conclude that we should allow
future CSAs outside the incentive auction context, and we invite
comment on issues attendant to that proposal.
D. Termination of a Sharing Station's Spectrum Usage Rights
21. Under the rules adopted in the IA R&O, if a channel sharing
station's license is terminated due to voluntary relinquishment,
revocation, failure to renew, or any other circumstance, the remaining
channel sharing station or stations will continue to have rights to
their portion(s) of the shared channel, and the rights to the
terminated portion of the shared channel will revert to the Commission
for reassignment. The Commission further stated that shared channels
``permanently will be designated as shared in the Table of
[[Page 67340]]
Allotments, absent a future rulemaking proceeding to redesignate the
channel for non-shared use.''
22. EOBC argues that ``[e]ven the possibility that the FCC could
appoint a successor sharing partner will be troublesome to most
broadcasters considering the channel sharing option.'' Instead, EOBC
argues that channel sharing parties should have ``the option to reclaim
the spectrum rights (but not the licenses) previously held by the
departing party . . . Thus, if a sharee station relinquishes its
spectrum, the host station could either find a new channel sharing
partner . . . or resume use of the full six megahertz channel. If the
host station relinquishes its spectrum, meanwhile, the sharee
station(s) would have the option to assume the previously shared
channel, subject to the technical parameters of the existing
allotment.'' CTIA agrees that, if a sharing station relinquishes its
license, then the right to use the relinquished portion of the shared
spectrum should return to the remaining sharing partner(s). Similarly,
Fox, Ion Media, Tribute, and Univision agree that ``upon expiration or
termination of a CSA sharing stations should have the flexibility
either to utilize the full capacity of their shared channel or to enter
into a channel sharing arrangement with a new partner (or partners).''
No parties opposed this request.
23. We grant EOBC's request, and modify our rules to allow parties
to develop CSA terms that address what happens in the event that a
sharing party's license is terminated for any reason, rather than
providing that the terminated spectrum usage rights revert to the
Commission for reassignment. Our decisions here do not affect the right
of a channel sharing party to assign or transfer its license consistent
with the IA R&O.
24. We agree with EOBC that, as business partners, channel sharers
should ``have the ability to choose partners that satisfy their own
criteria.'' The Commission will not select a sharing partner. To
accommodate this flexibility, we will not permanently designate
channels as ``shared'' in the Table of Allotments, and a channel's
shared status will be indicated on the station license. In the event
that a sharing partner relinquishes its license, its spectrum usage
rights (but not its license) may revert to the remaining sharing
partners if the partners so agree. Where only one sharing partner
remains, it may apply to change its license to non-shared status using
FCC Form 2100 Schedule B (formerly FCC Form 302) or F (formerly FCC
Form 302-CA). If a full power station that is sharing with a Class A
station relinquishes its license, then the Class A station would
continue to operate under the rules governing Class A stations.
E. Commission Review of CSAs and Licensing of Channel Sharees
25. In order to provide additional certainty to broadcasters
interested in the channel sharing bid option, and in light of our
decision to allow post-auction CSAs, we modify and clarify our
procedures for submission and review of both pre-auction and post-
auction CSAs. At the outset, we emphasize that we will not question
parties' business judgment in drafting CSAs.
26. If a licensee submits an executed CSA before the auction along
with its auction application, we will accept for purposes of
determining eligibility to participate the applicant's certification
that the CSA complies with our channel sharing operating rules. We will
not review the CSA itself at the pre-auction stage for compliance with
our operating rules. We will review the CSA at the pre-auction stage
solely to confirm that the parties qualify for the channel sharing
exception to the rule prohibiting certain communication adopted in the
IA R&O.
27. Post-auction, we will review CSAs submitted before or after the
auction by successful bidders to determine whether the CSAs meet the
requirements the Commission has adopted to ensure compliance with our
CSA operating rules and policies. Although in the IA R&O we reserved
the right to review the CSA and require modification of any CSAs that
do not comply with our CSA operating rules and policies, we clarify
that such review will occur after the auction. To allow time for such
review, we modify our rules to require that, at least 60 days prior to
the date by which it must implement the CSA, the channel sharee file a
minor change application for a construction permit specifying the same
technical facilities as the sharer station, and include a copy of the
CSA with its application. This requirement will be the same regardless
of whether the parties execute their CSA before or after the auction.
Following grant of the construction permit and initiation of shared
operations, both the sharee and sharer must file a license application.
We emphasize again that the Commission does not involve itself in
private contractual agreements, and we do not intend during our review
of the CSA to substitute our judgment for that of the parties with
respect to the terms of the agreement. Thus, we will limit our post-
auction review to confirming that the CSA contains the required
provisions and that any terms beyond those related to sharing of
bitstream and related technical facilities comport with our general
rules and policies regarding licensee agreements. We also reiterate
that any application for a construction permit or modified license
filed in accordance with the requirements established here or in the IA
R&O will not trigger the filing of competing applications.
F. Exception to Prohibited Communications for Parties to CSAs
28. Under the rules adopted in the IA R&O, all parties to a CSA
submitted with a reverse auction application may communicate with each
other about their bids and bidding strategies. The Commission adopted
this exception to the rule generally prohibiting such communications in
order to encourage channel sharing relationships, allowing potential
channel sharers to fully engage as various options are presented during
the auction process. In light of the risk of agreements to reduce
competition in response to auction conditions, however, the exception
is limited to CSAs executed prior to the reverse auction application
filing deadline and submitted with the reverse auction application. We
note that a CSA may have more than two parties (if, for instance, three
stations propose to share the same channel), and all parties to a pre-
auction CSA may communicate during the auction. Commenters have
proposed that we also allow stations to enter into multiple contingent
CSAs. We will address this issue in a forthcoming decision.
IV. Procedural Matters
A. Supplemental Final Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
29. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as
amended (``RFA''), an Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
(``IRFA'') was incorporated in the Notice of Proposed Rule Making
(``Notice''). The Commission sought written public comment on the
proposals in the Notice, including comment on the IRFA. The Commission
subsequently incorporated a Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
(``FRFA'') in the Report and Order. This Supplemental FRFA conforms to
the RFA and incorporates by reference the FRFA in the IA R&O. It
reflects changes to the Commission's rules arising from the First Order
on Reconsideration prepared in response to the Petition for
Reconsideration filed by the Expanding Opportunities for Broadcasters
Coalition (``EOBC'').
[[Page 67341]]
30. This First Order on Reconsideration affirms the Commission's
commitment to making the channel sharing reverse auction bid option
attractive to television broadcasters. In the Channel Sharing R&O, the
Commission established rules authorizing channel sharing in connection
with the incentive auction. The Commission addressed a variety of
further issues related to channel sharing in the IA R&O in order to
complete the framework for incentive auction-related channel sharing.
In this First Order on Reconsideration, the Commission generally grants
the EOBC Petition, finding that modifying its original determination
will increase broadcasters' flexibility to use the channel sharing bid
option, will make the option more attractive and will provide an
improved ability of the Commission to monitor compliance of CSAs with
our rules.
31. Specifically, in the First Order on Reconsideration, the
Commission grants in part the EOBC petition for reconsideration by:
Clarifying that the reversionary interest rule does not apply to CSAs;
allowing parties the flexibility to enter into term-limited CSAs and to
execute a CSAs post-auction; and modifying the rules to allow the
spectrum usage rights of a sharing party whose license is terminated to
revert to the remaining sharing parties rather than having the rights
revert to the Commission for reassignment. The Order also clarifies
that at the pre- auction stage Commission staff will only review CSAs
to determine whether the bidder qualifies for the anti-collusion rule
exception. To allow review for compliance with Commission rules, the
Order requires that a channel sharee file a construction permit
application, including a copy of the CSA, after the auction. Most
notably, the flexibility granted herein will make it easier for
entities such as small businesses and non-commercial education stations
to avail themselves of the opportunity to channel share as part of the
incentive auction.
32. No commenters directly responded to the IRFA in the Notice.
Because a number of commenters raised concerns about the impact on
small businesses of various auction design issues, the FRFA in the IA
R&O addressed those concerns. The EOBC Petition addressed herein, and
associated pleadings, did not raise any concerns with the FRFA.
33. Pursuant to the Small Business Jobs Act of 2010, the Commission
is required to respond to any comments filed by the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy of the Small Business Administration (SBA), and to provide a
detailed statement of any change made to the proposed rules as a result
of those comments. The Chief Counsel did not file any comments in
response to the rules adopted in this proceeding.
34. The RFA directs the Commission to provide a description of and,
where feasible, an estimate of the number of small entities that will
be affected by the adopted rules, if adopted. The RFA generally defines
the term ``small entity'' as having the same meaning as the terms
``small business,'' small organization,'' and ``small government
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.
35. As noted, we incorporated a FRFA into the IA R&O. In that
analysis, the Commission described in detail the various small business
entities that may be affected by the final rules, including television
broadcast entities. This First Order on Reconsideration amends the
final rules adopted in the IA R&O affecting television broadcasting.
This Supplemental FRFA incorporates by reference the description and
estimate of the number of television broadcasting small entities from
the IRFA in the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking accompanying this First
Order on Reconsideration.
36. In section D of the FRFA incorporated into the IA R&O, the
Commission described in detail the projected recording, recordkeeping,
reporting and other compliance requirements for small entities arising
from the rules adopted in the IA R&O. This Supplemental FRFA
incorporates by reference the requirements described in section D of
the FRFA. In this First Order on Reconsideration, however, the
Commission adds and modifies rules adopted in the IA R&O. It adds the
requirement that in order to take advantage of the flexibility adopted
in this First Order on Reconsideration to enter into a channel sharing
agreement post-auction, a license relinquishment bidder must indicate
its intent to enter a post auction channel sharing agreement on its
pre-auction application. The First Order on Reconsideration also
requires channel sharee stations to file an application for
construction permit, including a copy of the executed channel sharing
agreement. Commercial stations must pay the fee associated with this
filing. (Non-commercial entities are fee exempt.) In addition, it
require CSAs to include a provision regarding the reversion of spectrum
usage rights to remaining channel sharing partners in the event that
one party has its license terminated. Finally, to take advantage of the
new rule allowing the last remaining licensee to a channel sharing
agreement to have its license revert to non-shared status, that last
remaining licensee must file a license application requesting this
reversion.
37. The RFA requires an agency to describe any significant
alternatives that it has considered in developing its approach, which
may include the following four alternatives (among others): ``(1) The
establishment of differing compliance or reporting requirements or
timetables that take into account the resources available to small
entities; (2) the clarification, consolidation, or simplification of
compliance and reporting requirements under the rule for such small
entities; (3) the use of performance rather than design standards; and
(4) an exemption from coverage of the rule, or any part thereof, for
such small entities.''
38. The reporting, recordkeeping, and other compliance requirements
resulting from the First Order on Reconsideration will apply to all
entities in the same manner. The Commission believes that applying the
same rules equally to all entities in this context promotes fairness.
The Commission does not believe that the costs and/or administrative
burdens associated with the rules, including the payment of a
construction permit filing fee by commercial broadcasters who are
reverse auction winners and who will channel share, will unduly burden
small entities. (Non-commercial broadcasters are exempt from such
filing fees.) The construction permit itself will contain the same
information included in the construction permit and license information
of the channel sharer station and therefore can be copied without
additional engineering work. The submission of the executed channel
sharing agreement does not add cost as the rules already require
execution of a channel sharing agreement between sharing parties.
39. While these new rules require additional filings for those
reverse auction winning bidders that channel share, they give bidders,
including broadcast television entities meeting the definition of small
businesses, the increased flexibility to enter into post auction CSAs,
to limit the term of their CSAs rather than make them permanent, and to
request reversion of spectrum usage rights in the event of the
termination of the license of a
[[Page 67342]]
broadcaster with whom they share spectrum. Lastly, the requirement that
a channel sharee file a construction permit including a copy of the
channel sharing agreement will streamline the pre-auction application
process.
Federal Rules That Might Duplicate, Overlap, or Conflict With the Rules
40. None.
Report to Congress
41. The Commission will send a copy of this First Order on
Reconsideration in a report to be sent to Congress and the Government
Accountability Office pursuant to the Congressional Review Act, see 5
U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
Report to Small Business Administration
42. The Commission will send a copy of this First Order on
Reconsideration, including this Supplemental FRFA, to the Chief Counsel
for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration.
B. Final Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis
43. This document contains new or modified information collection
requirements subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (``PRA''),
Public Law 104-13. It will be submitted to the Office of Management and
Budget (``OMB'') for review under section 3507(d) of the PRA. OMB, the
general public, and other Federal agencies will be invited to comment
on the new or modified information collection requirements contained in
this proceeding in a separate published Federal Register notice. In
addition, we note that pursuant to the Small Business Paperwork Relief
Act of 2002, Public Law 107-198, see 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(4), we
previously sought specific comment on how the Commission might further
reduce the information collection burden for small business concerns
with fewer than 25 employees.
44. We have assessed the effects of the policies adopted in this
First Order on Reconsideration with regard to information collection
burdens on small business concerns, and find that these policies will
benefit many companies with fewer than 25 employees by providing them
with options for voluntarily relinquishing broadcast spectrum usage
rights and by streamlining the pre-auction application process. In
addition, we have described impacts that might affect small businesses,
which includes most businesses with fewer than 25 employees, in the
Supplemental FRFA in Appendix B.
V. Ordering Clauses
45. Accordingly, IT IS ORDERED that, pursuant to the authority
contained in sections 1, 4, 301, 303, 307, 308, 309, 310, 316, 319, and
405 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, and sections 6402
and 6403 of Middle Class Tax Relief and Job Creation Act of 2012, Pub.
L. 112-96, 126 Stat. 156, 47 U.S.C. 151, 154, 301, 303, 307, 308, 309,
310, 316, 319, 405, 1404, and 1452, this FIRST ORDER ON RECONSIDERATION
is ADOPTED and parts 1 and 73 of Commission's rules are AMENDED as set
forth in the Appendix A of the First Order on Reconsideration.
46. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the rules adopted herein will become
effective December 2, 2015, except for sections 1.2204(c)(4) and
73.3700(b)(1), which contain new or modified information collection
requirements that require approval by the OMB under the PRA and WILL
BECOME EFFECTIVE after the Commission publishes a notice in the Federal
Register announcing such approval and the relevant effective date.
47. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that, that pursuant to sections 4(i), and
405 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 154(i) and
405, and section 1.429 of the Commission's rules, 47 CFR 1.429, the
Petition for Reconsideration filed by the Expanding Opportunities for
Broadcasters Coalition IS HEREBY GRANTED IN PART AND IS OTHERWISE
DISMISSED AS MOOT.
48. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Commission's Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau, Reference Information Center, SHALL SEND a
copy of this First Order on Reconsideration, including the Supplemental
Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, to the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy of the Small Business Administration.
49. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Commission SHALL SEND a copy of
this First Order on Reconsideration in a report to be sent to Congress
and the Government Accountability Office pursuant to the Congressional
Review Act, see 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
List of Subjects
47 CFR Part 1
Administrative practice and procedure, Television.
47 CFR Part 73
Television, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Federal Communications Commission.
Gloria J. Miles,
Federal Register Liaison.
Final Rules
For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Federal
Communications Commission amends Parts 1 and 73 of Title 47 of the Code
of Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 1--PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE
0
1. The authority citation for part 1 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 79, et seq.; 47 U.S.C. 151, 154(i), 154(j),
155, 157, 160, 201, 225, 227, 303, 309, 332, 1403, 1404, 1451, 1452,
and 1455.
0
2. Section 1.2200 is amended by revising paragraph (d) to read as
follows:
Sec. 1.2200 Definitions.
* * * * *
(d) Channel sharing bid. The term channel sharing bid means a bid
to relinquish all spectrum usage rights with respect to a particular
television channel in order to share a television channel with another
broadcast television licensee by an applicant that submits an executed
channel sharing agreement with its application.
* * * * *
0
3. Section 1.2204 is amended by redesignating paragraphs (c)(4)(i)
through (iii) as (c)(4)(ii) through (iv), and adding new paragraph
(c)(4)(i) to read as follows:
Sec. 1.2204 Applications to participate in competitive bidding.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(4) * * *
(i) Whether it intends to enter into a channel sharing agreement if
it becomes a winning bidder;
* * * * *
PART 73--RADIO BROADCAST SERVICES
0
4. The authority citation for part 73 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 303, 334, 336, and 339.
0
5. Section 73.3700 is amended by revising paragraph (a)(3); revising
paragraph (b)(1)(i); adding paragraph (b)(1)(vii); revising paragraphs
(b)(2)(i) introductory text, (b)(2)(ii), and (b)(3); and revising
paragraphs (h)(2) through (5) to read as follows:
[[Page 67343]]
Sec. 73.3700 Post-incentive auction licensing and operation.
(a) * * *
(3) Channel sharee station. For purposes of this section, channel
sharee station means a broadcast television station for which a winning
channel sharing bid, as defined in Sec. 1.2200(d) of this chapter, was
submitted, or a broadcast television station for which a winning
license relinquishment bid, as defined in Sec. 1.2200(g) of this
chapter, was submitted where the station licensee executes and
implements a post-auction channel sharing agreement.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) Licensees of reassigned stations, UHF-to-VHF stations, and
High-VHF-to-Low-VHF stations must file a minor change application for a
construction permit for the channel specified in the Channel
Reassignment Public Notice using FCC Form 2100 Schedule A (for a full
power station) or E (for a Class A station) within three months of the
release date of the Channel Reassignment Public Notice. Licensees that
are unable to meet this filing deadline may request a waiver of the
deadline no later than 30 days prior to the deadline.
* * * * *
(vii) Channel sharee stations must file a minor change application
for a construction permit for the channel on which the channel sharer
operates at least sixty (60) days prior to the date by which it must
terminate operations on its pre-auction channel pursuant to paragraphs
(b)(4)(i) and (ii) of this section. The application must include a copy
of the executed channel sharing agreement.
* * * * *
(2) * * *
(i) Alternate channels. The licensee of a reassigned station, a
UHF-to-VHF station, or a High-VHF-to-Low-VHF station, or a broadcast
television station described in paragraph (b)(1)(iv)(B) of this section
will be permitted to file a major change application for a construction
permit for an alternate channel on FCC Form 2100 Schedules A (for a
full power station) and E (for a Class A station) during a filing
window to be announced by the Media Bureau by public notice, provided
that:
* * * * *
(ii) Expanded facilities. The licensee of a reassigned station, a
UHF-to-VHF station, or a High-VHF-to-Low-VHF station, or a broadcast
television station described in paragraph (b)(1)(iv)(B) of this section
will be permitted to file a minor change application for a construction
permit on FCC Form 2100 Schedules A (for a full power station) and E
(for a Class A station) during a filing window to be announced by the
Media Bureau by public notice, in order to request a change in the
technical parameters specified in the Channel Reassignment Public
Notice (or, in the case of a broadcast television station described in
paragraph (b)(1)(iv)(B) of this section that is not reassigned to a new
channel, a change in its authorized technical parameters) with respect
to height above average terrain (HAAT), effective radiated power (ERP),
or transmitter location that would be considered a minor change under
Sec. 73.3572(a)(1) and (2) or Sec. 74.787(b) of this chapter.
* * * * *
(3) License applications for channel sharing stations. The licensee
of each channel sharee station and channel sharer station must file an
application for a license for the shared channel using FCC Form 2100
Schedule B (for a full power station) or F (for a Class A station)
within three months of the date that the channel sharee station
licensee receives its incentive payment pursuant to section 6403(a)(1)
of the Spectrum Act.
* * * * *
(h) * * *
(2) Upon termination of the license of a party to a CSA, the
spectrum usage rights covered by that license may revert to the
remaining parties to the CSA. Such reversion shall be governed by the
terms of the CSA in accordance with paragraph (h)(5)(i)(E) of this
section. If upon termination of the license of a party to a CSA only
one party to the CSA remains, the remaining licensee may file an
application to change its license to non-shared status using FCC Form
2100, Schedule B (for a full power licensee) or F (for a Class A
licensee).
(3) Channel sharing between full power television and Class A
television stations. (i) A CSA may be executed between licensees of
full power television stations, between licensees of Class A television
stations, and between licensees of full power and Class A television
stations.
(ii) A Class A channel sharee station licensee that is a party to a
CSA with a full power channel sharer station licensee must comply with
the rules of part 73 governing power levels and interference, and must
comply in all other respects with the rules and policies applicable to
Class A television stations, as set forth in Sec. Sec. 73.6000 et seq.
(iii) A full power channel sharee station licensee that is a party
to a CSA with a Class A channel sharer station licensee must comply
with the rules of part 74 of this chapter governing power levels and
interference.
(iv) A Class A channel sharee station may qualify only for the
cable carriage rights afforded to ``qualified low power television
stations'' in Sec. 76.56(b)(3) of this chapter.
(4) Channel sharing between commercial and noncommercial
educational television stations. (i) A CSA may be executed between
commercial and NCE broadcast television station licensees.
(ii) The licensee of an NCE station operating on a reserved channel
under Sec. 73.621 that becomes a party to a CSA, either as a channel
sharee station or as a channel sharer station, will retain its NCE
status and must continue to comply with Sec. 73.621.
(iii) If the licensee of an NCE station operating on a reserved
channel under Sec. 73.621 becomes a party to a CSA, either as a
channel sharee station or as a channel sharer station, the portion of
the shared television channel on which the NCE station operates shall
be reserved for NCE-only use.
(iv) The licensee of an NCE station operating on a reserved channel
under Sec. 73.621 that becomes a party to a CSA may assign or transfer
its shared license only to an entity qualified under Sec. 73.621 as an
NCE television licensee.
(5) Required CSA provisions. (i) CSAs must contain provisions
outlining each licensee's rights and responsibilities regarding:
(A) Access to facilities, including whether each licensee will have
unrestrained access to the shared transmission facilities;
(B) Allocation of bandwidth within the shared channel;
(C) Operation, maintenance, repair, and modification of facilities,
including a list of all relevant equipment, a description of each
party's financial obligations, and any relevant notice provisions;
(D) Transfer/assignment of a shared license, including the ability
of a new licensee to assume the existing CSA; and
(E) Termination of the license of a party to the CSA, including
reversion of spectrum usage rights to the remaining parties to the CSA.
(ii) CSAs must include provisions:
(A) Affirming compliance with the requirements in paragraph (h)(5)
of this section and all relevant Commission rules and policies; and
(B) Requiring that each channel sharing licensee shall retain
spectrum usage rights adequate to ensure a sufficient amount of the
shared channel capacity to allow it to provide at least
[[Page 67344]]
one Standard Definition (SD) program stream at all times.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2015-27738 Filed 10-30-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712-01-P