Promoting Broadcast Internet Innovation Through ATSC 3.0, 10847-10856 [2020-28615]
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 34 / Tuesday, February 23, 2021 / Rules and Regulations
§ 64.606 internet-based TRS provider and
TRS program certification.
(a) * * * (1) Certified state program.
Any state, through its office of the
governor or other delegated executive
office empowered to provide TRS,
desiring to establish a state program
under this section shall submit
documentation to the Commission
addressed to the Federal
Communications Commission, Chief,
Consumer and Governmental Affairs
Bureau, TRS Certification Program,
Washington, DC 20554, and captioned
‘‘TRS State Certification Application.’’
All documentation shall be submitted in
narrative form, shall clearly describe the
state program for implementing
intrastate TRS, and the procedures and
remedies for enforcing any requirements
imposed by the state program. The
Commission shall give public notice of
state applications for certification.
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2021–00792 Filed 2–22–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 73
[MB Docket No. 20–145; FCC 20–181; FRS
17327]
Promoting Broadcast Internet
Innovation Through ATSC 3.0
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
Through this final rule, the
Commission fosters the efficient and
robust use of broadcast spectrum
capacity for the provision of Broadcast
internet services consistent with
statutory directives. In this document,
the Commission concludes that
ancillary and supplementary (A&S) fees
should be calculated based on the gross
revenue received by the broadcaster,
without regard to the gross revenue of
an unaffiliated third party, such as a
spectrum lessee; should retain the
existing standard of derogation of
broadcast service, but amend the
wording of the rules to eliminate the
outdated reference to analog television;
and should reaffirm that noncommercial
educational television broadcast stations
(NCEs) may offer Broadcast internet
services. The Commission also
reinterprets the application to permit
noncommercial educational stations
(NCEs) to devote the substantial
majority of their spectrum not just to
free over-the-air television but also
ancillary and supplementary services;
SUMMARY:
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lowers the ancillary and supplementary
service fee for certain NCE services; and
clarifies that NCEs may offer limited
Broadcast internet services to donors
without transforming those donations
into feeable ancillary and
supplementary service revenue.
DATES: Effective March 25, 2021.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
additional information, contact Lyle
Elder, Lyle.Elder@fcc.gov, of the Media
Bureau, Policy Division, (202) 418–
2120. Direct press inquiries to Janice
Wise at (202) 418–8165.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a
summary of the Commission’s Report
and Order, FCC 20–181, adopted and
released on December 10, 2020. The full
text of this document is available
electronically via the FCC’s Electronic
Document Management System
(EDOCS) website at https://
www.fcc.gov/edocs or via the FCC’s
Electronic Comment Filing System
(ECFS) website at https://www.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).
Synopsis
1. Earlier last year, the Commission
initiated a proceeding to encourage the
provision of new and innovative
Broadcast internet services enabled by
ATSC 3.0—the ‘‘Next Generation’’
broadcast television standard often
referred to as Next Gen TV—that can
complement the nation’s 5G wireless
networks.1 In so doing, the Commission
sought to eliminate uncertainty cast on
such services by legacy regulations and
to consider whether, and if so how, to
update the Commission’s rules
regarding ancillary and supplementary
services, adopted over 20 years ago.
With this item, we take additional steps
to clarify and update the regulatory
landscape in order to foster the efficient
and robust use of broadcast spectrum
1 Promoting Broadcast Internet Innovation
Through ATSC 3.0, MB Docket No. 20–145,
Declaratory Ruling and notice of proposed
rulemaking, 85 FR 43142 and 85 FR 43195 (July 16,
2020) (Declaratory Ruling and NPRM). The
Commission referred to these new ancillary
offerings over broadcast spectrum as ‘‘Broadcast
internet’’ services to distinguish them from
traditional over-the-air video services. We note that
the rule changes we adopt herein will apply equally
to all ancillary and supplementary services
provided using either the ATSC 1.0 or 3.0
transmission standards.
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capacity for the provision of Broadcast
internet services consistent with
statutory directives.
2. In this Report and Order (Order),
we adopt, with only minor changes, four
of the tentative conclusions set forth in
the NPRM. Specifically, we clarify the
basis on which to calculate ancillary
and supplementary service fees. We
retain the existing standard of
derogation of broadcast service. We also,
however, amend the derogation rule to
eliminate an outdated reference to
analog television. We reaffirm the
freedom of noncommercial educational
television stations (NCEs) to provide
ancillary and supplementary services.
And while we generally decline at this
time to adjust the fee imposed on
ancillary and supplementary services,
we intend to revisit this issue at a future
date to determine whether we should
adjust the fee or the basis of the fee once
the market for Broadcast internet
services develops.
3. Recognizing the unique educational
public service mission of NCEs seeking
to provide Broadcast internet services,
we also adopt a number of additional
proposals designed to preserve and
expand this essential mission. Notably,
we find that an NCE television
broadcast station may use its 6 MHz
channel capacity primarily not only for
its free, over-the-air nonprofit,
noncommercial, educational, television
broadcast service, as under our current
interpretation of the rule, but also for
any nonprofit, noncommercial,
educational (‘‘primary’’) ancillary and
supplementary services. We also adopt
a reduced fee of 2.5% on gross revenue
generated by such ‘‘primary’’ ancillary
and supplementary services, as opposed
to the 5% fee applied to ancillary and
supplementary services generally. With
these actions, this Order continues to
lay the groundwork for broadcasters,
and thereby the general public, to
explore and benefit from the
possibilities and opportunities that
Broadcast internet provides.
4. Background. As the Commission
explained in the NPRM, the ATSC 3.0
IP-based standard offers greater effective
spectral capacity than ATSC 1.0, the
current digital broadcast television
standard. The additional capacity will
allow broadcasters to expand their
traditional television offerings,
including by offering higher quality
video and audio and a wider range of
programming choices. Broadcasters may
also provide innovative non-traditional
services, and the NPRM asked about the
‘‘types of Broadcast internet services
that are likely to be provided in the
future.’’ Commenters describe a wide
array of exciting possibilities. APTS/
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PBS explain that NCEs might expand
and roll out offerings in ‘‘a variety of
areas that further their public service
missions, especially education, child
development, public safety, national
security, job training, and telehealth.’’
PMG describes a wide range of possible
uses, including: (i) Distance learning
services, such as distributing subjectand classroom-specific lectures and
reading materials to students, and
broadcasting content to school buses
during long rural commutes to make
that time more enriching for students;
(ii) trusted, encrypted, and curated
distribution of health-related content to
those unserved and underserved by
high-speed internet; (iii) emergency
alerting services that allow more homes,
vehicles, and first responders to gain
access to life-saving information; (iv)
expanded distribution of local and
hyper-local news to audiences across a
community; and (iv) software and
cybersecurity updates to power smart
cities, automobiles, and ‘‘Internet of
Things’’ (IoT) products and
applications. ONE Media explains that:
[i]n addition to enhanced broadcast
programming, the ATSC 3.0 standard enables
use of television spectrum to communicate
with devices over wide areas efficiently,
expanding opportunities for distance
learning, advanced emergency alerting and
information functions, highly secure file
delivery and authentication, offloading large
data files (including video) needed by
carriers to cache programming directly on
user devices, dramatically improving
efficient distribution of data to autonomous
driving vehicles, facilitating nearinstantaneous needs for IoT devices and
telemedicine or smart agriculture activities,
and other innovative services yet to be
conceived.
5. In June 2020, the Commission
commenced this proceeding to ensure
that our rules will help foster the
development of innovative and efficient
uses of broadcast spectrum like the ones
described above. In the Declaratory
Ruling, the Commission clarified that
the lease of excess broadcast television
spectrum to a third party, including
another broadcaster, for the provision of
ancillary and supplementary services
does not result in attribution under our
broadcast television station ownership
rules or for any other requirements
related to television station attribution
(e.g., filing ownership reports). The
Commission explained that regulatory
clarity will help ensure that
broadcasters and other innovators have
the flexibility to generate the scale—
both locally and nationally—that may
be necessary to support certain
Broadcast internet services, and that
regulatory reform can ensure that
market forces, rather than outdated
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rules, determine the success of the
nascent Broadcast internet industry. In
the accompanying NPRM, the
Commission sought comment on any
rule changes needed to further promote
regulatory certainty and greater
investment in innovative Broadcast
internet services.
6. Specifically, the NPRM sought
comment on a number of general
matters concerning the potential uses
and applications of excess broadcast
spectrum capacity resulting from the
transition to ATSC 3.0; on whether the
amount and method of calculating the
ancillary and supplementary services
fee should be reconsidered given the
new potential uses of excess spectrum
capacity; and on whether the
Commission should clarify or modify
the rules prohibiting derogation of
broadcast service and defining an
analogous service. The NPRM elicited
17 comments, 12 replies, and numerous
ex parte filings from commenters
representing companies and industry
groups from the broadcast, cable,
wireless, and consumer electronics
industries, as well as non-profit groups
and groups hoping to explore new
Broadcast internet opportunities.
Commenters are largely supportive of
the Commission’s tentative conclusions,
although as discussed below there is
notable opposition to the proposal to
exclude third party facility
improvements from revenue
calculations, a proposal we decline to
adopt today. There is also disagreement
regarding the proposal to clarify the
derogation standard, both from parties
who support a significant change and
parties who oppose any change at all to
the existing text. The record also reflects
widespread skepticism about any
Commission action that would go
beyond the tentative conclusions, with
two notable exceptions. First, NCEs and
associated parties make a compelling
case that substantial public benefits
could accrue through the widespread
deployment of Broadcast internet over
public television spectrum, justifying
additional steps to encourage that
deployment. Second, a large number of
low power television (LPTV) station
representatives and interested parties
propose changes to the rules governing
LPTV service, though the proposals are
largely unrelated to Broadcast internet
services.
7. Discussion. Ancillary and
Supplementary Service Fee. With one
exception, discussed below, we decline
at this time to adjust the fee program
associated with ancillary and
supplementary services. Rather, we will
revisit the size and basis of the fee, as
well as other relevant issues, when we
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have a better understanding of how the
transition to ATSC 3.0 is progressing.
We do, however, adopt our tentative
conclusion that fees should be
calculated based on the gross revenue
received by the broadcaster rather than
revenue received by a spectrum lessee.
Finally, we decline at this time to adopt
the proposal made by Public Knowledge
et al. that we use the fees we collect for
ancillary and supplementary services to
fund a program to offset costs for
consumers who upgrade their
equipment as part of the transition to
ATSC 3.0, and we decline at this time
to exempt from the ancillary and
supplementary service fee ‘‘in-kind’’
contributions, or otherwise change our
fee for ancillary and supplementary
services that fall into certain classes of
service.
8. The Telecommunications Act of
1996 (1996 Act) requires broadcasters to
pay a fee to the United States Treasury
to the extent they use their digital
television (DTV) spectrum to provide
ancillary and supplementary services
for which the payment of a subscription
fee is required in order to receive such
services, or for which the licensee
directly or indirectly receives
compensation from a third party in
return for transmitting material
furnished by such a third party (other
than commercial advertisements used to
support broadcasting for which a
subscription fee is not required). The
1996 Act further provides that the
ancillary and supplementary services
fee program shall be designed to recover
for the public a portion of the value of
the public spectrum resource made
available for such commercial use, and
to avoid unjust enrichment through the
method employed to permit such uses
of that resource; and to recover for the
public an amount that, to the extent
feasible, equals but does not exceed
(over the term of the license) the amount
that would have been recovered had
such services been licensed at auction.
In addition, the Commission is required
by statute to adjust the ancillary and
supplementary services fee from time to
time in order to ensure that these
requirements continue to be met.
9. As a preliminary matter, we
reaffirm that section 336 of the 1996 Act
gives the Commission flexibility to
determine the appropriate fee for
ancillary and supplementary services
within the parameters set forth in the
statute. Section 336 directs the
Commission to ‘‘establish a program to
assess and collect . . . an annual fee or
other schedule or method of payment
that promotes the objectives’’ described
by the statute. Specifically, the statute
requires that the fee program be
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designed to recover for the public some
portion of the value of the spectrum,
prevent the unjust enrichment of
broadcasters providing ancillary and
supplementary services, and
approximate the revenues that would
have been received had the spectrum on
which the services are provided been
licensed through an auction. As the
Commission has observed, ‘‘the 1996
Act gives the Commission broad
discretion in setting the amount of the
fee for ancillary and supplementary
services,’’ bounded by the criteria set
forth in section 336(e). Commenters
who addressed this issue agree with this
analysis.
10. Fee for Commercial Television
Broadcast Stations. We conclude that
we do not have sufficient information at
this early stage in the ATSC 3.0
transition to evaluate fully whether a
change to, much less elimination of, the
current fee for feeable ancillary and
supplementary services offered by
commercial television stations would
better reflect the directives of section
336(e). Accordingly, we retain the
current fee of 5% for such stations and
intend to reevaluate the fee once the
marketplace for Broadcast internet
services has become more mature.
11. As the Commission previously has
recognized, in considering how to
calculate the appropriate ancillary and
supplementary fee, we must balance
potentially competing statutory goals:
Recover a portion of the value of the
spectrum used for ancillary and
supplementary services, avoid unjust
enrichment, and approximate the
revenue that would have been received
had these services been licensed
through an auction. A fee that is too
high could dissuade broadcasters from
providing Broadcast internet services
and thereby reduce the potential
benefits to consumers of such services
and preclude the Commission from
collecting fees approximating the
amount that would have been recovered
for the spectrum at auction. On the
other hand, a fee that is too low may
both fail to prevent the unjust
enrichment of licensees and to recover
for the public an amount approximating
the amount that would have been
recovered at auction.
12. In considering these statutory
mandates, we conclude that it would be
premature at this time to adjust the
ancillary and supplementary service fee
without knowing more about the kinds
of Broadcast internet services that will
be provided and the economics thereof.
The conversion to ATSC 3.0 is entirely
voluntary, and commercial service has
only recently commenced in a few
television markets. We cannot yet gauge
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the extent to which ATSC 3.0 will be
deployed and adopted by consumers or
which ATSC 3.0-based services and
features will be offered as feeable
Broadcast internet services. Indeed, the
Commission recently reached a similar
conclusion when it first authorized the
voluntary transmission to ATSC 3.0.
Accordingly, we reject commenters’
suggestions that we reconsider the
current 5% fee on broadcast commercial
stations, at this time. Instead, consistent
with recommendations in the record, we
believe it would be better to revisit the
ancillary and supplementary service fee
when the ATSC 3.0 marketplace has
further developed.
13. Calculation of Gross Revenue. We
adopt our tentative conclusion that fees
should be calculated based on the gross
revenue received by the broadcaster
rather than revenue received by a
spectrum lessee. As the Commission
stated in the NPRM, to hold otherwise
could subject a broadcaster to a fee
payment in excess of the gross revenue
it actually receives. All commenters
who addressed this issue agree with this
approach regarding the calculation of
gross revenue. As proposed in the
NPRM, we also conclude that to the
extent the licensee and the lessee are
affiliated, we will attribute the gross
revenue of the lessee to the licensee for
purposes of calculating the ancillary
and supplementary services fee, based
on a share of gross revenue that is
proportional to the licensee’s stake in
the lessee. Otherwise, as the
Commission noted in the NPRM, the
licensee (or its parent company) could
create a subsidiary for the sole purpose
of evading the fee while retaining all of
the financial benefit of the arrangement.
14. We decline at this time to take up
the issue of whether to exclude from
gross revenue the value of ‘‘in-kind’’
facility improvements. Although the
Commission tentatively concluded in
the NPRM that the value of such
improvements should be excluded from
the gross revenue calculation, the record
on this issue was limited and the
comments were mixed. We will
continue to monitor the progress of the
transition to ATSC 3.0, the provision of
Broadcast internet services, and the
status of ‘‘in-kind’’ facility
improvements in the marketplace, and
may address this issue in the future if
warranted.
15. ATSC 3.0 Consumer Equipment.
We decline at this time to adopt the
proposal made by Public Knowledge et
al. that we use the fees collected from
ancillary and supplementary services to
fund a program offsetting costs for
consumers who upgrade their consumer
premises equipment as part of the ATSC
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3.0 transition. These commenters note
that ATSC 3.0 is not compatible with
current television devices and contend
that, because consumers will have to
replace their television sets or purchase
converter devices to receive ATSC 3.0
signals, the transition to ATSC 3.0 ‘‘will
create high consumer costs, similar to
those faced by consumers during the
DTV transition.’’ Thus, they maintain
we should act now, to develop a
program to offset ATSC 3.0 transition
costs for consumers. We note that the
transition to ATSC 3.0 is voluntary and
still in its early stages; therefore, we find
it is premature to consider such a
program at this time. We also note that
the DTV transition equipment subsidy
program was explicitly mandated by
Congress.
16. Classes of Ancillary and
Supplementary Service. We decline to
grant fee exemptions for certain classes
of Broadband internet service, such as
telehealth, distance learning, public
safety, or homeland security-related
services, or for services that promote
internet access in rural areas. Although,
according to the record, such services
are currently beginning to be provided
by, or are in development by, NCE
stations, we believe it is premature to
take any such action given the nascent
state of the market for these ATSC 3.0
services. As discussed further below, we
take action in this Order to encourage
the development of ‘‘primary’’ NCE
ancillary and supplementary services
(those used for nonprofit,
noncommercial, educational purposes),
by reducing the fee associated with such
services. At the same time, we conclude
that we do not have a sufficient basis at
this time to support changing our fee
approach for any other type of ancillary
and supplementary service that are not
considered ‘‘primary.’’ Among other
things, we lack information regarding
how such services are likely to be
provided, whether they will be revenuegenerating, whether there will be
sufficient demand to support the
provision of such services, or whether
our current fee for ancillary and
supplementary services will dissuade
broadcasters from offering such services.
For similar reasons, we also decline at
this time to exempt from fees, or adopt
a lower fee for, services that promote
internet access in rural areas. We will
continue to monitor the transition to
ATSC 3.0, including the provision of
Broadcast internet services such as
telehealth, public safety, and homeland
security-related services, as well as
services that provide internet access in
rural areas, and may reconsider this
issue in the future.
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17. NCE Television Stations. NCE
television stations play an important
role in providing nonprofit,
noncommercial, and education services
to communities nationwide, and the
Commission is committed to supporting
their enthusiastic embrace of the
possibilities that Next Gen TV provides.
Accordingly, we adopt, in part, the
commenter proposal to reinterpret
§ 73.621 of our rules, which will allow
NCEs to provide a wider range of
services that align with their core
mission. While, as discussed above, we
generally decline to adjust the fee
associated with ancillary and
supplementary services, to the extent
that NCE television stations offer feeable
ancillary and supplementary services
that are nonprofit, noncommercial, and
educational, we adopt a reduced fee
based on 2.5% of gross revenues
generated by such ‘‘primary’’ ancillary
and supplementary services. We also
clarify that when an NCE television
station provides ‘‘donor exclusive’’
ancillary and supplementary services
that are nominal in value in return for
contributions to the licensee, we will
not treat such contributions as
‘‘subscription fees’’ under section 336 of
the 1996 Act or § 73.621 of our rules.
18. NCE Ancillary and Supplementary
Services. We conclude that an NCE
television licensee may provide
Broadcast internet services, provided
that the substantial majority of its 6
MHz channel capacity is dedicated to a
combination of free, over-the-air
nonprofit, noncommercial, educational,
television broadcast service and any
nonprofit, noncommercial, educational
(or ‘‘primary’’) ancillary and
supplementary services it chooses to
provide.2 In this regard, we modify the
2001 NCE Ancillary Services Report and
2 An NCE television licensee may provide
ancillary and supplementary services that are not
nonprofit, noncommercial, and educational—
including commercial services—on the licensee’s
excess (i.e., non-primary) capacity. Such services
will be subject to the standard fee of 5% of gross
revenues. We note that an NCE licensee, like all
other television broadcasters, must broadcast at
least one free over-the-air video programming
stream, and its ancillary and supplementary
services must not derogate this service. During the
transition period to ATSC 3.0 service, we are
affording NCE television broadcasters significant
flexibility to determine the best mix of services for
their communities. However, as during the DTV
transition, our expectation remains that the
fundamental use of the DTV license will be for the
provision of free, over-the-air television service. We
do not decide at this time the separate, broader
issue of how much spectral capacity a broadcast
television station (commercial or NCE) must use
after the ATSC 3.0 transition period for the
provision of its free over-the-air television service.
We will consider this issue in a future proceeding,
such as when we decide it is the appropriate time
to consider eliminating the ATSC 1.0 simulcasting
requirement.
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Order’s interpretation of § 73.621,3
which held that a substantial majority of
an NCE television licensee’s digital
capacity must be dedicated to nonprofit,
noncommercial, educational broadcast
service, limiting ancillary and
supplementary services to an NCE
television licensee’s excess capacity. In
so doing, we seek to preserve the
nonprofit, noncommercial, educational
nature of an NCE television licensee’s
service to its community, while
affording such NCE licensees increased
flexibility to provide ‘‘primary’’ services
that are not traditional broadcasting.
Although we decline to define what
constitutes a ‘‘substantial majority’’ of
the NCE’s digital bitstream at this time,
we expect to seek comment in a future
proceeding on whether it is appropriate
to revise § 73.621(j) regarding the
amount of its 6 MHz channel capacity
that an NCE television licensee must
devote to ‘‘primary’’ uses, the scope of
those primary uses, and any other
related matters.4
19. As an initial matter, we adopt our
unopposed tentative conclusion that
NCE television licensees are allowed to
provide ancillary and supplementary
services. Indeed, the 2001 NCE
Ancillary Services Report and Order
sought to clarify not whether NCEs
could offer ancillary and supplementary
services, but ‘‘the manner in which
[NCE] television licensees may use their
excess [DTV] capacity for remunerative
purposes.’’ The 2001 NCE Ancillary
Services Report and Order amended
§ 73.621 of the rules ‘‘to clarify that the
[s]ection’s requirements apply to the
entire digital bitstream of NCE
[television] licensees, including the
provision of ancillary or supplementary
services,’’ in order to ‘‘preserve the
noncommercial educational nature of
public broadcasting, while allowing
NCE [television] licensees some
flexibility in remunerative use of their
spectrum.’’ The Commission concluded
at the time that this balance required
NCE television licensees to ‘‘use their
entire digital capacity primarily for a
nonprofit, noncommercial, educational
broadcast service.’’ The Commission
‘‘decline[d] to quantify the term
‘primarily,’ ’’ but ‘‘consider[ed] it to
mean a ‘substantial majority’ of [the
NCE television licensee’s] entire digital
capacity.’’
3 66
FR 58973 (Nov. 26, 2001).
addition, until we address this issue in this
future proceeding, we will consider waiver requests
as necessary to allow public safety or other
ancillary and supplementary uses that are nonprofit
and noncommercial, but may not be educational in
nature, to be applied to the ‘‘substantial majority’’
portion of an NCE licensee’s spectrum dedicated for
‘‘primary’’ purposes.
4 In
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20. In light of the unique educational
public service mission of
noncommercial educational television
stations (NCEs) seeking to provide
ancillary and supplementary services,
we clarify that § 73.621 allows NCE
television licensees to count as part of
the ‘‘primary’’ use of their spectrum not
just ‘‘nonprofit, noncommercial,
educational, broadcast service,’’ but also
ancillary and supplementary services
that are nonprofit, noncommercial, and
educational in nature. Specifically, we
conclude that § 73.621(j) permits an
NCE television licensee to count
nonprofit, noncommercial, and
educational ancillary and
supplementary services, together with
its free, over-the-air nonprofit,
noncommercial, educational television
broadcast service, as ‘‘primary’’ services
that fall within § 73.621(a). Section
73.621(j) states that § 73.621 ‘‘will apply
to the entire digital bitstream of
noncommercial educational television
stations, including the provision of
ancillary or supplementary services.’’
We recognize that the 2001 NCE
Ancillary Services Report and Order,
which adopted § 73.621(j), interpreted
this provision to mean that NCE
television licensees are required to use
their entire digital capacity ‘‘primarily’’
for their free, over-the-air television
nonprofit, noncommercial, educational
broadcast service and that ancillary and
supplementary services do not qualify
as a ‘‘primary’’ use. We reject this
interpretation of § 73.621(j) of our rules
as unnecessarily narrow. Rather, we
agree with APTS/PBS and PMVG that it
is reasonable to afford greater flexibility
to NCE television licensees to provide
ancillary and supplementary services
that are nonprofit, noncommercial, and
educational in nature as a ‘‘primary’’
use, and that there is a wide potential
variety of such services.5 We are
5 APTS/PBS maintain that any ancillary or
supplementary service that ‘‘ ‘serve[s] the
educational needs of the community’ or furthers the
‘advancement of educational programs’ ’’ should be
considered ‘‘primary.’’ We reject this view because
it would permit for-profit, commercial educational
services (or non-educational television broadcasts)
to be counted among the ‘‘primary’’ uses of an
NCE’s spectrum. Instead, consistent with the
requirements in § 73.621(a) that the station qualify
as ‘‘noncommercial educational’’ and is licensed
‘‘only to [a] nonprofit educational organization,’’
the rule requires that all ‘‘primary’’ uses, whether
broadcast television or ancillary and
supplementary, must be nonprofit, noncommercial,
and educational. We find this reading best
preserves the nonprofit, noncommercial, and
educational nature of public broadcasting. We note
that our decision today applies only to the
application of § 73.621(a) to the provision of
ancillary and supplementary services pursuant to
§ 73.621(j); it does not change an NCE television
licensee’s broadcast and other obligations under
§ 73.621(a).
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unpersuaded by Public Knowledge’s
contention that ‘‘allowing NCEs to count
spectrum used for ancillary and
supplementary services as primary
service . . . violates 47 U.S.C.
[397](11).’’ 6 Accordingly, we interpret
the language of § 73.621(j) providing
that the requirements of § 73.621 will
apply to the entire digital bitstream of
NCE television stations, ‘‘including the
provision of ancillary or supplementary
services,’’ to broaden the scope of
§ 73.621(a) such that NCE television
stations have the flexibility to make
‘‘primary’’ use of their ‘‘entire digital
bitstream’’ through provision of not only
a nonprofit, noncommercial,
educational television broadcast service,
but also any nonprofit, noncommercial,
and educational ancillary and
supplementary services it chooses to
provide.
21. Although we adopt the NCE
proposal to reinterpret our rules to
permit ‘‘primary’’ ancillary and
supplementary services, we decline to
‘‘pre-approve’’ specific services that
could be considered primary. APTS/
PBS and PMVG ask us essentially to
create a ‘‘safe harbor’’ for Broadcast
internet services by identifying specific
services that will qualify as ‘‘primary’’
uses under § 73.621(a). Given the
nascent state of the Broadcast internet
market, we find that it would be
premature to classify such services in
this manner. Instead, consistent with
our precedent in applying § 73.621(a) to
broadcast programming, we will defer to
the judgment of the broadcaster when
evaluating whether a given ancillary
and supplementary service is
educational unless such categorization
appears to be arbitrary or unreasonable.
22. We also decline, at this time, to
adopt the NCE television broadcasters’
proposal to redefine the term
‘‘primarily,’’ as used in § 73.621(a), to
mean a ‘‘simple majority’’ instead of a
‘‘substantial majority,’’ which is the
definition adopted by the Commission
in the 2001 NCE Ancillary Services
Report and Order. We disagree with
APTS/PBS that there is a plain or
common meaning of the term
‘‘primarily,’’ and instead find that the
6 Applying the last-antecedent rule, which
‘‘provides that ‘a limiting clause or phrase . . .
should ordinarily be read as modifying only the
noun or noun phrase that it immediately follows,’ ’’
we observe that ‘‘engaged primarily in the
production, acquisition, distribution, or
dissemination of educational and cultural television
or radio programs’’ is defining ‘‘any nonprofit
institution,’’ and not ‘‘any licensee or permittee of
a public broadcast station.’’ Furthermore, our
‘‘primary service’’ decision applies to the use of a
licensee’s spectrum, not the activities of the
licensee itself.
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term is ambiguous.7 In light of this
ambiguity, the Commission previously
determined in 2001 that ‘‘primarily’’
means ‘‘substantial majority.’’ This
definition was not challenged at the
time, and we are not persuaded by the
arguments in the record that present
circumstances warrant reconsideration
of this earlier decision. Given the
retention of our substantial majority
requirement, Public Knowledge is
incorrect that our rules ‘‘will allow
NCEs to sublease or otherwise monetize
the majority of their spectrum to third
parties instead of providing free service
to the public.’’ Moreover, we find that
our decision to include certain ancillary
and supplementary services as part of
the ‘‘primary’’ use of their spectrum
affords NCE television licensees
substantial additional flexibility in light
of the enhanced capabilities made
possible by the ATSC 3.0 standard.8 As
these services reach the market, we will
have additional context upon which to
evaluate whether any changes to the
definition of ‘‘primarily’’ are warranted.
Accordingly, we defer examination of
this issue and any other related matters
until the Broadcast internet marketplace
matures.9
23. Fee for NCE Primary Ancillary
and Supplementary Services. While we
generally decline to adjust the fee
associated with ancillary and
supplementary services, to the extent
that NCE television stations offer feeable
ancillary and supplementary services
that are nonprofit, noncommercial, and
educational, we adopt a reduced fee of
2.5% on gross revenues generated by
such ‘‘primary’’ services. As discussed
above, § 73.621 of our rules provides
that NCE stations must ‘‘be used
primarily to serve the educational needs
of the community; for the advancement
of educational programs; and to furnish
a nonprofit and noncommercial
television broadcast service,’’ and
extends this requirement to all services
provided via the station’s digital
7 We note that the Merriam-Webster online
dictionary defines ‘‘primarily’’ as ‘‘for the most part;
chiefly.’’ Webster’s New World Dictionary defines
it as ‘‘mainly; principally.’’ Thus, while ‘‘primarily’’
could be used to mean a ‘‘simple majority,’’ that is
far from the ‘‘common’’ understanding.
8 Public Knowledge’s claims to the contrary
notwithstanding, nothing in this Order undermines
the policy of ensuring free, over-the-air, educational
television programming. As required by existing
rules, each NCE station must continue to provide
a free, over-the-air, nonprofit, noncommercial,
educational television broadcast service.
9 We will also consider waiver requests, as
necessary, to allow public safety or other ancillary
and supplementary uses that are nonprofit and
noncommercial, but may not be educational in
nature, to be applied to the ‘‘substantial majority’’
portion of an NCE licensee’s spectrum committed
to ‘‘primary’’ purposes.
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bitstream. Given the benefit of the
‘‘distinctive content of public broadcast
programming’’ provided by NCEs, and
the fact that the auction value of
spectrum that must be ‘‘primarily’’ used
for such services is likely lower than
that of spectrum used for services
without such restrictions, we believe
this lower fee is appropriate.
24. Although we decline at this time
to exempt NCE television stations
entirely from all fees on ancillary and
supplementary service revenues
devoted to the station’s nonprofit
activities as APTS/PBS suggest, we
believe that the reduction we adopt is
an appropriate incremental and
balanced approach. While some
commenters suggest that we make no
change to the 5% fee under any
circumstances, and others asked us to
eliminate it entirely, we find that a fee
of 2.5% for ‘‘primary’’ NCE ancillary
and supplementary services that are
feeable under the statute appropriately
recognizes the public service mission of
public television stations without
creating a significant disparity with the
5% fee applied to other ancillary and
supplementary services offered by NCE
and commercial television stations.
While we decline to adjust the 5% fee
generally, choosing instead to wait until
the ATSC 3.0 marketplace further
develops and after a further review is
conducted, we believe a different
approach is warranted for NCE stations.
We seek to support the ability of public
television stations to provide and
expand their nonprofit, noncommercial,
educational services and engage in new
and innovative educational efforts using
ATSC 3.0 technology.10 NCE nonprofit,
noncommercial, educational services,
provided by the nonprofit, educationfocused licensees of NCE stations,
uniquely advance the public interest
and therefore should be treated
differently under our fee program than
other ancillary and supplementary
services that are provided by NCE and
commercial broadcast stations. Given
this, our approach appropriately
reduces the fees on any revenue
generated by such ‘‘primary’’ NCE
ancillary and supplementary services,
thereby permitting the nonprofit,
education-focused licensees of NCE
television stations to retain a larger
percentage of any such revenue,
providing more funds to support the
10 We note that Public Knowledge et al. contend
that the Commission is prohibited from setting a fee
of zero for any licensee. Because we will continue
to collect ancillary and supplementary fees from
every licensee, both commercial and
noncommercial, we need not address Public
Knowledge et al.’s argument.
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core educational public service missions
of such stations.
25. We find that our approach is
consistent with section 336 of the 1996
Act. As discussed above, the language of
section 336 gives the Commission wide
discretion to select the appropriate fee
for feeable ancillary and supplementary
services. Thus, we conclude that we
have discretion under the statute to
establish a fee for NCE primary ancillary
and supplementary services that is
lower than the fee for other ancillary
and supplementary services, including
those provided by commercial stations.
Section 336(e)(1) directs the
Commission to establish ‘‘a program to
assess and collect’’ ancillary and
supplementary fees that, pursuant to
section 336(e)(2), recover ‘‘a portion of
the value of the public spectrum,’’
‘‘avoid unjust enrichment,’’ and,
eventually, recover an amount
approximately equivalent to the
spectrum’s value at auction. Section 336
does not require the Commission to levy
fees in direct proportion to the amount
of spectrum held by each licensee.
Adjusting our program of fees to impose
a reduced fee of 2.5% for NCE stations’
‘‘primary’’ ancillary and supplementary
services will not undermine the
Commission’s ability to recover for the
public a portion of the value of the
spectrum made available for ancillary
and supplementary uses. Furthermore, a
reduced fee on the nonprofit,
noncommercial, educational ancillary
and supplementary services offered by
NCEs will not create a danger of unjust
enrichment. Any additional ‘‘primary’’
NCE ancillary and supplementary
services offered as a result of these
lower fees will, by their nature, redound
to the public’s benefit more than to the
benefit of the nonprofit educational
organization licensees of the NCE
stations.
26. Finally, we conclude that a 2.5%
fee is consistent with our directive
under section 336(e)(2)(B) to recover for
the public an amount that would have
been recovered ‘‘had such services been
licensed’’ pursuant to an auction. The
reduced fee of 2.5% will apply only to
feeable ancillary and supplementary
services that qualify as ‘‘primary’’ NCE
services under § 73.621 of our rules,
which means they must be nonprofit,
noncommercial, and educational in
nature. If spectrum restricted in this
manner were offered for auction, we
expect that bidders would offer a more
modest amount of money for the right
to build facilities that are restricted to
providing services that are ‘‘primarily’’
nonprofit, noncommercial, and
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educational as opposed to spectrum
designated for commercial use.11 In
other words, the requirements imposed
on the use of the NCE station spectrum
make this spectrum inherently less
valuable at auction than spectrum
without such use restrictions.12 Given
the benefits to the public of an
accelerated rollout of NCE primary
Broadcast internet services, we find it is
appropriate to adopt this reduced fee
even though it may overstate the auction
value of spectrum so restricted. We are
directed not only to ‘‘collect an amount
that . . . equals but does not exceed’’
the auction value of the spectrum, but
also to recover a ‘‘portion of the value
of the public spectrum resource’’ while
avoiding unjust enrichment. While we
find 2.5% to be appropriate at this time,
we intend to monitor the development
of the NCE Broadcast internet
marketplace and may adjust the fee if
conditions warrant.
27. In reaching our decision, we are
not constrained by the Commission’s
previous decision to apply to NCE
licensees the same fee for ancillary and
supplementary services that we apply to
commercial licensees. Instead, we
conclude that advances in technology
and the associated new offerings
anticipated by NCE stations suggest a
different approach is currently
warranted when assessing the
appropriate fee for NCE ‘‘primary’’
ancillary and supplementary services.
Public television stations are already
experimenting with ancillary and
supplementary services that advance the
public interest. Applying a reduced fee
for ‘‘primary’’ NCE services will give
NCE licensees both an additional
incentive to pursue the expensive
transition to ATSC 3.0 and additional
resources to devote to their core
mission. We find that the 2.5% rate for
‘‘primary’’ ancillary and supplementary
services is sufficient to meet our
obligations under section 336 of the
1996 Act and will advance our goals of
promoting Broadcast internet services
and supporting the mission of NCE
television stations to provide nonprofit,
noncommercial, educational services.
28. We note that this limited change
does not excuse NCEs from their
obligation to file an ‘‘Annual DTV
11 Our analysis is consistent with the analysis the
Commission applied to section 336(e)(2)(B) in the
NCE Ancillary Services Report and Order.
12 We agree with BitPath that, in considering
among other things the appropriate level of the fee,
the Commission should consider the auction value
of the spectrum in the context of the ancillary and
supplementary services being provided, not merely
the auction value of the spectrum in the abstract.
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Ancillary/Supplementary Services
Report’’ whenever they receive feeable
ancillary and supplementary services
revenue. We expect that, in this report,
NCE filers will clearly identify any
services that are nonprofit,
noncommercial, and educational and
therefore qualify for the reduced fee.13
29. Donor Contributions to NCE
Television Stations. As requested by
PMVG and unopposed by other
commenters, we clarify that, when an
NCE television station provides ‘‘donor
exclusive’’ ancillary and supplementary
services that are nominal in value in
return for contributions to the licensee,
we will not treat such contributions as
‘‘subscription fees’’ under section 336 of
the 1996 Act or § 73.621 of our rules.
For example, PMVG notes that stations
may provide donor households with
exclusive links to supplemental content,
such as extended interviews or
reference materials relevant to public
affairs programming, or stations could
offer donor households enhanced
viewing experiences, such as the
opportunity to view a local orchestra
performance in 4K definition with
immersive sound. We will not treat such
donor exclusive services as feeable as
long as the ancillary and supplementary
service provided in return is comparable
in terms of value to the kinds of small
gifts (e.g., coffee mugs, tote bags) that
NCE stations often give donors in return
for contributions. We agree with PMVG
that the type of limited content offerings
described above are comparable to the
traditional donor gifts provided by NCE
stations and should not be treated as
ancillary and supplementary services
provided in return for a subscription
fee. We also agree that, unlike
programming provided in return for a
subscription fee, the value of such
content offerings made in return for a
donation is likely minimal as compared
to the value of the donation. In addition,
unlike a subscription fee, the donation
is made voluntarily and not pursuant to
a subscription agreement. We intend to
monitor the provision of ‘‘donor
exclusive’’ services, however, and we
may reconsider our decision in the
future if such donor services appear to
be comparable to subscription-based
services.
13 We dismiss as moot NTCA’s proposal for a
detailed reporting and audit system, which they
suggest should apply if we waived all fees for
certain Broadcast internet services.
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30. Derogation and Analogous
Services. We adopt our tentative
conclusion that whether a broadcast
station’s signal has been derogated
should continue to be evaluated by
whether it provides ‘‘at least one
standard definition over-the-air video
program signal at no direct charge to
viewers that is at least comparable in
resolution to analog television
programming.’’ We also adopt our
tentative conclusion to amend the
wording of § 73.624(b) to define the
precise resolution that is considered to
be ‘‘at least comparable in resolution to
analog television programming’’ as 480i,
with a slight modification.14 Based on
the record, we decline to adopt two
other proposals on which we sought
comment in the NPRM—a presumption
that Broadcast internet services are not
analogous to any other service regulated
by the Commission and a de minimis
service threshold under which ancillary
and supplementary services might be
exempted from the need to comply with
the regulations applicable to an
analogous service otherwise regulated
by the Commission.
31. As discussed in the NPRM, section
336 of the 1996 Act allows broadcasters
the flexibility to provide ancillary and
supplementary services on their DTV
channels.15 In authorizing such
services, Congress directed the
Commission to adopt rules ensuring that
broadcasters providing ancillary and
supplementary services: (1) Avoid
derogating any advanced television
services that the Commission may
require; and (2) are subject to
Commission regulations applicable to
analogous services. In furtherance of
these statutory requirements, the
Commission adopted § 73.624(c) of the
rules, which permits broadcasters to
offer ancillary and supplementary
services provided they ‘‘do not derogate
the DTV broadcast stations’ obligations
under paragraph (b) of this section.’’
Section 73.624(b) of the rules, in turn,
requires that each DTV broadcast
licensee transmit at least one standard
definition (SD) over-the-air video
program signal on its digital channel, at
no charge to viewers, that is at least
comparable in resolution to analog
14 The number ‘‘480’’ identifies a vertical
resolution of 480 lines, and the ‘‘i’’ signifies an
interlaced resolution.
15 In general, the 1996 Act seeks ‘‘[t]o promote
competition and reduce regulation in order to
secure lower prices and higher quality services for
American telecommunications consumers and
encourage the rapid deployment of new
telecommunications technologies.’’ More
specifically, the 1996 Act gives the Commission
discretion to determine, in the public interest,
whether to permit broadcasters to offer ancillary
and supplementary services.
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television programming. The
Commission also adopted rules
codifying that broadcasters are
permitted to provide ancillary and
supplementary services on their
broadcast spectrum that are analogous
to other regulated services. If they
choose to do so, however, they are
required to adhere to any rules specific
to such type of service.
32. Derogation of Service. Derogation
of Service Standard. We adopt our
tentative conclusion that whether a
broadcast station’s signal has been
derogated should continue to be
evaluated by whether it provides ‘‘at
least one standard definition over-theair video program signal at no direct
charge to viewers that is at least
comparable in resolution to analog
television programming.’’ As
acknowledged both in this proceeding
and by the Commission in the Next Gen
TV Report and Order,16 the ATSC 3.0
standard will provide expanded
capacity for broadcasters to offer not
only HD programming, but also other
enhanced television resolutions such as
4K and 8K more efficiently. However, as
noted by NAB and BitPath, in light of
the ATSC 3.0 local simulcasting
requirement, requiring broadcasters to
provide a higher resolution above SD at
this early stage of ATSC 3.0 deployment
could jeopardize their ability to preserve
both primary and secondary ATSC 1.0
signals as stations convert to ATSC 3.0.
Moreover, we agree with NAB, Pearl,
and BitPath that current marketplace
forces are sufficient to incentivize
broadcasters to maintain their existing
standards of service for viewers, which
notably may include HD programming
streams.
33. Next, we deny requests from
several commenters that we prohibit
broadcasters from transitioning a signal
from HD to SD in order to provide an
ancillary and supplementary service.
Earlier this year, the Commission
rejected NCTA’s proposal to require that
ATSC 1.0 signals be simulcast in HD.
While we agree with NCTA that
transitioning an ATSC 1.0 signal from
HD to SD to facilitate the deployment of
ancillary and supplementary services is
different than transitioning a signal from
HD to SD in order to comply with the
ATSC 1.0 simulcast requirement, we
reiterate that there is no obligation that
broadcasters provide an HD signal, even
if they have chosen to do so in the past.
Imposing such a signal quality
requirement remains inappropriate, for
the same reasons it did six months
ago—broadcasters have strong market
16 83 FR 4998 (Feb. 2, 2018), 84 FR 60350 (Dec.
20, 2017).
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incentives to maintain HD service, and
a decision not to do so would be in
response to competitive marketplace
conditions. We therefore ‘‘decline to
substitute our own judgment for that of
local television stations that best know
their communities’ needs,’’ but will
continue to monitor broadcasters’
deployment of ATSC 3.0 services and
evaluate the need for changes to our
derogation standard as part of a planned
future proceeding.17
34. Definition of a Standard
Definition Signal. Notwithstanding our
decision to maintain the existing
derogation standard, we adopt our
tentative conclusion to modernize
§ 73.624(b) so that a standard definition
signal is defined as one that has a
resolution of at least 480i (vertical
resolution of 480 lines, interlaced), as
supported by multiple broadcast
commenters. Despite NAB’s suggestion
to the contrary, the record provides no
evidence that clarifying and
modernizing the definition of a
‘‘standard definition signal’’ will place
an increased burden on broadcasters.
Rather, this change will merely remove
an outdated reference to analog
television and codify what is
universally accepted as the digital
resolution of a standard definition
broadcast signal. While, as pointed out
by BitPath, the 480i resolution standard
was adopted over 20 years ago, it is
universally utilized by television sets
today for displaying standard definition
programming. Continued reliance on an
obsolete analog broadcasting standard
would be an outdated method by which
to determine what is an acceptable
digital standard definition signal.
Further, we conclude that this rule
update is fully consistent with the broad
initiative the Commission has
undertaken the past four years to
modernize its rules by removing
outdated references that no longer
reflect the current media marketplace.
35. Analogous Services Analysis. In
light of the limited record on this topic
and the present lack of clarity
concerning the precise Broadcast
internet services that broadcasters may
offer, we find it is premature to adopt
17 In the Spring of 2022, the Commission expects
to open a proceeding to evaluate the sunsetting of
certain ATSC 3.0 technical provisions. Separately,
the Commission has stated that it will consider as
part of a future proceeding the continued necessity
of the ATSC 1.0 simulcasting requirement, which
does not sunset. As part of a future proceeding,
based on the development of the ATSC 3.0
marketplace, we expect likewise to determine
whether to reevaluate our derogation standard.
While we have elected to maintain our current
derogation standard at this time, we continue to
‘‘expect that the fundamental use of the 6 MHz DTV
license will be for the provision of free over-the-air
television service.’’
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a presumption that certain Broadcast
internet services are or are not
analogous to any other service regulated
by the Commission. For the same
reasons, we decline to adopt a de
minimis service threshold under which
ancillary and supplementary services
might be exempted from the need to
comply with the regulations of an
analogous service otherwise regulated
by the Commission.
36. In reaching both of these
conclusions, we agree with NCTA and
CTIA that, at this initial stage in the
development of Broadcast internet
services, the Commission should
continue to evaluate whether or not a
service is analogous to other regulated
services on a case-by-case basis. While
we do not foreclose adopting specific
indicia of whether a service is or is not
likely to be found to be analogous at
some future point, we must first gain a
better understanding of how Broadcast
internet services ultimately evolve in
the marketplace. While, as argued by
PMG, it may in fact end up being the
case that Broadcast internet services
will be provided only on a one-way,
one-to-many basis, as is the case with
traditional video broadcast services,
without knowing the precise services
broadcasters will offer we cannot
universally conclude that such services
are inherently not analogous to any
other service regulated by the
Commission.18 We also agree with
commenters that it is premature to
adopt a presumptive or de minimis
threshold under which ancillary and
supplementary services otherwise akin
to other regulated services would be
found not to be analogous.19
37. Though we decline to adopt
additional rules at this time, we
recognize that broadcasters may
continue to seek clarification from the
Commission, from time to time, about
18 Pearl also requests that the Commission
‘‘clarify broadly that broadcast television
regulations do not apply to broadcast internet
services.’’ For the same reasons discussed above, we
are unable to conclude on a blanket basis, as
requested by Pearl, that all broadcast television
rules do not apply to Broadcast internet services.
While as a general matter we envision that many
broadcast television rules (such as those related to
children’s television or indecency, and, as
discussed by Pearl, our rules on attribution) would
not apply to Broadcast internet services, others
(such as technical rules governing station
operations) may still be applicable. We note that
our analysis in the Declaratory Ruling was
conducted solely in the context of evaluating our
media ownership and attribution rules and the
applicability of those rules to the leasing of excess
broadcast television spectrum to a third party,
including another broadcaster, for the provision of
ancillary and supplementary services.
19 NCTA maintains that the plain language of
section 336(b) of the 1996 Act does not permit a de
minimis exemption, and no commenters disagree.
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whether a particular service would be
analogous to another, or whether
specific broadcast rules would apply.
Finally, we will continue to monitor the
marketplace and provide any necessary
clarification in the future once both
broadcasters and the Commission know
the type of Broadcast internet services
that may be deployed and offered to
consumers.
38. Other proposals. Low Power
Television. We decline to adopt any of
the proposals by low power television
and translator (LPTV) station
representatives and others to change our
LPTV service rules in this proceeding.
In addition to seeking comments on the
ancillary and supplementary service fee
and derogation of service issues, the
NPRM generally sought comment on the
provision of Broadcast internet services
by LPTV stations and what steps, if any,
the Commission should take to facilitate
the provision of such services by LPTV
stations. In response, LPTV groups and
interested parties, such as ARK, ATBA,
Edge Spectrum, Evoca, NRB, NTA,
Spectrum Evolution, and One
Ministries, proposed a wide range of
changes to the rules governing LPTV
service. Among other things, these
proposals include: Equalizing LPTV
interference protection with that of full
power and Class A TV stations
(essentially eliminating LPTV’s
secondary status); creating a path for
certain LPTV stations to attain primary
status; lifting certain restrictions on
LPTV service; granting blanket
construction permit and license
extensions for LPTV stations seeking to
build ATSC 3.0 facilities; abolish the
ATSC 3.0 consumer education
requirement for silent and newly built
LPTV stations, changing aspects of the
interference rules; and changing aspects
of the Commission’s distributed
transmission systems (DTS) rules.
39. We find that all of these proposals,
many of which call for sweeping
changes to the nature of LPTV service or
translator service specifically, are
insufficiently related to Broadcast
internet and are thus beyond the scope
of this proceeding. We note, however,
that all LPTV stations transitioning to
digital service are eligible to request a
one-time, six-month extension of their
construction permit, and that we will
continue to consider requests to extend
LPTV licenses pursuant to the equity
and fairness provision of section 312(g)
of the Act on a case-by-case basis.20
20 We note that the Commission intended that the
LPTV exemption from the local simulcasting
requirement would help ensure that analog LPTV/
translator stations and stations that have been
displaced due to the post-incentive auction
repacking process were not forced to build both an
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Further, pursuant to our existing rules,
LPTV stations that are unable to air the
required ATSC 3.0 consumer education
notifications because they not
operational (i.e., silent or newly
constructed) may seek a waiver of the
Commission’s notice requirement from
the Media Bureau.21 Finally, we note
that the proposals to allow LPTV
stations to use DTS and to protect LPTV
stations from full power DTS service are
presently being considered in the DTS
proceeding.
40. Retransmission Consent. MVPD
Carriage of Broadcast internet Services.
We likewise decline to interpret our
retransmission consent rules in the
context of this proceeding. NCTA asks
us to clarify that a broadcaster’s use of
retransmission consent to negotiate for
carriage of Broadcast internet services
provided by a consortium of noncommonly owned broadcasters in the
same market is prohibited by the bar on
joint or coordinated retransmission
consent negotiations. NAB opposes this
proposal as premature, urging us ‘‘to
reject, now for the third time, NCTA’s
efforts to impose restraints on
negotiations in the absence of any
demonstration of real world market
failure.’’ 22 We decline to address this
ATSC 1.0 and an ATSC 3.0 facility. We also note
that under section 312(g) of the Communications
Act of 1934, as amended (the Act), if a station fails
to transmit a broadcast signal for any consecutive
12-month period its license automatically expires at
the end of that period. However, under that section
a licensee may request an extension of its license
if doing so would ‘‘promote equity and fairness.’’
The Commission has exercised its discretion under
section 312(g) to extend or reinstate a station’s
expired license ‘‘to promote equity and fairness’’
only in limited circumstances where a station’s
failure to transmit a broadcast signal is due to
compelling circumstances that were beyond the
licensee’s control. The Commission has stated that
it would consider extensions in cases where
stations were forced to remain dark for more than
12 months by the repack process. The Media
Bureau will continue to consider such relief for
LPTV stations impacted by the repack.
21 Stations should file requests for waiver as a
Legal STA in the Commission’s Licensing and
Management System (LMS). All waiver requests
will be evaluated on a case-by-case basis and must
include the following information: (1) An
explanation describing why the station is unable to
comply with the existing consumer education
requirements; (2) an alternative but comparable
means the station will use to notify viewers of the
station’s new channel or if the station has
previously not been operational (i.e., is newly built)
why notice would not be in the public interest; and
(3) how grant of the waiver request complies with
the Commission’s general waiver standard. A
station may propose to provide alternative
notification to viewers through, for example, local
newspaper, radio, other in-market television
stations, and/or digital and social media.
22 Although we note that NCTA’s request is more
narrowly focused than NAB suggests, we
nonetheless agree that retransmission consent
issues are not relevant to this proceeding.
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issue, finding it beyond the scope of this
proceeding.23
41. Retransmission Consent
Agreements Including Ancillary and
Supplementary Services. We also reject
NTCA’s proposal that we exempt
broadcasters from all ancillary and
supplementary service fees if they
provide ancillary and supplementary
services at no additional charge to
unaffiliated MVPDs with which they
have an existing retransmission consent
agreement. No commenters addressed
this proposal. We note that ancillary
and supplementary services that are
solely being offered free of charge do not
generate revenue and, therefore, are not
subject to the ancillary and
supplementary services fee.
42. Procedural Matters. Final
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis. As
required by the Regulatory Flexibility
Act of 1980, as amended (RFA), an
Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
(IRFA) was incorporated in the NPRM in
this proceeding. The Commission
sought written public comment on the
proposals in the NPRM, including
comment on the IRFA. We received no
comments specifically directed toward
the IRFA. This present Final Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) conforms to
the RFA.
43. Need for, and Objective of, the
Report and Order. The Commission
seeks to promote and preserve free,
universally available, local broadcast
television by providing a clear
regulatory landscape that permits
licensees the flexibility to succeed in a
competitive market and incentivizes the
most efficient use of prime spectrum.
We undertook this proceeding to ensure
that our rules, most over 20 years old,
will help foster the introduction of new
Broadcast internet services and the
efficient use of existing television
broadcast spectrum under the new
ATSC 3.0 standard. In this Report and
Order, we therefore conclude that
ancillary and supplementary (A&S) fees
should be calculated based on the gross
revenue received by the broadcaster,
without regard to the gross revenue of
an unaffiliated third party, such as a
spectrum lessee; should retain the
existing standard of derogation of
broadcast service, but amend the
wording of the rules to eliminate the
outdated reference to analog television;
and should reaffirm that noncommercial
educational television broadcast stations
(NCEs) may offer Broadcast internet
services. We also reinterpret the
23 We note that the NPRM indicated that changes
to our rules and policies regarding retransmission
consent agreements are beyond the scope to this
proceeding.
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21:28 Feb 22, 2021
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application of § 73.621 of our rules to
permit noncommercial educational
stations (NCEs) to devote the substantial
majority of their spectrum not just to
free over-the-air television but also
ancillary and supplementary services;
lower the ancillary and supplementary
service fee for certain NCE services; and
clarify that NCEs may offer limited
Broadcast internet services to donors
without transforming those donations
into feeable ancillary and
supplementary service revenue. With
these changes, we seek to clarify the
regulatory landscape in order to foster
the efficient and robust use of broadcast
spectrum capacity for the provision of
Broadcast internet services consistent
with statutory directives.
44. Summary of Significant Issues
Raised by Public Comments in Response
to the IRFA. There were no comments
filed in response to the IRFA.
45. Response to Comments by the
Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration. Pursuant to
the Small Business Jobs Act of 2010,
which amended the RFA, 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.
46. The Chief Counsel did not
comment in response to the proposed
rules in this proceeding.
47. Description and Estimate of the
Number of Small Entities to Which
Rules Will Apply. The RFA directs
agencies to provide a description of, and
where feasible, an estimate of the
number of small entities that may be
affected by the proposed rules, if
adopted. The RFA generally defines the
term ‘‘small entity’’ as having the same
meaning as the terms ‘‘small business,’’
‘‘small organization,’’ and ‘‘small
governmental jurisdiction.’’ In addition,
the term ‘‘small business’’ has the same
meaning as the term ‘‘small business
concern’’ under the Small Business Act.
A small business concern is one which:
(1) Is independently owned and
operated; (2) is not dominant in its field
of operation; and (3) satisfies any
additional criteria established by the
SBA. Below, we provide a description of
such small entities, as well as an
estimate of the number of such small
entities, where feasible.
48. Television Broadcasting. This
Economic Census category ‘‘comprises
establishments primarily engaged in
broadcasting images together with
sound.’’ These establishments operate
television broadcast studios and
facilities for the programming and
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10855
transmission of programs to the public.
These establishments also produce or
transmit visual programming to
affiliated broadcast television stations,
which in turn broadcast the programs to
the public on a predetermined schedule.
Programming may originate in their own
studio, from an affiliated network, or
from external sources. The SBA has
created the following small business
size standard for such businesses: Those
having $41.5 million or less in annual
receipts. The 2012 Economic Census
reports that 751 firms in this category
operated in that year. Of this number,
656 had annual receipts of less than $25
million, 25 had annual receipts ranging
from $25 million to $49,999,999, and 70
had annual receipts of $50 million or
more. Based on this data we therefore
estimate that the majority of commercial
television broadcasters are small entities
under the applicable SBA size standard.
49. Additionally, the Commission has
estimated the number of licensed
commercial television stations to be
1,374. Of this total, 1,282 stations (or
94.2%) had revenues of $41.5 million or
less in 2018, according to Commission
staff review of the BIA Kelsey Inc.
Media Access Pro Television Database
(BIA) on April 15, 2019, and therefore
these licensees qualify as small entities
under the SBA definition. In addition,
the Commission estimates the number
of licensed noncommercial educational
(NCE) television stations to be 388. The
Commission does not compile and does
not have access to information on the
revenue of NCE stations that would
permit it to determine how many such
stations would qualify as small entities.
50. We note, however, that in
assessing whether a business concern
qualifies as ‘‘small’’ under the above
definition, business (control) affiliations
must be included. Our estimate,
therefore, likely overstates the number
of small entities that might be affected
by our action, because the revenue
figure on which it is based does not
include or aggregate revenues from
affiliated companies. In addition,
another element of the definition of
‘‘small business’’ requires that an entity
not be dominant in its field of operation.
We are unable at this time to define or
quantify the criteria that would
establish whether a specific television
broadcast station is dominant in its field
of operation. Accordingly, the estimate
of small businesses to which rules may
apply does not exclude any television
station from the definition of a small
business on this basis and is therefore
possibly over-inclusive.
51. There are also 387 Class A
stations. Given the nature of these
services, the Commission presumes that
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all of these stations qualify as small
entities under the applicable SBA size
standard. In addition, there are 1,892
LPTV stations and 3,621 TV translator
stations. Given the nature of these
services as secondary and in some cases
purely a ‘‘fill-in’’ service, we will
presume that all of these entities qualify
as small entities under the above SBA
small business size standard.
52. Description of Projected
Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other
Compliance Requirements for Small
Entities. This Report and Order imposes
no new reporting, recordkeeping, or
compliance requirements.
53. Steps Taken to Minimize the
Significant Economic Impact on Small
Entities, and Significant Alternatives
Considered. 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 an 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.’’
54. Our rules will not impose a
negative economic impact on any
parties, because they increase
opportunities for broadcasters without
imposing additional obligations. Indeed,
by clarifying the scope of feeable
revenue our rule may allow small
broadcast entities transitioning to ATSC
3.0 to experience positive economic
impacts through partnership with
unaffiliated third parties. NCE television
stations in particular, both large and
small, will experience positive benefits
from the decisions made in this item,
which will allow them to offer
nonprofit, noncommercial, educational
Broadcast internet services alongside
their television programming as part of
the primary use of their spectrum, and
which imposes a reduced two and a half
percent fee on these services.
55. Report to Congress. The
Commission will send a copy of the
Report and Order, including this FRFA,
in a report to be sent to Congress
pursuant to the Congressional Review
Act. In addition, the Commission will
send a copy of the Report and Order,
including this FRFA, to the Chief
Counsel for Advocacy of the SBA. A
copy of the Report and Order and FRFA
(or summaries thereof) will also be
published in the Federal Register.
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21:28 Feb 22, 2021
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56. Final Paperwork Reduction Act
Analysis. This document does not
contain new or modified information
collection requirements subject to the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA), Public Law 104–13. In addition,
therefore, it does not contain any new
or modified information collection
burden for small business concerns with
fewer than 25 employees, pursuant to
the Small Business Paperwork Relief
Act of 2002 (SBPRA), Public Law 107–
198, see 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(4).
57. Congressional Review Act. The
Commission has determined, and the
Administrator of the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Office of Management and Budget,
concurs, that this rule is ‘‘non-major’’
under the Congressional Review Act, 5
U.S.C. 804(2). The Commission will
send a copy of the Order to Congress
and the Government Accountability
Office, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
58. Accordingly, it is ordered that,
pursuant to the authority contained in
sections 1, 4(i), 4(j), 303(r), and 336 of
the Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 154(i), 154(j),
303(r), and 336, the Report and Order is
adopted.
59. It is further ordered that the
Commission’s rules are hereby amended
as set forth in the Final Rules, effective
as of 30 days after the date of
publication in the Federal Register.
60. It is further ordered that the
Commission will send a copy of the
Report and Order in a report to Congress
and the Government Accountability
Office pursuant to the Congressional
Review Act (CRA).
61. It is further ordered that should no
petitions for reconsideration or petitions
for judicial review be timely filed, MB
Docket No. 20–145 shall be terminated
and its docket closed.
List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 73
Communications equipment,
Television.
Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene Dortch,
Secretary.
2. Amend § 73.624 by revising
paragraphs (b) introductory text and (g)
introductory text to read as follows:
■
§ 73.624 Digital television broadcast
stations.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) DTV broadcast station permittees
or licensees must transmit at least one
over-the-air video program signal at no
direct charge to viewers on the DTV
channel. Until such time as a DTV
station permittee or licensee ceases
analog transmissions and returns that
spectrum to the Commission, and
except as provided in paragraph (b)(1) of
this section, at any time that a DTV
broadcast station permittee or licensee
transmits a video program signal on its
analog television channel, it must also
transmit at least one over-the-air video
program signal on the DTV channel. The
DTV service that is provided pursuant
to this paragraph (b) must have a
resolution of at least 480i (vertical
resolution of 480 lines, interlaced).
*
*
*
*
*
(g) Commercial DTV licensees and
permittees, and low power television,
TV translator and Class A television
stations DTV licensees and permittees,
must annually remit a fee of 5 percent
of the gross revenues derived from all
ancillary and supplementary services, as
defined by paragraph (b) of this section,
which are feeable, as defined in
paragraphs (g)(1)(i) and (ii) of this
section. Noncommercial DTV licensees
and permittees must annually remit a
fee of 5 percent of the gross revenues
derived from all ancillary and
supplementary services, as defined by
paragraph (b) of this section, which are
feeable, as defined in paragraphs
(g)(1)(i) and (ii) of this section, except
that such licensees and permittees must
annually remit a fee of 2.5 percent of the
gross revenues from such ancillary or
supplementary services which are
nonprofit, noncommercial, and
educational.
*
*
*
*
*
Final Rules
[FR Doc. 2020–28615 Filed 2–22–21; 8:45 am]
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, the Federal Communications
Commission amends 47 CFR part 73 as
follows:
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
PART 73—RADIO BROADCAST
SERVICES
1. The authority citation for part 73
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 155, 301, 303,
307, 309, 310, 334, 336, 339.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 34 (Tuesday, February 23, 2021)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 10847-10856]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-28615]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 73
[MB Docket No. 20-145; FCC 20-181; FRS 17327]
Promoting Broadcast Internet Innovation Through ATSC 3.0
AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Through this final rule, the Commission fosters the efficient
and robust use of broadcast spectrum capacity for the provision of
Broadcast internet services consistent with statutory directives. In
this document, the Commission concludes that ancillary and
supplementary (A&S) fees should be calculated based on the gross
revenue received by the broadcaster, without regard to the gross
revenue of an unaffiliated third party, such as a spectrum lessee;
should retain the existing standard of derogation of broadcast service,
but amend the wording of the rules to eliminate the outdated reference
to analog television; and should reaffirm that noncommercial
educational television broadcast stations (NCEs) may offer Broadcast
internet services. The Commission also reinterprets the application to
permit noncommercial educational stations (NCEs) to devote the
substantial majority of their spectrum not just to free over-the-air
television but also ancillary and supplementary services; lowers the
ancillary and supplementary service fee for certain NCE services; and
clarifies that NCEs may offer limited Broadcast internet services to
donors without transforming those donations into feeable ancillary and
supplementary service revenue.
DATES: Effective March 25, 2021.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For additional information, contact
Lyle Elder, [email protected], of the Media Bureau, Policy Division,
(202) 418-2120. Direct press inquiries to Janice Wise at (202) 418-
8165.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Commission's Report
and Order, FCC 20-181, adopted and released on December 10, 2020. The
full text of this document is available electronically via the FCC's
Electronic Document Management System (EDOCS) website at https://www.fcc.gov/edocs or via the FCC's Electronic Comment Filing System
(ECFS) website at https://www.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 [email protected] or calling the Commission's Consumer
and Governmental Affairs Bureau at (202) 418-0530 (voice), (202) 418-
0432 (TTY).
Synopsis
1. Earlier last year, the Commission initiated a proceeding to
encourage the provision of new and innovative Broadcast internet
services enabled by ATSC 3.0--the ``Next Generation'' broadcast
television standard often referred to as Next Gen TV--that can
complement the nation's 5G wireless networks.\1\ In so doing, the
Commission sought to eliminate uncertainty cast on such services by
legacy regulations and to consider whether, and if so how, to update
the Commission's rules regarding ancillary and supplementary services,
adopted over 20 years ago. With this item, we take additional steps to
clarify and update the regulatory landscape in order to foster the
efficient and robust use of broadcast spectrum capacity for the
provision of Broadcast internet services consistent with statutory
directives.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Promoting Broadcast Internet Innovation Through ATSC 3.0, MB
Docket No. 20-145, Declaratory Ruling and notice of proposed
rulemaking, 85 FR 43142 and 85 FR 43195 (July 16, 2020) (Declaratory
Ruling and NPRM). The Commission referred to these new ancillary
offerings over broadcast spectrum as ``Broadcast internet'' services
to distinguish them from traditional over-the-air video services. We
note that the rule changes we adopt herein will apply equally to all
ancillary and supplementary services provided using either the ATSC
1.0 or 3.0 transmission standards.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. In this Report and Order (Order), we adopt, with only minor
changes, four of the tentative conclusions set forth in the NPRM.
Specifically, we clarify the basis on which to calculate ancillary and
supplementary service fees. We retain the existing standard of
derogation of broadcast service. We also, however, amend the derogation
rule to eliminate an outdated reference to analog television. We
reaffirm the freedom of noncommercial educational television stations
(NCEs) to provide ancillary and supplementary services. And while we
generally decline at this time to adjust the fee imposed on ancillary
and supplementary services, we intend to revisit this issue at a future
date to determine whether we should adjust the fee or the basis of the
fee once the market for Broadcast internet services develops.
3. Recognizing the unique educational public service mission of
NCEs seeking to provide Broadcast internet services, we also adopt a
number of additional proposals designed to preserve and expand this
essential mission. Notably, we find that an NCE television broadcast
station may use its 6 MHz channel capacity primarily not only for its
free, over-the-air nonprofit, noncommercial, educational, television
broadcast service, as under our current interpretation of the rule, but
also for any nonprofit, noncommercial, educational (``primary'')
ancillary and supplementary services. We also adopt a reduced fee of
2.5% on gross revenue generated by such ``primary'' ancillary and
supplementary services, as opposed to the 5% fee applied to ancillary
and supplementary services generally. With these actions, this Order
continues to lay the groundwork for broadcasters, and thereby the
general public, to explore and benefit from the possibilities and
opportunities that Broadcast internet provides.
4. Background. As the Commission explained in the NPRM, the ATSC
3.0 IP-based standard offers greater effective spectral capacity than
ATSC 1.0, the current digital broadcast television standard. The
additional capacity will allow broadcasters to expand their traditional
television offerings, including by offering higher quality video and
audio and a wider range of programming choices. Broadcasters may also
provide innovative non-traditional services, and the NPRM asked about
the ``types of Broadcast internet services that are likely to be
provided in the future.'' Commenters describe a wide array of exciting
possibilities. APTS/
[[Page 10848]]
PBS explain that NCEs might expand and roll out offerings in ``a
variety of areas that further their public service missions, especially
education, child development, public safety, national security, job
training, and telehealth.'' PMG describes a wide range of possible
uses, including: (i) Distance learning services, such as distributing
subject- and classroom-specific lectures and reading materials to
students, and broadcasting content to school buses during long rural
commutes to make that time more enriching for students; (ii) trusted,
encrypted, and curated distribution of health-related content to those
unserved and underserved by high-speed internet; (iii) emergency
alerting services that allow more homes, vehicles, and first responders
to gain access to life-saving information; (iv) expanded distribution
of local and hyper-local news to audiences across a community; and (iv)
software and cybersecurity updates to power smart cities, automobiles,
and ``Internet of Things'' (IoT) products and applications. ONE Media
explains that:
[i]n addition to enhanced broadcast programming, the ATSC 3.0
standard enables use of television spectrum to communicate with
devices over wide areas efficiently, expanding opportunities for
distance learning, advanced emergency alerting and information
functions, highly secure file delivery and authentication,
offloading large data files (including video) needed by carriers to
cache programming directly on user devices, dramatically improving
efficient distribution of data to autonomous driving vehicles,
facilitating near-instantaneous needs for IoT devices and
telemedicine or smart agriculture activities, and other innovative
services yet to be conceived.
5. In June 2020, the Commission commenced this proceeding to ensure
that our rules will help foster the development of innovative and
efficient uses of broadcast spectrum like the ones described above. In
the Declaratory Ruling, the Commission clarified that the lease of
excess broadcast television spectrum to a third party, including
another broadcaster, for the provision of ancillary and supplementary
services does not result in attribution under our broadcast television
station ownership rules or for any other requirements related to
television station attribution (e.g., filing ownership reports). The
Commission explained that regulatory clarity will help ensure that
broadcasters and other innovators have the flexibility to generate the
scale--both locally and nationally--that may be necessary to support
certain Broadcast internet services, and that regulatory reform can
ensure that market forces, rather than outdated rules, determine the
success of the nascent Broadcast internet industry. In the accompanying
NPRM, the Commission sought comment on any rule changes needed to
further promote regulatory certainty and greater investment in
innovative Broadcast internet services.
6. Specifically, the NPRM sought comment on a number of general
matters concerning the potential uses and applications of excess
broadcast spectrum capacity resulting from the transition to ATSC 3.0;
on whether the amount and method of calculating the ancillary and
supplementary services fee should be reconsidered given the new
potential uses of excess spectrum capacity; and on whether the
Commission should clarify or modify the rules prohibiting derogation of
broadcast service and defining an analogous service. The NPRM elicited
17 comments, 12 replies, and numerous ex parte filings from commenters
representing companies and industry groups from the broadcast, cable,
wireless, and consumer electronics industries, as well as non-profit
groups and groups hoping to explore new Broadcast internet
opportunities. Commenters are largely supportive of the Commission's
tentative conclusions, although as discussed below there is notable
opposition to the proposal to exclude third party facility improvements
from revenue calculations, a proposal we decline to adopt today. There
is also disagreement regarding the proposal to clarify the derogation
standard, both from parties who support a significant change and
parties who oppose any change at all to the existing text. The record
also reflects widespread skepticism about any Commission action that
would go beyond the tentative conclusions, with two notable exceptions.
First, NCEs and associated parties make a compelling case that
substantial public benefits could accrue through the widespread
deployment of Broadcast internet over public television spectrum,
justifying additional steps to encourage that deployment. Second, a
large number of low power television (LPTV) station representatives and
interested parties propose changes to the rules governing LPTV service,
though the proposals are largely unrelated to Broadcast internet
services.
7. Discussion. Ancillary and Supplementary Service Fee. With one
exception, discussed below, we decline at this time to adjust the fee
program associated with ancillary and supplementary services. Rather,
we will revisit the size and basis of the fee, as well as other
relevant issues, when we have a better understanding of how the
transition to ATSC 3.0 is progressing. We do, however, adopt our
tentative conclusion that fees should be calculated based on the gross
revenue received by the broadcaster rather than revenue received by a
spectrum lessee. Finally, we decline at this time to adopt the proposal
made by Public Knowledge et al. that we use the fees we collect for
ancillary and supplementary services to fund a program to offset costs
for consumers who upgrade their equipment as part of the transition to
ATSC 3.0, and we decline at this time to exempt from the ancillary and
supplementary service fee ``in-kind'' contributions, or otherwise
change our fee for ancillary and supplementary services that fall into
certain classes of service.
8. The Telecommunications Act of 1996 (1996 Act) requires
broadcasters to pay a fee to the United States Treasury to the extent
they use their digital television (DTV) spectrum to provide ancillary
and supplementary services for which the payment of a subscription fee
is required in order to receive such services, or for which the
licensee directly or indirectly receives compensation from a third
party in return for transmitting material furnished by such a third
party (other than commercial advertisements used to support
broadcasting for which a subscription fee is not required). The 1996
Act further provides that the ancillary and supplementary services fee
program shall be designed to recover for the public a portion of the
value of the public spectrum resource made available for such
commercial use, and to avoid unjust enrichment through the method
employed to permit such uses of that resource; and to recover for the
public an amount that, to the extent feasible, equals but does not
exceed (over the term of the license) the amount that would have been
recovered had such services been licensed at auction. In addition, the
Commission is required by statute to adjust the ancillary and
supplementary services fee from time to time in order to ensure that
these requirements continue to be met.
9. As a preliminary matter, we reaffirm that section 336 of the
1996 Act gives the Commission flexibility to determine the appropriate
fee for ancillary and supplementary services within the parameters set
forth in the statute. Section 336 directs the Commission to ``establish
a program to assess and collect . . . an annual fee or other schedule
or method of payment that promotes the objectives'' described by the
statute. Specifically, the statute requires that the fee program be
[[Page 10849]]
designed to recover for the public some portion of the value of the
spectrum, prevent the unjust enrichment of broadcasters providing
ancillary and supplementary services, and approximate the revenues that
would have been received had the spectrum on which the services are
provided been licensed through an auction. As the Commission has
observed, ``the 1996 Act gives the Commission broad discretion in
setting the amount of the fee for ancillary and supplementary
services,'' bounded by the criteria set forth in section 336(e).
Commenters who addressed this issue agree with this analysis.
10. Fee for Commercial Television Broadcast Stations. We conclude
that we do not have sufficient information at this early stage in the
ATSC 3.0 transition to evaluate fully whether a change to, much less
elimination of, the current fee for feeable ancillary and supplementary
services offered by commercial television stations would better reflect
the directives of section 336(e). Accordingly, we retain the current
fee of 5% for such stations and intend to reevaluate the fee once the
marketplace for Broadcast internet services has become more mature.
11. As the Commission previously has recognized, in considering how
to calculate the appropriate ancillary and supplementary fee, we must
balance potentially competing statutory goals: Recover a portion of the
value of the spectrum used for ancillary and supplementary services,
avoid unjust enrichment, and approximate the revenue that would have
been received had these services been licensed through an auction. A
fee that is too high could dissuade broadcasters from providing
Broadcast internet services and thereby reduce the potential benefits
to consumers of such services and preclude the Commission from
collecting fees approximating the amount that would have been recovered
for the spectrum at auction. On the other hand, a fee that is too low
may both fail to prevent the unjust enrichment of licensees and to
recover for the public an amount approximating the amount that would
have been recovered at auction.
12. In considering these statutory mandates, we conclude that it
would be premature at this time to adjust the ancillary and
supplementary service fee without knowing more about the kinds of
Broadcast internet services that will be provided and the economics
thereof. The conversion to ATSC 3.0 is entirely voluntary, and
commercial service has only recently commenced in a few television
markets. We cannot yet gauge the extent to which ATSC 3.0 will be
deployed and adopted by consumers or which ATSC 3.0-based services and
features will be offered as feeable Broadcast internet services.
Indeed, the Commission recently reached a similar conclusion when it
first authorized the voluntary transmission to ATSC 3.0. Accordingly,
we reject commenters' suggestions that we reconsider the current 5% fee
on broadcast commercial stations, at this time. Instead, consistent
with recommendations in the record, we believe it would be better to
revisit the ancillary and supplementary service fee when the ATSC 3.0
marketplace has further developed.
13. Calculation of Gross Revenue. We adopt our tentative conclusion
that fees should be calculated based on the gross revenue received by
the broadcaster rather than revenue received by a spectrum lessee. As
the Commission stated in the NPRM, to hold otherwise could subject a
broadcaster to a fee payment in excess of the gross revenue it actually
receives. All commenters who addressed this issue agree with this
approach regarding the calculation of gross revenue. As proposed in the
NPRM, we also conclude that to the extent the licensee and the lessee
are affiliated, we will attribute the gross revenue of the lessee to
the licensee for purposes of calculating the ancillary and
supplementary services fee, based on a share of gross revenue that is
proportional to the licensee's stake in the lessee. Otherwise, as the
Commission noted in the NPRM, the licensee (or its parent company)
could create a subsidiary for the sole purpose of evading the fee while
retaining all of the financial benefit of the arrangement.
14. We decline at this time to take up the issue of whether to
exclude from gross revenue the value of ``in-kind'' facility
improvements. Although the Commission tentatively concluded in the NPRM
that the value of such improvements should be excluded from the gross
revenue calculation, the record on this issue was limited and the
comments were mixed. We will continue to monitor the progress of the
transition to ATSC 3.0, the provision of Broadcast internet services,
and the status of ``in-kind'' facility improvements in the marketplace,
and may address this issue in the future if warranted.
15. ATSC 3.0 Consumer Equipment. We decline at this time to adopt
the proposal made by Public Knowledge et al. that we use the fees
collected from ancillary and supplementary services to fund a program
offsetting costs for consumers who upgrade their consumer premises
equipment as part of the ATSC 3.0 transition. These commenters note
that ATSC 3.0 is not compatible with current television devices and
contend that, because consumers will have to replace their television
sets or purchase converter devices to receive ATSC 3.0 signals, the
transition to ATSC 3.0 ``will create high consumer costs, similar to
those faced by consumers during the DTV transition.'' Thus, they
maintain we should act now, to develop a program to offset ATSC 3.0
transition costs for consumers. We note that the transition to ATSC 3.0
is voluntary and still in its early stages; therefore, we find it is
premature to consider such a program at this time. We also note that
the DTV transition equipment subsidy program was explicitly mandated by
Congress.
16. Classes of Ancillary and Supplementary Service. We decline to
grant fee exemptions for certain classes of Broadband internet service,
such as telehealth, distance learning, public safety, or homeland
security-related services, or for services that promote internet access
in rural areas. Although, according to the record, such services are
currently beginning to be provided by, or are in development by, NCE
stations, we believe it is premature to take any such action given the
nascent state of the market for these ATSC 3.0 services. As discussed
further below, we take action in this Order to encourage the
development of ``primary'' NCE ancillary and supplementary services
(those used for nonprofit, noncommercial, educational purposes), by
reducing the fee associated with such services. At the same time, we
conclude that we do not have a sufficient basis at this time to support
changing our fee approach for any other type of ancillary and
supplementary service that are not considered ``primary.'' Among other
things, we lack information regarding how such services are likely to
be provided, whether they will be revenue-generating, whether there
will be sufficient demand to support the provision of such services, or
whether our current fee for ancillary and supplementary services will
dissuade broadcasters from offering such services. For similar reasons,
we also decline at this time to exempt from fees, or adopt a lower fee
for, services that promote internet access in rural areas. We will
continue to monitor the transition to ATSC 3.0, including the provision
of Broadcast internet services such as telehealth, public safety, and
homeland security-related services, as well as services that provide
internet access in rural areas, and may reconsider this issue in the
future.
[[Page 10850]]
17. NCE Television Stations. NCE television stations play an
important role in providing nonprofit, noncommercial, and education
services to communities nationwide, and the Commission is committed to
supporting their enthusiastic embrace of the possibilities that Next
Gen TV provides. Accordingly, we adopt, in part, the commenter proposal
to reinterpret Sec. 73.621 of our rules, which will allow NCEs to
provide a wider range of services that align with their core mission.
While, as discussed above, we generally decline to adjust the fee
associated with ancillary and supplementary services, to the extent
that NCE television stations offer feeable ancillary and supplementary
services that are nonprofit, noncommercial, and educational, we adopt a
reduced fee based on 2.5% of gross revenues generated by such
``primary'' ancillary and supplementary services. We also clarify that
when an NCE television station provides ``donor exclusive'' ancillary
and supplementary services that are nominal in value in return for
contributions to the licensee, we will not treat such contributions as
``subscription fees'' under section 336 of the 1996 Act or Sec. 73.621
of our rules.
18. NCE Ancillary and Supplementary Services. We conclude that an
NCE television licensee may provide Broadcast internet services,
provided that the substantial majority of its 6 MHz channel capacity is
dedicated to a combination of free, over-the-air nonprofit,
noncommercial, educational, television broadcast service and any
nonprofit, noncommercial, educational (or ``primary'') ancillary and
supplementary services it chooses to provide.\2\ In this regard, we
modify the 2001 NCE Ancillary Services Report and Order's
interpretation of Sec. 73.621,\3\ which held that a substantial
majority of an NCE television licensee's digital capacity must be
dedicated to nonprofit, noncommercial, educational broadcast service,
limiting ancillary and supplementary services to an NCE television
licensee's excess capacity. In so doing, we seek to preserve the
nonprofit, noncommercial, educational nature of an NCE television
licensee's service to its community, while affording such NCE licensees
increased flexibility to provide ``primary'' services that are not
traditional broadcasting. Although we decline to define what
constitutes a ``substantial majority'' of the NCE's digital bitstream
at this time, we expect to seek comment in a future proceeding on
whether it is appropriate to revise Sec. 73.621(j) regarding the
amount of its 6 MHz channel capacity that an NCE television licensee
must devote to ``primary'' uses, the scope of those primary uses, and
any other related matters.\4\
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\2\ An NCE television licensee may provide ancillary and
supplementary services that are not nonprofit, noncommercial, and
educational--including commercial services--on the licensee's excess
(i.e., non-primary) capacity. Such services will be subject to the
standard fee of 5% of gross revenues. We note that an NCE licensee,
like all other television broadcasters, must broadcast at least one
free over-the-air video programming stream, and its ancillary and
supplementary services must not derogate this service. During the
transition period to ATSC 3.0 service, we are affording NCE
television broadcasters significant flexibility to determine the
best mix of services for their communities. However, as during the
DTV transition, our expectation remains that the fundamental use of
the DTV license will be for the provision of free, over-the-air
television service. We do not decide at this time the separate,
broader issue of how much spectral capacity a broadcast television
station (commercial or NCE) must use after the ATSC 3.0 transition
period for the provision of its free over-the-air television
service. We will consider this issue in a future proceeding, such as
when we decide it is the appropriate time to consider eliminating
the ATSC 1.0 simulcasting requirement.
\3\ 66 FR 58973 (Nov. 26, 2001).
\4\ In addition, until we address this issue in this future
proceeding, we will consider waiver requests as necessary to allow
public safety or other ancillary and supplementary uses that are
nonprofit and noncommercial, but may not be educational in nature,
to be applied to the ``substantial majority'' portion of an NCE
licensee's spectrum dedicated for ``primary'' purposes.
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19. As an initial matter, we adopt our unopposed tentative
conclusion that NCE television licensees are allowed to provide
ancillary and supplementary services. Indeed, the 2001 NCE Ancillary
Services Report and Order sought to clarify not whether NCEs could
offer ancillary and supplementary services, but ``the manner in which
[NCE] television licensees may use their excess [DTV] capacity for
remunerative purposes.'' The 2001 NCE Ancillary Services Report and
Order amended Sec. 73.621 of the rules ``to clarify that the
[s]ection's requirements apply to the entire digital bitstream of NCE
[television] licensees, including the provision of ancillary or
supplementary services,'' in order to ``preserve the noncommercial
educational nature of public broadcasting, while allowing NCE
[television] licensees some flexibility in remunerative use of their
spectrum.'' The Commission concluded at the time that this balance
required NCE television licensees to ``use their entire digital
capacity primarily for a nonprofit, noncommercial, educational
broadcast service.'' The Commission ``decline[d] to quantify the term
`primarily,' '' but ``consider[ed] it to mean a `substantial majority'
of [the NCE television licensee's] entire digital capacity.''
20. In light of the unique educational public service mission of
noncommercial educational television stations (NCEs) seeking to provide
ancillary and supplementary services, we clarify that Sec. 73.621
allows NCE television licensees to count as part of the ``primary'' use
of their spectrum not just ``nonprofit, noncommercial, educational,
broadcast service,'' but also ancillary and supplementary services that
are nonprofit, noncommercial, and educational in nature. Specifically,
we conclude that Sec. 73.621(j) permits an NCE television licensee to
count nonprofit, noncommercial, and educational ancillary and
supplementary services, together with its free, over-the-air nonprofit,
noncommercial, educational television broadcast service, as ``primary''
services that fall within Sec. 73.621(a). Section 73.621(j) states
that Sec. 73.621 ``will apply to the entire digital bitstream of
noncommercial educational television stations, including the provision
of ancillary or supplementary services.'' We recognize that the 2001
NCE Ancillary Services Report and Order, which adopted Sec. 73.621(j),
interpreted this provision to mean that NCE television licensees are
required to use their entire digital capacity ``primarily'' for their
free, over-the-air television nonprofit, noncommercial, educational
broadcast service and that ancillary and supplementary services do not
qualify as a ``primary'' use. We reject this interpretation of Sec.
73.621(j) of our rules as unnecessarily narrow. Rather, we agree with
APTS/PBS and PMVG that it is reasonable to afford greater flexibility
to NCE television licensees to provide ancillary and supplementary
services that are nonprofit, noncommercial, and educational in nature
as a ``primary'' use, and that there is a wide potential variety of
such services.\5\ We are
[[Page 10851]]
unpersuaded by Public Knowledge's contention that ``allowing NCEs to
count spectrum used for ancillary and supplementary services as primary
service . . . violates 47 U.S.C. [397](11).'' \6\ Accordingly, we
interpret the language of Sec. 73.621(j) providing that the
requirements of Sec. 73.621 will apply to the entire digital bitstream
of NCE television stations, ``including the provision of ancillary or
supplementary services,'' to broaden the scope of Sec. 73.621(a) such
that NCE television stations have the flexibility to make ``primary''
use of their ``entire digital bitstream'' through provision of not only
a nonprofit, noncommercial, educational television broadcast service,
but also any nonprofit, noncommercial, and educational ancillary and
supplementary services it chooses to provide.
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\5\ APTS/PBS maintain that any ancillary or supplementary
service that `` `serve[s] the educational needs of the community' or
furthers the `advancement of educational programs' '' should be
considered ``primary.'' We reject this view because it would permit
for-profit, commercial educational services (or non-educational
television broadcasts) to be counted among the ``primary'' uses of
an NCE's spectrum. Instead, consistent with the requirements in
Sec. 73.621(a) that the station qualify as ``noncommercial
educational'' and is licensed ``only to [a] nonprofit educational
organization,'' the rule requires that all ``primary'' uses, whether
broadcast television or ancillary and supplementary, must be
nonprofit, noncommercial, and educational. We find this reading best
preserves the nonprofit, noncommercial, and educational nature of
public broadcasting. We note that our decision today applies only to
the application of Sec. 73.621(a) to the provision of ancillary and
supplementary services pursuant to Sec. 73.621(j); it does not
change an NCE television licensee's broadcast and other obligations
under Sec. 73.621(a).
\6\ Applying the last-antecedent rule, which ``provides that `a
limiting clause or phrase . . . should ordinarily be read as
modifying only the noun or noun phrase that it immediately follows,'
'' we observe that ``engaged primarily in the production,
acquisition, distribution, or dissemination of educational and
cultural television or radio programs'' is defining ``any nonprofit
institution,'' and not ``any licensee or permittee of a public
broadcast station.'' Furthermore, our ``primary service'' decision
applies to the use of a licensee's spectrum, not the activities of
the licensee itself.
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21. Although we adopt the NCE proposal to reinterpret our rules to
permit ``primary'' ancillary and supplementary services, we decline to
``pre-approve'' specific services that could be considered primary.
APTS/PBS and PMVG ask us essentially to create a ``safe harbor'' for
Broadcast internet services by identifying specific services that will
qualify as ``primary'' uses under Sec. 73.621(a). Given the nascent
state of the Broadcast internet market, we find that it would be
premature to classify such services in this manner. Instead, consistent
with our precedent in applying Sec. 73.621(a) to broadcast
programming, we will defer to the judgment of the broadcaster when
evaluating whether a given ancillary and supplementary service is
educational unless such categorization appears to be arbitrary or
unreasonable.
22. We also decline, at this time, to adopt the NCE television
broadcasters' proposal to redefine the term ``primarily,'' as used in
Sec. 73.621(a), to mean a ``simple majority'' instead of a
``substantial majority,'' which is the definition adopted by the
Commission in the 2001 NCE Ancillary Services Report and Order. We
disagree with APTS/PBS that there is a plain or common meaning of the
term ``primarily,'' and instead find that the term is ambiguous.\7\ In
light of this ambiguity, the Commission previously determined in 2001
that ``primarily'' means ``substantial majority.'' This definition was
not challenged at the time, and we are not persuaded by the arguments
in the record that present circumstances warrant reconsideration of
this earlier decision. Given the retention of our substantial majority
requirement, Public Knowledge is incorrect that our rules ``will allow
NCEs to sublease or otherwise monetize the majority of their spectrum
to third parties instead of providing free service to the public.''
Moreover, we find that our decision to include certain ancillary and
supplementary services as part of the ``primary'' use of their spectrum
affords NCE television licensees substantial additional flexibility in
light of the enhanced capabilities made possible by the ATSC 3.0
standard.\8\ As these services reach the market, we will have
additional context upon which to evaluate whether any changes to the
definition of ``primarily'' are warranted. Accordingly, we defer
examination of this issue and any other related matters until the
Broadcast internet marketplace matures.\9\
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\7\ We note that the Merriam-Webster online dictionary defines
``primarily'' as ``for the most part; chiefly.'' Webster's New World
Dictionary defines it as ``mainly; principally.'' Thus, while
``primarily'' could be used to mean a ``simple majority,'' that is
far from the ``common'' understanding.
\8\ Public Knowledge's claims to the contrary notwithstanding,
nothing in this Order undermines the policy of ensuring free, over-
the-air, educational television programming. As required by existing
rules, each NCE station must continue to provide a free, over-the-
air, nonprofit, noncommercial, educational television broadcast
service.
\9\ We will also consider waiver requests, as necessary, to
allow public safety or other ancillary and supplementary uses that
are nonprofit and noncommercial, but may not be educational in
nature, to be applied to the ``substantial majority'' portion of an
NCE licensee's spectrum committed to ``primary'' purposes.
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23. Fee for NCE Primary Ancillary and Supplementary Services. While
we generally decline to adjust the fee associated with ancillary and
supplementary services, to the extent that NCE television stations
offer feeable ancillary and supplementary services that are nonprofit,
noncommercial, and educational, we adopt a reduced fee of 2.5% on gross
revenues generated by such ``primary'' services. As discussed above,
Sec. 73.621 of our rules provides that NCE stations must ``be used
primarily to serve the educational needs of the community; for the
advancement of educational programs; and to furnish a nonprofit and
noncommercial television broadcast service,'' and extends this
requirement to all services provided via the station's digital
bitstream. Given the benefit of the ``distinctive content of public
broadcast programming'' provided by NCEs, and the fact that the auction
value of spectrum that must be ``primarily'' used for such services is
likely lower than that of spectrum used for services without such
restrictions, we believe this lower fee is appropriate.
24. Although we decline at this time to exempt NCE television
stations entirely from all fees on ancillary and supplementary service
revenues devoted to the station's nonprofit activities as APTS/PBS
suggest, we believe that the reduction we adopt is an appropriate
incremental and balanced approach. While some commenters suggest that
we make no change to the 5% fee under any circumstances, and others
asked us to eliminate it entirely, we find that a fee of 2.5% for
``primary'' NCE ancillary and supplementary services that are feeable
under the statute appropriately recognizes the public service mission
of public television stations without creating a significant disparity
with the 5% fee applied to other ancillary and supplementary services
offered by NCE and commercial television stations. While we decline to
adjust the 5% fee generally, choosing instead to wait until the ATSC
3.0 marketplace further develops and after a further review is
conducted, we believe a different approach is warranted for NCE
stations. We seek to support the ability of public television stations
to provide and expand their nonprofit, noncommercial, educational
services and engage in new and innovative educational efforts using
ATSC 3.0 technology.\10\ NCE nonprofit, noncommercial, educational
services, provided by the nonprofit, education-focused licensees of NCE
stations, uniquely advance the public interest and therefore should be
treated differently under our fee program than other ancillary and
supplementary services that are provided by NCE and commercial
broadcast stations. Given this, our approach appropriately reduces the
fees on any revenue generated by such ``primary'' NCE ancillary and
supplementary services, thereby permitting the nonprofit, education-
focused licensees of NCE television stations to retain a larger
percentage of any such revenue, providing more funds to support the
[[Page 10852]]
core educational public service missions of such stations.
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\10\ We note that Public Knowledge et al. contend that the
Commission is prohibited from setting a fee of zero for any
licensee. Because we will continue to collect ancillary and
supplementary fees from every licensee, both commercial and
noncommercial, we need not address Public Knowledge et al.'s
argument.
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25. We find that our approach is consistent with section 336 of the
1996 Act. As discussed above, the language of section 336 gives the
Commission wide discretion to select the appropriate fee for feeable
ancillary and supplementary services. Thus, we conclude that we have
discretion under the statute to establish a fee for NCE primary
ancillary and supplementary services that is lower than the fee for
other ancillary and supplementary services, including those provided by
commercial stations. Section 336(e)(1) directs the Commission to
establish ``a program to assess and collect'' ancillary and
supplementary fees that, pursuant to section 336(e)(2), recover ``a
portion of the value of the public spectrum,'' ``avoid unjust
enrichment,'' and, eventually, recover an amount approximately
equivalent to the spectrum's value at auction. Section 336 does not
require the Commission to levy fees in direct proportion to the amount
of spectrum held by each licensee. Adjusting our program of fees to
impose a reduced fee of 2.5% for NCE stations' ``primary'' ancillary
and supplementary services will not undermine the Commission's ability
to recover for the public a portion of the value of the spectrum made
available for ancillary and supplementary uses. Furthermore, a reduced
fee on the nonprofit, noncommercial, educational ancillary and
supplementary services offered by NCEs will not create a danger of
unjust enrichment. Any additional ``primary'' NCE ancillary and
supplementary services offered as a result of these lower fees will, by
their nature, redound to the public's benefit more than to the benefit
of the nonprofit educational organization licensees of the NCE
stations.
26. Finally, we conclude that a 2.5% fee is consistent with our
directive under section 336(e)(2)(B) to recover for the public an
amount that would have been recovered ``had such services been
licensed'' pursuant to an auction. The reduced fee of 2.5% will apply
only to feeable ancillary and supplementary services that qualify as
``primary'' NCE services under Sec. 73.621 of our rules, which means
they must be nonprofit, noncommercial, and educational in nature. If
spectrum restricted in this manner were offered for auction, we expect
that bidders would offer a more modest amount of money for the right to
build facilities that are restricted to providing services that are
``primarily'' nonprofit, noncommercial, and educational as opposed to
spectrum designated for commercial use.\11\ In other words, the
requirements imposed on the use of the NCE station spectrum make this
spectrum inherently less valuable at auction than spectrum without such
use restrictions.\12\ Given the benefits to the public of an
accelerated rollout of NCE primary Broadcast internet services, we find
it is appropriate to adopt this reduced fee even though it may
overstate the auction value of spectrum so restricted. We are directed
not only to ``collect an amount that . . . equals but does not exceed''
the auction value of the spectrum, but also to recover a ``portion of
the value of the public spectrum resource'' while avoiding unjust
enrichment. While we find 2.5% to be appropriate at this time, we
intend to monitor the development of the NCE Broadcast internet
marketplace and may adjust the fee if conditions warrant.
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\11\ Our analysis is consistent with the analysis the Commission
applied to section 336(e)(2)(B) in the NCE Ancillary Services Report
and Order.
\12\ We agree with BitPath that, in considering among other
things the appropriate level of the fee, the Commission should
consider the auction value of the spectrum in the context of the
ancillary and supplementary services being provided, not merely the
auction value of the spectrum in the abstract.
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27. In reaching our decision, we are not constrained by the
Commission's previous decision to apply to NCE licensees the same fee
for ancillary and supplementary services that we apply to commercial
licensees. Instead, we conclude that advances in technology and the
associated new offerings anticipated by NCE stations suggest a
different approach is currently warranted when assessing the
appropriate fee for NCE ``primary'' ancillary and supplementary
services. Public television stations are already experimenting with
ancillary and supplementary services that advance the public interest.
Applying a reduced fee for ``primary'' NCE services will give NCE
licensees both an additional incentive to pursue the expensive
transition to ATSC 3.0 and additional resources to devote to their core
mission. We find that the 2.5% rate for ``primary'' ancillary and
supplementary services is sufficient to meet our obligations under
section 336 of the 1996 Act and will advance our goals of promoting
Broadcast internet services and supporting the mission of NCE
television stations to provide nonprofit, noncommercial, educational
services.
28. We note that this limited change does not excuse NCEs from
their obligation to file an ``Annual DTV Ancillary/Supplementary
Services Report'' whenever they receive feeable ancillary and
supplementary services revenue. We expect that, in this report, NCE
filers will clearly identify any services that are nonprofit,
noncommercial, and educational and therefore qualify for the reduced
fee.\13\
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\13\ We dismiss as moot NTCA's proposal for a detailed reporting
and audit system, which they suggest should apply if we waived all
fees for certain Broadcast internet services.
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29. Donor Contributions to NCE Television Stations. As requested by
PMVG and unopposed by other commenters, we clarify that, when an NCE
television station provides ``donor exclusive'' ancillary and
supplementary services that are nominal in value in return for
contributions to the licensee, we will not treat such contributions as
``subscription fees'' under section 336 of the 1996 Act or Sec. 73.621
of our rules. For example, PMVG notes that stations may provide donor
households with exclusive links to supplemental content, such as
extended interviews or reference materials relevant to public affairs
programming, or stations could offer donor households enhanced viewing
experiences, such as the opportunity to view a local orchestra
performance in 4K definition with immersive sound. We will not treat
such donor exclusive services as feeable as long as the ancillary and
supplementary service provided in return is comparable in terms of
value to the kinds of small gifts (e.g., coffee mugs, tote bags) that
NCE stations often give donors in return for contributions. We agree
with PMVG that the type of limited content offerings described above
are comparable to the traditional donor gifts provided by NCE stations
and should not be treated as ancillary and supplementary services
provided in return for a subscription fee. We also agree that, unlike
programming provided in return for a subscription fee, the value of
such content offerings made in return for a donation is likely minimal
as compared to the value of the donation. In addition, unlike a
subscription fee, the donation is made voluntarily and not pursuant to
a subscription agreement. We intend to monitor the provision of ``donor
exclusive'' services, however, and we may reconsider our decision in
the future if such donor services appear to be comparable to
subscription-based services.
[[Page 10853]]
30. Derogation and Analogous Services. We adopt our tentative
conclusion that whether a broadcast station's signal has been derogated
should continue to be evaluated by whether it provides ``at least one
standard definition over-the-air video program signal at no direct
charge to viewers that is at least comparable in resolution to analog
television programming.'' We also adopt our tentative conclusion to
amend the wording of Sec. 73.624(b) to define the precise resolution
that is considered to be ``at least comparable in resolution to analog
television programming'' as 480i, with a slight modification.\14\ Based
on the record, we decline to adopt two other proposals on which we
sought comment in the NPRM--a presumption that Broadcast internet
services are not analogous to any other service regulated by the
Commission and a de minimis service threshold under which ancillary and
supplementary services might be exempted from the need to comply with
the regulations applicable to an analogous service otherwise regulated
by the Commission.
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\14\ The number ``480'' identifies a vertical resolution of 480
lines, and the ``i'' signifies an interlaced resolution.
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31. As discussed in the NPRM, section 336 of the 1996 Act allows
broadcasters the flexibility to provide ancillary and supplementary
services on their DTV channels.\15\ In authorizing such services,
Congress directed the Commission to adopt rules ensuring that
broadcasters providing ancillary and supplementary services: (1) Avoid
derogating any advanced television services that the Commission may
require; and (2) are subject to Commission regulations applicable to
analogous services. In furtherance of these statutory requirements, the
Commission adopted Sec. 73.624(c) of the rules, which permits
broadcasters to offer ancillary and supplementary services provided
they ``do not derogate the DTV broadcast stations' obligations under
paragraph (b) of this section.'' Section 73.624(b) of the rules, in
turn, requires that each DTV broadcast licensee transmit at least one
standard definition (SD) over-the-air video program signal on its
digital channel, at no charge to viewers, that is at least comparable
in resolution to analog television programming. The Commission also
adopted rules codifying that broadcasters are permitted to provide
ancillary and supplementary services on their broadcast spectrum that
are analogous to other regulated services. If they choose to do so,
however, they are required to adhere to any rules specific to such type
of service.
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\15\ In general, the 1996 Act seeks ``[t]o promote competition
and reduce regulation in order to secure lower prices and higher
quality services for American telecommunications consumers and
encourage the rapid deployment of new telecommunications
technologies.'' More specifically, the 1996 Act gives the Commission
discretion to determine, in the public interest, whether to permit
broadcasters to offer ancillary and supplementary services.
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32. Derogation of Service. Derogation of Service Standard. We adopt
our tentative conclusion that whether a broadcast station's signal has
been derogated should continue to be evaluated by whether it provides
``at least one standard definition over-the-air video program signal at
no direct charge to viewers that is at least comparable in resolution
to analog television programming.'' As acknowledged both in this
proceeding and by the Commission in the Next Gen TV Report and
Order,\16\ the ATSC 3.0 standard will provide expanded capacity for
broadcasters to offer not only HD programming, but also other enhanced
television resolutions such as 4K and 8K more efficiently. However, as
noted by NAB and BitPath, in light of the ATSC 3.0 local simulcasting
requirement, requiring broadcasters to provide a higher resolution
above SD at this early stage of ATSC 3.0 deployment could jeopardize
their ability to preserve both primary and secondary ATSC 1.0 signals
as stations convert to ATSC 3.0. Moreover, we agree with NAB, Pearl,
and BitPath that current marketplace forces are sufficient to
incentivize broadcasters to maintain their existing standards of
service for viewers, which notably may include HD programming streams.
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\16\ 83 FR 4998 (Feb. 2, 2018), 84 FR 60350 (Dec. 20, 2017).
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33. Next, we deny requests from several commenters that we prohibit
broadcasters from transitioning a signal from HD to SD in order to
provide an ancillary and supplementary service. Earlier this year, the
Commission rejected NCTA's proposal to require that ATSC 1.0 signals be
simulcast in HD. While we agree with NCTA that transitioning an ATSC
1.0 signal from HD to SD to facilitate the deployment of ancillary and
supplementary services is different than transitioning a signal from HD
to SD in order to comply with the ATSC 1.0 simulcast requirement, we
reiterate that there is no obligation that broadcasters provide an HD
signal, even if they have chosen to do so in the past. Imposing such a
signal quality requirement remains inappropriate, for the same reasons
it did six months ago--broadcasters have strong market incentives to
maintain HD service, and a decision not to do so would be in response
to competitive marketplace conditions. We therefore ``decline to
substitute our own judgment for that of local television stations that
best know their communities' needs,'' but will continue to monitor
broadcasters' deployment of ATSC 3.0 services and evaluate the need for
changes to our derogation standard as part of a planned future
proceeding.\17\
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\17\ In the Spring of 2022, the Commission expects to open a
proceeding to evaluate the sunsetting of certain ATSC 3.0 technical
provisions. Separately, the Commission has stated that it will
consider as part of a future proceeding the continued necessity of
the ATSC 1.0 simulcasting requirement, which does not sunset. As
part of a future proceeding, based on the development of the ATSC
3.0 marketplace, we expect likewise to determine whether to
reevaluate our derogation standard. While we have elected to
maintain our current derogation standard at this time, we continue
to ``expect that the fundamental use of the 6 MHz DTV license will
be for the provision of free over-the-air television service.''
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34. Definition of a Standard Definition Signal. Notwithstanding our
decision to maintain the existing derogation standard, we adopt our
tentative conclusion to modernize Sec. 73.624(b) so that a standard
definition signal is defined as one that has a resolution of at least
480i (vertical resolution of 480 lines, interlaced), as supported by
multiple broadcast commenters. Despite NAB's suggestion to the
contrary, the record provides no evidence that clarifying and
modernizing the definition of a ``standard definition signal'' will
place an increased burden on broadcasters. Rather, this change will
merely remove an outdated reference to analog television and codify
what is universally accepted as the digital resolution of a standard
definition broadcast signal. While, as pointed out by BitPath, the 480i
resolution standard was adopted over 20 years ago, it is universally
utilized by television sets today for displaying standard definition
programming. Continued reliance on an obsolete analog broadcasting
standard would be an outdated method by which to determine what is an
acceptable digital standard definition signal. Further, we conclude
that this rule update is fully consistent with the broad initiative the
Commission has undertaken the past four years to modernize its rules by
removing outdated references that no longer reflect the current media
marketplace.
35. Analogous Services Analysis. In light of the limited record on
this topic and the present lack of clarity concerning the precise
Broadcast internet services that broadcasters may offer, we find it is
premature to adopt
[[Page 10854]]
a presumption that certain Broadcast internet services are or are not
analogous to any other service regulated by the Commission. For the
same reasons, we decline to adopt a de minimis service threshold under
which ancillary and supplementary services might be exempted from the
need to comply with the regulations of an analogous service otherwise
regulated by the Commission.
36. In reaching both of these conclusions, we agree with NCTA and
CTIA that, at this initial stage in the development of Broadcast
internet services, the Commission should continue to evaluate whether
or not a service is analogous to other regulated services on a case-by-
case basis. While we do not foreclose adopting specific indicia of
whether a service is or is not likely to be found to be analogous at
some future point, we must first gain a better understanding of how
Broadcast internet services ultimately evolve in the marketplace.
While, as argued by PMG, it may in fact end up being the case that
Broadcast internet services will be provided only on a one-way, one-to-
many basis, as is the case with traditional video broadcast services,
without knowing the precise services broadcasters will offer we cannot
universally conclude that such services are inherently not analogous to
any other service regulated by the Commission.\18\ We also agree with
commenters that it is premature to adopt a presumptive or de minimis
threshold under which ancillary and supplementary services otherwise
akin to other regulated services would be found not to be
analogous.\19\
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\18\ Pearl also requests that the Commission ``clarify broadly
that broadcast television regulations do not apply to broadcast
internet services.'' For the same reasons discussed above, we are
unable to conclude on a blanket basis, as requested by Pearl, that
all broadcast television rules do not apply to Broadcast internet
services. While as a general matter we envision that many broadcast
television rules (such as those related to children's television or
indecency, and, as discussed by Pearl, our rules on attribution)
would not apply to Broadcast internet services, others (such as
technical rules governing station operations) may still be
applicable. We note that our analysis in the Declaratory Ruling was
conducted solely in the context of evaluating our media ownership
and attribution rules and the applicability of those rules to the
leasing of excess broadcast television spectrum to a third party,
including another broadcaster, for the provision of ancillary and
supplementary services.
\19\ NCTA maintains that the plain language of section 336(b) of
the 1996 Act does not permit a de minimis exemption, and no
commenters disagree.
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37. Though we decline to adopt additional rules at this time, we
recognize that broadcasters may continue to seek clarification from the
Commission, from time to time, about whether a particular service would
be analogous to another, or whether specific broadcast rules would
apply. Finally, we will continue to monitor the marketplace and provide
any necessary clarification in the future once both broadcasters and
the Commission know the type of Broadcast internet services that may be
deployed and offered to consumers.
38. Other proposals. Low Power Television. We decline to adopt any
of the proposals by low power television and translator (LPTV) station
representatives and others to change our LPTV service rules in this
proceeding. In addition to seeking comments on the ancillary and
supplementary service fee and derogation of service issues, the NPRM
generally sought comment on the provision of Broadcast internet
services by LPTV stations and what steps, if any, the Commission should
take to facilitate the provision of such services by LPTV stations. In
response, LPTV groups and interested parties, such as ARK, ATBA, Edge
Spectrum, Evoca, NRB, NTA, Spectrum Evolution, and One Ministries,
proposed a wide range of changes to the rules governing LPTV service.
Among other things, these proposals include: Equalizing LPTV
interference protection with that of full power and Class A TV stations
(essentially eliminating LPTV's secondary status); creating a path for
certain LPTV stations to attain primary status; lifting certain
restrictions on LPTV service; granting blanket construction permit and
license extensions for LPTV stations seeking to build ATSC 3.0
facilities; abolish the ATSC 3.0 consumer education requirement for
silent and newly built LPTV stations, changing aspects of the
interference rules; and changing aspects of the Commission's
distributed transmission systems (DTS) rules.
39. We find that all of these proposals, many of which call for
sweeping changes to the nature of LPTV service or translator service
specifically, are insufficiently related to Broadcast internet and are
thus beyond the scope of this proceeding. We note, however, that all
LPTV stations transitioning to digital service are eligible to request
a one-time, six-month extension of their construction permit, and that
we will continue to consider requests to extend LPTV licenses pursuant
to the equity and fairness provision of section 312(g) of the Act on a
case-by-case basis.\20\ Further, pursuant to our existing rules, LPTV
stations that are unable to air the required ATSC 3.0 consumer
education notifications because they not operational (i.e., silent or
newly constructed) may seek a waiver of the Commission's notice
requirement from the Media Bureau.\21\ Finally, we note that the
proposals to allow LPTV stations to use DTS and to protect LPTV
stations from full power DTS service are presently being considered in
the DTS proceeding.
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\20\ We note that the Commission intended that the LPTV
exemption from the local simulcasting requirement would help ensure
that analog LPTV/translator stations and stations that have been
displaced due to the post-incentive auction repacking process were
not forced to build both an ATSC 1.0 and an ATSC 3.0 facility. We
also note that under section 312(g) of the Communications Act of
1934, as amended (the Act), if a station fails to transmit a
broadcast signal for any consecutive 12-month period its license
automatically expires at the end of that period. However, under that
section a licensee may request an extension of its license if doing
so would ``promote equity and fairness.'' The Commission has
exercised its discretion under section 312(g) to extend or reinstate
a station's expired license ``to promote equity and fairness'' only
in limited circumstances where a station's failure to transmit a
broadcast signal is due to compelling circumstances that were beyond
the licensee's control. The Commission has stated that it would
consider extensions in cases where stations were forced to remain
dark for more than 12 months by the repack process. The Media Bureau
will continue to consider such relief for LPTV stations impacted by
the repack.
\21\ Stations should file requests for waiver as a Legal STA in
the Commission's Licensing and Management System (LMS). All waiver
requests will be evaluated on a case-by-case basis and must include
the following information: (1) An explanation describing why the
station is unable to comply with the existing consumer education
requirements; (2) an alternative but comparable means the station
will use to notify viewers of the station's new channel or if the
station has previously not been operational (i.e., is newly built)
why notice would not be in the public interest; and (3) how grant of
the waiver request complies with the Commission's general waiver
standard. A station may propose to provide alternative notification
to viewers through, for example, local newspaper, radio, other in-
market television stations, and/or digital and social media.
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40. Retransmission Consent. MVPD Carriage of Broadcast internet
Services. We likewise decline to interpret our retransmission consent
rules in the context of this proceeding. NCTA asks us to clarify that a
broadcaster's use of retransmission consent to negotiate for carriage
of Broadcast internet services provided by a consortium of non-commonly
owned broadcasters in the same market is prohibited by the bar on joint
or coordinated retransmission consent negotiations. NAB opposes this
proposal as premature, urging us ``to reject, now for the third time,
NCTA's efforts to impose restraints on negotiations in the absence of
any demonstration of real world market failure.'' \22\ We decline to
address this
[[Page 10855]]
issue, finding it beyond the scope of this proceeding.\23\
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\22\ Although we note that NCTA's request is more narrowly
focused than NAB suggests, we nonetheless agree that retransmission
consent issues are not relevant to this proceeding.
\23\ We note that the NPRM indicated that changes to our rules
and policies regarding retransmission consent agreements are beyond
the scope to this proceeding.
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41. Retransmission Consent Agreements Including Ancillary and
Supplementary Services. We also reject NTCA's proposal that we exempt
broadcasters from all ancillary and supplementary service fees if they
provide ancillary and supplementary services at no additional charge to
unaffiliated MVPDs with which they have an existing retransmission
consent agreement. No commenters addressed this proposal. We note that
ancillary and supplementary services that are solely being offered free
of charge do not generate revenue and, therefore, are not subject to
the ancillary and supplementary services fee.
42. Procedural Matters. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis. As
required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended (RFA),
an Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) was incorporated in
the NPRM in this proceeding. The Commission sought written public
comment on the proposals in the NPRM, including comment on the IRFA. We
received no comments specifically directed toward the IRFA. This
present Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) conforms to the
RFA.
43. Need for, and Objective of, the Report and Order. The
Commission seeks to promote and preserve free, universally available,
local broadcast television by providing a clear regulatory landscape
that permits licensees the flexibility to succeed in a competitive
market and incentivizes the most efficient use of prime spectrum. We
undertook this proceeding to ensure that our rules, most over 20 years
old, will help foster the introduction of new Broadcast internet
services and the efficient use of existing television broadcast
spectrum under the new ATSC 3.0 standard. In this Report and Order, we
therefore conclude that ancillary and supplementary (A&S) fees should
be calculated based on the gross revenue received by the broadcaster,
without regard to the gross revenue of an unaffiliated third party,
such as a spectrum lessee; should retain the existing standard of
derogation of broadcast service, but amend the wording of the rules to
eliminate the outdated reference to analog television; and should
reaffirm that noncommercial educational television broadcast stations
(NCEs) may offer Broadcast internet services. We also reinterpret the
application of Sec. 73.621 of our rules to permit noncommercial
educational stations (NCEs) to devote the substantial majority of their
spectrum not just to free over-the-air television but also ancillary
and supplementary services; lower the ancillary and supplementary
service fee for certain NCE services; and clarify that NCEs may offer
limited Broadcast internet services to donors without transforming
those donations into feeable ancillary and supplementary service
revenue. With these changes, we seek to clarify the regulatory
landscape in order to foster the efficient and robust use of broadcast
spectrum capacity for the provision of Broadcast internet services
consistent with statutory directives.
44. Summary of Significant Issues Raised by Public Comments in
Response to the IRFA. There were no comments filed in response to the
IRFA.
45. Response to Comments by the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration. Pursuant to the Small Business Jobs Act
of 2010, which amended the RFA, 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.
46. The Chief Counsel did not comment in response to the proposed
rules in this proceeding.
47. Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities to
Which Rules Will Apply. The RFA directs agencies to provide a
description of, and where feasible, an estimate of the number of small
entities that may be affected by the proposed rules, if adopted. The
RFA generally defines the term ``small entity'' as having the same
meaning as the terms ``small business,'' ``small organization,'' and
``small governmental jurisdiction.'' In addition, the term ``small
business'' has the same meaning as the term ``small business concern''
under the Small Business Act. A small business concern is one which:
(1) Is independently owned and operated; (2) is not dominant in its
field of operation; and (3) satisfies any additional criteria
established by the SBA. Below, we provide a description of such small
entities, as well as an estimate of the number of such small entities,
where feasible.
48. Television Broadcasting. This Economic Census category
``comprises establishments primarily engaged in broadcasting images
together with sound.'' These establishments operate television
broadcast studios and facilities for the programming and transmission
of programs to the public. These establishments also produce or
transmit visual programming to affiliated broadcast television
stations, which in turn broadcast the programs to the public on a
predetermined schedule. Programming may originate in their own studio,
from an affiliated network, or from external sources. The SBA has
created the following small business size standard for such businesses:
Those having $41.5 million or less in annual receipts. The 2012
Economic Census reports that 751 firms in this category operated in
that year. Of this number, 656 had annual receipts of less than $25
million, 25 had annual receipts ranging from $25 million to
$49,999,999, and 70 had annual receipts of $50 million or more. Based
on this data we therefore estimate that the majority of commercial
television broadcasters are small entities under the applicable SBA
size standard.
49. Additionally, the Commission has estimated the number of
licensed commercial television stations to be 1,374. Of this total,
1,282 stations (or 94.2%) had revenues of $41.5 million or less in
2018, according to Commission staff review of the BIA Kelsey Inc. Media
Access Pro Television Database (BIA) on April 15, 2019, and therefore
these licensees qualify as small entities under the SBA definition. In
addition, the Commission estimates the number of licensed noncommercial
educational (NCE) television stations to be 388. The Commission does
not compile and does not have access to information on the revenue of
NCE stations that would permit it to determine how many such stations
would qualify as small entities.
50. We note, however, that in assessing whether a business concern
qualifies as ``small'' under the above definition, business (control)
affiliations must be included. Our estimate, therefore, likely
overstates the number of small entities that might be affected by our
action, because the revenue figure on which it is based does not
include or aggregate revenues from affiliated companies. In addition,
another element of the definition of ``small business'' requires that
an entity not be dominant in its field of operation. We are unable at
this time to define or quantify the criteria that would establish
whether a specific television broadcast station is dominant in its
field of operation. Accordingly, the estimate of small businesses to
which rules may apply does not exclude any television station from the
definition of a small business on this basis and is therefore possibly
over-inclusive.
51. There are also 387 Class A stations. Given the nature of these
services, the Commission presumes that
[[Page 10856]]
all of these stations qualify as small entities under the applicable
SBA size standard. In addition, there are 1,892 LPTV stations and 3,621
TV translator stations. Given the nature of these services as secondary
and in some cases purely a ``fill-in'' service, we will presume that
all of these entities qualify as small entities under the above SBA
small business size standard.
52. Description of Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other
Compliance Requirements for Small Entities. This Report and Order
imposes no new reporting, recordkeeping, or compliance requirements.
53. Steps Taken to Minimize the Significant Economic Impact on
Small Entities, and Significant Alternatives Considered. 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 an
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.''
54. Our rules will not impose a negative economic impact on any
parties, because they increase opportunities for broadcasters without
imposing additional obligations. Indeed, by clarifying the scope of
feeable revenue our rule may allow small broadcast entities
transitioning to ATSC 3.0 to experience positive economic impacts
through partnership with unaffiliated third parties. NCE television
stations in particular, both large and small, will experience positive
benefits from the decisions made in this item, which will allow them to
offer nonprofit, noncommercial, educational Broadcast internet services
alongside their television programming as part of the primary use of
their spectrum, and which imposes a reduced two and a half percent fee
on these services.
55. Report to Congress. The Commission will send a copy of the
Report and Order, including this FRFA, in a report to be sent to
Congress pursuant to the Congressional Review Act. In addition, the
Commission will send a copy of the Report and Order, including this
FRFA, to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the SBA. A copy of the
Report and Order and FRFA (or summaries thereof) will also be published
in the Federal Register.
56. Final Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis. This document does not
contain new or modified information collection requirements subject to
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA), Public Law 104-13. In
addition, therefore, it does not contain any new or modified
information collection burden for small business concerns with fewer
than 25 employees, pursuant to the Small Business Paperwork Relief Act
of 2002 (SBPRA), Public Law 107-198, see 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(4).
57. Congressional Review Act. The Commission has determined, and
the Administrator of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Office of Management and Budget, concurs, that this rule is ``non-
major'' under the Congressional Review Act, 5 U.S.C. 804(2). The
Commission will send a copy of the Order to Congress and the Government
Accountability Office, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
58. Accordingly, it is ordered that, pursuant to the authority
contained in sections 1, 4(i), 4(j), 303(r), and 336 of the
Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 154(i), 154(j),
303(r), and 336, the Report and Order is adopted.
59. It is further ordered that the Commission's rules are hereby
amended as set forth in the Final Rules, effective as of 30 days after
the date of publication in the Federal Register.
60. It is further ordered that the Commission will send a copy of
the Report and Order in a report to Congress and the Government
Accountability Office pursuant to the Congressional Review Act (CRA).
61. It is further ordered that should no petitions for
reconsideration or petitions for judicial review be timely filed, MB
Docket No. 20-145 shall be terminated and its docket closed.
List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 73
Communications equipment, Television.
Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene Dortch,
Secretary.
Final Rules
For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Federal Communications
Commission amends 47 CFR part 73 as follows:
PART 73--RADIO BROADCAST SERVICES
0
1. The authority citation for part 73 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 155, 301, 303, 307, 309, 310, 334,
336, 339.
0
2. Amend Sec. 73.624 by revising paragraphs (b) introductory text and
(g) introductory text to read as follows:
Sec. 73.624 Digital television broadcast stations.
* * * * *
(b) DTV broadcast station permittees or licensees must transmit at
least one over-the-air video program signal at no direct charge to
viewers on the DTV channel. Until such time as a DTV station permittee
or licensee ceases analog transmissions and returns that spectrum to
the Commission, and except as provided in paragraph (b)(1) of this
section, at any time that a DTV broadcast station permittee or licensee
transmits a video program signal on its analog television channel, it
must also transmit at least one over-the-air video program signal on
the DTV channel. The DTV service that is provided pursuant to this
paragraph (b) must have a resolution of at least 480i (vertical
resolution of 480 lines, interlaced).
* * * * *
(g) Commercial DTV licensees and permittees, and low power
television, TV translator and Class A television stations DTV licensees
and permittees, must annually remit a fee of 5 percent of the gross
revenues derived from all ancillary and supplementary services, as
defined by paragraph (b) of this section, which are feeable, as defined
in paragraphs (g)(1)(i) and (ii) of this section. Noncommercial DTV
licensees and permittees must annually remit a fee of 5 percent of the
gross revenues derived from all ancillary and supplementary services,
as defined by paragraph (b) of this section, which are feeable, as
defined in paragraphs (g)(1)(i) and (ii) of this section, except that
such licensees and permittees must annually remit a fee of 2.5 percent
of the gross revenues from such ancillary or supplementary services
which are nonprofit, noncommercial, and educational.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2020-28615 Filed 2-22-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712-01-P