Video Description: Implementation of the Twenty-First Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010, 73758-73762 [2023-23760]
Download as PDF
73758
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 207 / Friday, October 27, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
representative by VHF Channel 16.
Those in the safety zone must comply
with all lawful orders or directions
given to them by the COTP or the
COTP’s designated representative.
(d) Information broadcasts. The COTP
or a designated representative will
inform the public through Broadcast
Notices to Mariners (BNMs), Local
Notices to Mariners (LNMs), and/or
Marine Safety Information Bulletins
(MSIBs) as appropriate of the
enforcement times and dates for the
safety zone.
Dated: October 24, 2023.
J.W. Spitler,
Captain, U.S. Coast Guard, Captain of the
Port Sector San Diego.
[FR Doc. 2023–23865 Filed 10–26–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 79
[MB Docket No. 11–43; FCC 23–82; FR ID
181039]
Video Description: Implementation of
the Twenty-First Century
Communications and Video
Accessibility Act of 2010
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
In this document, the Federal
Communications Commission
(Commission) expands its audio
description requirements by phasing
them in for an additional 10 designated
market areas (DMAs) each year until all
DMAs are included. This action is based
on a finding that the costs of expanding
the audio description regulations to
DMAs 101 through 210 are reasonable
for program owners, providers, and
distributors.
SUMMARY:
Effective November 27, 2023.
For
additional information on this
proceeding, contact Diana Sokolow,
Diana.Sokolow@fcc.gov, of the Policy
Division, Media Bureau, (202) 418–
2120.
DATES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
This is a
summary of the Commission’s Second
Report and Order, FCC 23–82, adopted
and released on October 17, 2023. The
full test of this document will be
available at https://docs.fcc.gov/public/
attachments/FCC-23-82A1.pdf and via
ECFS at https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/.
Documents will be available
electronically in ASCII, Microsoft Word,
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:43 Oct 26, 2023
Jkt 262001
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), 1–844–4–FCC–ASL
(1–844–432–2275) (videophone).
Synopsis
1. In this Second Report and Order
(Order), we expand our audio
description requirements by phasing
them in for an additional 10 designated
market areas (DMAs) each year until all
DMAs are included. Such an expansion
will help ensure that a greater number
of individuals who are blind or visually
impaired can be connected, informed,
and entertained by television
programming. Consistent with the
requirements of the Twenty-First
Century Communications and Video
Accessibility Act of 2010 (CVAA), we
find that the costs of expanding the
audio description regulations to DMAs
101 through 210 are reasonable for
program owners, providers, and
distributors. No commenters oppose this
action.
2. Audio description makes video
programming 1 more accessible to
individuals who are blind or visually
impaired through ‘‘[t]he insertion of
audio narrated descriptions of a
television program’s key visual elements
into natural pauses between the
program’s dialogue.’’ 2 To access audio
description, consumers generally switch
from the main program audio to the
secondary audio stream on which audio
description is typically provided. In
2011, pursuant to section 202 of the
CVAA, the Commission adopted rules
requiring certain television broadcast
stations and multichannel video
programming distributors (MVPDs) to
provide audio description for a portion
of the video programming that they offer
to consumers. The current audio
description rules require certain
commercial television broadcast stations
to provide 50 hours of audio-described
programming per calendar quarter
during prime time or on children’s
programming, as well as an additional
37.5 hours of audio-described
programming per calendar quarter at
any time between 6 a.m. and 11:59
p.m.3 The commercial television
1 ‘‘Video programming’’ refers to programming
provided by, or generally considered comparable to
programming provided by, a television broadcast
station but does not include consumer-generated
media.
2 47 CFR 79.3(a)(3).
3 47 CFR 79.3(b)(1). The rules also require
‘‘[t]elevision broadcast stations that are affiliated or
PO 00000
Frm 00004
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
broadcast stations that are subject to this
requirement are those that are affiliated
with one of the top four commercial
television broadcast networks (ABC,
CBS, Fox, and NBC) and are located in
the top television markets.4
3. The 2011 Audio Description Order
applied the audio description
requirements to certain television
broadcast stations in DMAs 1 through
60.5 Pursuant to the requirements of the
CVAA, the Commission submitted a
report to Congress (the Second Report)
to assess, among other topics, ‘‘the
potential costs to program owners,
providers, and distributors in [DMAs]
outside of the top 60 of creating [audiodescribed] programming’’ and ‘‘the need
for additional described programming in
[DMAs] outside the top 60.’’ 6 The
Media Bureau submitted the Second
Report to Congress in October 2019,
describing the consumer desire for
application of the audio description
rules outside the top 60 DMAs but
stating that commenters did not offer
‘‘detailed or conclusive information’’ as
to the costs of such an expansion or a
station’s ability to bear those costs. It
thus deferred issuing a determination
otherwise associated with any television network
[to] pass through audio description when the
network provides audio description and the
broadcast station has the technical capability
necessary to pass through the audio description,
unless it is using the technology used to provide
audio description for another purpose related to the
programming that would conflict with providing
the audio description.’’ Id. 79.3(b)(3). In addition,
MVPD systems that serve 50,000 or more
subscribers must provide 50 hours of audio
description per calendar quarter during prime time
or on children’s programming, as well as an
additional 37.5 hours of audio description per
calendar quarter at any time between 6 a.m. and
11:59 p.m., on each of the top five national
nonbroadcast networks that they carry on those
systems. Id. 79.3(b)(4). The rules also require MVPD
systems of any size to pass through audio
description provided by a broadcast station or
nonbroadcast network, if the channel on which the
MVPD distributes the station or programming has
the technical capability necessary to do so and if
that technology is not being used for another
purpose related to the programming. Id.
79.3(b)(5)(i)–(ii).
4 Id. 79.3(b)(1).
5 Video Description: Implementation of the
Twenty-First Century Communications and Video
Accessibility Act of 2010, 76 FR 55585, para. 16
(Sept. 8, 2011) (‘‘The rules extend the requirement
. . . to major network affiliates in the 60 largest
markets beginning on July 1, 2015.’’) (2011 Audio
Description Order).
6 47 U.S.C. 613(f)(4)(C)(iii)(IV), (VII). In the 2020
Audio Description Order, the Commission
modernized the terminology in its rules by
replacing the term ‘‘video description’’ with the
‘‘more common and widely understood’’ term
‘‘audio description.’’ Video Description:
Implementation of the Twenty-First Century
Communications and Video Accessibility Act of
2010, 85 FR 76480, paras. 14–15 (Nov. 30, 2020)
(2020 Audio Description Order). When discussing
items that use the prior terminology, we have
updated the terminology accordingly.
E:\FR\FM\27OCR1.SGM
27OCR1
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 207 / Friday, October 27, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
regarding whether any costs associated
with the expansion would be
reasonable, explaining that, ‘‘[s]hould
the Commission seek to expand the
[audio] description requirements to
DMAs outside the top 60, it will need
to utilize the information contained in
this Second Report, and any further
information available to it at the time,
to determine that ‘the costs of
implementing the [audio] description
regulations to program owners,
providers, and distributors in those
additional markets are reasonable.’ ’’ 7
4. The CVAA provides the
Commission with authority ‘‘to phase in
the [audio] description regulations for
up to an additional 10 [DMAs] each
year,’’ ‘‘based upon the findings,
conclusions, and recommendations
contained in the [Second Report],’’ ‘‘(I)
if the costs of implementing the [audio]
description regulations to program
owners, providers, and distributors in
those additional markets are reasonable,
as determined by the Commission; and
(II) except that the Commission may
grant waivers to entities in specific
[DMAs] where it deems appropriate.’’ 8
Exercising this authority, the
Commission adopted a phased
expansion of the audio description
rules, finding that the costs of the
expansion to DMAs 61 through 100 are
reasonable for program owners,
providers, and distributors.9 The audio
description requirements extended to
DMAs 61 through 70 on January 1, 2021,
to DMAs 71 through 80 on January 1,
2022, and to DMAs 81 through 90 on
January 1, 2023. The requirements will
extend to DMAs 91 through 100 on
January 1, 2024. Thus far, the timetable
for the phased expansion has been
successful, with no requests for relief
under either the rule governing
exemptions due to economic burden or
the more general waiver rule.
5. The 2020 Audio Description Order
also indicated that the Commission
would consider in 2023 whether to
7 Second Report (quoting 47 U.S.C.
613(f)(4)(C)(iv)(I)).
8 47 U.S.C. 613(f)(4)(C)(iv).
9 The Commission’s audio description rules
define a ‘‘video programming distributor’’ as ‘‘[a]ny
television broadcast station licensed by the
Commission and any [MVPD], and any other
distributor of video programming for residential
reception that delivers such programming directly
to the home and is subject to the jurisdiction of the
Commission.’’ 47 CFR 79.3(a)(5). The rules also
define a ‘‘video programming provider’’ as ‘‘[a]ny
video programming distributor and any other entity
that provides video programming that is intended
for distribution to residential households including,
but not limited to, broadcast or nonbroadcast
television networks and the owners of such
programming.’’ Id. 79.3(a)(2). The Commission’s
audio description rules do not separately define the
term ‘‘owner.’’
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:43 Oct 26, 2023
Jkt 262001
continue expanding the audio
description requirements to an
additional 10 DMAs per year, after
assessing the reasonableness of the
associated costs. The Commission
explained that deferring a determination
on the application of the audio
description rules beyond DMA 100
‘‘will best enable us to consider the
unique circumstances that may be
applicable’’ to the smallest markets, and
provides ‘‘the additional benefit of . . .
any additional information gleaned from
[the] practical experience’’ of expansion
beyond DMA 60. To foster this
determination, in March 2023 the
Commission proposed to continue
expanding the audio description
requirements through a phased schedule
applicable to DMAs 101 through 210.10
The 2023 Audio Description FNPRM
elicited four comments and two replies,
all of which supported the
Commission’s proposal.
6. We adopt the proposal contained in
the 2023 Audio Description FNPRM to
continue phasing in the audio
description requirements for an
additional 10 DMAs each year until all
210 DMAs are covered. Commenters
unanimously support the expansion of
the Commission’s audio description
rules to all remaining DMAs. As stated
above, the CVAA provides the
Commission with authority for this
phase-in, ‘‘based upon the findings,
conclusions, and recommendations
contained in the [Second Report],’’ ‘‘(I)
if the costs of implementing the [audio]
description regulations to program
owners, providers, and distributors in
those additional markets are reasonable,
as determined by the Commission; and
(II) except that the Commission may
grant waivers to entities in specific
[DMAs] where it deems appropriate.’’ 11
7. The record demonstrates that the
costs of implementing the audio
description regulations in markets 101
through 210 are reasonable.
Commenters did not specify the current
costs of adding description to television
programming. However, the
Commission previously found that such
costs held steady between 2017 and
2019, indicating that they were at a level
the Commission previously deemed
‘‘minimal,’’ and no commenter reported
that costs have increased or objected to
the proposal on the basis that it would
impose an unreasonable cost. We expect
that the costs of extending the audio
description requirements to all
10 Video Description: Implementation of the
Twenty-First Century Communications and Video
Accessibility Act of 2010, 88 FR 18505 (Mar. 29,
2023) (2023 Audio Description FNPRM).
11 47 U.S.C. 613(f)(4)(C)(iv).
PO 00000
Frm 00005
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
73759
remaining market areas should be
minimal. This is because covered
broadcasters already are required to
have the equipment and infrastructure
necessary to deliver a secondary audio
stream for purposes of the emergency
information requirements, without
exception for technical capability or
market size. Further, network affiliates
in all DMAs are already required to pass
through the audio description they
receive via a network feed, which will
mitigate any costs associated with the
rule expansion.12 For all of these
reasons, we conclude that the costs of
expanding the audio description
regulations to DMAs 101 through 210
are reasonable. To the extent a
broadcaster finds itself in an unusual
situation that makes the costs of
compliance unreasonable, it may avail
itself of the exemption procedures
discussed below.13 However, based on
our expertise and the record compiled
in this proceeding, we expect such
instances to be exceedingly rare.
8. The significant benefits of
expanding the audio description
requirements to DMAs 101 through 210,
when weighed against the minimal
costs, further support expansion to these
markets. The Second Report indicated
that consumers desired an expansion of
the audio description requirements
outside the top 60 DMAs, and we
believe that consumers will benefit from
an expansion even in the smallest
DMAs. In fact, there may be even greater
benefits to applying the audio
description rules to smaller DMAs,
given American Foundation for the
Blind’s (AFB) assertion that ‘‘there is
evidence that less urbanized
communities experience higher rates of
disability, including blindness.’’ AFB
explains that the expansion should also
benefit video programming providers,
whose programming and advertising
12 In addition, as stated in the 2020 Audio
Description Order, the Media Bureau’s first report
to Congress on audio description ‘‘concluded that
the costs of complying with the audio description
requirements were consistent with industry’s
expectations at the time the rules were adopted and
had not impeded industry’s ability to comply, and
the record for the Second Report did not alter that
conclusion.’’
13 As with the 2020 expansion, comments on the
2023 Audio Description FNPRM did not provide
detailed analysis of the current costs of audio
description, or the costs that entities in the
additional DMAs might face as a result of the
proposed expansion. Nonetheless, as explained
herein, we believe that like 2020, the current record
provides sufficient information to determine, as
required under the CVAA, that the costs of
implementing the audio description regulations to
program owners, providers, and distributors in the
additional markets are ‘‘reasonable.’’ We note that
commenters did not provide any information that
undermines our conclusion regarding the
reasonableness of costs.
E:\FR\FM\27OCR1.SGM
27OCR1
73760
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 207 / Friday, October 27, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
will reach additional consumers. When
the Commission previously expanded
the audio description requirements to
DMAs 61 through 100, the record
indicated there would also be benefits
for consumers who are not blind or
visually impaired, such as consumers
with other sensory or cognitive
impairments, individuals learning the
language, and those who listen to video
programming while multitasking. We
believe the same would be true with
regard to expanding to DMAs 101
through 210. Although commenters did
not provide specific data on the amount
of audio-described programming
currently available in DMAs 101
through 210—including comparing that
data to the amount that would be
available if the Commission were to
expand the audio description
requirements to such DMAs—it is clear
that expanding the audio description
requirements to these additional
markets will benefit a significant
number of consumers.
9. We adopt the proposal in 2023
Audio Description FNPRM to continue
the phase-in with DMAs 101 through
110 on January 1, 2025, extending to 10
additional DMAs per year until the
phase-in concludes with DMAs 201
through 210 on January 1, 2035,
consistent with the expansion allowable
under the CVAA.14 The Commission
sought comment on whether it should
consider phasing in the audio
description requirements to a smaller
subset of DMAs, or to a smaller number
of DMAs per year. ACB explains that
adopting an even slower expansion
‘‘would increase the equity gap
experienced by residents of smaller
communities, which are often rural and/
or at an economic disadvantage.’’ The
record does not contain any support for
a slower phase-in, and thus we adopt
the proposed timeline contained in the
2023 Audio Description FNPRM, which
we expect will provide covered
broadcasters with ample time to
comply.
14 The CVAA does not permit the Commission to
expand the audio description requirements to more
than an additional 10 DMAs per year. We recognize,
however, American Council of the Blind (ACB) and
AFB’s assertions that to the extent broadcasters
voluntarily pass through audio description at an
earlier date, doing so would benefit consumers. The
National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) has
responded that it ‘‘will heed the disability
community’s requests to encourage television
stations in markets outside the top 100 DMAs to
implement audio description earlier than the FCC
may require in accordance with the CVAA.’’
Accordingly, while we adopt the phase-in schedule
as proposed and consistent with the CVAA, we
encourage television stations in markets outside the
top 100 DMAs to implement audio description
earlier to the extent they are able to do so.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:43 Oct 26, 2023
Jkt 262001
10. We also adopt the proposal
contained in the 2023 Audio
Description FNPRM to base the
extension to additional DMAs on an
updated Nielsen determination of
market rankings. We find that using
updated Nielsen data will facilitate the
efficient roll out of audio description
obligations to all remaining DMAs, and
will be consistent with the
Commission’s prior expansion of the
rules from the top 25 markets to the top
60 markets and from the top 60 markets
to the top 100 markets. The audio
description rules currently utilize DMA
rankings ‘‘as determined by The Nielsen
Company as of January 1, 2020.’’ 15 The
revised rules will utilize DMA rankings
‘‘as determined by The Nielsen
Company as of January 1, 2023.’’ Under
existing rules, the audio description
requirements apply to the top 90 DMAs
as of January 1, 2023, and they will next
extend to DMAs 91 through 100 on
January 1, 2024. We note that utilizing
updated Nielsen market rankings will
affect two DMAs that are in the top 90
DMAs utilizing the Nielsen figures as of
January 1, 2020, that will fall within the
later deadline for DMAs 91 through 100
utilizing the Nielsen figures as of
January 1, 2023.16 Conversely, there are
two DMAs that are within the later
deadline for DMAs 91 through 100
utilizing the Nielsen figures as of
January 1, 2020, that will fall within the
earlier deadline for DMAs 81 through 90
utilizing the Nielsen figures as of
January 1, 2023.17 ACB is the only
commenter that addresses application of
updated Nielsen figures, and it indicates
that it ‘‘feels strongly that regardless of
the most recent data, once audio
description has been required of a DMA,
that mandate should not change, even if
the market’s ranking does.’’ To avoid
any consumer confusion, and given that
ACB’s request is unopposed, we find
that stations that are currently subject to
the deadline for DMAs 81 through 90
(January 1, 2023), but will become
subject to the deadline for DMAs 91
through 100 (January 1, 2024) once the
new rule takes effect, must continue
complying with the audio description
requirements during any gap between
the effective date of the new rules and
the January 1, 2024 application of the
rules to DMAs 91 through 100.18 In
15 47
CFR 79.3(b)(1).
two DMAs are (1) Paducah-Cape
Girardeau-Harrisburg (moved from DMA 84 to DMA
92) and (2) Cedar Rapids-Waterloo-Iowa City and
Dubuque (moved from DMA 90 to DMA 93).
17 The two DMAs are (1) Chattanooga (moved
from DMA 92 to DMA 84) and (2) Charleston, SC
(moved from DMA 91 to DMA 88).
18 We find that this approach is necessary here,
whereas it was not utilized in the 2020 Audio
16 The
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
other words, stations that are already
subject to the rules should continue
their provision of this service, regardless
of a change in their DMA status, in
order to prevent disruption during the
gap period to consumers who have
come to rely on audio description.
Consistent with the approach in the
2020 Audio Description Order, we
expect stations in a DMA that was not
in the top 90 markets as of January 1,
2020, but is in the top 90 markets as of
January 1, 2023, to come into
compliance with the audio description
rules by the compliance deadline for
DMAs 91 through 100.19
11. Finally, we affirm the tentative
conclusion in the 2023 Audio
Description FNPRM that ‘‘sections
79.3(d) and 1.3 provide a sufficient
mechanism for entities seeking relief
from any expansion of the audio
description rules to additional DMAs.’’
ACA Connects—America’s
Communications Association states that
its support for the proposed expansion
of the audio description requirements is
conditioned upon the Commission
adopting its proposals regarding
exemption petitions and waivers.
According to ACA Connects, ‘‘the costs
of compliance with the audio
description rules may be most difficult
to absorb by small MVPDs and/or
MVPDs operating in the smallest market
areas,’’ and thus, such entities may need
relief in the form of either an exemption
due to economic burden or a waiver for
a different reason.20 We find that the
Description Order, because of the earlier timing of
the adoption of this Order (October 17, 2023 as
compared to October 27, 2020), pursuant to which
there may be a slightly longer time period between
the effective date of the new rules and the next
compliance deadline of January 1, 2024.
19 We note that this January 1, 2024 compliance
deadline is the date on which such stations already
would have expected to become subject to the
requirements, had we not adopted the use of
updated Nielsen figures, so there should be no
difficulty with complying.
20 While today we expand the number of
broadcasters subject to the audio description
requirements, we recognize that our action also
impacts MVPDs, given that MVPDs of any size
‘‘[m]ust pass through audio description on each
broadcast station they carry, when the broadcast
station provides audio description, and the channel
on which the MVPD distributes the programming of
the broadcast station has the technical capability
necessary to pass through the audio description,
unless it is using the technology used to provide
audio description for another purpose related to the
programming that would conflict with providing
the audio description.’’ 47 CFR 79.3(b)(5)(i). We
find that the costs of the expansion for impacted
MVPDs are reasonable. MVPDs in the expanded
markets that serve 50,000 or more subscribers are
already subject to the separate audio description
requirements that apply directly to MVPDs. We
expect that even small MVPDs in small markets
already have the capability to provide audio
description via a secondary audio stream, because
video programming distributors and providers
E:\FR\FM\27OCR1.SGM
27OCR1
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 207 / Friday, October 27, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
existing exemption and waiver
procedures will be sufficient to address
this concern. Specifically, section 79.3
of the Commission’s rules governs
petitions for exemption due to economic
burden, and section 1.3 governs waivers
of the Commission’s rules generally.
Under section 79.3(d), a video
programming provider 21 may petition
the Commission for a full or partial
exemption from the audio description
requirements upon a showing that they
are economically burdensome.22 The
CVAA provides that if an expansion of
the audio description rules to additional
DMAs occurs, ‘‘the Commission may
grant waivers to entities in specific
[DMAs] where it deems appropriate.’’ 23
While section 79.3(d) applies to
instances in which an entity seeks to
demonstrate that the extension to
additional DMAs is economically
burdensome, the CVAA specifically
references waivers as a means of relief,
which differs from the exemptions
available under section 79.3(d). Hence,
if an entity impacted by the extension
believes it needs relief for some reason
already are required to have the equipment and
infrastructure necessary to deliver a secondary
audio stream for purposes of the emergency
information requirements, without exception for
technical capability or market size. ACA Connects
states that there are ‘‘some practical limitations’’
even where the audio description rules already
apply, including ‘‘the amount of programming
encoded with audio description’’ and ‘‘the
availability of a secondary audio programming
(SAP) channel to carry the audio description.’’ ACA
Connects acknowledges that MVPDs are making
progress in this area ‘‘as they replace legacy
equipment and as the industry finds new solutions
to facilitate distribution of multiple audio streams.’’
In the rare instance that an MVPD in the expanded
markets finds that it is unable to comply with the
requirements by the time the relevant market is
subject to the applicable phased compliance
deadline, we agree with ACA Connects that the
existing exemption and waiver procedures will
suffice.
21 The term ‘‘video programming provider’’
includes MVPDs.
22 The term ‘‘economically burdensome’’ means
imposing significant difficulty or expense, and the
Commission considers the following factors in
determining whether the requirements for audio
description would be economically burdensome: (i)
the nature and cost of providing audio description
of the programming; (ii) the impact on the operation
of the video programming provider; (iii) the
financial resources of the video programming
provider; and (iv) the type of operations of the
video programming provider. In addition, the
Commission considers any other factors the
petitioner deems relevant to the determination and
any available alternative that might constitute a
reasonable substitute for the audio description
requirements, and it evaluates economic burden
with regard to the individual outlet. In the First
Report, the Bureau stated its belief ‘‘that the ability
to seek an exemption on the basis of economic
burden should alleviate the potential for undue cost
burdens on covered entities, particularly when the
rules go into effect for broadcast stations in
television markets ranked 26 through 60 in 2015.’’
We support this finding.
23 47 U.S.C. 613(f)(4)(C)(iv)(II).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:43 Oct 26, 2023
Jkt 262001
other than economic burden, it may
seek a waiver under section 1.3.24
12. Final Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis. As required by the Regulatory
Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended
(RFA), the Commission has prepared a
Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
(FRFA) relating to the Second Report
and Order. In summary, the Second
Report and Order expands the audio
description requirements by phasing
them in for an additional 10 designated
market areas (DMAs) each year until all
DMAs are included. The action is
authorized pursuant to the Twenty-First
Century Communications and Video
Accessibility Act of 2010, Public Law
111–260, 124 Stat. 2751, and section
713 of the Communications Act of 1934,
as amended, 47 U.S.C. 613. The types of
small entities that may be affected by
the action fall within the following
categories: Television Broadcasting,
Wired Telecommunications Carriers,
Cable and Other Subscription
Programming, Cable Companies and
Systems (Rate Regulation), Cable System
Operators (Telecom Act Standard), and
Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS) Service.
13. The projected reporting,
recordkeeping, and other compliance
requirements include phasing in the
audio description requirements for an
additional 10 DMAs each year,
beginning with DMAs 101 through 110
on January 1, 2025 and continuing until
all 210 DMAs are covered, which will
be on January 1, 2035. The substance of
the audio description requirements will
not change, but rather, this will be an
expansion of the DMAs in which
broadcast television stations in those
additional markets are required to
comply with the requirements. The
extension to additional DMAs will be
based on an updated Nielsen
determination, with the revised rules
applying to the relevant DMAs as
determined by the Nielsen company as
of January 1, 2023. There are two DMAs
that are in the top 90 DMAs utilizing the
Nielsen figures as of January 1, 2020,
that will fall within the later deadline
for DMAs 91 through 100 utilizing the
Nielsen figures as of January 1, 2023.25
24 We note that commenters raise additional
issues that are outside the scope of this Order and
thus not addressed here. Such proposals include
the availability of customer service agents with
knowledge of audio description, the idea of
‘‘encourag[ing] entities to support the success of the
expansion by informing viewers of the new
availability of audio description and how to access
it,’’ and a requested increase in the amount of
audio-described content. See ACB Comments at 3;
AFB Comments at 4; Arona Rosegold Reply; 2020
Audio Description Order.
25 The two DMAs are (1) Paducah-Cape
Girardeau-Harrisburg (moved from DMA 84 to DMA
92) and (2) Cedar Rapids-Waterloo-Iowa City and
Dubuque (moved from DMA 90 to DMA 93).
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
73761
To avoid any consumer confusion,
stations in those DMAs must continue
complying with the audio description
requirements during any gap between
the effective date of the new rules and
the January 1, 2024 application of the
rules to DMAs 91 through 100.
14. The Chief Counsel for Advocacy
of the Small Business Administration
(SBA) did not file any comments in
response to the proposed rules in this
proceeding.
15. The Commission considered
alternatives and adopted certain
proposals that will minimize the impact
of the rules on small entities. First, by
continuing the phase-in by extending
the requirements to an additional 10
DMAs per year, the Commission will
ensure that the smallest DMAs have the
longest timeframe for compliance. In the
2023 Audio Description FNPRM, the
Commission sought comment on
whether it should phase in a smaller
subset of DMAs, and whether the
Commission should consider expanding
to a smaller number of DMAs each year,
such as five. While either such alternate
approach could have mitigated the costs
of the expansion, no commenter
supports the alternate approaches, and
one commenter expresses concern that a
slower expansion would increase the
equity gap that exists in smaller
communities. Second, to the extent any
entity in DMAs 101 through 210 finds
that it is unable to comply with the
expansion due to economic burden, it
may file a petition for an exemption due
to economic burden in accordance with
section 79.3(d). Stations and MVPDs,
including small entities, that need relief
for some reason other than an economic
burden may also request a waiver under
section 1.3. We conclude that sections
79.3(d) and 1.3 provide a sufficient
mechanism for entities, including
smaller entities, seeking relief from the
expansion of the audio description rules
to additional DMAs.
16. Paperwork Reduction Act. The
Second Report and Order does not
contain new or substantively revised
information collection requirements
subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995, Public Law 104–13 (44 U.S.C.
3501–3520).26 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,
Public Law 107–198, see 44 U.S.C.
3506(c)(4). This document may contain
26 The Commission will file a non-substantive
modification to the information collection that
contains § 79.3 (OMB 3060–1148), to clarify that the
audio description requirements have been extended
to DMAs 101 through 210.
E:\FR\FM\27OCR1.SGM
27OCR1
73762
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 207 / Friday, October 27, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
non-substantive modifications to
approved information collection(s). Any
such modifications will be submitted to
OMB for review pursuant to OMB’s nonsubstantive modification process.
17. Ordering Clauses. Accordingly, it
is ordered that, pursuant to the TwentyFirst Century Communications and
Video Accessibility Act of 2010, Public
Law 111–260, 124 Stat. 2751, and the
authority contained in Section 713 of
the Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, 47 U.S.C. 613, this Second
Report and Order is hereby adopted.
18. It is further ordered that part 79
of the Commission’s rules, 47 CFR part
79, is amended as set forth in the Final
Rules below, and such rule amendments
shall be effective thirty (30) days after
the date of publication in the Federal
Register. The amendments to part 79
may contain non-substantive
modifications to information collection
requirements that will be submitted to
the Office of Management and Budget
for approval.
19. It is further ordered that the
Commission’s Office of the Secretary,
Reference Information Center, shall
send a copy of this Second Report and
Order, including the Final Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis, to the Chief
Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration.
20. It is further ordered that the
Commission shall send a copy of this
Second Report and Order in a report to
be sent to Congress and the Government
Accountability Office pursuant to the
Congressional Review Act, see 5 U.S.C.
801(a)(1)(A).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:43 Oct 26, 2023
Jkt 262001
List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 79
Communications equipment,
Television broadcasters.
Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene Dortch,
Secretary.
Final Rules
For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, the Federal Communications
Commission amends 47 CFR part 79 to
read as follows:
PART 79—ACCESSIBILITY OF VIDEO
PROGRAMMING
1. The authority citation for part 79
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 151, 152(a), 154(i),
303, 307, 309, 310, 330, 544a, 613, 617.
2. Amend § 79.3 by revising paragraph
(b)(1) to read as follows:
■
§ 79.3 Audio description of video
programming.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) Commercial television broadcast
stations that are affiliated with one of
the top four commercial television
broadcast networks (ABC, CBS, Fox, and
NBC), and that are licensed to a
community located in the top 90 DMAs,
as determined by The Nielsen Company
as of January 1, 2023, must provide 50
hours of audio description per calendar
quarter, either during prime time or on
children’s programming, and 37.5
additional hours of audio description
per calendar quarter between 6 a.m. and
11:59 p.m. local time, on each
programming stream on which they
PO 00000
Frm 00008
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 9990
carry one of the top four commercial
television broadcast networks. If a
previously unaffiliated station in one of
these markets becomes affiliated with
one of these networks, it must begin
compliance with these requirements no
later than three months after the
affiliation agreement is finalized. On
January 1, 2024, and on January 1 each
year thereafter until January 1, 2035, the
requirements of this paragraph (b)(1)
shall extend to the next 10 largest DMAs
as determined by The Nielsen Company
as of January 1, 2023, as follows: On
January 1, 2024, the requirements shall
extend to DMAs 91 through 100; on
January 1, 2025, the requirements shall
extend to DMAs 101 through 110; on
January 1, 2026, the requirements shall
extend to DMAs 111 through 120; on
January 1, 2027, the requirements shall
extend to DMAs 121 through 130; on
January 1, 2028, the requirements shall
extend to DMAs 131 through 140; on
January 1, 2029, the requirements shall
extend to DMAs 141 through 150; on
January 1, 2030, the requirements shall
extend to DMAs 151 through 160; on
January 1, 2031, the requirements shall
extend to DMAs 161 through 170; on
January 1, 2032, the requirements shall
extend to DMAs 171 through 180; on
January 1, 2033, the requirements shall
extend to DMAs 181 through 190; on
January 1, 2034, the requirements shall
extend to DMAs 191 through 200; and
on January 1, 2035, the requirements
shall extend to DMAs 201 through 210;
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2023–23760 Filed 10–26–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
E:\FR\FM\27OCR1.SGM
27OCR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 207 (Friday, October 27, 2023)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 73758-73762]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-23760]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 79
[MB Docket No. 11-43; FCC 23-82; FR ID 181039]
Video Description: Implementation of the Twenty-First Century
Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010
AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In this document, the Federal Communications Commission
(Commission) expands its audio description requirements by phasing them
in for an additional 10 designated market areas (DMAs) each year until
all DMAs are included. This action is based on a finding that the costs
of expanding the audio description regulations to DMAs 101 through 210
are reasonable for program owners, providers, and distributors.
DATES: Effective November 27, 2023.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For additional information on this
proceeding, contact Diana Sokolow, [email protected], of the Policy
Division, Media Bureau, (202) 418-2120.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Commission's Second
Report and Order, FCC 23-82, adopted and released on October 17, 2023.
The full test of this document will be available at https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/FCC-23-82A1.pdf and via ECFS 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), 1-844-4-FCC-ASL (1-844-432-2275) (videophone).
Synopsis
1. In this Second Report and Order (Order), we expand our audio
description requirements by phasing them in for an additional 10
designated market areas (DMAs) each year until all DMAs are included.
Such an expansion will help ensure that a greater number of individuals
who are blind or visually impaired can be connected, informed, and
entertained by television programming. Consistent with the requirements
of the Twenty-First Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act
of 2010 (CVAA), we find that the costs of expanding the audio
description regulations to DMAs 101 through 210 are reasonable for
program owners, providers, and distributors. No commenters oppose this
action.
2. Audio description makes video programming \1\ more accessible to
individuals who are blind or visually impaired through ``[t]he
insertion of audio narrated descriptions of a television program's key
visual elements into natural pauses between the program's dialogue.''
\2\ To access audio description, consumers generally switch from the
main program audio to the secondary audio stream on which audio
description is typically provided. In 2011, pursuant to section 202 of
the CVAA, the Commission adopted rules requiring certain television
broadcast stations and multichannel video programming distributors
(MVPDs) to provide audio description for a portion of the video
programming that they offer to consumers. The current audio description
rules require certain commercial television broadcast stations to
provide 50 hours of audio-described programming per calendar quarter
during prime time or on children's programming, as well as an
additional 37.5 hours of audio-described programming per calendar
quarter at any time between 6 a.m. and 11:59 p.m.\3\ The commercial
television broadcast stations that are subject to this requirement are
those that are affiliated with one of the top four commercial
television broadcast networks (ABC, CBS, Fox, and NBC) and are located
in the top television markets.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ ``Video programming'' refers to programming provided by, or
generally considered comparable to programming provided by, a
television broadcast station but does not include consumer-generated
media.
\2\ 47 CFR 79.3(a)(3).
\3\ 47 CFR 79.3(b)(1). The rules also require ``[t]elevision
broadcast stations that are affiliated or otherwise associated with
any television network [to] pass through audio description when the
network provides audio description and the broadcast station has the
technical capability necessary to pass through the audio
description, unless it is using the technology used to provide audio
description for another purpose related to the programming that
would conflict with providing the audio description.'' Id.
79.3(b)(3). In addition, MVPD systems that serve 50,000 or more
subscribers must provide 50 hours of audio description per calendar
quarter during prime time or on children's programming, as well as
an additional 37.5 hours of audio description per calendar quarter
at any time between 6 a.m. and 11:59 p.m., on each of the top five
national nonbroadcast networks that they carry on those systems. Id.
79.3(b)(4). The rules also require MVPD systems of any size to pass
through audio description provided by a broadcast station or
nonbroadcast network, if the channel on which the MVPD distributes
the station or programming has the technical capability necessary to
do so and if that technology is not being used for another purpose
related to the programming. Id. 79.3(b)(5)(i)-(ii).
\4\ Id. 79.3(b)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. The 2011 Audio Description Order applied the audio description
requirements to certain television broadcast stations in DMAs 1 through
60.\5\ Pursuant to the requirements of the CVAA, the Commission
submitted a report to Congress (the Second Report) to assess, among
other topics, ``the potential costs to program owners, providers, and
distributors in [DMAs] outside of the top 60 of creating [audio-
described] programming'' and ``the need for additional described
programming in [DMAs] outside the top 60.'' \6\ The Media Bureau
submitted the Second Report to Congress in October 2019, describing the
consumer desire for application of the audio description rules outside
the top 60 DMAs but stating that commenters did not offer ``detailed or
conclusive information'' as to the costs of such an expansion or a
station's ability to bear those costs. It thus deferred issuing a
determination
[[Page 73759]]
regarding whether any costs associated with the expansion would be
reasonable, explaining that, ``[s]hould the Commission seek to expand
the [audio] description requirements to DMAs outside the top 60, it
will need to utilize the information contained in this Second Report,
and any further information available to it at the time, to determine
that `the costs of implementing the [audio] description regulations to
program owners, providers, and distributors in those additional markets
are reasonable.' '' \7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Video Description: Implementation of the Twenty-First
Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010, 76 FR
55585, para. 16 (Sept. 8, 2011) (``The rules extend the requirement
. . . to major network affiliates in the 60 largest markets
beginning on July 1, 2015.'') (2011 Audio Description Order).
\6\ 47 U.S.C. 613(f)(4)(C)(iii)(IV), (VII). In the 2020 Audio
Description Order, the Commission modernized the terminology in its
rules by replacing the term ``video description'' with the ``more
common and widely understood'' term ``audio description.'' Video
Description: Implementation of the Twenty-First Century
Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010, 85 FR 76480,
paras. 14-15 (Nov. 30, 2020) (2020 Audio Description Order). When
discussing items that use the prior terminology, we have updated the
terminology accordingly.
\7\ Second Report (quoting 47 U.S.C. 613(f)(4)(C)(iv)(I)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. The CVAA provides the Commission with authority ``to phase in
the [audio] description regulations for up to an additional 10 [DMAs]
each year,'' ``based upon the findings, conclusions, and
recommendations contained in the [Second Report],'' ``(I) if the costs
of implementing the [audio] description regulations to program owners,
providers, and distributors in those additional markets are reasonable,
as determined by the Commission; and (II) except that the Commission
may grant waivers to entities in specific [DMAs] where it deems
appropriate.'' \8\ Exercising this authority, the Commission adopted a
phased expansion of the audio description rules, finding that the costs
of the expansion to DMAs 61 through 100 are reasonable for program
owners, providers, and distributors.\9\ The audio description
requirements extended to DMAs 61 through 70 on January 1, 2021, to DMAs
71 through 80 on January 1, 2022, and to DMAs 81 through 90 on January
1, 2023. The requirements will extend to DMAs 91 through 100 on January
1, 2024. Thus far, the timetable for the phased expansion has been
successful, with no requests for relief under either the rule governing
exemptions due to economic burden or the more general waiver rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ 47 U.S.C. 613(f)(4)(C)(iv).
\9\ The Commission's audio description rules define a ``video
programming distributor'' as ``[a]ny television broadcast station
licensed by the Commission and any [MVPD], and any other distributor
of video programming for residential reception that delivers such
programming directly to the home and is subject to the jurisdiction
of the Commission.'' 47 CFR 79.3(a)(5). The rules also define a
``video programming provider'' as ``[a]ny video programming
distributor and any other entity that provides video programming
that is intended for distribution to residential households
including, but not limited to, broadcast or nonbroadcast television
networks and the owners of such programming.'' Id. 79.3(a)(2). The
Commission's audio description rules do not separately define the
term ``owner.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
5. The 2020 Audio Description Order also indicated that the
Commission would consider in 2023 whether to continue expanding the
audio description requirements to an additional 10 DMAs per year, after
assessing the reasonableness of the associated costs. The Commission
explained that deferring a determination on the application of the
audio description rules beyond DMA 100 ``will best enable us to
consider the unique circumstances that may be applicable'' to the
smallest markets, and provides ``the additional benefit of . . . any
additional information gleaned from [the] practical experience'' of
expansion beyond DMA 60. To foster this determination, in March 2023
the Commission proposed to continue expanding the audio description
requirements through a phased schedule applicable to DMAs 101 through
210.\10\ The 2023 Audio Description FNPRM elicited four comments and
two replies, all of which supported the Commission's proposal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ Video Description: Implementation of the Twenty-First
Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010, 88 FR
18505 (Mar. 29, 2023) (2023 Audio Description FNPRM).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
6. We adopt the proposal contained in the 2023 Audio Description
FNPRM to continue phasing in the audio description requirements for an
additional 10 DMAs each year until all 210 DMAs are covered. Commenters
unanimously support the expansion of the Commission's audio description
rules to all remaining DMAs. As stated above, the CVAA provides the
Commission with authority for this phase-in, ``based upon the findings,
conclusions, and recommendations contained in the [Second Report],''
``(I) if the costs of implementing the [audio] description regulations
to program owners, providers, and distributors in those additional
markets are reasonable, as determined by the Commission; and (II)
except that the Commission may grant waivers to entities in specific
[DMAs] where it deems appropriate.'' \11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ 47 U.S.C. 613(f)(4)(C)(iv).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
7. The record demonstrates that the costs of implementing the audio
description regulations in markets 101 through 210 are reasonable.
Commenters did not specify the current costs of adding description to
television programming. However, the Commission previously found that
such costs held steady between 2017 and 2019, indicating that they were
at a level the Commission previously deemed ``minimal,'' and no
commenter reported that costs have increased or objected to the
proposal on the basis that it would impose an unreasonable cost. We
expect that the costs of extending the audio description requirements
to all remaining market areas should be minimal. This is because
covered broadcasters already are required to have the equipment and
infrastructure necessary to deliver a secondary audio stream for
purposes of the emergency information requirements, without exception
for technical capability or market size. Further, network affiliates in
all DMAs are already required to pass through the audio description
they receive via a network feed, which will mitigate any costs
associated with the rule expansion.\12\ For all of these reasons, we
conclude that the costs of expanding the audio description regulations
to DMAs 101 through 210 are reasonable. To the extent a broadcaster
finds itself in an unusual situation that makes the costs of compliance
unreasonable, it may avail itself of the exemption procedures discussed
below.\13\ However, based on our expertise and the record compiled in
this proceeding, we expect such instances to be exceedingly rare.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ In addition, as stated in the 2020 Audio Description Order,
the Media Bureau's first report to Congress on audio description
``concluded that the costs of complying with the audio description
requirements were consistent with industry's expectations at the
time the rules were adopted and had not impeded industry's ability
to comply, and the record for the Second Report did not alter that
conclusion.''
\13\ As with the 2020 expansion, comments on the 2023 Audio
Description FNPRM did not provide detailed analysis of the current
costs of audio description, or the costs that entities in the
additional DMAs might face as a result of the proposed expansion.
Nonetheless, as explained herein, we believe that like 2020, the
current record provides sufficient information to determine, as
required under the CVAA, that the costs of implementing the audio
description regulations to program owners, providers, and
distributors in the additional markets are ``reasonable.'' We note
that commenters did not provide any information that undermines our
conclusion regarding the reasonableness of costs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
8. The significant benefits of expanding the audio description
requirements to DMAs 101 through 210, when weighed against the minimal
costs, further support expansion to these markets. The Second Report
indicated that consumers desired an expansion of the audio description
requirements outside the top 60 DMAs, and we believe that consumers
will benefit from an expansion even in the smallest DMAs. In fact,
there may be even greater benefits to applying the audio description
rules to smaller DMAs, given American Foundation for the Blind's (AFB)
assertion that ``there is evidence that less urbanized communities
experience higher rates of disability, including blindness.'' AFB
explains that the expansion should also benefit video programming
providers, whose programming and advertising
[[Page 73760]]
will reach additional consumers. When the Commission previously
expanded the audio description requirements to DMAs 61 through 100, the
record indicated there would also be benefits for consumers who are not
blind or visually impaired, such as consumers with other sensory or
cognitive impairments, individuals learning the language, and those who
listen to video programming while multitasking. We believe the same
would be true with regard to expanding to DMAs 101 through 210.
Although commenters did not provide specific data on the amount of
audio-described programming currently available in DMAs 101 through
210--including comparing that data to the amount that would be
available if the Commission were to expand the audio description
requirements to such DMAs--it is clear that expanding the audio
description requirements to these additional markets will benefit a
significant number of consumers.
9. We adopt the proposal in 2023 Audio Description FNPRM to
continue the phase-in with DMAs 101 through 110 on January 1, 2025,
extending to 10 additional DMAs per year until the phase-in concludes
with DMAs 201 through 210 on January 1, 2035, consistent with the
expansion allowable under the CVAA.\14\ The Commission sought comment
on whether it should consider phasing in the audio description
requirements to a smaller subset of DMAs, or to a smaller number of
DMAs per year. ACB explains that adopting an even slower expansion
``would increase the equity gap experienced by residents of smaller
communities, which are often rural and/or at an economic
disadvantage.'' The record does not contain any support for a slower
phase-in, and thus we adopt the proposed timeline contained in the 2023
Audio Description FNPRM, which we expect will provide covered
broadcasters with ample time to comply.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ The CVAA does not permit the Commission to expand the audio
description requirements to more than an additional 10 DMAs per
year. We recognize, however, American Council of the Blind (ACB) and
AFB's assertions that to the extent broadcasters voluntarily pass
through audio description at an earlier date, doing so would benefit
consumers. The National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) has
responded that it ``will heed the disability community's requests to
encourage television stations in markets outside the top 100 DMAs to
implement audio description earlier than the FCC may require in
accordance with the CVAA.'' Accordingly, while we adopt the phase-in
schedule as proposed and consistent with the CVAA, we encourage
television stations in markets outside the top 100 DMAs to implement
audio description earlier to the extent they are able to do so.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
10. We also adopt the proposal contained in the 2023 Audio
Description FNPRM to base the extension to additional DMAs on an
updated Nielsen determination of market rankings. We find that using
updated Nielsen data will facilitate the efficient roll out of audio
description obligations to all remaining DMAs, and will be consistent
with the Commission's prior expansion of the rules from the top 25
markets to the top 60 markets and from the top 60 markets to the top
100 markets. The audio description rules currently utilize DMA rankings
``as determined by The Nielsen Company as of January 1, 2020.'' \15\
The revised rules will utilize DMA rankings ``as determined by The
Nielsen Company as of January 1, 2023.'' Under existing rules, the
audio description requirements apply to the top 90 DMAs as of January
1, 2023, and they will next extend to DMAs 91 through 100 on January 1,
2024. We note that utilizing updated Nielsen market rankings will
affect two DMAs that are in the top 90 DMAs utilizing the Nielsen
figures as of January 1, 2020, that will fall within the later deadline
for DMAs 91 through 100 utilizing the Nielsen figures as of January 1,
2023.\16\ Conversely, there are two DMAs that are within the later
deadline for DMAs 91 through 100 utilizing the Nielsen figures as of
January 1, 2020, that will fall within the earlier deadline for DMAs 81
through 90 utilizing the Nielsen figures as of January 1, 2023.\17\ ACB
is the only commenter that addresses application of updated Nielsen
figures, and it indicates that it ``feels strongly that regardless of
the most recent data, once audio description has been required of a
DMA, that mandate should not change, even if the market's ranking
does.'' To avoid any consumer confusion, and given that ACB's request
is unopposed, we find that stations that are currently subject to the
deadline for DMAs 81 through 90 (January 1, 2023), but will become
subject to the deadline for DMAs 91 through 100 (January 1, 2024) once
the new rule takes effect, must continue complying with the audio
description requirements during any gap between the effective date of
the new rules and the January 1, 2024 application of the rules to DMAs
91 through 100.\18\ In other words, stations that are already subject
to the rules should continue their provision of this service,
regardless of a change in their DMA status, in order to prevent
disruption during the gap period to consumers who have come to rely on
audio description. Consistent with the approach in the 2020 Audio
Description Order, we expect stations in a DMA that was not in the top
90 markets as of January 1, 2020, but is in the top 90 markets as of
January 1, 2023, to come into compliance with the audio description
rules by the compliance deadline for DMAs 91 through 100.\19\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ 47 CFR 79.3(b)(1).
\16\ The two DMAs are (1) Paducah-Cape Girardeau-Harrisburg
(moved from DMA 84 to DMA 92) and (2) Cedar Rapids-Waterloo-Iowa
City and Dubuque (moved from DMA 90 to DMA 93).
\17\ The two DMAs are (1) Chattanooga (moved from DMA 92 to DMA
84) and (2) Charleston, SC (moved from DMA 91 to DMA 88).
\18\ We find that this approach is necessary here, whereas it
was not utilized in the 2020 Audio Description Order, because of the
earlier timing of the adoption of this Order (October 17, 2023 as
compared to October 27, 2020), pursuant to which there may be a
slightly longer time period between the effective date of the new
rules and the next compliance deadline of January 1, 2024.
\19\ We note that this January 1, 2024 compliance deadline is
the date on which such stations already would have expected to
become subject to the requirements, had we not adopted the use of
updated Nielsen figures, so there should be no difficulty with
complying.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
11. Finally, we affirm the tentative conclusion in the 2023 Audio
Description FNPRM that ``sections 79.3(d) and 1.3 provide a sufficient
mechanism for entities seeking relief from any expansion of the audio
description rules to additional DMAs.'' ACA Connects--America's
Communications Association states that its support for the proposed
expansion of the audio description requirements is conditioned upon the
Commission adopting its proposals regarding exemption petitions and
waivers. According to ACA Connects, ``the costs of compliance with the
audio description rules may be most difficult to absorb by small MVPDs
and/or MVPDs operating in the smallest market areas,'' and thus, such
entities may need relief in the form of either an exemption due to
economic burden or a waiver for a different reason.\20\ We find that
the
[[Page 73761]]
existing exemption and waiver procedures will be sufficient to address
this concern. Specifically, section 79.3 of the Commission's rules
governs petitions for exemption due to economic burden, and section 1.3
governs waivers of the Commission's rules generally. Under section
79.3(d), a video programming provider \21\ may petition the Commission
for a full or partial exemption from the audio description requirements
upon a showing that they are economically burdensome.\22\ The CVAA
provides that if an expansion of the audio description rules to
additional DMAs occurs, ``the Commission may grant waivers to entities
in specific [DMAs] where it deems appropriate.'' \23\ While section
79.3(d) applies to instances in which an entity seeks to demonstrate
that the extension to additional DMAs is economically burdensome, the
CVAA specifically references waivers as a means of relief, which
differs from the exemptions available under section 79.3(d). Hence, if
an entity impacted by the extension believes it needs relief for some
reason other than economic burden, it may seek a waiver under section
1.3.\24\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ While today we expand the number of broadcasters subject to
the audio description requirements, we recognize that our action
also impacts MVPDs, given that MVPDs of any size ``[m]ust pass
through audio description on each broadcast station they carry, when
the broadcast station provides audio description, and the channel on
which the MVPD distributes the programming of the broadcast station
has the technical capability necessary to pass through the audio
description, unless it is using the technology used to provide audio
description for another purpose related to the programming that
would conflict with providing the audio description.'' 47 CFR
79.3(b)(5)(i). We find that the costs of the expansion for impacted
MVPDs are reasonable. MVPDs in the expanded markets that serve
50,000 or more subscribers are already subject to the separate audio
description requirements that apply directly to MVPDs. We expect
that even small MVPDs in small markets already have the capability
to provide audio description via a secondary audio stream, because
video programming distributors and providers already are required to
have the equipment and infrastructure necessary to deliver a
secondary audio stream for purposes of the emergency information
requirements, without exception for technical capability or market
size. ACA Connects states that there are ``some practical
limitations'' even where the audio description rules already apply,
including ``the amount of programming encoded with audio
description'' and ``the availability of a secondary audio
programming (SAP) channel to carry the audio description.'' ACA
Connects acknowledges that MVPDs are making progress in this area
``as they replace legacy equipment and as the industry finds new
solutions to facilitate distribution of multiple audio streams.'' In
the rare instance that an MVPD in the expanded markets finds that it
is unable to comply with the requirements by the time the relevant
market is subject to the applicable phased compliance deadline, we
agree with ACA Connects that the existing exemption and waiver
procedures will suffice.
\21\ The term ``video programming provider'' includes MVPDs.
\22\ The term ``economically burdensome'' means imposing
significant difficulty or expense, and the Commission considers the
following factors in determining whether the requirements for audio
description would be economically burdensome: (i) the nature and
cost of providing audio description of the programming; (ii) the
impact on the operation of the video programming provider; (iii) the
financial resources of the video programming provider; and (iv) the
type of operations of the video programming provider. In addition,
the Commission considers any other factors the petitioner deems
relevant to the determination and any available alternative that
might constitute a reasonable substitute for the audio description
requirements, and it evaluates economic burden with regard to the
individual outlet. In the First Report, the Bureau stated its belief
``that the ability to seek an exemption on the basis of economic
burden should alleviate the potential for undue cost burdens on
covered entities, particularly when the rules go into effect for
broadcast stations in television markets ranked 26 through 60 in
2015.'' We support this finding.
\23\ 47 U.S.C. 613(f)(4)(C)(iv)(II).
\24\ We note that commenters raise additional issues that are
outside the scope of this Order and thus not addressed here. Such
proposals include the availability of customer service agents with
knowledge of audio description, the idea of ``encourag[ing] entities
to support the success of the expansion by informing viewers of the
new availability of audio description and how to access it,'' and a
requested increase in the amount of audio-described content. See ACB
Comments at 3; AFB Comments at 4; Arona Rosegold Reply; 2020 Audio
Description Order.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
12. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis. As required by the
Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended (RFA), the Commission
has prepared a Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) relating to
the Second Report and Order. In summary, the Second Report and Order
expands the audio description requirements by phasing them in for an
additional 10 designated market areas (DMAs) each year until all DMAs
are included. The action is authorized pursuant to the Twenty-First
Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010, Public Law
111-260, 124 Stat. 2751, and section 713 of the Communications Act of
1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 613. The types of small entities that may
be affected by the action fall within the following categories:
Television Broadcasting, Wired Telecommunications Carriers, Cable and
Other Subscription Programming, Cable Companies and Systems (Rate
Regulation), Cable System Operators (Telecom Act Standard), and Direct
Broadcast Satellite (DBS) Service.
13. The projected reporting, recordkeeping, and other compliance
requirements include phasing in the audio description requirements for
an additional 10 DMAs each year, beginning with DMAs 101 through 110 on
January 1, 2025 and continuing until all 210 DMAs are covered, which
will be on January 1, 2035. The substance of the audio description
requirements will not change, but rather, this will be an expansion of
the DMAs in which broadcast television stations in those additional
markets are required to comply with the requirements. The extension to
additional DMAs will be based on an updated Nielsen determination, with
the revised rules applying to the relevant DMAs as determined by the
Nielsen company as of January 1, 2023. There are two DMAs that are in
the top 90 DMAs utilizing the Nielsen figures as of January 1, 2020,
that will fall within the later deadline for DMAs 91 through 100
utilizing the Nielsen figures as of January 1, 2023.\25\ To avoid any
consumer confusion, stations in those DMAs must continue complying with
the audio description requirements during any gap between the effective
date of the new rules and the January 1, 2024 application of the rules
to DMAs 91 through 100.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ The two DMAs are (1) Paducah-Cape Girardeau-Harrisburg
(moved from DMA 84 to DMA 92) and (2) Cedar Rapids-Waterloo-Iowa
City and Dubuque (moved from DMA 90 to DMA 93).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
14. The Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration (SBA) did not file any comments in response to the
proposed rules in this proceeding.
15. The Commission considered alternatives and adopted certain
proposals that will minimize the impact of the rules on small entities.
First, by continuing the phase-in by extending the requirements to an
additional 10 DMAs per year, the Commission will ensure that the
smallest DMAs have the longest timeframe for compliance. In the 2023
Audio Description FNPRM, the Commission sought comment on whether it
should phase in a smaller subset of DMAs, and whether the Commission
should consider expanding to a smaller number of DMAs each year, such
as five. While either such alternate approach could have mitigated the
costs of the expansion, no commenter supports the alternate approaches,
and one commenter expresses concern that a slower expansion would
increase the equity gap that exists in smaller communities. Second, to
the extent any entity in DMAs 101 through 210 finds that it is unable
to comply with the expansion due to economic burden, it may file a
petition for an exemption due to economic burden in accordance with
section 79.3(d). Stations and MVPDs, including small entities, that
need relief for some reason other than an economic burden may also
request a waiver under section 1.3. We conclude that sections 79.3(d)
and 1.3 provide a sufficient mechanism for entities, including smaller
entities, seeking relief from the expansion of the audio description
rules to additional DMAs.
16. Paperwork Reduction Act. The Second Report and Order does not
contain new or substantively revised information collection
requirements subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, Public Law
104-13 (44 U.S.C. 3501-3520).\26\ 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, Public Law 107-198, see 44
U.S.C. 3506(c)(4). This document may contain
[[Page 73762]]
non-substantive modifications to approved information collection(s).
Any such modifications will be submitted to OMB for review pursuant to
OMB's non-substantive modification process.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ The Commission will file a non-substantive modification to
the information collection that contains Sec. 79.3 (OMB 3060-1148),
to clarify that the audio description requirements have been
extended to DMAs 101 through 210.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
17. Ordering Clauses. Accordingly, it is ordered that, pursuant to
the Twenty-First Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of
2010, Public Law 111-260, 124 Stat. 2751, and the authority contained
in Section 713 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C.
613, this Second Report and Order is hereby adopted.
18. It is further ordered that part 79 of the Commission's rules,
47 CFR part 79, is amended as set forth in the Final Rules below, and
such rule amendments shall be effective thirty (30) days after the date
of publication in the Federal Register. The amendments to part 79 may
contain non-substantive modifications to information collection
requirements that will be submitted to the Office of Management and
Budget for approval.
19. It is further ordered that the Commission's Office of the
Secretary, Reference Information Center, shall send a copy of this
Second Report and Order, including the Final Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis, to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration.
20. It is further ordered that the Commission shall send a copy of
this Second Report and Order in a report to be sent to Congress and the
Government Accountability Office pursuant to the Congressional Review
Act, see 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 79
Communications equipment, Television broadcasters.
Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene Dortch,
Secretary.
Final Rules
For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Federal
Communications Commission amends 47 CFR part 79 to read as follows:
PART 79--ACCESSIBILITY OF VIDEO PROGRAMMING
0
1. The authority citation for part 79 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 47 U.S.C. 151, 152(a), 154(i), 303, 307, 309, 310,
330, 544a, 613, 617.
0
2. Amend Sec. 79.3 by revising paragraph (b)(1) to read as follows:
Sec. 79.3 Audio description of video programming.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) Commercial television broadcast stations that are affiliated
with one of the top four commercial television broadcast networks (ABC,
CBS, Fox, and NBC), and that are licensed to a community located in the
top 90 DMAs, as determined by The Nielsen Company as of January 1,
2023, must provide 50 hours of audio description per calendar quarter,
either during prime time or on children's programming, and 37.5
additional hours of audio description per calendar quarter between 6
a.m. and 11:59 p.m. local time, on each programming stream on which
they carry one of the top four commercial television broadcast
networks. If a previously unaffiliated station in one of these markets
becomes affiliated with one of these networks, it must begin compliance
with these requirements no later than three months after the
affiliation agreement is finalized. On January 1, 2024, and on January
1 each year thereafter until January 1, 2035, the requirements of this
paragraph (b)(1) shall extend to the next 10 largest DMAs as determined
by The Nielsen Company as of January 1, 2023, as follows: On January 1,
2024, the requirements shall extend to DMAs 91 through 100; on January
1, 2025, the requirements shall extend to DMAs 101 through 110; on
January 1, 2026, the requirements shall extend to DMAs 111 through 120;
on January 1, 2027, the requirements shall extend to DMAs 121 through
130; on January 1, 2028, the requirements shall extend to DMAs 131
through 140; on January 1, 2029, the requirements shall extend to DMAs
141 through 150; on January 1, 2030, the requirements shall extend to
DMAs 151 through 160; on January 1, 2031, the requirements shall extend
to DMAs 161 through 170; on January 1, 2032, the requirements shall
extend to DMAs 171 through 180; on January 1, 2033, the requirements
shall extend to DMAs 181 through 190; on January 1, 2034, the
requirements shall extend to DMAs 191 through 200; and on January 1,
2035, the requirements shall extend to DMAs 201 through 210;
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2023-23760 Filed 10-26-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712-01-P